Folia archeologica 27.
Viola T. Dobosi: Őskori telep Demjén-Hegyeskőbércen
DEMJÉN-HBGYF.SKŐBÉRC 11 Fig. 1. Demjén-Hegyeskőbérc, excavation area 1. ábra. Demjén-Hegyeskőbérc, ásatási terület knowledge, to definite oecologicaï conditions, hunting, using spearheads), 1 do not consider it likely that a dense population of a permanent character (settled ?) could have been present, hindering the extremely expansive, "revolutional" Körös population in their expansion. We have, therefore, to look for other causes explaining the stopping short of this culture. The opinion of J. Nandris, according to which in the Neolithic occupation of Europe no apparent signs of conflicts between human groups are discernible, seems to be much more acceptable. As Mesolithic cultures are, according to the most generally accepted theory, nothing but surviving Epipaleolithic populations groups, adjusting themselves to a changed, warmer holocene climate, forest vegetation and fauna, they depend more than any later culture on natural conditions. I have to agree with J. Nandris