//--> //--> //-->
Toggle navigation
Logout
Change account settings
EN
DE
ES
FR
A-Z
Beta
About EconBiz
News
Thesaurus (STW)
Research Skills
Help
EN
DE
ES
FR
My account
Logout
Change account settings
Login
Publications
Events
Your search terms
Search
Retain my current filters
~isPartOf:"Articles by John Komlos"
~isPartOf:"Post-Print / HAL"
~subject:"Anthropometrics"
Search options
All Fields
Title
Exact title
Subject
Author
Institution
ISBN/ISSN
Published in...
Publisher
Open Access only
Advanced
Search history
My EconBiz
Favorites
Loans
Reservations
Fines
You are here:
Home
Virtual R&D Teams: A potential...
Similar by person
Narrow search
Delete all filters
| 3 applied filters
Subject
All
Anthropometrics
Industrial Revolution
13
Malthusian Trap
9
height
8
economic growth
6
nutrition
5
nutritional status
5
18th century
3
Anthropometric history
3
Germany
3
Malthusian trap
3
Virtual teams
3
19th Century
2
Antebellum period
2
Biological standard of living
2
Collaboration
2
France
2
Literature review
2
Virtual R&D teams
2
Virtual team
2
biological standard of living
2
cross-functional teams
2
height cycles
2
physical stature
2
population
2
product development
2
small and medium enterprises
2
social status
2
18th Century
1
America
1
American population
1
Americas
1
Austria-Hungary
1
Austro-HUngarian Empire
1
Austro-Hungary
1
Banks
1
Central Bank policies
1
Chemistry
1
Collaboration teams
1
Colonial America
1
more ...
less ...
Type of publication
All
Book / Working Paper
1
Language
All
Undetermined
1
Author
All
Komlos, John
1
Institution
All
Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
1
Published in...
All
Articles by John Komlos
Post-Print / HAL
Discussion Papers in Economics
2
MPRA Paper
1
Munich Dissertations in Economics
1
Source
All
RePEc
1
Showing
1
-
1
of
1
Sort
relevance
articles prioritized
date (newest first)
date (oldest first)
1
On the Biological Standard of Living of Eighteenth-Century Americans: Taller, Richer, Healthier
Komlos, John
-
Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät, …
Based on the height data of 18th-century American soldiers the inference is warranted that Americans were taller than Europeans, and the wedge widened during the course of the century.
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005463809
Saved in:
Results per page
10
25
50
100
250
A service of the
zbw
×
Loading...
//-->