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Carla S. Hadden

Researcher at University of Georgia

Publications -  31
Citations -  323

Carla S. Hadden is an academic researcher from University of Georgia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Radiocarbon dating & Oyster. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 25 publications receiving 208 citations. Previous affiliations of Carla S. Hadden include American Museum of Natural History.

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Radiocarbon re-dating of contact-era Iroquoian history in northeastern North America.

TL;DR: The revised time frame dramatically rewrites 16th-century contact-era history in this region, with key processes of violent conflict, community coalescence, and the introduction of European goods all happened much later and more rapidly than previously assumed.
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Market share and recent hiring trends in anthropology faculty positions.

TL;DR: This work identifies and rank PhD programs in terms of numbers of graduates who have obtained tenure-track academic jobs; examines long-term and ongoing trends in the programs producing doctorates for the discipline as a whole, as well as for the subfields of archaeology, bioanthropology, and sociocultural anthropology.
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Mediterranean radiocarbon offsets and calendar dates for prehistory

TL;DR: Controlling for interlaboratory variation, radiocarbon data from Europe and the Mediterranean in the second to earlier first millennia BCE suggest that some small, but critical, periods of variation for Mediterranean radiokarbon levels exist, especially associated with major reversals or plateaus in the atmospheric radiOCarbon record.
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Indigenous oyster fisheries persisted for millennia and should inform future management

TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigate Native American oyster harvest through time in North America and Australia, placing these data in the context of sea level histories and historical catch records, and find that oyster fisheries were pervasive across space and through time, persisting for 5000-10,000 years or more.
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14C Variations in Pre-Bomb Nearshore Habitats of the Florida Panhandle, USA

TL;DR: In this paper, the radiocarbon data for known-age, pre-bomb marine gastropods, Busycon sinistrum and Strombus alatus, collected between AD 1924 and 1946 from nearshore environments of the Florida Panhandle, on the northern Gulf of Mexico.