TY - GEN N1 - 29 cm L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/61031/PDF/WA308_80153_PIII149_O-homogenicznosci-st_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Przegląd Archeologiczny T. 40 (1992) PY - 1992 EP - 112 KW - Paleolithic -- Poland KW - Ertebølle culture KW - regional neolithization -- Poland KW - Western Pomerania (Poland) A1 - Kabaciński, Jacek PB - Instytut Archeolgoii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk VL - 40 CY - Wrocław SP - 105 T1 - O homogeniczności stanowisk archeologicznych : uwagi do artykułu T. Galińskiego „Zespoły typu Tanowo : zachodniopomorski ekwiwalent ugrupowania Ertebølle – Ellerbek - Lietzow” UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/61031 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill., 24 cm N2 - Abstakt “Chocolate’”flint was the main raw material used by the Early Neolithic Linear Band Cul¬ture (LBK) groups in the Polish Lowlands. Since the second (note) phase of the development of this culture, the early farmers developed a complex system of distribution of ‘chocolate’ flint within the great-valleys zone of the Lowlands. Concretions of raw flint were transported by the Vistula river from the outcrops located on the southeastern slopes of the Świętokrzyskie (Holy Cross) Mountains to Kuyavia. They were worked into cores and processed in settlements close to the Vistula valley. Cores and blades/flakes were also exported to distant locations to the west as far as the Lower Oder basin area. One would expect the existence of specialised workshops providing materials for such a mass distribution. Kruszyn site 13, Włocławek distr., is the first LBK ‘chocolate’ flint workshop discovered close to the Vistula river concentrated on production of blades. This site fits well into the LBK flint distribution system developed on the Lowlands L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/73277/PDF/WA308_88937_P356_Contribution-to-Unde_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 56 (2018) PY - 2018 EP - 87 KW - early Neolithic KW - Linear Band Culture (LBK) KW - “chocolate” flint KW - distribution KW - workshop A1 - Kabaciński, Jacek PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 56 CY - Warszawa SP - 79 T1 - Contribution to Understanding the Distribution of ‘Chocolate’ Flint on the Polish Lowlands in the Early Neolithic: Kruszyn, Site 13 UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/73277 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 29 cm N1 - Bibliography p. 15-18 N2 - The matter of causes and mechanisms behind the radical cultural modification, which occurred at the turn of the Late Glacial and the Early Holocene and was characterized by the Mesolithic communities settlement throughout the North European Plain, constitutes the most vividly discussed issue connected with research on hunter-gatherer societies of that area. Fast and profound transformations of natural environment, taking place in that period all over the Plain, are the essential element of this debate. The article presents the latest results of the investigations into the changes of natural environment. It also argues basic conceptions concerning the disappearance of the Late Palaeolithic groups and the settle¬ment of the Mesolithic communities in the north of Europe. In the authors' opinion, the process of cultural transformations that can be observed in the North European Plain between ca. 10000-9000 BC was an independent phenomenon lasting together with co-occurring environmental changes. Their synchronism was absolutely coincidental. Thus, the natural envi¬ronment transformations can be treated only as a kind of catalyst of limited (and diversified) influence but not as decisive and causative factor L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/61411/PDF/WA308_72964_PIII149_Srodowiskowe-uwarunk_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Environmental Determinants of Cultural Changes in the Late Glacial and the Early Holocene on the North European Plain J2 - Przegląd Archeologiczny T. 58 (2010) PY - 2010 EP - 21 KW - Late Glacial KW - Late Palaeolithic KW - Early Mesolithic KW - Palaeolithic-Mesolithic transition KW - environmental change A1 - Kabaciński, Jacek A2 - Sobkowiak-Tabaka, Iwona PB - Instytut Archeologii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk VL - 58 CY - Wrocław SP - 5 T1 - Środowiskowe uwarunkowania