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The Magatama is jewelry from Jōmon period Japan, and was also found in the Korean Peninsula and Northeast Asia. Reconstruction of Jōmon period houses in the Aomori Prefecture. This period saw a rise in complexity in the design of pit-houses, the most commonly used method of housing at the time, [39] with some even having paved stone floors. [40]
The Higashimyō site is located on a low-lying marshland in the central Saga Plain, north of the modern Saga city. It is about 12 kilometers inland from the current coastline, but the coastline at the time of the Jōmon Maximum Transgression, about 7,000 years ago was near the site, and there is a large river nearby, and the site is estimated to be on the left bank of that river.
The style of pottery created by the Jōmon people is identifiable for its "cord-marked" patterns, hence the name "Jōmon" (縄文, "straw rope pattern").The pottery styles characteristic of the first phases of Jōmon culture used decoration created by impressing cords into the surface of wet clay, and are generally accepted to be among the oldest forms of pottery in East Asia and the world. [9]
It is a waterlogged midden site that was occupied mainly from the Incipient Jomon period to the Early Jomon period from 12,000 to 5,000 years ago (10,000–3,000 BC). [ 2 ] The site is located in the area of Lake Mikata, one of the Mikata five lakes , near the confluence of Hasu and Takase Rivers, within the borders of the Wakasa Wan Quasi ...
The Sannai-Maruyama Site (三内丸山遺跡, Sannai-Maruyama iseki) is an archaeological site and museum located in the Maruyama and Yasuta neighborhoods to the southwest of central Aomori in Aomori Prefecture in northern Japan, containing the ruins of a very large Jōmon period settlement.
The Satohama Shell Midden (里浜貝塚) is an archaeological site consisting of a shell midden and the remains of an adjacent Jōmon period settlement located in what is now the city of Higashimatsushima, Miyagi Prefecture in the Tōhoku region of northern Japan. It has been protected by the central government as a National Historic Site in ...
Jōmon Prehistoric Sites in Northern Japan (北海道・北東北の縄文遺跡群) is a serial UNESCO World Heritage Site consisting of 17 Jōmon-period archaeological sites in Hokkaidō and northern Tōhoku, Japan. The Jōmon period lasted more than 10,000 years, representing "sedentary pre-agricultural lifeways and a complex spiritual ...
It is now kept at the Tokyo National Museum, and is an Important Cultural Property. [1] It is recognized internationally as a relic representative of Japan’s Jomon culture. The site has been known and excavated since the Edo period , when clay figurines and pottery were discovered in 1622 when Tsugaru Nobuhira , the second daimyō of Tsugaru ...