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nikolaas johannes van der merwe - University of Cape Town

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J.C. Sealy & N. J. <strong>van</strong> <strong>der</strong> Merwe. Isotope assessment <strong>of</strong> Holocene human diets in the<br />

southwestern <strong>Cape</strong>, South Africa. Nature 315:138-40.<br />

J.C. Sealy & N.J. <strong>van</strong> <strong>der</strong> Merwe. The first accelerator radiocarbon dates in South<br />

African archaeology. South African Journal <strong>of</strong> Science 81:350-351.<br />

1986 J.C. Sealy & N. J. <strong>van</strong> <strong>der</strong> Merwe. Isotope assessment and the seasonal mobility<br />

hypothesis in the southwestern <strong>Cape</strong> <strong>of</strong> South Africa. Current Anthropology 27:135-150.<br />

1987 N.J. <strong>van</strong> <strong>der</strong> Merwe, J.C. Sealy & R. Yates. First accelerator carbon-14 date for pigment<br />

from a rock painting. South African Journal <strong>of</strong> Science 83:56-57.<br />

J.A. Lee-Thorp & N.J. <strong>van</strong> <strong>der</strong> Merwe. Carbon isotope analysis <strong>of</strong> fossil bone apatite.<br />

South African Journal <strong>of</strong> Science 83: 712-713.<br />

J.A. Lee-Thorp, J.L. Lanham, D. Wenner & N.J.<strong>van</strong> <strong>der</strong> Merwe. A carbon isotope survey<br />

<strong>of</strong> South African honey. South African Journal <strong>of</strong> Science 83:186.<br />

J.C. Sealy & N.J. <strong>van</strong> <strong>der</strong> Merwe. Stable carbon isotopes, Later Stone Age diets and<br />

seasonal mobility in the south-western <strong>Cape</strong>. In J.Parkington & M. Hall (Eds.): Papers<br />

on the Prehistory <strong>of</strong> the Western <strong>Cape</strong>, South Africa. British Archaeological Reports,<br />

Oxford, pp 262-268.<br />

J. C. Sealy & N.J. <strong>van</strong> <strong>der</strong> Merwe. On stable carbon isotopes and dietary reconstruction:<br />

reply to Jacobson and Parkington. Current Anthropology 28:94-95.<br />

J.C. Sealy, N. J. <strong>van</strong> <strong>der</strong> Merwe, J.A. Lee Thorp & J.L. Lanham. Nitrogen isotope<br />

ecology in southern Africa: Implications for environmental and dietary tracing.<br />

Cosmochimica et Geochimica Acta 51:2707-2717.<br />

N.J. <strong>van</strong> <strong>der</strong> Merwe & D.H. Avery. Science and magic in African technology:<br />

Traditional iron smelting in Malawi. Africa 57:143-172.<br />

D.B. Wenner & N.J. <strong>van</strong> <strong>der</strong> Merwe. Mining for the lowest grade ore: traditional iron<br />

production in Northern Malawi. Geoarchaeology 2:199-216.<br />

T.M. Evers & N.J. <strong>van</strong> <strong>der</strong> Merwe. Iron age ceramics from Phalaborwa, north eastern<br />

Transvaal Lowveld, South Africa. South African Archaeological Bulleten 42:87-106.<br />

1988 J.E. Buikstra, W. Antry, E. Breitburg, L. Eisenberg & N.J. <strong>van</strong> <strong>der</strong> Merwe. Diet and<br />

health in the Nashville Basin: human adaptation and maize agriculture in Middle<br />

Tennessee. In B.V. Kennedy & G.M. LeMoine (Eds.): Diet and Subsistence: Current<br />

Archaeological Perspectives. Proceedings <strong>of</strong> the Chacmool Conference, Calgary,<br />

Canada, pp 243-259.

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