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Walnuts, salmon and...
Walnuts, salmon and sika deer : Exploring the evolution and diversification of Jōmon “culinary” traditions in prehistoric Hokkaidō
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Robson, Harry K. (author)
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Lucquin, Alexandre (author)
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Gibbs, Kevin (author)
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Saul, Hayley (author)
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Tomoda, Tetsuhiro (author)
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Hirasawa, Yu (author)
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Yamahara, Toshiro (author)
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Kato, Hirofumi (author)
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- Isaksson, Sven (author)
- Stockholms universitet,Institutionen för arkeologi och antikens kultur
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Craig, Oliver E. (author)
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Jordan, Peter D. (author)
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(creator_code:org_t)
- Elsevier BV, 2020
- 2020
- English.
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In: Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. - : Elsevier BV. - 0278-4165 .- 1090-2686. ; 60
- Related links:
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https://pure.rug.nl/...
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https://urn.kb.se/re...
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https://doi.org/10.1...
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Abstract
Subject headings
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- The goal of this contribution is to stimulate a wider reflection on the role of food consumption practices throughout prehistory. We focussed on the Jmon communities of Hokkaid Island in Northern Japan since these mobile foragers underwent a process of economic diversification and intensification, eventually leading to higher levels of sedentism across the Pleistocene-Holocene transition. Moreover, dynamic social settings and expansion of the subsistence base at the start of the Holocene would have provided rich opportunities for novel food combinations, and potentially, the rise of diverse regional cuisines. We investigated tool kits and resource landscapes, and sampled pottery from a range of sites, phases and regions. We then applied organic residue analysis to confirm the actual spatiotemporal patterning in cuisine. Although we predicted that ruminants and nuts would have played a major role in local cuisine, especially in inland areas, our results indicate that aquatic resources were central to pottery-based cuisines across the island, and that other food groups had probably been processed in other ways. While organic residue analysis enabled us to reconstruct some major patterns in Jmon cuisine, we conclude that archaeologists will need to look beyond the cooking pot to fully appreciate the full diversity of local foodways.
Subject headings
- HUMANIORA -- Historia och arkeologi (hsv//swe)
- HUMANITIES -- History and Archaeology (hsv//eng)
Keyword
- Hunter-gatherers
- Jmon
- Japan
- Hokkaid
- Pottery
- Economic diversification and intensification
- Cuisine
- Nuts
- Environmental change
- Adaptation
- Plant foods
- Salmon
Publication and Content Type
- ref (subject category)
- art (subject category)
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- By the author/editor
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Robson, Harry K.
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Lucquin, Alexand ...
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Gibbs, Kevin
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Saul, Hayley
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Tomoda, Tetsuhir ...
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Hirasawa, Yu
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show more...
-
Yamahara, Toshir ...
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Kato, Hirofumi
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Isaksson, Sven
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Craig, Oliver E.
-
Jordan, Peter D.
-
show less...
- About the subject
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- HUMANITIES
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HUMANITIES
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and History and Arch ...
- Articles in the publication
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Journal of Anthr ...
- By the university
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Stockholm University