przemian kulturowych u schyłku późnego glacjału i w początkach holocenu na Niżu Północnoeuropejskim UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/61411 ER - TY - GEN N1 - P. 245-290 : ill. ; 25 cm N1 - Bibliography p. 285-287 N1 - English summary M3 - Text J2 - Mesolithic site from the Boreal Period in Krzyż Wielkopolski J2 - Archeologia Polski PY - 2008 IS - 2 EP - 290 KW - Mezolithic KW - Boreal KW - red deer antler and bone products A1 - Kabaciński, Jacek A2 - Polska Akademia Nauk. Instytut Archeologii i Etnologii A2 - Polska Akademia Nauk. Instytut Historii Kultury Materialnej A2 - David, Éva A2 - Makowiecki, Daniel (1959– ) A2 - Schild, Romuald (1936– ) A2 - Sobkowiak-Tabaka, Iwona A2 - Winiarska-Kabacińska, Małgorzata PB - Instytut Archeolgoii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk VL - 53 CY - Warszawa ; CY - Wrocław CY - Warszawa SP - 245 T1 - Archeologia Polski Vol. 53 (2008) No 2 T1 - Stanowisko mezolityczne z okresu borealnego w Krzyżu Wielkopolskim UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/49839 ER - TY - GEN N1 - P. 7-24 : ill. ; 29 cm N1 - Bibliography p. 17-21 N1 - English summary N2 - The presented paper is an attempt to analyse the available paleoenvironmental and settlement data not only to demonstrate that already at the end of the Pleniglacial (Greenland Stadial GS-2) the conditions on the Plain were favourable for the existence of human societies, but also to present evidence for the development of the Lowland settlement before the Gl-le phase of the Late Glacial L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/50553/PDF/WA308_68850_PIII353_Zasiedlenie-Nizu-Eur_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - The settlement of the North European Plain in the Late Pleniglacial in the light of palaeoenivronmental evidence J2 - Przegląd Archeologiczny T. 60 (2012) PY - 2012 EP - 24 KW - Late Pleniglacial KW - Last Glacitation KW - North European Plain KW - palaeoenivronmental conditions KW - settlement A1 - Kabaciński, Jacek A2 - Sobkowiak-Tabaka, Iwona PB - Instytut Archeologii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk PB - Ośrodek Badań nad Kulturą Późnego Antyku i Wczesnego Średniowiecza VL - 60 CY - Wrocław SP - 7 T1 - Zasiedlenie Niżu Europejskiego u schyłku pleniglacjału w świetle danych paleośrodowiskowych UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/50553 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 29 cm N2 - Paper discuss a new-discovered Hamburgian site located in the northern part of the Polish Lowland. A detailed technological and typological analysis of flint materials as well as stratigraphic and palaoenvironmental context of the settlement are presented. Exceptional geomorphological and stratigraphic position of the site - location at a dune in the close vicinity of the glacial trough, filled with biogenic sediments of the Bølling times - creates a unique possibility of a relatively complete reconstruction of the Early Late Glacial environment during the times of human occupation and a real chance of recovering artefacts made wood, bone and antler. Location of the Mirkowice site far north of the maximal extent of the last glacier is another argument in the discussion on spatial distribution of the Hamburgian settlement and generally supports a thesis of fast expansion of the Hamburgian to the north L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/60029/PDF/WA308_79588_PIII149_Mirkowice-another-se_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Przegląd Archeologiczny T. 45 (1997) PY - 1997 EP - 23 KW - Early Late Glacial KW - archaeological finds KW - palaeoenvironmental reconstruction KW - palaeoecology A1 - Chłodnicki, Marek A1 - Kabaciński, Jacek PB - Instytut Archeologii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk VL - 45 CY - Wrocław SP - 5 T1 - Mirkowice - another settlement of the Hamburgian culture at the Polish Plain UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/60029 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 29 cm N2 - The paper discusses the state-of-the-art of a chronology and a stratigraphy of the Late Glacial in the context of current analyses of dead-ice cores from Greenland and Antarctic, analyses of laminated lake and marine sediments, and dendrochronological and palaeobotanical research. The results obtained from Greenland ice cores directly influence archaeological studies