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<xml><records><record><database name="MyLibrary">MyLibrary</database><source-app name="Zotero">Zotero</source-app><ref-type name="Journal Article">17</ref-type><contributors><authors><author>Péntek, Attila</author></authors></contributors><titles><title>Some lithic artefacts from Mexico in the America‒ Collection of the Museum of Ethnography in Budapest</title><secondary-title>Litikum - Journal of the Lithic Research Roundtable</secondary-title></titles><periodical><full-title>Litikum - Journal of the Lithic Research Roundtable</full-title></periodical><pages>43-54</pages><volume>13</volume><keywords><keyword>Huastec culture</keyword><keyword>Mesoamerica</keyword><keyword>Mexico</keyword><keyword>projectile points</keyword><keyword>Tamaulipas State</keyword></keywords><dates><year>2025</year><pub-dates><date>2025</date></pub-dates></dates><isbn>2064-3640</isbn><electronic-resource-num>https://doi.org/10.23898/litikuma0046</electronic-resource-num><abstract>The America‒Collection of the Museum of Ethnography in Budapest houses a small archaeological collection, donated originally to the Hungarian National Museum by Ede Szenger. Besides various ceramic objects, the collection contains some lithic artefacts, mostly bifacially manufactured projectile points. The exact origin of the lithic artefacts is unknown, but indirect evidence suggests that they come from the southeastern part of Tamaulipas State, Northeastern Mexico). This paper describes the lithic artefacts that can be analysed satisfactorily based on the typology lists available to the author.</abstract><urls><web-urls><url>https://www.litikum.hu/project/a0046/</url></web-urls></urls></record></records></xml>