The origin of pottery is among the most important questions inOldWorld archaeology. The author undertakes a critical review of radiocarbon dates associated with the earliest pottery-making and eliminates a number of them where the material or its context are unreliable. Using those that survive this process of ‘chronometric hygiene’, he proposes that food-containers made of burnt clay originated in East Asia in the Late Glacial, c. 13 700-13 300 BP, and appeared in three separate regions, in Japan, China and far eastern Russia, at about the same time
The exact definition of the term “Neolithic” is discussed and the spatio-temporal coordinates of the...
From the 17th International Radiocarbon Conference held in Jerusalem, Israel, June 18-23, 2000.Recen...
Pottery was a hunter-gatherer innovation that first emerged in East Asia between 20,000 and 12,000 c...
Patterns for the emergence of pottery-making in greater East Asia based on radiocarbon dates associa...
From the 18th International Radiocarbon Conference held in Wellington, New Zealand, September 1-5, 2...
ABSTRACT. The chronometry of the origin of pottery in East Asia can give some insights to the questi...
The earliest known dated ceramic containers are from East Asia. Calibrated radiocarbon dates for the...
Recent developments related to the emergence of pottery in East Asia and neighbouring regions are pr...
International audienceThe appearance of the oldest pottery in the world is a major focus of Early Ne...
The earliest pottery in East Asia, as is found in several cave sites in southern China, emerges in U...
The earliest pottery in East Asia, as is found in several cave sites in southern China, emerges in U...
The earliest pottery from the Russian Far East, Osipovka and Gromatukha cultural complexes, was radi...
The invention of pottery introduced fundamental shifts in human subsistence practices and sociosymbo...
Pottery was a fundamentally important prehistoric innovation and had revolutionary implications for ...
During the transitional period from the Upper Pleistocene to the onset of the Holocene, there were t...
The exact definition of the term “Neolithic” is discussed and the spatio-temporal coordinates of the...
From the 17th International Radiocarbon Conference held in Jerusalem, Israel, June 18-23, 2000.Recen...
Pottery was a hunter-gatherer innovation that first emerged in East Asia between 20,000 and 12,000 c...
Patterns for the emergence of pottery-making in greater East Asia based on radiocarbon dates associa...
From the 18th International Radiocarbon Conference held in Wellington, New Zealand, September 1-5, 2...
ABSTRACT. The chronometry of the origin of pottery in East Asia can give some insights to the questi...
The earliest known dated ceramic containers are from East Asia. Calibrated radiocarbon dates for the...
Recent developments related to the emergence of pottery in East Asia and neighbouring regions are pr...
International audienceThe appearance of the oldest pottery in the world is a major focus of Early Ne...
The earliest pottery in East Asia, as is found in several cave sites in southern China, emerges in U...
The earliest pottery in East Asia, as is found in several cave sites in southern China, emerges in U...
The earliest pottery from the Russian Far East, Osipovka and Gromatukha cultural complexes, was radi...
The invention of pottery introduced fundamental shifts in human subsistence practices and sociosymbo...
Pottery was a fundamentally important prehistoric innovation and had revolutionary implications for ...
During the transitional period from the Upper Pleistocene to the onset of the Holocene, there were t...
The exact definition of the term “Neolithic” is discussed and the spatio-temporal coordinates of the...
From the 17th International Radiocarbon Conference held in Jerusalem, Israel, June 18-23, 2000.Recen...
Pottery was a hunter-gatherer innovation that first emerged in East Asia between 20,000 and 12,000 c...