The earliest pots in the world are from East Asia and date to the Late Pleistocene. However, ceramic vessels were only produced in large numbers during the warmer and more stable climatic conditions of the Holocene. It has long been assumed that the expansion of pottery was linked with increased sedentism and exploitation of new resources that became available with the ameliorated climate, but this hypothesis has never been tested. Through chemical analysis of their contents, we herein investigate the use of pottery across an exceptionally long 9,000-y sequence from the Jomon site of Torihama in western Japan, intermittently occupied from the Late Pleistocene to the mid-Holocene. Molecular and isotopic analyses of lipids from 143 vessels pr...
Island chains provide access to terrestrial, coastal and offshore marine resources, attracting peopl...
During the Late Glacial, hunter-gatherers began using ceramic cooking containers in three separate g...
The goal of this contribution is to stimulate a wider reflection on the role of food consumption pra...
The earliest pots in the world are from East Asia and date to the Late Pleistocene. However, ceramic...
Pottery was a hunter-gatherer innovation that first emerged in East Asia between 20,000 and 12,000 c...
The invention of pottery was a fundamental technological advancement with far-reaching economic and ...
Hamanaka 2 is a multi-phase coastal site in Rebun Island with a ~ 3000-year occupation sequence exte...
Pottery was a fundamentally important prehistoric innovation and had revolutionary implications for ...
During the Late Glacial, hunter-gatherers began using ceramic cooking containers in three separate g...
The earliest pottery on the Korean peninsula dates to the early Holocene, notably later than other r...
This paper presents a preliminary study of the analysis of organic residues of Early and Middle Jomo...
The earliest known dated ceramic containers are from East Asia. Calibrated radiocarbon dates for the...
Island chains provide access to terrestrial, coastal and offshore marine resources, attracting peopl...
During the Late Glacial, hunter-gatherers began using ceramic cooking containers in three separate g...
The goal of this contribution is to stimulate a wider reflection on the role of food consumption pra...
The earliest pots in the world are from East Asia and date to the Late Pleistocene. However, ceramic...
Pottery was a hunter-gatherer innovation that first emerged in East Asia between 20,000 and 12,000 c...
The invention of pottery was a fundamental technological advancement with far-reaching economic and ...
Hamanaka 2 is a multi-phase coastal site in Rebun Island with a ~ 3000-year occupation sequence exte...
Pottery was a fundamentally important prehistoric innovation and had revolutionary implications for ...
During the Late Glacial, hunter-gatherers began using ceramic cooking containers in three separate g...
The earliest pottery on the Korean peninsula dates to the early Holocene, notably later than other r...
This paper presents a preliminary study of the analysis of organic residues of Early and Middle Jomo...
The earliest known dated ceramic containers are from East Asia. Calibrated radiocarbon dates for the...
Island chains provide access to terrestrial, coastal and offshore marine resources, attracting peopl...
During the Late Glacial, hunter-gatherers began using ceramic cooking containers in three separate g...
The goal of this contribution is to stimulate a wider reflection on the role of food consumption pra...