Production Pacea 2016 ______

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Production Pacea 2016 ______ PRODUCTION PACEA 2016 _______ Articles dans des revues internationales ou nationales avec comité de lecture répertoriées par l’AERES ou dans des bases de données internationales (ACL) ACL - Andrieux E., Bertran P., Antoine P., Deschodt L., Lenoble A., Coutard S., Van Vliet-Lanoë B. (2016) - Database of Pleistocene periglacial features in France : description of the online version. Quaternaire, vol. 27, n° 4, p. 329-339. ***ACL - Andrieux E., Bertran P., Saito K. (2016) - Spatial analysis of the French Pleistocene permafrost by a GIS database. Permafrost and Periglacial Processes, vol. 27, p. 17-30. ACL - Arranz Otaegui A., Boaretto A., Boaretto E., Bocaege E., Estrup E., Martinez- Gallardo C., Pantos G. A. (2016) - Shubayqa 6 : a new Late Natufian and Pre-Pottery Neolithic A settlement in north-east Jordan. Antiquity, vol. 90, n° 352, e2, 5 p. (doi:10.15184/aqy.2016.182) ACL - Aujoulat N. †, Feruglio V. (2016) - La base de données d’art mobilier du Musée national de Préhistoire (Les Eyzies-de-Tayac, Dordogne, France). Paleo, n° hors-série « Hommage à Norbert Aujoulat », p. 29-32. ACL - Averbouh A., Feruglio V., Delluc M. (2016) - L’ancrage du symbolique dans le réel : réflexions sur les représentations de bois de cerfs à Lascaux. Paleo, n° hors- série « Hommage à Norbert Aujoulat », p. 91-102. ACL - Barshay-Szmidt C., Costamagno S., Henry-Gambier D., Laroulandie V., Pétillon J.-M., Boudadi-Maligne M., Kuntz D., Langlais M., Mallye J.-B. (2016) - New extensive focused AMS 14C dating of the Middle and Upper Magdalenian of the western Aquitaine/Pyrenean region of France (ca. 19–14 ka cal BP) : Proposing a new model for its chronological phases and for the timing of occupation In : Pétillon J.-M., Laroulandie V., Costamagno S., Langlais M. (eds), Magdatis project : Hunter- gatherers and environmental change in the Aquitaine basin during the Magdalenian. Quaternary International, vol. 414, p. 62-91. ACL - Bassel L., Tauzin X., Queffelec A., Ferrier C., Lacanette D., Chapoulie R., Bousquet B. (2016) - Fluorescence-based knife-edge beam diameter measurement to characterize X-ray beam profiles in reflection geometry. Spectrochemica Acta, Part B, vol. 118, p. 98–101. ACL - Bauduer F. (2016) - Nicolas Ferry (1741-1764), the court dwarf of King Stanislas, probably suffered from microcephalic osteodysplastic primordial dwarfism type II (MOPD II). Medical Hypotheses, vol. 92, p. 26-27. ACL - Bauduer F. (2016) - Représentations artistiques de l'insuffisance staturale : approche diagnostique. Histoire des Sciences médicales, vol. 50, p. 237-246. ACL - Becdelièvre C., Thiol S., Saligny L., Granjon L., Rottier S. (2016) - The role of fire within Neolithic collective burials : spatial analyses of cremains from the site of La Truie Pendue, France. Journal of Field Archaeology, vol. 56, n° 5, p. 550-567. ACL - Bertran P., Allenet G., Brenet M., Chadelle J.-P., Dietsch-Sellami M.-F., Hébard J.-P., Madelaine G., Mercier N., Pasquet V., Ponel P., Queffelec A., Sirieix C. (2016) - Last Glacial palaeoenvironments at Lascaux, southwest France, with special emphasis on MIS 4 (Ognon II interstadia). Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, vol. 449, p. 149-165. ***ACL - Bertran P., Liard M., Sitzia L., Tissoux H. (2016) - A map of Pleistocene deposits in Western Europe, with special emphasis on France. Journal of Quaternary Science, vol. 31, n° 8, p. 844-856. ACL - Biosse Duplan M., Komla-Ebri D., Heuzé Y., Estibals V., Gaudas E., Kaci N., Benoist-lasselin C., Zerah M., Kramer I., Kneissel M., Grauss Porta D., Di Rocco F., Legeai-Mallet L. (2016) - Meckel's and condylar cartilages anomalies in achondroplasia result in defective development and growth of the mandible. Human Molecular Genetics, 2016, 14 p. (doi:10.1093/hmg/ddw153) ACL - Birouste C., Chauvière F.-X., Plassard F., Dachary M. (2016) - The horse mandibles at Duruthy Rockshelter (Sorde-l'Abbaye, Landes, France) and the identification of ontological systems in the Pyrenean Magdalenian. Quaternary International, vol. 414, p. 159-173. ACL - Blaser F., Chaussé C., Bayle G., Claud E., Coubray S., Didelot C., Péan S. (2016) - Données préliminaires sur la fouille du site du Paléolithique moyen de Montereau-sur-le-Jard (Seine-et-Marne). Bulletin de la Société préhistorique française, vol. 113, n° 4, 2016, p. 819-823. ACL - Bocaege E. (2016) - The hidden microworld of J.T. Quekett. Endeavour, vol. 40, n° 3, p. 201-203. ACL - Bocaege E., Hillson S. W. (2016) - Disturbances and noise : defining furrow- form enamel hypolasia. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, vol. 161, n° 4, p. 744-751. ACL - Bocaege E., Humphrey L. T. (2016) - Lateral enamel growth in human incisors from Çatalhöyük in Turkey. Çatalhöyük. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, vol. 161, n° 4, p. 656-666. ACL - Bocherens H., Diaz-Zorita Bonilla M., Daujeard C., Fernandes P., Raynal J.- P., Moncel M.-H. (2015) - Direct isotopic evidence for subsistence variability in Middle Pleistocene Neanderthals (Payre, Southeastern France). Quaternary Science Reviews, vol. 154, p. 226-236. ACL - Boucherie A., Castex D., Polet C., Kacki S. (2016) - Normal growth, altered growth ? Study of the relationship between Harris lines and bone form within a post- medieval plague cemetery (Dendermonde, Belgium, 16th Century). American Journal of Human Biology, 12 p. (doi:10.1002/ajhb.22885) ACL - Boulestin B. (2016) - Rites funestes et mythes romanesques : la leçon de la sépulture A de Téviec. Bulletin de la Société préhistorique française, vol. 113, n° 4, p. 811-813. ACL - Boudadi-Maligne M., Bailon S., Bochaton C., Casagrande F., Grouard S., Serrand N., Lenoble A. - Evidence for historical human-induced extinctions of vertebrate species on La Désirade (French West Indies). Quaternary Research, vol. 85, 2016, p. 54-65. ACL - Brenet M., Chadelle J.-P., Claud E., Colonge D., Delagnes A., Deschamps M., Folgado M., Gravina B. (2016) - The function and role of bifaces in the Late Middle Paleolithic of Southwestern France : example from the Charente and Dordogne to the Basque country. Quaternary International, 19 p. (http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2015.12.052) ACL - Bourguignon L., Crochet J.-Y., Capdevila R., Ivorra J., Antoine P.-O., Agusti J., Barsky D., Blain H.-A., Boulbes N., Bruxelles L., Claude J., Cochard D., Filoux A., Firmat C., Lozano-Fernandez I., Magniez P., Pelletier M., Rios-Garaizar J., Testu A., Valensi P., Weyer Louis de. (2016) - Bois-de-Riquet (Lézignan-la-Cèbe, Hérault) : A late Early Pleistoene archaeological occurrence in Southern France. Quaternary International, vol. 393, p. 24-40. ACL - Castel J.-Ch., Discamps E., Soulier M.