This page lists research projects and publications that use XRONOS.
If you would like to add your research to the list, please get in touch!
Papers
Johannsen, J. W., Laabs, J., Bunbury, M. M. E., & Mortensen, M. F. 2024. Subsistence and Population Development from the Middle Neolithic B (2800–2350 BCE) to the Late Neolithic (2350–1700 BCE) in Southern Scandinavia. PLOS ONE 19(10): e0301938. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0301938
Bilotti, G., Kempf, M., & Morillo Leon, J. M. 2024. Modelling Land and Water Based Movement Corridors in the Western Mediterranean: A Least Cost Path Analysis from Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age Ivory Records. Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences 16(8): 122. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-024-02029-x
Schirrmacher, J., Feeser, I., Filipović, d., Stika, H.-P., Oelbüttel, M., & Kirleis, W.. 2024. Cereal Agriculture in Prehistoric North-Central Europe and South-East Iberia: Changes and Continuities as Potential Adaptations to Climate. In Perspectives on Socio-Environmental Transformations in Ancient Europe, edited by J. Müller, W. Kirleis, and N. Taylor, pp. 143–74. Cham: Springer Nature Switzerland. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-53314-3_6
Hinz, M., Roe, J., Laabs, J., Heitz, C., & Kolář, J., 2022. Bayesian inference of prehistoric population dynamics from multiple proxies: a case study from the North of the Swiss Alps. Preprint: https://doi.org/10.31235/osf.io/dbcag
2023–2027: Caroline Heitz (Bern), RISE – Climate Change Resilience and Vulnerabilities of Bronze Age Waterfront Communities (2200–800 BC) (SNSF Project #208840)
2023–2025: Marta Andriiovych (Oxford), Off the beaten track: The Significance of the Black Sea Regions for European Neolithization (SNSF Project #214120)
2021–2022: Mirco Brunner (Bern), Climate change, mobility and transformation processes. Human-environment interactions in (pre)historical societies of the Arctic (SNSF Project #199868)
2020–2022: Caroline Heitz (Kiel), TimeArch – Time and Temporality in Archaeology. Approaching (Trans)formations of Settlement Communities in Prehistoric Wetland Site (SNSF Project #194326)
2017–2021: Marco Conedera (WSL) & Albert Hafner (Bern), QuantHum – Quantifying human impacts to tease apart cultural and climatic drivers of Holocene vegetation change (SNSF Project #169371)