Lower Palaeolithic Small Tools in Europe and the Levant

Bok av Jan Micha Burdukiewicz
In accordance with European Science Foundation regulations, Exploratory Workshops with a maximum of 20 participants were designed to encourage researchers from across Europe to put forward innovative and creative ideas in European research. The workshop 'Lower Palaeolithic small tools in Europe and the Levant' was accordingly held in Liege (Belgium) between September 3 - 7, 2001 (in cooperation with the XIVth Congress of the International Union of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Sciences). Since the famous 1960s' excavations in Vertesszolos (Hungary), Lower Palaeolithic assemblages of very small tools have been known in Europe and referred to as microlithic assemblages. They were so different from the known European Lower Palaeolithic assemblages, that the Hungarian archaeologist L. Vertes introduced the new generic name 'Buda Industry', and sparked a wider interest in this whole area of study. This volume (bringing together the current knowledge on a topic that includes the oldest hunting weapons known in the world: the Schoningen (Lower Saxony, Germany) wooden spears) includes the 15 papers that were prepared for the Workshop.Taking the main theme of the Workshop (the comparative technological and stylistic analysis of small tool assemblages in Europe and Asia) as a starting point, the 15 papers presented here (ordered spatially from west to east and temporally from the Lower to the Middle Palaeolithic: c. 1000 - 300 kyr BP), as well as discussing the "Buda Industry", also extend to cover such areas of interest as the "Lower Palaeolithic Microlithic Tradition", the "Colombanian", the "Archaic Industries" or "Taubachian", etc: (1) Lower Palaeolithic Sites at Schoningen, Lower Saxony; (2) Bilzingsleben - Homo erectus, his culture and his environment; (3) The small flint tool industry from Bilzingsleben - Steinrinne; (4) Lower Palaeolithic sites with small artefacts in Poland; (5) A new Lower Palaeolithic site with a small toolset at Raeinives (Central Bohemia); (6) Changing environment - unchanged culture at Vertesszolos, Hungary; (7) The small tools of Evron-Quarry, western Galilee, Israel; (8) The use of raw material at the Lower Palaeolithic site of Bizat Ruhama, Israel; (9) Small instruments of the Lower Palaeolithic site Kuldara and their geoarchaeological meaning; (10) The role of raw material in explaining tool assemblage variability in Palaeolithic China; (11) Some Observations on Microlithic Assemblages in Central Europe during the Lower and Middle Palaeolithic Kulna and Pooedmosti II (Czech Republic); (12) The Taubachian, a Middle Palaeolithic Small Tool Industry in the Czech Republic and Slovakia; (13) The Middle Palaeolithic Microlithic Assemblage from Wroc3 aw,Southwest Poland; (14) Palaeolithic micro-industries: value and significance; (15) Research problems of the Lower and Middle Palaeolithic small tool assemblages.