Introduction to the special issue “Interaction between Man and Plants. New Progress in Archaeobotanical Research” Ramon BuxóStefanie JacometFelix Bittmann Editorial 12 October 2005 Pages: 235 - 236
A comparison of early Neolithic crop and weed assemblages from the Linearbandkeramik and the Bulgarian Neolithic cultures: differences and similarities Angela KreuzElena MarinovaJulian Wiethold Original Article 25 August 2005 Pages: 237 - 258
Grain versus chaff: identifying a contrast between grain-rich and chaff-rich sites in the Neolithic of northern Greece Soultana Maria Valamoti Original Article 06 April 2005 Pages: 259 - 267
The spread of agriculture in northern Iberia: new archaeobotanical data from El Mirón cave (Cantabria) and the open-air site of Los Cascajos (Navarra) Leonor Peña-ChocarroLydia Zapata PeñaLawrence G. Straus Original Article 25 August 2005 Pages: 268 - 278
Plant remains from a Bell Beaker site in Switzerland, and the beginnings of Triticum spelta (spelt) cultivation in Europe Örni Akeret Original Article 06 April 2005 Pages: 279 - 286
Missing plant macro remains as indicators of plant exploitation in Predynastic Egypt Ahmed Gamal-El-Din Fahmy Original Article 18 January 2005 Pages: 287 - 294
A new find of macrofossils of feather grass (Stipa) in an Early Bronze Age storage pit at Vliněves, Czech Republic: local implications and possible interpretation in a Central European context Aldona BieniekPetr Pokorný Original Article 25 May 2005 Pages: 295 - 302
Subsistence strategies of two Bronze Age hill-top settlements in the eastern Alps—Friaga/Bartholomäberg (Vorarlberg, Austria) and Ganglegg/Schluderns (South Tyrol, Italy) Alexandra SchmidlKlaus Oeggl Original Article 03 June 2005 Pages: 303 - 312
Food storage in two Late Bronze Age caves of Southern France: palaeoethnobotanical and social implications Laurent BoubyGilbert FagesJean Michel Treffort Original Article 25 May 2005 Pages: 313 - 328
Burnt sacrificial plant offerings in Hellenistic times: an archaeobotanical case study from Messene, Peloponnese, Greece Fragkiska Megaloudi Original Article 25 August 2005 Pages: 329 - 340
Agriculture and food from the Roman to the Islamic Period in the North-East of the Iberian peninsula: archaeobotanical studies in the city of Lleida (Catalonia, Spain) Natàlia Alonso Martinez Original Article 21 July 2005 Pages: 341 - 361
An approach to funerary rituals in the Roman provinces: plant remains from a Gallo-Roman cemetery at Faulquemont (Moselle, France) Sidonie PreissVeronique MatterneFrederic Latron Original Article 21 July 2005 Pages: 362 - 372
How to detect fodder and litter? A case study from the Roman site “Le Marais de Dourges,” France Marie Derreumaux Original Article 27 August 2005 Pages: 373 - 385
Hints of economic change during the late Roman Empire period in central Italy: a study of charred plant remains from “La Fontanaccia”, near Rome Laura SadoriFrancesca Susanna Original Article 19 October 2005 Pages: 386 - 393
Crops produced in the southern Netherlands and northern France during the early medieval period: a comparison Corrie C. Bakels Original Article 21 June 2005 Pages: 394 - 399
Aspects of early medieval farming from sites in Mediterranean France Marie-Pierre Ruas Original Article 06 April 2005 Pages: 400 - 415
An 11th century a.d. burnt granary at La Gravette, south-western France: preliminary archaeobotanical results Marie-Pierre RuasLaurent BoubyJean-Paul Cazes Original Article 18 January 2005 Pages: 416 - 426
Nutrition, aspects of land use and environment in medieval times in southern Germany: plant macro-remain analysis from latrines (late 11th–13th century a.d.) at the town of Überlingen, Lake Constance Tanja Märkle Original Article 03 August 2005 Pages: 427 - 441
Plant use in a city in Northern Italy during the late Mediaeval and Renaissance periods: results of the archaeobotanical investigation of “The Mirror Pit” (14th–15th century a.d.) in Ferrara Marta Bandini MazzantiGiovanna BosiChiara Guarnieri Original Article 01 June 2005 Pages: 442 - 452
Nutrition and environment in medieval Serbia: charred cereal, weed and fruit remains from the fortress of Ras Ksenija Borojević Original Article 23 July 2005 Pages: 453 - 464
ArchaeobotanyofmoundstructuresinCampodelPucará,Catamarca, Argentina (1750–1450 b.p.): ceremonial use or rubbish dumps? Nurit Oliszewski Original Article 20 September 2005 Pages: 465 - 471
The introduction of Old World crops (wheat, barley and peach) in Andean Argentina during the 16th century a.d.: archaeobotanical and ethnohistorical evidence Aylen CapparelliVerónica LemaRodolfo Raffino Original Article 07 September 2005 Pages: 472 - 484
Human diet and land use in the time of the Khans—Archaeobotanical research in the capital of the Mongolian Empire, Qara Qorum, Mongolia Manfred RöschElske FischerTanja Märkle Original Article 30 April 2005 Pages: 485 - 492
The functional ecology of present-day arable weed floras and its applicability for the identification of past crop husbandry Glynis JonesMichael CharlesCarol Palmer Original Article 21 July 2005 Pages: 493 - 504
The impact of crop processing on the reconstruction of crop sowing time and cultivation intensity from archaeobotanical weed evidence Amy BogaardGlynis JonesMike Charles Original Article 02 March 2005 Pages: 505 - 509
Water management practices and climate in ancient agriculture: inferences from the stable isotope composition of archaeobotanical remains Juan P. FerrioJosé Luis ArausJordi Bort Original Article 02 March 2005 Pages: 510 - 517
The first subfossil records of Urtica kioviensis Rogow. and their consequences for palaeoecological interpretations Steffen WoltersFelix BittmannVolker Kummer Original Article 07 June 2005 Pages: 518 - 527
Distinguishing food from fodder through the study of charred plant remains: an experimental approach to dung-derived chaff Soultana Maria ValamotiMike Charles Original Article 24 June 2005 Pages: 528 - 533
The distribution, natural habitats and availability of wild cereals in relation to their domestication in the Near East: multiple events, multiple centres George Willcox Original Article 25 August 2005 Pages: 534 - 541
Plant economy of hunter-gatherer groups at the end of the last Ice Age: plant macroremains from the cave of Santa Maira (Alacant, Spain) ca. 12000–9000 b.p. Josep Emili AuraYolanda CarriónGuillem Pérez Jordà Original Article 28 October 2005 Pages: 542 - 550
On the origin and domestication of Olea europaea L. (olive) in Andalucía, Spain, based on the biogeographical distribution of its finds Maria Oliva Rodríguez-ArizaEva Montes Moya Original Article 05 November 2005 Pages: 551 - 561
The oldest evidence of Nigella damascena L. (Ranunculaceae) and its possible introduction to central Europe Andreas G. HeissKlaus Oeggl Original Article 08 September 2005 Pages: 562 - 570
Lallemantia, an imported or introduced oil plant in Bronze Age northern Greece Glynis JonesSoultana M. Valamoti Original Article 17 September 2005 Pages: 571 - 577