-C., Sandgathe D., Dibble H., McPherron S.J.P., Goldberg P., Turq A. (2016) - Neandertal subsistence strategies during the Quina Mousterian at Roc de Marsal (France). Quaternary International, 17p. (http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2015.12.033 ***ACL - Castex D., Kacki S. (2016) - Demographic patterns distinctive of epidemic cemeteries in archaeological samples. Microbiology Spectrum, vol. 4, n° 3 : PoH- 0015-2015 (doi:10.1128/microbiolspec.PoH-0015-2015). ACL - Chahid D., Boudad L. Lenoble A., El Hmaidi A. et Chakroun A. (2016) - Nouvelles données morpho-stratigraphiques et géochronologiques sur le cordon littoral externe (SIM 5-c) de Rabat–Témara, Maroc. Géomorphologie, relief, processus et environnement, vol. 22, n° 3, p. 253-264. ACL - Chahid D., Lenoble A., Boudad L., Van Vliet-Lanoë B. (2016) - Enregistrements sédimentaires d’événements de haute énergie, exemples de la Côte Atlantique de Rabat-Skhirat (Maroc). Quaternaire, vol. 27, n° 2, p. 157-171. ACL - Charrié-Duhaut A., Porraz G., Igreja M., Texier P.-J., Parkington J. E. (2016) - Holocene hunter-gatherers and adhesive manufacture in the West Coast of South Africa. Southern African Humanities, vol. 29, p. 283-306. ACL - Chevallier A., Costamagno S., Ferrié J.-G., Kuntz D., Laroulandie V. (2016) - Exploitation du milieu montagnard sur le versant nord des Pyrénées entre 20 000 et 12 000 cal BP : que nous apprend la faune ? Munibe, vol. 67, p. 279-284. ACL - Cleyet-Merle J.-J., Feruglio V., Delluc M. (2016) - Combarelles III (Les Eyzies-de-Tayac, Dordogne, France). Paleo, n° hors-série « Hommage à Norbert Aujoulat », p. 115-128. ACL - Coqueugniot H. (2016) - Une expérience de dépôt de brevet et de mise en place d’une cellule de transfert au sein d’une équipe de recherche en anthropologie. Mélanges de la Casa de Velazquez, vol. 46, n° 1, 2016, p. 281-286. ACL - Costamagno S., Barshay-Szmidt C., Kuntz D., Laroulandie V., Pétillon J.-M., Boudadi-Maligne M., Langlais M., Mallye J.-B., Chevallier A. (2016) - Reexamining the timing of reindeer disappearance in southwestern France in the larger context of late glacial faunal turnover In : Pétillon J.-M., Laroulandie V., Costamagno S., Langlais M. (eds), Magdatis project : Hunter-gatherers and environmental change in the Aquitaine basin during the Magdalenian. Quaternary International, vol. 414, p. 34- 61. ACL - Crevecoeur I., Brooks A.S., Ribot I., Cornelissen E., Semal P. (2016) - Late Stone Age human remains from Ishango (Democratic Republic of Congo): new insights on Late Pleistocene modern human diversity in Africa. Journal of Human Evolution, vol. 96, p. 35-57. ACL - Cuenca-Solana D., Gutiérrez-Zugasti I., Ruiz-Redondo A., Gonzalez-Morales M.R., Setién I., Ruiz-Martinez E., Palacio-Pérez E., de las Heras-Martin C., Prada- Freixedo A., Lasheras-Corruchaga J.A. (2016) - Painting Altamira Cave ? Shell tools for ochre-processing in the Upper Palaeolithic in northern Iberia. Journal of Archaeological Science, vol. 74, p. 135-151. ACL - Dayet L., Le Bourdonnec F.-X., Porraz G., Daniel F., Texier P.-J. (2016) - Ochre provenance and procurement strategies during the Middle Stone Age at Diepkloof Rock Shelter, South Africa. Archaeometry, vol. 58, n° 5, p. 807-829. ACL - Debard E., Ferrier C., Kervazo B. (2016) - Grotte Chauvet-Pont d’Arc (Ardèche) : évolution morphosédimentaire de l’entrée, implication sur les occupations et sur la conservation des vestiges. Quaternaire, vol.
