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Featured researches published by Junzo Uchiyama.


Nature | 2013

Earliest evidence for the use of pottery

Oliver E. Craig; Hayley Saul; Alexandre Lucquin; Yastami Nishida; Karine Taché; Leon J. Clarke; Anu Thompson; D. T. Altoft; Junzo Uchiyama; M. Ajimoto; K. Gibbs; Sven Isaksson; Carl Heron; Peter C. Jordan

Pottery was a hunter-gatherer innovation that first emerged in East Asia between 20,000 and 12,000 calibrated years before present (cal bp), towards the end of the Late Pleistocene epoch, a period of time when humans were adjusting to changing climates and new environments. Ceramic container technologies were one of a range of late glacial adaptations that were pivotal to structuring subsequent cultural trajectories in different regions of the world, but the reasons for their emergence and widespread uptake are poorly understood. The first ceramic containers must have provided prehistoric hunter-gatherers with attractive new strategies for processing and consuming foodstuffs, but virtually nothing is known of how early pots were used. Here we report the chemical analysis of food residues associated with Late Pleistocene pottery, focusing on one of the best-studied prehistoric ceramic sequences in the world, the Japanese Jōmon. We demonstrate that lipids can be recovered reliably from charred surface deposits adhering to pottery dating from about 15,000 to 11,800 cal bp (the Incipient Jōmon period), the oldest pottery so far investigated, and that in most cases these organic compounds are unequivocally derived from processing freshwater and marine organisms. Stable isotope data support the lipid evidence and suggest that most of the 101 charred deposits analysed, from across the major islands of Japan, were derived from high-trophic-level aquatic food. Productive aquatic ecotones were heavily exploited by late glacial foragers, perhaps providing an initial impetus for investment in ceramic container technology, and paving the way for further intensification of pottery use by hunter-gatherers in the early Holocene epoch. Now that we have shown that it is possible to analyse organic residues from some of the world’s earliest ceramic vessels, the subsequent development of this critical technology can be clarified through further widespread testing of hunter-gatherer pottery from later periods.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Ancient lipids document continuity in the use of early hunter-gatherer pottery through 9,000 years of Japanese prehistory.

Alexandre Lucquin; Kevin Gibbs; Junzo Uchiyama; Hayley Saul; Mayumi Ajimoto; Yvette Eley; Anita Radini; Carl Heron; Shinya Shoda; Yastami Nishida; Jasmine Lundy; Peter Jordan; Sven Isaksson; Oliver E. Craig

Significance Pottery has had a central role in human society for many millennia, but the reasons for the emergence and spread of this technology are poorly understood. First invented by groups of hunter–gatherers living in East Asia during the last glacial period, production only began to flourish with rising global temperatures in the Holocene, but the reasons for its uptake and spread are unknown. Through chemical analysis of their contents, we herein provide, to our knowledge, the first direct evidence of pottery use across this climatic transition. Contrary to expectations, ceramic vessels had a remarkably consistent use, predominantly for processing aquatic resources, indicating that cultural rather than environmental factors were most important for their widespread uptake. 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 Jōmon 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 provides clear evidence that pottery across this sequence was predominantly used for cooking marine and freshwater resources, with evidence for diversification in the range of aquatic products processed during the Holocene. Conversely, there is little indication that ruminant animals or plants were processed in pottery, although it is evident from the faunal and macrobotanical remains that these foods were heavily exploited. Supported by other residue analysis data from Japan, our results show that the link between pottery and fishing was established in the Late Paleolithic and lasted well into the Holocene, despite environmental and socio-economic change. Cooking aquatic products in pottery represents an enduring social aspect of East Asian hunter–gatherers, a tradition based on a dependable technology for exploiting a sustainable resource in an uncertain and changing world.


Journal of World Prehistory | 2014

Investigating Neolithization of Cultural Landscapes in East Asia: The NEOMAP Project

Junzo Uchiyama; J. Christopher Gillam; Leo Aoi Hosoya; Kati Lindström; Peter Jordan


The 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2017

Honshu’s Pre-Agricultural Landscapes: Perspectives from Mt. Fuji and Toyama Bay

Christopher Gillam; Junzo Uchiyama; Mark Hudson; Carlos Zeballos


The 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2016

Pottery, Shellmounds, and Monuments: Environmental Impacts and Landscape Management of Hunter-Gatherer-Fisher (HGF) in Jomon Japan

Junzo Uchiyama; Christopher Gillam


PECSRL 2016 | 2016

Fuji as a European Mountain? Universal heritage value, local identities and changing landscapes at a new world heritage site.

Kati Lindström; Junzo Uchiyama


International Transdisciplinary Workshop “MOVEMENT and LANDSCAPE” | 2016

Idealised landscapes and heritage: sustainability in mountain Japan

Kati Lindström; Junzo Uchiyama


International Conference of Historical Geographers 2015 | 2015

Taming the Lake: Modernization of Water at Lake Biwa

Kati Lindström; Junzo Uchiyama; Carlos Renzo Zeballos Velarde


Archive | 2014

Neolithization of Cultural Landscapes in East Asia (Journal of World Prehistory Special Issue)

Peter Jordan; Christopher Gillam; Junzo Uchiyama


Anthropology of Japan in Japan Autumn Meeting Japan’s Cultural, Social, and Natural Landscapes: Challenges and Developments. | 2014

Idealised Landscapes and Heritage : Past and Future Sustainability in Hida

Junzo Uchiyama; Kati Lindström

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Kati Lindström

Royal Institute of Technology

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Peter Jordan

University of Groningen

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Carl Heron

University of Bradford

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Anu Thompson

University of Liverpool

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