A fully illustrated introduction to the archaeology of the Jomon period in Japan, this book explores the complex relationships between Jomon people and their rich natural environment. From the end of the last Ice Age 12,000 years ago to the appearance of rice agriculture around 400 BC, Jomon people subsisted by hunting, fishing and gathering; but abundant and predictable sources of wild food enabled Jomon people to live in large, relatively permanent settlements, and to develop an elaborate material culture. This book explores thematic issues in Jomon archaeology: the appearance of sedentism in the Japanese archipelago and the nature of Jomon settlements; the invention of pottery and the development and meaning of regional pottery styles; s...
I have been researching Japanese art and culture for most of my college career, studying it for clas...
This paper explores how different aspects of Jomon archaeology have shaped contemporary Japanese ide...
In this thesis, organic residues preserved in ancient pottery are used to reconstruct diversity andc...
A fully illustrated introduction to the archaeology of the Jomon period in Japan, this book explores...
People of the Jomon period (currently dated from about 14,000 B.C. to the first millennium B.C.) beg...
The concept of the Mesolithic/Neolithic transition is difficult to apply in the Japanese archipelago...
culture (c. 12,500-2300 B.P.) in Japan is characterized by the production and use of pottery (Pearso...
This thesis examines the economic vs. social and symbolic importance of fish in the foodways of the ...
This paper discusses prehistoric subsistence and the development of plant husbandry in northeastern ...
PRELIMINARY RESULTS of the analysis of plant remains and pollen from theEarly Jomon, Hamanasuno site...
several avenues of research into human palaeoeconomic issues and general pro-cesses of culture chang...
This article examines the relationship between archaeological practices and the public , focusing on...
I will examine the possibility that earthen mounds were the result of ritual acts in the Jomon perio...
During the adoption of large-scale wet rice agriculture in the Japanese archipelago, it was supposed...
In the Japanese Islands, small sedentary villages sustained by hunting, gathering, fish- ing and cul...
I have been researching Japanese art and culture for most of my college career, studying it for clas...
This paper explores how different aspects of Jomon archaeology have shaped contemporary Japanese ide...
In this thesis, organic residues preserved in ancient pottery are used to reconstruct diversity andc...
A fully illustrated introduction to the archaeology of the Jomon period in Japan, this book explores...
People of the Jomon period (currently dated from about 14,000 B.C. to the first millennium B.C.) beg...
The concept of the Mesolithic/Neolithic transition is difficult to apply in the Japanese archipelago...
culture (c. 12,500-2300 B.P.) in Japan is characterized by the production and use of pottery (Pearso...
This thesis examines the economic vs. social and symbolic importance of fish in the foodways of the ...
This paper discusses prehistoric subsistence and the development of plant husbandry in northeastern ...
PRELIMINARY RESULTS of the analysis of plant remains and pollen from theEarly Jomon, Hamanasuno site...
several avenues of research into human palaeoeconomic issues and general pro-cesses of culture chang...
This article examines the relationship between archaeological practices and the public , focusing on...
I will examine the possibility that earthen mounds were the result of ritual acts in the Jomon perio...
During the adoption of large-scale wet rice agriculture in the Japanese archipelago, it was supposed...
In the Japanese Islands, small sedentary villages sustained by hunting, gathering, fish- ing and cul...
I have been researching Japanese art and culture for most of my college career, studying it for clas...
This paper explores how different aspects of Jomon archaeology have shaped contemporary Japanese ide...
In this thesis, organic residues preserved in ancient pottery are used to reconstruct diversity andc...