Recommended publications
  • Program of the 76Th Annual Meeting
    PROGRAM OF THE 76 TH ANNUAL MEETING March 30−April 3, 2011 Sacramento, California THE ANNUAL MEETING of the Society for American Archaeology provides a forum for the dissemination of knowledge and discussion. The views expressed at the sessions are solely those of the speakers and the Society does not endorse, approve, or censor them. Descriptions of events and titles are those of the organizers, not the Society. Program of the 76th Annual Meeting Published by the Society for American Archaeology 900 Second Street NE, Suite 12 Washington DC 20002-3560 USA Tel: +1 202/789-8200 Fax: +1 202/789-0284 Email: [email protected] WWW: http://www.saa.org Copyright © 2011 Society for American Archaeology. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reprinted in any form or by any means without prior permission from the publisher. Program of the 76th Annual Meeting 3 Contents 4................ Awards Presentation & Annual Business Meeting Agenda 5………..….2011 Award Recipients 11.................Maps of the Hyatt Regency Sacramento, Sheraton Grand Sacramento, and the Sacramento Convention Center 17 ................Meeting Organizers, SAA Board of Directors, & SAA Staff 18 ............... General Information . 20. .............. Featured Sessions 22 ............... Summary Schedule 26 ............... A Word about the Sessions 28…………. Student Events 29………..…Sessions At A Glance (NEW!) 37................ Program 169................SAA Awards, Scholarships, & Fellowships 176................ Presidents of SAA . 176................ Annual Meeting Sites 178................ Exhibit Map 179................Exhibitor Directory 190................SAA Committees and Task Forces 194…….…….Index of Participants 4 Program of the 76th Annual Meeting Awards Presentation & Annual Business Meeting APRIL 1, 2011 5 PM Call to Order Call for Approval of Minutes of the 2010 Annual Business Meeting Remarks President Margaret W.
    [Show full text]
  • The Origins of Japanese Culture Uncovered Using DNA ―What Happens When We Cut Into the World of the Kojiki Myths Using the Latest Science
    The Origins of Japanese Culture Uncovered Using DNA ―What happens when we cut into the world of the Kojiki myths using the latest science Miura Sukeyuki – Professor, Rissho University & Shinoda Kenichi – Director, Department of Anthropology, Japanese National Museum of Nature and Science MIURA Sukeyuki: The Kojiki (Records of Ancient Matters) has one distinguishing feature in the fact it includes a mixture of both Southern and Northern style myths. This is proof that Japanese culture was originally not only one culture, but rather came into existence while being influenced by its various surroundings; but when it comes to trying to seek out the origins of that culture, as we would expect, there are limits to how far we can get using only an arts and humanities-based approach. That’s where your (Professor Shinoda’s) area of expertise— molecular anthropology—comes in and corroborates things scientifically for us. Miura Sukeyuki , Professor, Rissho By analyzing the DNA remaining in ancient human skeletal remains, University your research closing in on the origins of the Japanese people is beginning to unravel when the Jomon and Yayoi peoples and so on came to the Japanese archipelago, where they came from, and the course of their movements, isn’t it? In recent times we’ve come to look forward to the possibility that, by watching the latest developments in scientific research, we may be able to newly uncover the origins of Japanese culture. SHINODA Kenichi: Speaking of the Kojiki , during my time as a student my mentor examined the bones of O-no-Yasumaro, who is regarded as being the person who compiled and edited it.
