Items where authors include "Kenward, H."

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Number of items: 8.

Article

Kenward, H. (2006) The visibility of past trees and woodland: testing the value of insect remains. Journal of Archaeological Science, 33 (10). pp. 1368-1380. ISSN 0305-4403

Kenward, H. and Carrott, J. (2006) Insect species associations characterise past occupation sites. Journal of Archaeological Science, 33 (10). pp. 1452-1473. ISSN 0305-4403

Gearey, B.R., Hall, A.R., Bunting, M.J. et al. (3 more authors) (2005) Recent palaeoenvironmental evidence for the processing of hemp (Cannabis sativa L.) in eastern England during the medieval period. Medieval Archaeology. pp. 317-322. ISSN 0076-6097

Kenward, H. (2004) Do insect remains from historic-period archaeological occupation sites track climate change in Northern England? Environmental Archaeology, 9 (1). pp. 47-59. ISSN 1461-4103

Book Section

Hall, A. and Kenward, H. (2004) Actively decaying or just poorly preserved? Can we tell when plant and invertebrate remains in urban archaeological deposits decayed? In: Nixon, T., (ed.) Preserving archaeological remains in situ? Proceedings of the 2nd [PARIS] conference 12-14th September 2001. Museum of London Archaeology Service , London , pp. 4-10.

Hall, A. and Kenward, H. (2004) Setting people in their environment: plant and animal remains from Anglo-Scandinavian York. In: Aspects of Anglo-Scandinavian York. The Archaeology of York . Council for British Archaeology , York, UK , pp. 372-426.

Hall, A. and Kenward, H. (2003) Evidence for tanning from plant and insect remains. In: Mould, Q., Carlisle, I. and Cameron, E., (eds.) Leather and Leatherworking in Anglo-Scandinavian and Medieval York. The Archaeology of York . York Archaeological Trust and Council for British Archaeology , York, UK , pp. 3230-3231.

Dobney, K., Hall, A. and Kenward, H. (2000) The bioarchaeology of Anglo-Saxon Yorkshire: present and future perspectives. In: Geake, H. and Kenny, J., (eds.) Early Deira: Archaeological studies of the East Riding in the fourth to ninth centuries AD. Oxbow Books , Oxford, UK , pp. 133-140.

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