Abstract: |
(Papers dedicated to G W Dimbleby.) Includes: K J Edwards (pp 5-22), Man, space and the woodland edge: speculations on the detection and interpretation of human impact in pollen profiles; J Greig (23-55), Past and present lime woods of Europe; R G Scaife (57-74), Late-Devensian and early Flandrian vegetation changes in S England; P V Waton (75-91), Man's impact on the chalklands: some new pollen evidence; A G Brown (93-104), Human impact on the former floodplain woodlands of the Severn; K Crabtree (105-13), Evidence for the Burren's forest cover; D P Drew (115-27), Environmental archaeology and karstic terrains: the example of the Burren, Co Clare, Ireland; M A Girling (129-46), Fossil insect faunas from forest sites; K D Thomas (147-70), Neolithic enclosures and woodland habitats on the South Downs in Sussex, England; O Rackham (171-6), The Avon Gorge and Leigh Woods; P Rowley-Conwy (199-215), Forest grazing and clearance in temperate Europe with special reference to Denmark; R A Morgan (261-78), Current tree-ring research in the Somerset levels; S Limbrey (279-86), The honeybee and woodland resources; J Coy (287-96), Woodland mammals in Wessex - the archaeological evidence; C Grigson (297-314), Porridge and pannage: pig husbandry in Neolithic England; B Noddle (315-33), The size of red deer in Britain - past and present, with some reference to fallow deer. |