Przeglądanie według Temat "Kuyavia"
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Pozycja Field Survey Versus Excavation – Compatibility of Results Illustrated by the Example of Selected Sites from the A1 Motorway in the Włocławek Province, Poland(Fundacja Rzeszowskiego Ośrodka Archeologicznego, 2017) Pyzel, JoannaThis paper reconsiders the compatibility of results from survey and subsequent excavations as their verification: the issues of detection of sites and the reliability of estimations of their size as well as their dating including the relative visibility of separate chronological units based on surface material are discussed here. This is presented through the example of archaeological investigations conducted due to the construction of the A1 motorway route within the former Włocławek Voivodeship.Pozycja On the Edge. Relics of LBK Settlement at the Site of Kruszyn 3, Commune Włocławek (Household A)(The University of Rzeszów Publishing House, 2024-12) Rzepecki, Seweryn; Domańska, LucynaThe aim of the article is to present the LBK sources recorded in the northern part of the site of Kruszyn 3, commune Włocławek. A special feature of the site is its location on the edge of the Kuyavia Lake District and the Płock Basin. The former was intensively settled in the Early Neolithic, while the latter was anecumene. The complex of finds described in the article consists of the remains of a house, outbuildings, a relatively numerous pottery assemblage and less numerous flints, stone tools, and animal bone remains. The entire site dates to phase II (Music-Note Phase) of the LBK in Kuyavia.Pozycja Two water wells of the LBK culture from the north part of the site of Kruszyn 3/10, Włocławek commune(Fundacja Rzeszowskiego Ośrodka Archeologicznego, 2014) Rzepecki, SewerynThe aim of the present paper is to present two water wells from a settlement of the LBK culture at the site of Kruszyn 3/10, Włocławek commune. The features under consideration are dated to phase IIB of this culture in Kuyavia. They represent the simplest, timberless types of devices which were used to supply water. The author also pays attention to non-utalitarian aspects connected with cult and ritual meaning of water wells in the LBK societies.