MATEICIUCOVÁ, Inna. Mesolithic traditions and the origin of the Linear Pottery culture (LBK). In BAR International Series 1304, 91-108. 1st ed. Oxford: Archaeopress, Publishers of British Archaeological Reports, 2004, p. 91-108. B.A.R. International Series 1304. ISBN 1-84171-654-5.
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Basic information
Original name Mesolithic traditions and the origin of the Linear Pottery culture (LBK)
Name in Czech Mezolitické tradice a puvod kultury lineární
Authors MATEICIUCOVÁ, Inna (203 Czech Republic, guarantor).
Edition 1. vyd. Oxford, BAR International Series 1304, 91-108, p. 91-108, 18 pp. B.A.R. International Series 1304, 2004.
Publisher Archaeopress, Publishers of British Archaeological Reports
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Chapter(s) of a specialized book
Field of Study Archaeology, anthropology, ethnology
Country of publisher United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
RIV identification code RIV/00216224:14210/04:00010845
Organization unit Faculty of Arts
ISBN 1-84171-654-5
Keywords in English Mesolithic-Neolithic transition; Neolithisation of psyche; chipped stone industry; regular blade production; distribution of stone raw material; trapezes; borers/perforators; exchange of partners
Tags borers/perforators, chipped stone industry, exchange of partners, Mesolithic-Neolithic transition, Neolithisation of psyche, regular blade production, Trapezes
Tags International impact
Changed by Changed by: Mgr. Inna Mateiciucová, Ph.D., učo 5897. Changed: 26/2/2010 18:02.
Abstract
Chipped stone tools made by both Mesolithic foragers and Neolithic farmers, play a significant role in discussions about the beginning of the Neolithic in Central Europe (LBK culture). In this paper I compare the technology of blade production, the distribution of raw stone sources and the occurrence of so-called culturally specific tool types (trapezes, borers and retouched blades) of the chipped stone industries of Mesolithic and Early Neolithic sites in Central Europe and Balkans. I suggest indigenous development of the LBK culture in the region of Transdanubia. I would like to emphasize the psychological implications on Neolithisation. I suggest long before the physical acceptance of the Neolithic, some changes occurred at the psychic level. First, there was a Neolithisation of the hunter-gatherer soul (psyche), followed by Neolithisation at the material level. On the end of this paper I try to explain the rapid dispersion of the Early LBK culture throughout Central Europe.
Abstract (in Czech)
stípaná industrie, trapézy, vrtáky/dírkovace, výroba pravidelných cepelí, neolitizace psýché, vznik LnK, snatková politika, mezolitické tradice
Links
MSM 142100001, plan (intention)Name: Centrum archeologickrch výzkumů sociálních struktur pravěku až vrcholného středověku
Investor: Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the CR
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