    [Show full text]
  • Archaeology and Development / Peter G. Gould
    Theme01: Archaeology and Development / Peter G. Gould Poster T01-91P / Mohammed El Khalili / Managing Change in an ever-Changing Archeological Landscape: Safeguard the Natural and Cultural Landscape of Jarash T01-92P / Wai Man Raymond Lee / Archaeology and Development: a Case Study under the Context of Hong Kong T01A / RY103 / SS5,SS6 T01A01 / Emmanuel Ndiema / Engaging Communities in Cultural Heritage Conservation: Perspectives from Kakapel, Western Kenya T01A02 / Paul Edward Montgomery / Branding Barbarians: The Development of Renewable Archaeotourism Destinations to Re-Present Marginalized Cultures of the Past T01A03 / Selvakumar Veerasamy / Historical Sites and Monuments and Community Development: Practical Issues and ground realities T01A04 / Yoshitaka SASAKI / Sustainable Utilization Approach to Cultural Heritage and the Benefits for Tourists and Local Communities: The Case of Akita Fortification, Akita prefecture, Japan. T01A05 / Angela Kabiru / Sustainable Development and Tourism: Issues and Challenges in Lamu old Town T01A06 / Chulani Rambukwella / ENDANGERED ARCHAEOLOGICAL LANDSCAPE OF THE WORLD HERITAGE CITY OF KANDY AND ITS SUBURBS IN SRI LANKA T01A07 / chandima bogahawatta / Sigiriya: World’s Oldest Living Heritage and Multi Tourist Attraction T01A08 / Shahnaj Husne Jahan Leena / Sustainable Development through Archaeological Heritage Management and Eco-Tourism at Bhitargarh in Bangladesh T01A09 / OLALEKAN AKINADE / IGBO UKWU ARCHAEOLOGICAL HERITAGE AS A BOOST TO NIGERIAN CULTURAL HERITAGE OLALEKAN AJAO AKINADE, [email protected]
    [Show full text]
  • Formation of the Proto-Japanese People
    EAST ASIAN HISTORY: A KOREAN PERSPECTIVE Vol. 2. No. 8. 2005. 5. 28. 1 IC-10.S-1.5-0528 Formation of the Proto-Japanese People THE YAYOI WAVE Wontack Hong Professor, Seoul University 1. Jōmon Pottery THE NEOLITHIC JŌMON CULTURE OF AINU AND MALAYO- POLYNESIAN PEOPLE 1 The skeletal remains of The Ainu people from Siberia came by foot to the Hokkaido Ainu share Sakhalin-Hokkaidō area toward the end of the glacial period morphologically close relations and then spread over the whole archipelago, commencing the with northern Mongoloid people. pre-pottery Palaeolithic life. Before the end of the glacial An analysis of mitochondrial period, the Malayo-Polynesian people also came from DNA found no shared types Southeast Asia via the sea route of the Philippines-Taiwan- between the Ainu and Okinawans. Ryūkyū Islands, settling mostly in the Kyūshū area and some of See Hudson (1999: 64-67, 71-72 them moving into the western mainland. and 76-78). Genetic studies show that the Ainu are much closer to northern Mongoloid than to Southeast Asian populations.1 2 Diamond (1998: 11). Many place-names in Hokkaidō and northern main land include the Ainu words, but such Ainu-like names never occur 3 See Imamura (1996: 112). in the southwestern area and Kyūshū.2 It may account for the Ainu and Malayo-Polynesians are contrast in Jōmon pottery traditions between southwestern and not genetically close. northeastern Japan, the boundary being located around the See Nei Masatoshi, “The Origins Nagoya region.3 of Human Populations: Genetic, With the advent of the Neolithic Jōmon period (10,000 – Linguistic, and Archeological 300 BC), people on the Japanese islands began fishing with ” Data, in The Origin and Past of harpoons and fishhooks, hunting and gathering with stones Modern Humans as Viewed from DNA, ed.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction, in K
    RAW MATERIAL UTILIZATION FOR STONE IMPLEMENTS OF THE JOMON CULTURE IN JAPAN 889 . in Kanto, Japan- Part 2, Journal of the Faculty of raw materials of stone implements], in Kamaki Science sec. V, vol. iv, part 4: 395469. Tokyo: Yoshimasa Sensei Koki Kinen Ronshu: University of Tokyo. Kokogaku to Kanren Kagaku: 447-91. Okayama; TAKANEZAWA-MACHIKYOIKU IINKAI. 1982. Ishigami Kamaki Yoshimasa Sensei Koki Kinen Ron- lseki [The Ishigami site]. Tochigi: Takanezawa- bunshu Kankoukai. machi Kyoiku Iinkai. WARASHINA,TETSUO et al. 1978a. Keikou x-sen bun- TSUBOI,KIYOTARI. 1984. Introduction, in K. Tsuboi seki niyoru sanukite sekki no gensanchi suitei (ed.), Recent Archaeological Discoveries in (Ill) [Sourcing of sanukite stone implements by Japan: 1-4. Tokyo: The Centre for East Asian x-ray fluorescence analysis (III)], Koukogaku to Cultural Studies and UNESCO. Shizenkagaku 10: 53-81. WARASHINA,TETSUO. 