on the Late Palaeolithic in Central European Lowlands. A complete sequence of climatic changes obtained from the analysis enables a more precise observation of cultural alteration in the context of dynamically changing climate conditions L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/60141/PDF/WA308_79828_PIII149_Pozny-paleolit-Nizu_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Late Palaeolithic of Central European Lowlands in the light of chronostratigraphy of the Late Glacial J2 - Przegląd Archeologiczny T. 55 (2007) PY - 2007 EP - 70 KW - Late Glacial KW - Late Palaeolithic KW - chronostratigraphy A1 - Kabaciński, Jacek A1 - Sobkowiak-Tabaka, Iwona PB - Instytut Archeologii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk VL - 55 CY - Wrocław SP - 53 T1 - Późny paleolit Niżu Środkowoeuropejskiego w świetle chronostratygrafii poźnego glacjału UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/60141 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 29 cm N2 - The object under discussion is a kind of dugout dwelling partially sunk into dune sands. It was located on top of a dune in an area that was attractive to hunters and gatherers because it bordered by a lake with a large ice-marginal valley nearby. Bones associated with hearths within the dugout indicate that hunting red-deer and roe-deer had been one of the basic means of sustenance of the single family which exploited the dwelling over at least several seasons. Radiocarbon dates as well as the typology and technology o f the flint assemblage found with the dugout point toa Late Mesolithic (Atlantic) age for the dwelling. Burned human bones found in the hearth, obviously treated along with the animal remains as kitchen vaste, suggest that cannibalism had been practiced at the site. Inside the dugout a cash of pre-cores and cores of flint was found, as well as traces of hematite powder (ochre), probably imported from Rydno (Central Poland). Wear-traces analysis of the flint suggests it was used for processing animal tissue L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/60707/PDF/WA308_80058_PIII149_Late-Mesolithic-dwel_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Przegląd Archeologiczny T. 38 (1991) PY - 1991 EP - 15 KW - late Mesolithic – Poland KW - late Mesolithic dwelling buildings KW - late Mesolithic flint objects KW - cannibalism KW - ochre KW - bone remains KW - Pomorsko, Sulechów commune (Poland) A1 - Kobusiewicz, Michał (1939– ) A1 - Kabaciński, Jacek PB - Instytut Archeolgoii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk VL - 38 CY - Wrocław SP - 5 T1 - Late Mesolithic dwelling object in Pomorsko (Western Poland) UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/60707 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 24 cm N2 - Rescue excavations at an artefact manufacturing site at Pęgów, Poddębice district, dated to the modern period, have produced several dozens of lumps of flint. The flint exhibits greyish and brownish bands and is macroscopically similar to the well-known banded flint occurring in the area of Krzemionki Opatowskie, Ostrowiec Świętokrzyski district. Artefacts made from this tentatively named ‘Pęgów flint’ have been identified in archaeological assemblages of different chronological age in the Koło Basin. To verify whether macroscopically similar nodules and artefacts come from the same outcrop and if the artefacts made of banded flint are made of the Krzemionki Opatowskie flint, instrumental neutron activation analysis (INAA) was conducted on samples of Pęgów flint and banded raw material from Krzemionki Opatowskie. Although most of the obtained results fall below INAA detection limits the compostion of chromium content in each sample may reflect common origin of all the analysed pieces from Pęgów. INAA data suggest that the artifacts made of banded flint were mot made from Krzemionki Opatowskie material. L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/63433/PDF/WA308_83008_P357_A-Newly-Discovered_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 54 (2016) PY - 2016 EP - 65 KW - ‘Pęgów flint’ KW - Instrumental Neutron Activation Analysis (INAA) KW - Koło Basin A1 - Kabaciński, Jacek A1 - Sobkowiak-Tabaka, Iwona PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 54 CY - Warszawa SP - 51 T1 - A Newly Discovered Source of ‘Banded Flint’ in the Polish Lowlands UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/63433 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 25 cm N2 - Around 5600–5500 calBC first farmers appeared at the North European Lowland initiating ca 2.000 years lasting process of neolithisation of this area. A unique feature of Dąbki settlement is the presence of several horizons of imports in the Late Mesolithic and early FBC context, mainly pottery vessels. These imports point toward an important role of that place in the exchange system between Mesolithic groups inhabited Central European Lowland and Neolithic people. Beside local hunters-gatherers, groups of Linear Band Pottery, Stroke Band Pottery, Ertebølle, Brześć Kujawski Group, Funnel Beaker and finally Bodrogkeresztúr cultures were engaged in these contacts. Till 2009 on site 9 at Dąbki there were discovered 8 potsherds of the Bodrogkeresztúr culture. Ornamentation, morphology, and technology of the fragments are typical for the pottery of the culture in question. We can synchronize the discussed imports with the earliest Funnel Beaker settlement stage in Dąbki, i.e. with years 4100/4000 cal BC M3 - Text J2 - Sprawozdania Archeologiczne 63 (2011) PY - 2011 EP - 87 KW - Pomerania KW - Neolithic KW - imports KW - Bodrogkeresztúr culture KW - Funnel Beaker Culture A1 - Czekaj-Zastawny, Agnieszka A1 - Kabaciński, Jacek A1 - Terberger, Thomas PB - Instytut Archeologii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk VL - 63 CY - Kraków SP - 55 T1 - Cultural Relations between the Great Hungarian Plain and the Southern Baltic Coast. Imports from the Bodrogkeresztúr Culture on the Site Dąbki 9 (Middle Pomerania) = Relacje kulturowe między terenami Wielkiej Niziny Węgierskiej a południowym wybrzeżem Bałtyku. Importy kultury Bodrogkeresztúr na stanowisku Dąbki 9 (Pomorze Środkowe) UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/54779 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 29 cm N2 - The origin and further development of the Funnel Beaker Culture is one of the key problems in the studies of the middle Neolithic of Northern Europe. This paper presents and discuss new data from the Dąbki site (southern Baltic coastal area), where Late Mesolithic and early Funnel Beaker Culture settlement of the Northern Group was studied over last 10 years. These data are starting point for discussion on the origin of FBC. The authors interpret the earliest appearance of funnel beaker in the Northern Group of FBC around 4200-4000 cal. BC as a stylistic phenomenon that spread quickly on the European Lowland. Only after 4000 cal. BC we may consider the FBC as a completely formed Neolithic farming culture L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/50508/PDF/WA308_68764_PIII353_Geneza-kultury-pucha_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Origin of Funnel Beaker Culture in the light of cultural transformations in Northern Europe in the 5th millennium BC J2 - Przegląd Archeologiczny T. 61 (2013) PY - 2013 EP - 213 KW - Late Mesolithic KW - Ertebølle Culture KW - Funnel Beaker culture KW - pointed bottom pottery KW - funnel baker KW - origin of FBC A1 - Czekaj-Zastawny, Agnieszka A1 - Kabaciński, Jacek A1 - Terberger, Thomas PB - Instytut Archeologii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk PB - Ośrodek Badań nad Kulturą Późnego Antyku i Wczesnego Średniowiecza VL - 61 CY - Wrocław SP - 189 T1 - Geneza kultury pucharów lejkowatych w kontekście przemian kulturowych w Europie Północnej w V tys. BC UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/50508 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 25 cm N2 - Prompted by the discovery of a small workshop producing axes of red deer antler (the so-called T-shaped axes) at Bodzia, site 1 (Kuyavia), this paper addresses the issue of the origin and chronology of the said axes. In the first place, we shall present the inventory the workshop yielded and then analyse the distribution of T-shaped axes in Europe, especially in the European Lowland, in the context of antler production of the Late Mesolithic communities of the circa Baltic zone and the southern coasts of the North Sea and also within the Early Neolithic groups in Northern Europe. We shall also recount the discussion that has recently developed around this question L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/54759/PDF/WA308_74886_P244_The-Chronology-of-T_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Sprawozdania