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Dive into the research topics where Maria Lityńska-Zając is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Lityńska-Zając.


Vegetation History and Archaeobotany | 2001

New finds of Malus sylvestris Mill. (wild apple) from Neolithic sites in Poland

Aldona Bieniek; Maria Lityńska-Zając

Abstract. The oldes Neolithic crab apple (Malus sylvestris L.) remains have been found in the Gwoździec 2 site (southeast Poland), archaeologically dated to the earliest part of the Linear Pottery Culture. There is also another find of apple pips from Poland (Dąbki site) identified as Malus sylvestris L. and after a long discussion archaeologically dated to the proto-Neolithic period. Wild apple fruits were gathered and dried for storage, as was the case in several other sites in Europe.


Vegetation History and Archaeobotany | 2017

Plant materials used as temper in the oldest Neolithic pottery from south-eastern Poland

Magdalena Moskal-del Hoyo; Anna Rauba-Bukowska; Maria Lityńska-Zając; Aldona Mueller-Bieniek; Agnieszka Czekaj-Zastawny

Plant materials were frequently used as a temper as an important part of the process of making pottery. However, identification of the presence of tempering material and its taxonomic composition are still uncommon practices. This paper presents the results of a study of plant remains observed in pottery dated to the oldest Neolithic from south-eastern Poland, as a tool for detecting or confirming changes in the method of making the pottery. In previous studies, plant material was noticed sporadically in coarse ware and its identification was based on macroscopic plant morphology. On the other hand, remains of plants were not usually observed in the other finer ware types since their surfaces were frequently smoothed and decorated, while their sections were very thin. Therefore, in the present study, these groups of pottery have been studied in detail. A preliminary observation of surfaces and fresh sections of selected potsherds has shown that plant temper was neither evident nor abundant in them. However, with microscopy, small fragments of plant tissues and their imprints have been seen inside the clay. Their identification was not possible on the basis of plant morphology, but was carried out with the help of plant anatomy, especially by observing the microscopic features of plant epidermis. Previous archaeobotanical studies from the area indicated that the plants used as temper in coarse ware mostly included remnants of cereal chaff. Consequently, this paper will test this hypothesis in the case of the finer Neolithic ceramics.


Geochronometria | 2017

Benefits and weaknesses of radiocarbon dating of plant material as reflected by Neolithic archaeological sites from Poland, Slovakia and Hungary

Marek Nowak; Magdalena Moskal-del Hoyo; Aldona Mueller-Bieniek; Maria Lityńska-Zając; Krzysztof Kotynia

Abstract Radiocarbon dating of the plant material is important for chronology of archaeological sites. Therefore, a selection of suitable plant samples is an important task. The contribution emphasizes the necessity of taxonomical identification prior to radiocarbon dating as a crucial element of such selection. The benefits and weaknesses of dating of taxonomically undetermined and identified samples will be analysed based on several case studies referring to Neolithic sites from Hungary, Slovakia and Poland. These examples better illustrate the significance of the taxonomical identification since plant materials of the Neolithic age include only a limited number of cultivated species (e.g. hulled wheats) and typically do not contain remains of late arrived plants (e.g. Carpinus betulus and Fagus sylvatica). For more accurate dating results cereal grains, fruits and seeds, which reflect a single vegetative season, are preferred. Among charred wood, fragments of twigs, branches and external rings should mainly be taken into account, while those of trunks belonging to long-lived trees should be avoided. Besides the absolute chronology of archaeological features and artefacts, radiocarbon dating of identified plant remains might significantly contribute to the history of local vegetation and food production systems.


Folia Quaternaria | 2016

Plant remains from the Late Neolithic settlement of Polgár-Bosnyákdomb

Magdalena Moskal-del Hoyo; Maria Lityńska-Zając

Charred plant remains were recovered at the Polgar-Bosnyakdomb site dated to the Middle Neolithic period (the Tisza–Herpaly–Csőszhalom culture), corresponding to the first half of the Vth millenium BC. Among cultivated plants found as dispersed within the archaeological features and in daub pieces, remains of emmer wheat Triticum dicoccon were the most frequent. Also, leguminous plants were used as demonstrated by seeds of lentil Lens culinaris. Among wild herbaceous plants, taxa of field and ruderal habitats prevailed (Chenopodium type album, Galium spurium, Polygnum mite and Bromus sp.) as well as those coming from dry grasslands (Stipa sp.). The analysis of charcoal remains showed that mostly wood belonging to Quercus sp., Ulmus sp. and Cornus sp. were collected as firewood from the proximity of the settlement, mainly from oak-dominated wooded steppes developed on the elevated surfaces and floodplain forests from the seasonally flooded alluvium. The most frequently found plant remains (Cornus sp. wood and Stipa sp. awns) were dated with the means of radiocarbon analysis and the chronology showed their use at the end of the settlement, toward the middle of the Vth millenium BC.


Archive | 2018

A Man and a Plant: Archaeobotany

Maria Lityńska-Zając

This chapter discusses the significance of archaeobotanical studies for recognition of the mutual relationship between a man and a plant in the past. The author presented sources providing the grounds for palaeoeconomic and palaeoecological analyses and interpretations, which means the type and state of preservation of plant remains encountered at archaeological sites and methods employed for examining them. A great majority of the material enclosed in this chapter is based on Polish handbook entitled Guidebook to Archaeobotanical Studies. The issues discussed here are mainly based on biological sources, with particular attention drawn to materials coming from Poland, only in few cases complemented with information gathered in other regions.


Vegetation History and Archaeobotany | 2008

Plant remains from an early Neolithic settlement at Moravany (eastern Slovakia)

Maria Lityńska-Zając; Magdalena Moskal-del Hoyo; Marek Nowak


Vegetation History and Archaeobotany | 2005

Application of Lithospermum officinale L. in early Bronze Age medicine

Barbara Baczyńska; Maria Lityńska-Zając


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2015

Plants and environment: results of archaeobotanical research of the Bronze Age settlements in the Carpathian Foothills in Poland

Magdalena Moskal-del Hoyo; Maria Lityńska-Zając; Marta M. Korczyńska; Katarzyna Cywa; Tobias L. Kienlin; Klaus Cappenberg


Sprawozdania Archeologiczne | 2017

Utilisation of cultivated and wild plants in the economy of the Linear Pottery Culture in the Upper Vistula basin

Maria Lityńska-Zając; Agnieszka Czekaj-Zastawny; Anna Rauba-Bukowska


Quaternary International | 2017

The character of the Atlantic oak woods of the Great Hungarian Plain

Magdalena Moskal-del Hoyo; Maria Lityńska-Zając; Pál Raczky; Alexandra Anders; Enikő Magyari

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Janusz Kruk

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Marek Nowak

Jagiellonian University

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Sarunas Milisauskas

State University of New York System

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