1972. Sanukite no keikou x-sen 1978b. Keikou x-sen bunseki niyoru sanukite bunseki [X-ray fluorescence analysis of sanu- sekki no gensanchi suitei (IV) [Sourcing of sanu- kite], Koukogaku to Shizenkagaku 5: 69-75. kite stone implements by x-ray fluorescence WARASHINA,TETSUO & TAKENOBUHIGASHIMURA. 1973. analysis (IV]]. Koukogaku to Shizenkagaku 11: Keikou x-sen bunseki niyoru sanukite sekki no 33-47. gensanchi suitei [Sourcing of sanukite stone YAMAGATA-KENKYOIKU IINKAI. 1981. Higashikouya-B implements by x-ray fluorescence analysis], Iseki [The Higashikouya-B site]. Yamagata: Koukogaku to Shizenkagaku 6: 3342. Yamagata-ken Kyoiku Iinkai. 1975. Keikou x-sen bunseki niyoru sanukite sekki YAMAMOTO,KAORU. 1989a. Jomon jidai no sekki ni no gensanchi suitei (111 [Sourcing of sanukite tsukawareta ganseki oyobi koubutsu nitsuite stone implements by x-ray fluorescence analysis [Raw material utilization for stone implements (1111, Koukogaku to Shizenkagaku 8: 61-9.
    [Show full text]
  • Rice, Bronze, and Chieftains —An Archaeology of Yayoi Ritual—
    Japanese Journal of Religions Studies 1992 19/2-3 Rice, Bronze, and Chieftains —An Archaeology of Yayoi Ritual— Mark J. H udson The Yayoi 弥生 was the period in which agriculture came to form the basis of society in a laree part of the Japanese archipelago. It is often dated from 300 bc to ad 300,thoueh in parts of western Japan wet rice farming began a century or more earlier. The end of the Yayoi was marked by the appearance in the third century of kofun, standardized keyhole-shaped tomb mounds. Although there is disagreement over both the exact chronology of this transition and the difference between standardized and pre-standardized mounds, the majority of Japanese archaeologists now believe the Yayoi ended by about ad 250 in the west­ ern archipelago. Limitations of space make it impossible to present a general discussion of Yayoi culture here. A recent review can be found in H udson (1990), but the reader should be aware that many areas of debate still remain. One such problem is the degree of continental immigration into Yayoi Japan —something that has obvious consequences for our understand­ ing of ritual continuities with the Jomon. The Yayoi is partially proto- historic, since the Eastern Han and Wei dynastic histories (Hou H an shu 後漢書 and Wei zhi 魏志〉contain short descriptions of the Wa 倭 people. Although there have been suggestions that “Wa” was used to refer to a distinct ethnic group, it is probably best understood as a general term for the inhabitants of at least western Japan in the third century ad.
    [Show full text]
  • Syracuse University Art Galleries
    J Syracuse University Art Galleries I The Colonel John R. Fox Collection of R ERAMIC from the Syracuse University Art Collection Joe and Emily Lowe Art Gallery Sims Hall Syracuse University October 12-30,1977 THE COLONEL JOHN R. FOX COLLECTION OF K 0 REA N C ERA M I C S FROM THE SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY ART COLLECTIONS ESSAY BY CHARLES RYDER DIBBLE, Ph.D. GUEST CURATOR OCTOBER 12-0CTOBER 30, 1977 Syracuse University Art GalleriesJOE AND EMILY LOWE ART GALLERY SIMS HALL, SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY SYRACUSE, NEW YORK Copyright, 1977 by Joe and Emily Lowe Art Gallery College of Visual and Performing Arts, Syracuse University Syracuse, New York ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS It is with great pride that the Joe and Emily Lowe Art Gallery presents the Colonel John R. Fox Collection of Korean Ceramics from the Syracuse University Art Collections. This exhibition illustrates the high level of professional expertise available from the School of Art and the depth of the international art collection at Syracuse University. My special thanks to Dr. Charles R. Dibble, Assistant Dean C.V.P.A. for curating the exhibition and for providing the historical information printed in this document. I would also like to·extend my thanks to Syracuse University LauraArt Fleischmann Galleries for her very able assistance on all aspects of the exhibition and Dianne Ludman for designing the graphics and helping with the installation. Thanks to Gary McLoughlin and Judy Barry of the gallery staff and thanks to Dr. August Freundlich, Dean of the College of Visual and Performing Arts, Dr. Alfred T. Collette, Director of the Syracuse University Art Collections, Domenic Iacono, Registrar and Bill Boylan for their special cooperation.
