Abstract Intercultural relations of the Przeworsk Culture population in the Carpathian area at the turn of the Early and Younger Roman Periods as refl ected by cemetery at Prusiek, site 25, commune Sanok. The contribution deals with the characteristics of the cemetery at Prusiek, dated to the end of the Early Roman Period and the beginnings of the Younger Roman Period. This is the fi rst necropolis of the Przeworsk Culture discovered in the Polish Carpathian Mountains, in the upper San River basin. The rich grave goods helped to determine directions of the contacts of the population connected with the graveyard. Clearly visible are its links with so-called eastern zone of the Przeworsk culture as well as with Wielbark culture area and other areas located in the Baltic Sea basin., Renata Madyda-Legutko, Judyta Rodzinska-Nowak., and Obsahuje seznam literatury
In 1912 L. Kozłowski and W Ku´zniar discovered a new Paleolithic site in Jaksice. A fireplace with flint artefacts, which appeared to be Aurignacian, was found in a loess exposure. This was one of the first open-air Palaeolithic sites discovered in territory of Poland. During fieldwork conducted at the site in 2010-11, an interesting assemblage of flint artefacts was discovered. This new material can be clearly linked to the Gravettian culture. This antiquity was also confirmed by radiocarbon dating performed on mammoth bones from this site. In this work, an analysis of the assemblage is presented and it is also compared with the Kraków Spadzista assemblage. Although the assemblage is small, it sheds new light on the variability of Gravettian assemblages in southern Poland around 24 ka BP., Jaroslaw Wilczyński, Piotr Wojtal., and Obsahuje seznam literatury