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Tracking the Adoption of Early Pottery Traditions into Maritime Northeast Asia: Emerging Insights and New Questions Научная публикация

Журнал The Archaeology of Asia-Pacific Navigation
ISSN: 2524-7468
Вых. Данные Год: 2022, Страницы: 315-345 Страниц : 31 DOI: 10.1007/978-981-19-1118-7_14
Ключевые слова Early pottery, Coastal adaptations, Maritime economies, Northeast Asia, Alaska, Aquatic resources, Organic residue analysis, Northern Indigenous communities
Авторы Jordan Peter 1,2 , Ponkratova Irina Y. 3 , Dyakonov Viktor M. 4 , Solovyova Elena N. 5 , Yamahara Toshiro 6 , Kato Hirofumi 7,2 , Admiraal Marjolein 8,9
Организации
1 Department of Archaeology and Ancient History, Lund University, Lund, Sweden
2 Global Station for Indigenous Studies and Cultural Diversity (GSI), Global Institution for Collaborative Research and Education (GI-CoRE), Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan
3 North East State University, Magadan, Russia
4 Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography, Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Novosibirsk, Russia
5 Arctic Research Center of the Academy of Sciences of the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia), Yakutsk, Russia
6 Obihiro Centennial City Museum, Obihiro City, Japan
7 Centre for Ainu and Indigenous Studies, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan
8 Arctic Centre and Groningen Institute of Archaeology, University of Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands
9 Department of Archaeology, BioArCh, University of York, York, UK

Реферат: Understanding the emergence and development of coastal adaptations is a central theme in the archaeology of Maritime Northeast Asia. The capacity to harvest, store and share aquatic resources offered a novel economic strategy that could support greater sedentism and new forms of social life. In turn, growing reliance on the exploitation of rich coastal resources would have generated powerful incentives to invent, adopt or refine food-processing technologies such as pottery. By the end of the Holocene, marine-adapted cultures were present along all habitable coastlines and most of them maintained some kind of pottery tradition, though the deeper origins of the apparent relationship remain obscure. To explore evolving associations between early pottery dispersals and the emergence of coastal adaptations we undertake a broad-scale chrono-spatial analysis of the expansion of these two phenomena across Northeast Asia and into Alaska, and then use this framework to discuss regional trajectories in more detail. Our preliminary results suggest that pottery and coastal economies have complex, and largely separate histories, and that closer associations only start to emerge in later times. While limitations in the quality and coverage of data make these insights tentative, this mapping exercise highlights important themes requiring further research. Improved chronological frameworks are needed in all areas to better correlate cultural developments with climatic and environmental changes. Many regions would also benefit from large-scale analysis of food residues preserved in pottery to clarify general patterns in vessel function. More contextual analysis is needed to clarify how pottery use relates to other food processing and storage technologies, and to explain why only some contemporaneous sites contain pottery while others do not. Finally, comparative insights from ethnography and oral history can shed light on later developments in food-processing technologies and will improve understanding of how ancestral cooking traditions continue to inform northern Indigenous food cultures.
Библиографическая ссылка: Jordan P. , Ponkratova I.Y. , Dyakonov V.M. , Solovyova E.N. , Yamahara T. , Kato H. , Admiraal M.
Tracking the Adoption of Early Pottery Traditions into Maritime Northeast Asia: Emerging Insights and New Questions
The Archaeology of Asia-Pacific Navigation. 2022. P.315-345. DOI: 10.1007/978-981-19-1118-7_14 OpenAlex
Идентификаторы БД:
≡ OpenAlex: W3194049578
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