    [Show full text]
  • Current Studies of the Jomon Archaeology Ryuzaburo
    Šw‰ï•ñ•• Current Studies of the Jomon Archaeology Archaeological Studies of Japan: Current Studies of the Jomon Archaeology Ryuzaburo TAKAHASHI, Takeji TOIZUMI and Yasushi KOJO I . Introduction palaeoenvironment It is about 120 years ago that the scientific archaeology was introduced into Japan by E.S. Morse, an American zoologist who came to the country to conduct malacological research. Morse happened to see a shell heap from the window of a train during his first visit, which he thereafter soon excavated. It was the Omori shell-midden site of the Late Jomon Period located in the southern part of Tokyo. The techniques and ideas that Morse adopted in the excavation exerted substantial influence on the subsequent development of Japanese archaeology. Since Morse's ground breaking undertaking, a plethora of excavations have been conducted throughout the country and our knowledge on the Jomon Period has increased accordingly. The Jomon Period archaeology was initiated under the interest in the antiquity and the racial or ethnic affiliation of this unique archaeological culture. Today, the research interest has expanded to a variety of issues including the re-construction of palaeoenvironment, subsistence, social organization, religion, demography and so forth. With such a historical backdrop, the current understanding of the Jomon Period is epitomized below. Along with the Japanese archaeology of other periods, the Jomon archaeology is also involved in an unprecedented information deluge that archaeologists in the world have never undergone. References cited in the text are merely a fraction of the thousands of excavation reports and journal articles incessantly published every year over the last couple of decades.
    [Show full text]
  • Chicago Fall Books
    chicago fall books 2014 chicago fall books fall 2014 street chicago, illinois 60637 th 27 east 60 14 University of Chicago Press of Chicago University Recently Published Fall 2014 Contents General Interest 1 Special Interest 39 Paperbacks 101 House of Debt On the Run Distributed Books 132 How They (and You) Caused the Fugitive Life in an American City Great Recession, and How We Can Alice Goffman Prevent It from Happening Again ISBN-13: 978-0-226-13671-4 Author Index 356 Atif Mian and Amir Sufi Cloth $25.00/£17.50 ISBN-13: 978-0-226-08194-6 E-book ISBN-13: 978-0-226-13685-1 Cloth $26.00/£18.00 Title Index 358 E-book ISBN-13: 978-0-226-13864-0 Subject Index 360 Ordering Inside Information back cover The Book of Eggs Bedrooms of the Fallen A Life-Size Guide to the Eggs of Six Ashley Gilbertson Hundred of the World’s Bird Species With a Foreword by Philip Gourevitch Mark E. Hauber ISBN-13: 978-0-226-06686-8 Edited by John Bates and Barbara Becker Cloth $35.00/£24.50 E-book ISBN-13: 978-0-226-13511-3 ISBN-13: 978-0-226-05778-1 Cloth $55.00 E-book ISBN-13: 978-0-226-05781-1 CUSA Cover illustration: “Bouquiniste sur le quai des Grands-Augustins.” Oil on canvas c. 1949. Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1883–1949). Paris, France, Musée Walden Warming The Oldest Living Carnavalet. © Musée Carnavalet/Roger-Viollet/The Image Works. From Palace Climate Change Comes to Things in the World of Books by Roger Grenier, translated from the French by Alice Kaplan and Thoreau’s Woods published by the University of Chicago Press.
