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Ref ID: 31210
Ref Type: Journal Article
Authors: Shinji, Ito
Title: The position of the Ryukyu Jomon Culture in the Asia-Pacific region
Date: 2003
Source: Bulletin of the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association
Notes: Proceedings of the 17th Congress of the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association Taipei, Taiwan 9 to 15 September 2002.
Abstract: From c.5000 BC to AD 900, the Ryukyu Jomon culture flourished in the northern Ryukyu Islands. During this period, cultural relationships between this region and mainland Japan were intermittent and limited. The Ryukyu Jomon culture also had some cultural similarities with certain assemblages in Southeast Asia and Oceania. In terms of pottery, the Ryukyu Jomon possessed nine successive indigenous styles whose transitional processes were continuous. Furthermore, in the northern Ryukyus the durations of the different pottery styles were relatively short. The main subsistence economy of this culture was based on foraging for wild plants and animals, an economy was well adapted to coral reef islands in the subtropics. However, swidden horticulture might also have been practiced. Cultural differences like those that existed during the historic period between the Ryukyu and mainland Japan (Yamato) might have extended back to the time of the Ryukyu Jomon culture.
Date Created: 3/31/2004
Volume: 23
Page Start: 63
Page End: 66

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