REFERENCES


Burns, J.A. 1996. Vertebrate paleontology and the alleged ice-free corridor: the meat of the matter. Quaternary International 32:107-112.

DRIVER, J.C.1988. Late Pleistocene and Holocene vertebrates and palaeoenvironments from Charlie Lake Cave, northeast British Columbia. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 25:1545-1553.

DRIVER, J.C.1996. The Significance of the fauna from Charlie Lake Cave. In Carlson, R.L. and Dalla Bona, L., ed. Early Human Occupation in British Columbia. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press. 21-28.

DRIVER, J.C. 1999. Raven Skeletons from Paleoindian contexts, Charlie Lake Cave, British Columbia. American Antiquity, 64(2):289-298.

DRIVER, J.C. and HOBSON, K.A. 1992. A 10500-year sequence of bird remains from the southern boreal forest region of western Canada. Arctic 45(2):105-110.

FLADMARK, K.R. 1996. The prehistory of Charlie Lake Cave. In: Carlson, R.L. and Dalla Bona, L., ed. Early Human Occupation in British Columbia. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press. 11-20.

FLADMARK, K.R., DRIVER, J.C. and ALEXANDER, D.1988. The Palaeoindian component at Charlie Lake Cave (HbRf 39), British Columbia. American Antiquity 53(2):371-384.

HANDLY, M.J.1993. Lithic assemblage variability at Charlie Lake Cave (HbRf-39) : a stratified rockshelter in northeastern British Columbia. Unpublished M.A. thesis, Department of Anthropology, Trent University, Peterborough, Ontario.

LUNDELIUS, E.L., GRAHAM, R.W., ANDERSON, E., GUILDAY, J., HOLMAN, J.A., STEADMAN, D.W., WEBB, D.S. 1983. Terrestrial vertebrate faunas. In : Porter, S.C., ed. Late-Quaternary environments of the United States, volume 1, the late Pleistocene. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. 311-353.

MacDonald, G.M. (1987). Postglacial development of the subalpine-boreal transition forest of western Canada. Journal of Ecology, 75, 303-320.

White, J.M. (1983). Late Quaternary geochronology and palaeoecology of the upper Peace River District, Canada. Unpublished PhD Dissertation, Department of Archaeology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia.


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