| Sander E. I. Aerts |
Acknowledgements I would like to thank the following people, without whom this paper could not have been realised: the editorial board of INTER-SECTION, for giving me this opportunity and their full support, Drs. Tom Hakbijl( Naturalis Biodiversity Center) for sharing his knowledge with me, Dr. Roos van Oosten( Leiden University), for always willing to discuss and correct my writing, and my anonymous peer reviewer for providing me with great feedback. I also want to thank my friends who read the paper in various stages to help me improve my writing, you know who you are.
Bibliography Aerts, S., in prep. Medieval Manure Pits: a Coleopteran Evaluation( preliminary title). Leiden( upcoming MSc thesis University of Leiden).
Binford, L. R., 1964. A Consideration of Archaeological Research Design. American antiquity. 29( 4), 425-441.
Buckland, P. C., E. Panagiotakopulu and P. I. Bukland, 2004. What’ s eating Halvdan the Black? Fossil insects in the study of a burial mound in its landscape context, in J. H. Larsen and P. Rolfsen( eds.). Halvdanshaugenarkeologi, historie og naturvitenskap. Oslo: Universitetets kulturhistoriske museer, 353-378.
Buckland, P. I., 2014. The Bugs Ecology Package( BugsCEP) database: 1000 sites and half a million fossils later. Quaternary International 341, 272-282.
Buckland, P. C., E. Panagiotakopulu and G. Sveinbjarnardóttir, 2009. A failed invader in the North Atlantic, the case of Aglenus brunneus Gyll.( Col., Colydiidae), a blind flightless beetle from Iceland. Biological Invasions 11( 6), 1239-1245.
Carrott, J. and H. Kenward, 2001. Species Associations Among Insect Remains from Urban Archaeological Deposits and their Significance in Reconstructing the Past Human Environment. Journal of Archaeological Science 28, 887-905.
Kenward, H. K., 1978. The Analysis of Archaeological Insect Assemblages: A New Approach York: Council for British Archaeology.( The Archaeology of York Principles and Methods 19 / 1).
Kenward, H. K., and A. Hall, 1997. Enhancing Bioarchaeological Interpretation Using Indicator Groups: Stable Manure as a Paradigm. Journal of Archaeological Science 24, 663-673.
King, G. A., 2014. Exaptation and synanthropic insects: A diachronic interplay between biology and culture. Environmental Archaeology: The Journal of Human Palaeoecology 19( 1), 12-22.
King, G. A., H. Kenward, E. Schmidt and D. Smith, 2014. Six-Legged Hitchhikers: An Archaeobiogeographical Account of the Early Dispersal of Grain Beetles. Journal of the North Atlantic 23, 1-18.
Robinson, W. H., 1996. Urban Entomology: insect and mite pests in the human environment. London: Chapman & Hall.
Schiffer, M. B., 1972. Archaeological Context and Systemic Context. American Antiquity 37( 2), 156-165.
Schiffer, M. B., 1987. Formation Processes of the Archaeological Record. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
Smith, D. N., 2012. Insects in the City: An archaeoentomological perspective on London’ s past. Oxford: BAR Publishing( BAR British Series 561).
Smith, D. N., 2013. Defining an indicator package to allow identification of‘ cesspits’ in the archaeological record. Journal of Archaeological Science 40, 526-543.
Welinder, S., 1991. Ecofacts and the transition from systemic to archaeological context. Laborativ Arkeologi 5, 27-36.
Elias, S. A., 2010. Advances in Quaternary Entomology. Amsterdam: Elsevier( Developments in Quaternary Sciences 12).
Forbes, V., and K. Milek, 2014. Insects, activity areas and turf building’ s interiors: An ethno-archaeoentomological case study from 19th to early 20th century Þverá, northeast Iceland. Quaternary International 341, 195- 215.
Kenward, H. K., 1975. The Biological and Archaeological implications of the beetle Aglenus brunneus( Gyllenhaal) in Ancient Faunas. Journal of Archaeological Science 2, 63-69.
p. 28 | VOL II | INTER-SECTION | 2016