    [Show full text]
  • Print This Article
    RADIOCARBON Editors: RICHARD FOSTER FLINT-J GORDON ODGEN, III-IRVING ROUSE-MINZE STUIVER Managing Editor: RENEE S KRA Published by THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE Editors: JOHN RODGERS, JOHN H OSTROM, AND PHILLIP M ORVILLE Published three times a year, in Winter, Spring, and Summer, at Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut. Subscription rate $45.00 (for institutions), $30.00 (for individuals), available only in whole volumes. All correspondence and manuscripts should be addressed to the Managing Editor, RADIOCARBON, Box 2161, Yale Station, New Haven, Connecticut 06520. INSTRUCTIONS TO CONTRIBUTORS Manuscripts of radiocarbon papers should follow the recommendations in Sugges- tions to Authors, 5th ed.* All copy (including the bibliography) must be typewritten in double space. Manuscripts for vol 17, no. 1 must be submitted in duplicate before June 1, 1974; for vol 17, no. 2 before October 1, 1974. Descriptions of samples, in date lists, should follow as closely as possible the style shown in this volume. Each separate entry (date or series) in a date list should be considered an abstract, prepared in such a way that descriptive material is distinguished from geologic or archaeologic interpretation, but description and interpretation must be both brief and informative, emphasis placed on significant comments. Date lists should therefore not be preceded by abstracts, but abstracts of the more usual form should accompany all papers (eg, geochemical contributions) that are directed to specific problems. Each description should include the following data, if possible in the order given: 1. Laboratory number, descriptive name (ordinarily that of the locality of collec- tion), and the date expressed in years BP (before present, ie, before AD 1950) and, for finite dates, in years AD/BC.
    [Show full text]
  • The Yayoi Period
    The Yayoi Period Received 5 April 1976 HIROSHI KANASEKI AND MAKOTO SAHARA N THE long course of Japanese history, the Yayoi period (200 B.C.-A.D. 300) is recognized as a time of remarkable change. During the Yayoi period, the I transition from food gathering to food producing occurred simultaneously with the transition from stone technology to metallurgy. Also, the foundation of the ancient Japanese state was laid as individual small local primitive communities were unified and as specialization of labor and social stratification developed. It is interesting to note that these changes required several thousand years in Southwest Asia and China, but that in the Japanese archipelago they occurred more rapidly. The dramatic cultural change of the Yayoi period can be compared with that of the Meiji era, for since that time the Japanese have had significant contact with the continent. Indeed, since the Yayoi period Japan has recognized itself as a member of the East Asian world. DEFINITION Archaeologists customarily have defined the Yayoi period on the basis of its pottery. They believed that typological studies would enable them to distinguish Yayoi pottery from Jomon or Haji pottery; they defined the Yayoi period as the period during which Yayoi pottery was produced and used. But, more recent investigations reveal a remarkable consistency of pottery technique through the Jomon to the Haji, thus reducing the usefulness of this view. Accordingly, the authors of this paper define the Yayoi period as beginning when the people came to depend upon paddy cultivation as the major means ofsupport for society and ending with the emergence of the first keyhole-shaped burial mounds, that is, the beginning of the Kofun period.
    [Show full text]
  • Archaeology and History of Toraijin Human, Technological, and Cultural Flow from the Korean Peninsula to the Japanese Archipelago C
    Archaeology and History of Toraijin Human, technological, and cultural flow from the Korean Peninsula to the Japanese Archipelago c. 800 BC–AD 600 Song-nai Rhee C. Melvin Aikens with Gina L. Barnes Archaeopress Archaeology Archaeopress Publishing Ltd Summertown Pavilion 18-24 Middle Way Summertown Oxford OX2 7LG www.archaeopress.com ISBN 978-1-78969-966-1 ISBN 978-1-78969-967-8 (e-Pdf) © Archaeopress, Song-nai Rhee, C. Melvin Aikens and Gina L. Barnes 2021 All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the copyright owners. This book is available direct from Archaeopress or from our website www.archaeopress.com Contents List of Figures and Tables ....................................................................................................................................v List of Maps .........................................................................................................................................................vii Stylistic Notes ................................................................................................................................................... viii Acknowledgements ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ix Preface ..................................................................................................................................................................xi
    [Show full text]