1.
Robert Orr Whyte Land and land appraisal ; Dr. W. Junk b. v. Publishers, The hague 1976, XIV + 376 pp., 38 figs., 39 tables, 3 photographs, 100.—Dutch glds
J. Semal (red.) Traité de Pathologie Végétale ; Les Presses agronomiques de Gembloux, A. S. B. L., Belgium, 1989, 621 pp.
Unlocking the wealth of Dutch pollen data for future research and education
Palaeo-ecological and archaeological analysis of two Dutch Celtic fields (Zeijen-Noordse Veld and Wekerom-Lunteren): solving the puzzle of local Celtic field bank formation
A meta-analysis of the presence of crop plants in the Dutch and German terp area between 700 bc and ad 1600
Correction to: Small things can make a big difference: a comparison of pollen and macrobotanical records of some food plants from medieval and post-medieval cesspits in the Netherl...
2.
3.
Vegetation history and agriculture in the cover-sand area west of Breda (province of Noord-Brabant, The Netherlands)
Neolithisation at the site Brandwijk-Kerkhof, the Netherlands: natural vegetation, human impact and plant food subsistence
“Ontellicke boomen” or “countless trees”: reconstructing the late medieval vegetation surrounding the 16th century St Margaretha Convent, Leiden, The Netherlands
Plant remains from the Kreftenheye Formation (Eemian) at Raalte, The Netherlands