Lucquin Alexandre, Gibbs Kevin, Uchiyama Junzo, Saul Hayley, Ajimoto Mayumi, Eley Yvette, Radini Anita, Heron Carl P, Shoda Shinya, Nishida Yastami, Lundy Jasmine, Jordan Peter, Isaksson Sven, Craig Oliver E
Department of Archaeology, BioArCh, University of York, York YO10 5DD, United Kingdom;
Department of Anthropology, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, NV 89154;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Apr 12;113(15):3991-6. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1522908113. Epub 2016 Mar 21.
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.
世界上最早的陶器来自东亚,可追溯到晚更新世。然而,陶瓷容器只是在全新世气候更温暖、更稳定的时期才大量生产。长期以来,人们一直认为陶器的扩张与定居生活的增加以及随着气候改善而出现的新资源的开发有关,但这一假设从未得到验证。通过对其内容物的化学分析,我们在此研究了日本西部鸟浜绳纹遗址长达9000年的陶器使用情况,该遗址从晚更新世到全新世中期断断续续有人居住。对143个容器中的脂质进行的分子和同位素分析提供了明确的证据,表明这一时期的陶器主要用于烹饪海洋和淡水资源,有证据表明全新世期间加工的水产品种类有所多样化。相反,几乎没有迹象表明反刍动物或植物是用陶器加工的,尽管从动物和大型植物遗迹中可以明显看出这些食物被大量食用。在来自日本的其他残留物分析数据的支持下,我们的结果表明,尽管环境和社会经济发生了变化,但陶器与捕鱼之间的联系在旧石器时代晚期就已建立,并一直持续到全新世。用陶器烹饪水产品是东亚狩猎采集者一个持久的社会特征,这一传统基于一种可靠的技术,即在不确定和不断变化的世界中开发可持续资源。