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Nicholas Blurton-Jones
Nicholas Blurton-Jones
Emeritus Professor, University of California Los Angleles
Verified email at g.ucla.edu
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Hadza women's time allocation, offspring provisioning, and the evolution of long postmenopausal life spans
K Hawkes, JF O'Connell, NG Blurton Jones
Current Anthropology 38 (4), 551-577, 1997
9391997
Ethological studies of child behaviour
N Blurton-Jones
NG Blurton-Jones (Ed.), 97-127, 1972
645*1972
Hadza hunting, butchering, and bone transport and their archaeological implications
JF O'Connell, K Hawkes, NB Jones
Journal of Anthropological research 44 (2), 113-161, 1988
6391988
Tolerated theft, suggestions about the ecology and evolution of sharing, hoarding and scrounging
NG Blurton Jones
Information (International Social Science Council) 26 (1), 31-54, 1987
4451987
An ethological study of some aspects of social behaviour of children in nursery school
NG Blurton Jones
432*1967
Hardworking hadza grandmothers
K Hawkes, JF O’Connell, NG Blurton Jones
Comparative socioecology, 341-366, 1989
3691989
Bushman birth spacing: a test for optimal interbirth intervals
NB Jones
Ethology and Sociobiology 7 (2), 91-105, 1986
3581986
Hadza scavenging: Implications for Plio/Pleistocene hominid subsistence
JF O'Connell, K Hawkes, NB Jones
Current Anthropology 29 (2), 356-363, 1988
2851988
Hunting and nuclear families: some lessons from the Hadza about mens work
K Hawkes, JF OConnell, NG Blurton Jones, D Bell, RB Bird, DW Bird, ...
Current Anthropology 42 (5), 681-709, 2001
2802001
Kung knowledge of animal behavior
N Blurton Jones, MJ Konner
Studies of the, 325-348, 1976
262*1976
Demography and evolutionary ecology of Hadza hunter-gatherers
NB Jones
Cambridge University Press, 2016
2462016
Antiquity of postreproductive life: Are there modern impacts on hunter‐gatherer postreproductive life spans?
NG Blurton Jones, K Hawkes, JF O'Connell
American Journal of Human Biology 14 (2), 184-205, 2002
2342002
Testing adaptiveness of culturally determined behaviour: Do Bushman women maximise their reproductive success by spacing births widely and foraging seldom
N Blurton Jones, RM Sibly
Human behaviour and adaptation 18, 135-157, 1978
2291978
Institute of Child Health, University of London and RM Sibly Department of Zoology, University of Oxford Many recent writings in ecological anthropology or cultural
NB Jones
Human behaviour and adaptation 18, 135, 1978
229*1978
Selection for delayed maturity
NB Jones, FW Marlowe
Human Nature 13 (2), 199-238, 2002
2112002
Distribution of refuse-producing activities at Hadza residential base camps
JF O’Connell, K Hawkes, NB Jones
The interpretation of archaeological spatial patterning, 61-76, 1991
2001991
Modelling and measuring costs of children in two foraging societies
NG Blurton Jones, K Hawkes, JF O’Connell
Comparative socioecology of humans and other mammals. London: Basil …, 1989
1911989
Patterns in the distribution, site structure and assemblage composition of Hadza kill-butchering sites
JF O'Connell, K Hawkes, NG Blurton-Jones
Journal of Archaeological Science 19 (3), 319-345, 1992
1821992
Paternal investment and hunter-gatherer divorce rates
NGB Jones, FW Marlowe, K Hawkes, JF O’Connell
Adaptation and human behavior: An anthropological perspective 69, 2000
163*2000
Differences between Hadza and! Kung children’s work: Original affluence or practical reason?
NG Blurton Jones, K Hawkes, P Draper
Key issues in hunter-gatherer research, 189-215, 1994
151*1994
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