Title | Date | Reference | Authors | Call # | ISSN | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Growing fibrous hemp and production of hemp fibres in the 1950s. By the example of the village of Mezdreya, Montana region | 2019 | Bulgarska etnologiia 45 (3): 340-62 | H6/KVR [BULGARSKA-] | 1310-5213 | |||
Shared image metaphors of the corn lifeway in Mesoamerica and the American Southwest | 2012 | Journal of anthropological research 68 (4): 473-502 | H6 [SOUTHWESTERN-] | 0091-7710 | |||
Archaic forms of farming in Lemk villages in the region of Velikoberezianshchyna | 2008 | Narodna tvorchist’ ta etnohrafiya 3 (): 71-82 | H6/KVY [NARODNA-] | 0130-6936 | |||
Scenarios as a tool for eliciting and understanding farmers' biological knowledge | 2005 | Field Methods 17 (3): 283-301 | HI/KFB [CAM-] | 1525-822X | |||
Changes in the distribution of the !Nara plant that affect the life of the Topnaar people in the lower Kuiseb river, Namib desert | 2005 | African study monographs 30 (): 65-75 | H6/KY [AFRICAN-] | 0285-1601 | |||
Farmer's selection of local and improved pearl millet varieties in Ovamboland, northern Namibia | 2005 | African study monographs 30 (): 107-17 | H6/KY [AFRICAN-] | 0285-1601 | |||
Factors controlling geographical distribution in savanna vegetation in Namibia | 2005 | African study monographs 30 (): 135-51 | H6/KY [AFRICAN-] | 0285-1601 | |||
Ecological mutualism in Navajo corrals: implications for Navajo environmental perceptions and human /plant coevolution | 2001 | Journal of anthropological research 57 (1): 17-39 | H6 [SOUTHWESTERN-] | 0091-7710 | |||
The archaeological significance of patterns of anomalous vegetation on a raised mire in the Solway estuary and the processes in their formation | 2001 | Journal of archaeological science 28 (1): 1-18 | 0305-4403 | ||||
Flax and hemp processing | 2000 | Zborník slovenského národného Múzea: etnografia 94 (41): 78-87 | H6/KVL [SLOVENSKE-] | 0139-5475 | |||
The growth of family trees: understanding Huaorani perceptions of the forest | 1993 | Man (New Series) 28 (4): 635-52 |