Citations:ubiquity


 * 2018, Joseph A. Tainter, Evolving Complexity And Environmental Risk In The Prehistoric Southwest, CRC Press (ISBN 9780429961137), page 97:
 * Beans tend to decay rapidly once discarded, and the generally low bean ubiquities are probably not representative of the contribution of beans to ...
 * 2020, Richard W. Edwards IV, Indigenous Life around the Great Lakes: War, Climate, and Culture, University of Notre Dame Pess (ISBN 9780268108199)
 * In other words, unless maize ubiquities are extremely low, maize plays little role in determining a site&#39;s position. Negative values indicate that cultigens ...
 * 2015, David A. Gregory, David R. Wilcox, Zuni Origins: Toward a New Synthesis of Southwestern Archaeology, University of Arizona Press (ISBN 9780816533404), page 59:
 * In those cases where requisite data are available, even the earliest maizeproducing sites have high (] 80 percent) ubiquities of maize in flotation ...
 * 1947, N. Sundararama Sastry, Statistical Study of India's Industrial Development
 * First considering transport charges, raw materials may be divided m}^two groups, (1) &quot;ubiquities&quot;, i.e., those which are available everywhere like clay, ...
 * 1975, John Carl Lowe, S. Moryadas, The Geography of Movement
 * If only ubiquities are used, the plant will be located at the market , because the costs of assembly and distribution are eliminated at that location.
 * 2017, Mark Perlman, Charles J. Leven, Benjamin Chinitz, Spatial, Regional and Population Economics: Essays in honor of Edgar M Hoover, Routledge (ISBN 9781351594233), page 151:
 * Materials were either ubiquities, meaning that they were everywhere present ( presumably at equal price ) , or localized . Weber reasoned that firms whose ...