Archeologiczne 66 (2014) PY - 2014 EP - 56 KW - Polish Lowland KW - Kuyavia KW - Late Mesolithic KW - Early Neolithic KW - T-shaped axes A1 - Kabaciński, Jacek A1 - Sobkowiak-Tabaka, Iwona A1 - David, Éva A1 - Osypińska, Marta A1 - Terberger, Thomas A1 - Winiarska-Kabacińska, Małgorzata PB - Instytut Archeologii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk VL - 66 CY - Kraków SP - 29 T1 - The chronology of T-shaped axes in the Polish Lowland = Chronologia toporów T-kształtnych na Niżu Polskim UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/54759 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 24 cm N2 - The research around the palaeo-lake of Gebel Ramlah has revealed the presence of numerous remains of Late Neolithic occupation. One such site – E-16-02 – was excavated in 2018 and delivered unique evidence pointing to the specific style of life of human groups here in the later Neolithic. In the light of the available evidence, it seems that the occupation was seasonal and the site was visited several times. Its main feature was an oven, carefully designed and regularly cleaned as it served for cooking food during subsequent visits to the place. The remaining features were occasionally constructed during each stay. The distribution of flint artefacts, chaotic, unpatterned, without visible places of flint processing and lacking clear links with features and remains of pottery vessels also indicate multiple visits to the site. This pattern is obviously different to that recognized during the Holocene climatic optimum when the extent of the settlements was substantially larger accompanied by a diversity of features indicating a stable, long-lasting occupation (Al Jerar Unit) L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/133597/PDF/WA308_167210_P357_Towards-understanding_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 58 (2020) PY - 2020 EP - 193 KW - Prehistoric Egypt KW - Western Desert KW - late Neolithic KW - pottery KW - flint industry KW - settlement pattern A1 - Kabaciński, Jacek A1 - Czekaj-Zastawny, Agnieszka A1 - Ibrahim, Hebatallah A. A. A1 - Mugaj, Jakub PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 58 CY - Warszawa SP - 179 T1 - Towards Understanding the Late Neolithic of the Egyptian Western Desert: Gebel Ramlah, Site E-16-02 UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/133597 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 31 cm N2 - Identification of exotic raw-materials discovered within the context of Late Glacial societies of the North European Plain is a crucial factor in discussion about far-reaching exchange systems of goods and ideas. The present paper considers the occurrence of obsidian finds on the Polish Lowlands, hundreds of kilometers away from its sources located south of the Carpathians. The focus is on chemical recognition and identification of a large and unique assemblage of obsidian artefacts from two Polish localities based on non-invasive Prompt Gamma Activation Analysis (PGAA). As a result, a clear connection of northern Polish obsidians with its outcrops located on the northern (Slovakian) fringe of the Tokaj Mountains was established that is the first detailed identification of obsidian finds from the territory of Poland ever. A review of Polish and Slovakian obsidian assemblages from the Late Glacial times and the importance of obsidian exchange and mobility for Late Palaeolithic societies of Central Europe are discussed supported by analytical results of PGAA L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/61632/PDF/WA308_80783_PIII272_Transcarpathian-cont_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Przegląd Archeologiczny T. 63 (2015) PY - 2015 EP - 28 KW - obsidian KW - Late Glacial KW - Central Europe KW - Poland KW - Slovakia KW - Hungary KW - exchange KW - mobility KW - provenance KW - prompt gamma activation analysis A1 - Sobkowiak-Tabaka, Iwona A1 - Kasztovszky, Zsolt A1 - Kabaciński, Jacek A1 - Biró, Katalin T. A1 - Maróti, Bolgárka A1 - Gméling, Katalin PB - Ośrodek Badań nad Kulturą Późnego Antyku i Wczesnego Średniowiecza PB - Instytut Archeolgoii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk VL - 63 CY - Wrocław SP - 5 T1 - Transcarpathian contacts of the Late Glacial Societies of the Polish Lowlands UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/61632 ER -