Coexistence and cultural transmission in East Asia

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Bibliographic Details
Corporate Authors: World Archaeological Congress (Organization). Inter-Congress, ebrary, Inc
Other Authors: Matsumoto, Naoko, 1968-, Bessho, Hidetaka, Tomii, Makoto
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: Walnut Creek, Calif. : Left Coast Press, c2011.
Series:One world archaeology ; 61.
Subjects:
Online Access:An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view
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Table of Contents:
  • Introduction : archaeological approaches toward coexistence and cultural transmissions in East Asia / N. Matsumoto, H. Bessho and M. Tomii
  • Cognitive foundation of long-distance interaction and its relation to social contexts / Naoko Matsumoto
  • The role of long-distance interaction in the socio-cultural change in Yayoi period, Japan / Satoru Nakazono
  • The assimilation process in the Yayoi society of western Japan : was there a coexistence of different cultural groups? / Kazunori Misaka and Kunihiko Wakabayashi
  • Co-existence in prehistoric Guangdong, South China / Tracey L-D. Lu
  • Technological choices among maritime potter-traders : Mare islanders of northern Maluku (Indonesia) and other comparative cases / Akira Goto
  • The use of livestock carcasses in each period of Japanese history : an archaeological perspective / Akira Matsui
  • Changes in the perception of cattle and horses in ancient Japanese society / Hiroshi Sekiyama
  • The diverse activities of the Kugonin at the medieval period Nishinotsuji Site, Osaka, Japan / Hidetaka Bessho
  • Contact between indigenous people and immigrants in broad-leafed evergreen forests : plant utilization during the final Jomon period in southwestern Japan / Yudai Itakura
  • The diffusion process of red burnished jars and rice paddy field agriculture from the southern part of the Korean peninsula to the Japanese archipelago / Shinpei Hashino
  • The diversity of mortuary practice acceptance at the beginning of Yayoi period / Daisuke Nakamura
  • The imitation and hybridization of Korean peninsula style earthenware at northern Kyushu area during Yayoi period / Yoichi Kawakami.