Kamegaoka Stone Age Site

Kamegaoka Site
亀ヶ岡遺跡
Korekawa Jōmon Kan
Location in Japan
Kamegaoka Site
Location in Japan
Kamegaoka Stone Age Site (Japan)
Location Tsugaru, Aomori, Japan
Region Tōhoku region
Coordinates 40°53′5.62″N 140°20′22.45″E / 40.8848944°N 140.3395694°E / 40.8848944; 140.3395694
Type settlement, midden
Area 38,887.99 square metres (418,586.8 sq ft)
History
Founded 1,000 – 300 BC
Periods Final Jōmon period
Site notes
Ownership National Historic Site
Public access Yes

Kamegaoka Site (亀ヶ岡遺跡, Kamegaoka iseki) is a Jōmon period archaeological site in the city of Tsugaru, Aomori Prefecture, in the Tōhoku region of northern Japan. The remains were designated a National Historic Site in 1944 by the Japanese government. It is also referred to as the Kamegaoka Stone Age Site (亀ヶ岡石器時代遺跡, Korekawa sekki jidai iseki), although the remains discovered are from the Jōmon period, rather than the Japanese Paleolithic period.

Site

The site is located on a tongue-shaped plateau at an elevation of seven to eighteen meters above surrounding lowland swamps along the left bank of the Iwaki River on the Tsugaru Peninsula in western Aomori Prefecture. The site contained pit dwellings, a graveyard with mounds and pit graves containing numerous grave goods, including many finished and unfinished Jōmon pottery pieces, clay figurines, plant objects and jade beads. The artifacts have been dates to the Final Jomon period (approx. 1,000 – 300 BC).

One of the most famous objects found was a large clay figure (Dogū), discovered in 1887. Known as a Shakōki-dogū, or "goggle-eyed type" figurine, it appears to be wearing some form of snow goggles, and has exaggerated, feminine buttocks, chest and thighs. 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.

Other artifacts include pottery painted in red and black and lacquerware in a distinctive style, based on which archaeologists have named this site a type site for the “Kamegaoka culture”.

The site has been known and excavated since the Edo period, and some artifacts were even exported to Europe through Dutch traders at Nagasaki.[2]

The site has been submitted for inscription on the UNESCO World Heritage List as one of the Jōmon Archaeological Sites in Hokkaidō, Northern Tōhoku, and other regions[3][4]

See also

References

  1. Nakajima, Toshio (1943). 石器時代土偶の乳房及び下腹部膨隆に就いて [On the Breasts and Swollen Hips of Stone Age Dōgu] (PDF). Jinruigaku Zasshi (in Japanese). Tōkyō: Tōkyō Jinrui Gakkai. 58 (7): 294–295. Retrieved July 21, 2012.
  2. "Kamegaoka Site". Jomon Archaeological Sites in Hokkaido and Northern Tohoku. Jomon Japan. 2015. Retrieved 23 December 2016.
  3. "Jômon Archaeological Sites in Hokkaidô, Northern Tôhoku, and other regions". UNESCO. Retrieved 19 June 2012.
  4. 「北海道・北東北を中心とした縄文遺跡群」の世界文化遺産登録をめざして [Towards World Heritage Inscription of "Jōmon Archaeological Sites in Hokkaidō, Northern Tōhoku, and other regions"] (in Japanese). Hokkaidō Government Board of Education. Retrieved 9 November 2013.
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