Litikum könyvtár 2 / Litikum Books 2

2 – From tea leaves to leaf-shaped tools


His former students and colleagues celebrate the 60th birthday of their teacher at the ELTE Institute of Archaeological Sciences with this volume. Zsolt Mester, an expert of the Middle Palaeolithic and knapped lithics, is one of the most influential persons of Hungarian Palaeolithic research. Beside his essential role in research and academics, his courses endeared the Prehistoric era to a host of students at the University of Miskolc, the Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church and the Eötvös Loránd University.

This volume is an extended English continuation of our first book in this series, the latter of which contains Hungarian articles.

Cite as: A. Király (Ed.), (2023). From tea leaves to leaf-shaped tools. Studies in honour of Zsolt Mester on his sixtieth birthday. Lithic Research Roundtable & Institute of Archaeological Sciences, ELTE Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary. https://doi.org/10.23898/litikumsi02

ISBN 978-963-489-662-3 (PDF)
ISBN 978-963-489-661-6 (Softcover)
ISSN 2786-3751 (Online)

This is an open-access book distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

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(01) The problematic role of fossilized mollusc shells in the Upper Palaeolithic of Hungary

Csaba Bálint

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(02) Etwas tierisch: the chaîne opératoire and animal studies

László Bartosiewicz

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(03) The Demjén-Szőlő-hegy III Early Upper Palaeolithic Site

Sándor Béres†, Dalma Kerekes

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(04) Animal “body techniques” Processing and consumption of animals in a Late Copper Age settlement in Budapest (Hungary)

Péter Csippán

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(05) The Lincombian-Ranisian-Jerzmanowician with new sites in South Moravia and the Initial Upper Palaeolithic record of East-Central Europe

Yuri E. Demidenko, Petr Škrdla

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(06) Using geological, geomorphological and soil science description data in archaeological research. Andornaktálya, Gyilkos Hill as a case study

Anna Dobos

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(07) Technological observations on the bifacial point from the Copper Age cemetery of Rákóczifalva

Norbert Faragó

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(08) Öcsöd-Kováshalom and the Neolithic Ceramic Technological Tradition in Hungary

András Füzesi

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(09) Settlement research of the Late Copper Age Baden complex in Hungary New evidence from the past two decades

Tünde Horváth

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(10) Complex study of the Acsa-Rovnya endscrapers. Surface collections in the reconstruction of Upper Palaeolithic land use

Attila Király

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(11) Mesolithic and Neolithic finds from Zbehy-Dolné lúky site, sectors A0–M10

Adrián Nemergut, Michal Cheben, Klaudia Daňová, Marek Vojteček, Peter Šefčík, Juraj Maglay, & Martina Moravcová

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(12) Zsolt Mester and zooarchaeology in the French National Museum of Natural History

Marylène Patou-Mathis, Stéphane Péan, Antony Borel, Éva J. Daschek, & Marie Seguedy

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(13) If These Stones Could Talk – An attempt to enlighten a four-variable archaeological problem. Two macro-blades from Paraburdoo (Pilbara Region, Western Australia)

Attila Péntek

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(14) The provenance of a forgotten Copper Age spectacle spiral pendant

Zsuzsanna Siklósi, Igor M. Villa, & Stefano Nisi

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(15) Bringing social process into lithic studies. Implementing the chaîne opératoire concept into the analysis of Neolithic stone material

Kata Szilágyi

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(16) The Detachable Barbed Bronze Harpoon Heads with a Loop

János Gábor Tarbay

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