Szeletian


The Szeleta Culture is a transitional archaeological culture between the Middle paleolithic and the Upper Palaeolithic, found in Austria, Moravia, northern Hungary, and southern Poland. It is dated 41,000 to 37,000 years before the present, and is named after the Szeleta cave in the Bükk Mountains, part of the North Hungarian Mountains.
It was preceded by the Bohunician, and is roughly contemporary with the Aurignacian in France, and the Uluzzian in Italy. It was succeeded by the Gravettian.
The initial excavation of the Szeletian cave was carried out 1906–1913 by Ottocar Kadić. The idea of a distinctive Szeletian culture was advocated by the Czechoslovakian archaeologist Frantisek Prosek.

Neanderthals or modern humans

It has been called the most original and also the most aboriginal Upper Palaeolithic culture in Central Europe. The findings are often interpreted in terms of the contemporaneity of Neandertal and modern man, "as the product of acculturation at the boundary of Middle and Upper Paleolithic." However, the absence of human remains makes it impossible to attribute the culture to Neanderthals or modern humans.

Lithic industry

The lithic industry is characterized by:
Later assemblages contain endscrapers and retouched blades.

Sites

In addition to the Szeletian cave in Hungary, assemblages have been found in Dzierzyslaw and Lubotyń, at Čertova pec in Slovakia, and Pod Hradem.