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Archaeological cultures in Germany

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Hallstatt culture
archaeological culture
Urnfield culture
archaeological culture
Magdalenian
The Magdalenian (also Madelenian; ) is a technocomplex of the Late Upper Paleolithic in parts of Western and Central Europe. It dates from around 21,000 to 13,000 years Before Present. It is named after the type site of Abri de la Madeleine, a rock shelter () located in the Vézère valley of Tursac in Dordogne, France.
Linear Pottery culture
archaeological culture
Funnelbeaker culture
archaeological culture
Lusatian culture
archaeological culture
Baden culture
archaeological culture
Jastorf culture
Iron Age material culture in what is now north Germany
Unetice culture
archaeological culture
Maglemosian culture
mesolithic culture from Denmark
Nordic Bronze Age
Bronze Age in Scandinavia
Ertebølle culture
archaeological culture
Globular Amphora culture
Neolithic culture in Central Europe identified with finds of large round pottery storage jars
Przeworsk culture
archaeological culture
Ahrensburg culture
Upper Paleolithic nomadic hunter culture
Lengyel culture
archaeological culture
Tardenoisian
The Tardenoisian (or Beuronian) is an archaeological culture of the Mesolithic/Epipaleolithic period from northern France and Belgium. Similar cultures are known further east in central Europe, parts of Britain. and west across Spain. It is named after the type site at Fère-en-Tardenois in the Tardenois region in France, where E. Taté first discovered its characteristic artifacts in 1885.
Hamburg culture
archaeological culture
Federmesser culture
archaeological culture
Michelsberg culture
archaeological culture
Nordwestblock
thumb|300px|Archaeological cultures of the Bronze Age associated with the Nordwestblock area The Nordwestblock (German, "Northwest Block") is a hypothetical Northwestern European cultural region that some scholars propose as a prehistoric culture in the present-day Netherlands, Belgium, far-northern France, and northwestern Germany, in an area approximately bounded by the Somme, Oise, Meuse and Elbe rivers, possibly extending to the eastern part of what is now England, during the Bronze and Iron Ages from the 3rd to the 1st millennia BCE, up to the onset of historical sources, in the 1st centu
Prague culture
Eastern European archaeological culture
Bromme culture
archaeological culture
Rössen culture
Archaeological culture
Single Grave culture
archaeological culture
Horgen culture
archaeological culture
Stroke-ornamented ware culture
Archeological horizon of Central Europe (4900–4400 BC)
Elp culture
archaeological culture
Sukow-Dziedzice group
archaeological culture
Baalberge group
archaeological culture
Pfyn culture
archaeological culture
Wartberg culture
archaeological culture
Altheim culture
archaeological culture
Swifterbant culture
subneolithic culture in the Netherlands
Mondsee group
archaeological culture
House Urns culture
archaeological culture
Lincombian-Ranisian-Jerzmanowician
Lincombian-Ranisian-Jerzmanowician (LRJ) is a European Upper Palaeolithic culture or technocomplex (industry) dating to the Initial Upper Palaeolithic, about 45,000 years ago. It is characterised by leaf points made on long blades, which were traditionally thought to have been made by the last Neanderthals, although more recently it has been recognised as having been produced by among the first anatomically modern humans in Europe. It is rarely found, but extends across northwest Europe from Wales to Poland.
Walternienburg-Bernburg culture
archaeological culture
Luboszyce culture
archaeological culture in Germany
Unstrut culture
Havelland culture
archaeological culture