2009. Indigenous Resouce Management: Past, present, and Future. Journal of Ethnobiology, special issue. Vol 29 .
2009. Ancient Land Use and Managment of Ebey's Prairie, Whidbey Island, Washington. In Indigenous Resource Management: Past, Present and Future , edited by D.Lepofsky. Journal of Ethnobiology 29:161-166.
2009. Traditional Resource Management: Past, Present and Future. In Indigenous Resource Management: Past, Present and Future , edited by D.Lepofsky. Journal of Ethnobiology 29:184:212
2009. Exploring Stó:lo-Coast Salish Interaction and Identity in Ancient Houses and Settlements in the Fraser Valley, British Columbia. American Antiquity 74:595-626.
2008. Deconstructing the McCallum Site. BC Studies 158:3-31
2008. Documenting Ancient Plant Management in the Northwest of North America. Botany 86:129-145
2007. Coast Salish Interaction: A View from the Inlets. Canadian Journal of Archaeology 31:190-223
2005. Documenting precontact plant management on the Northwest Coast: An example of prescribed burning in the central and upper Fraser Valley, British Columbia. In Keeping it Living: Traditions of Plant Use and Cultivation on the Northwest Coast, edited by D.E. Deur and N.J. Turner University of Washington Press, Seattle.
2005. More on Richness and Diversity in Archaeobiological Assemblages. Journal of Ethnobiology 25 (2).
2005. Climate Change and Culture Change on the Southern Coast of British Columbia 2400–1200 B.P.: An Hypothesis. American Antiquity 70: 267–293.
2004. The Northwest. In Plants and People in Ancient North America, edited by P. Minnis. Smithsonian Institution Press. in press.
2004. A Question of Intensity: Exploring the Role of Plant Foods in Northern Plateau Prehistory, In Complex Hunter-Gatherers: Evolution and Organization of Prehistoric Communities on the Plateau of Northwestern North America, edited by B. Prentiss and I. Kuijt. University of Utah Press.
2004. The Paleoethnobotanical Remains from the Cape Addington Site. In The Cape Addington Site, edited by M. Moss. Univ. of Oregon.
2003. Modeling ancient plant use on the Northwest Coast: Towards an understanding of mobility and sedentism. Journal of Archaeological Science 30: 1357–1371.
Lepofsky, D., E. Heyerdahl, K. Lertzman, D. Schaepe, and B. Mierendorf.
2003. Climate, Humans, and Fire in the History of Chittenden Meadow. Conservation Ecology 7:5. [online] URL: http://www.consecol.org/vol7/iss3/art5
2003. The use of driftwood on the North Pacific Coast: An example from Southeast Alaska. Journal of Ethnobiology 23: 125–141.
2003. The Ethnobotany of cultivated plants of the Maohi of the Society Islands. Economic Botany 57: 73–92.
2003. 11,000 years of fire history and climate in the mountain hemlock rainforests of southwestern British Columbia based on sedimentary charcoal. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 33: 292–312.
Ostapkowicz, J., D. Lepofsky, R. Schulting, and S. McHalsie.
2002. The use of cattail (Typha latifolia L.) down as a sacred substance by the Interior and Coast Salish. Journal of Ethnobiology 21: 77–90.
2002 Long-term fire regime estimated from soil charcoal in coastal temperate rainforests. Conservation Ecology 6(2): 5. [online] URL: http://www.consecol.org/vol6/iss2/art5
2000. The archaeology of the Scowlitz site, Southwestern British Columbia. Journal of Field Archaeology 27(4): 391–416. [released in 2002]
2002. Plants and Pithouses: archaeobotany and site formation processes at the Keatley Creek village site, In Hunter-gatherer Archaeobotany: Perspectives from the Northern Temperate Zone, edited by Sarah L.R. Mason & Jon G. Hather, pp. 62–73. Institute of Archaeology, University College of London, London.