EN
A set of lithic artefacts (29 pieces) worked in local erratic flint, reminiscent stylistically of Late Palaeolithic forms (bipolar blade cores, blades, flakes and tools - end scrapers, burins, a perforator, an end scrape -perforator, assorted leaf points) had surfaced during an excavation made in the early 1980s of a settlement of Rzucewo Culture at Suchacz, a village on the coast of the Vistula Lagoon near Elbląg, NE Poland. Like the rest of the material the flints subsequently were attributed to the Rzucewo Culture of the Late Neolithic. It now appears that due to mechanical causes the flints had become mixed up with the lithics of Rzucewo Culture, most of which are associated with the working of Pomeranian flint using the splintering technique. Basing on the results obtained from analysis of technology, typology and the material resource, the set has now been given a new attribution to the later stages of Sviderian Culture of the Boreal Period.