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Some Notes on the Prehistory of the Eastern Part of Central Europe

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 October 2013

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Extract

Having lately returned from Czecho-Slovakia, where I was attending an Anthropological Congress and studying museum collections, I thought perhaps it might interest members of the P.S.E.A. to have a note on what appears to be the succession of prehistoric cultures in that country.

There seems to be nothing so far found corresponding to our Lower Palæolithic or earlier industries. It is true that there is one solitary lump of flint, roughly chipped, with large flake-scars and an ochreous patina that has been claimed as Lower Palæolithic in date, but it is really very little to go on. A poor kind of Mousterian, mostly not made of good flint, seems fairly common in Moravia although it has not been found near Prague. On the other hand, many of the tools in an undoubted Upper Palæolithic series recall by their technique and shape the industry of La Quina.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1924

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References

page 180 note * Some years ago, on a visit to Buda-Pest, one noted the rarity of beakers and yet their fully developed character

page 181 note * The finds from Laibach, Yugoslavia should be also dated hereabouts.

page 181 note † Mr. G. Childe places a part at any rate of the Vinca finds just above the lower Tordos, and the Lengyel cultures just below the Upper Tordos series.