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Apel, J. & Knutsson, K., 2006. Skilled Production and Social Reproduction. SAU Stone Studies 2. Uppsala.<br />

<br />

Some remarks on contacts between<br />

Late Mesolithic hunter-gatherer<br />

<br />

technology: a case study from<br />

Central Poland<br />

Abstract<br />

<br />

Age in the Polish Lowlands. Both the range and the quality of its supply<br />

changed together with the cultural sequence from the Palaeolithic to the<br />

Early Iron Age. This paper deals with the problem of the use of choco<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

camps found about 250 km to the north, will be discussed. The aspect of<br />

<br />

culture will also be discussed. A reconstruction of a contact network based<br />

on Mesolithic sites containing artifacts of the same Mesolithic culture will<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

the 1 st half of the 5 th millennium BC.<br />

Introduction<br />

In this paper I would like to discuss the interpretative possibilities of using<br />

<br />

societies. My investigation is based on assemblages of the Late Mesolithic<br />

<br />

from the territory of Central and Eastern Poland, Western Belarus and West<br />

ern Ukraine. The discussion focuses on assemblages from the Vistula ba<br />

sin.<br />

One important aspects of this culture is the use of mined “chocolate”<br />

<br />

most popular raw materials used during Polish Lowland prehistory from<br />

the Lower Palaeolithic until the Early Iron Age (Domanski & Webb 2000).<br />

Its popularity was probably the result of both its high quality and the rich<br />

outcrops. From an archaeological point of view it is important that the out<br />

315

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