Author: Michael Balter
Links:
-AUTHOR SITE: MichaelBalter.com -AUTHOR PAGE: Michael Balter (Simon Says) -Çatalhöyük: Excavations of a Neolithic Anatolian Höyük -Mysteries of Çatalhöyük (Science Museum of Minnesota) -ESSAY: The Seeds of Civilization: Why did humans first turn from nomadic wandering to villages and togetherness? The answer may lie in a 9,500-year-old settlement in central Turkey (Michael Balter, May 2005, Smithsonian) -ESSAY: Search for the Indo-Europeans: Were Kurgan horsemen or Anatolian farmers responsible for creating and spreading the world's most far-flung language family? (Michael Balter, 27 February 2004, Science) -ESSAY: Why Anatolia? (Michael Balter, 27 February 2004, Science) -ESSAY: Did Plaster Hold Neolithic Society Together?: Recent studies around a 9500-year-old settlement suggest it was built in the middle of marshland. How then did its inhabitants grow their food? (Michael Balter, 14 December 2001, Science) -ESSAY: A Long Season Puts Çatalhöyük in Context (Michael Balter, 29 October 1999, Science) -ESSAY: The First Cities: Why Settle Down?: The Mystery of Communities (Michael Balter, 20 November 1998, Science) -ESSAY: THE FIRST CITIES: Digging Into the Life of the Mind (Michael Balter,, 20 November 1998, Science) -ESSAY:Let 'intelligent design' and science rumble (Michael Balter, 10/02/05, LA Times) -ESSAY: Evolutionary Genetics: Are Humans Still Evolving?: The goal of much of modern medicine and culture is effectively to stop evolution. Is that happening? (Michael Balter, 8 July 2005, Science) -ESSAY: Why Get Smart? (Michael Balter, 15 February 2002, Science) -ESSAY: Becoming Human: What Made Humans Modern?: Could our species have been born in a rapid burst of change? Researchers from different disciplines are trying to find out. (Michael Balter, 15 February 2002, Science) -ESSAY: Shake-Up in Paris: At 109, the International Herald Tribune is at a crossroads (Michael Balter, July/August 1996, Columbia Journalism Review) -ESSAY: Killing the Messengers: Thirty-seven murdered journalists - and counting. (Michael Balter, May/June 1995, Columbia Journalism Review) -ESSAY: 'Onward ... Over the Sea to Skye' (Michael Balter, August 23, 1991, International Herald Tribune) -ARCHIVES: "Michael Balter" (International Herald Tribune) -ARTICLE: Redesigned Rocket Fires Up Eurospace Program (Michael Balter, November 17, 1993, International Herald Tribune) -ARTICLE: Eggheads à la Lyonnaise (Michael Balter, October 5, 1993, International Herald Tribune) -ARTICLE: Summerhill's Radical Recipe Survives (Michael Balter, February 17, 1993, International Herald Tribune) -ARTICLE: 400 Years Later, Oxford Press Thrives (Michael Balter, February 16, 1994, International Herald Tribune) -ARTICLE: Biopesticides Use Genetics to Protect Both Crops and Environment (Michael Balter, December 19, 1991, International Herald Tribune) -ARTICLE: 'Jumping Genes' Get Vaccine Role (Michael Balter, September 17, 1991, International Herald Tribune) -ARTICLE: Ile de France Museums Offer Aesthetics in a Pastoral Setting (Michael Balter, October 27, 1992, International Herald Tribune) -ARTICLE: Biotech Bubbly - A Headache for Pests (Michael Balter, November 17, 1993, International Herald Tribune) -REVIEW: of Guns, Germs & Steel: Is This How the West Won? (Michael Balter, Science) -ARCHIVES: "Michael Balter" (Find Articles) -REVIEW: of The Goddess and the Bull: Catalhöyük: An Archaeological Journey to the Dawn of Civilization by Michael Balter (Steven Mithen, Science) -REVIEW: of Goddess and the Bull (Pat Shipman, Nature) -EDITOR'S PICK: Goddess and the Bull (Archaeology.org) -REVIEW: of The Goddess and the Bull(Stein Jarving, Eutopia) -REVIEW: of Goddess and the Bull (K. Kris Hirst, Archaeology: About.com) -REVIEW: of Goddess and the Bull (G. Hall, Book Loons) -REVIEW: of Goddess and the Bull (Matamea.org) The Goddess and the Bull : Catalhoyuk: An Archaeological Journey to the Dawn of Civilization (2005) - Michael Balter (-) (Grade:A-) |
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