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Japan Cultural Profiles ProjectCultural Profile
 
                                                                               
 
 
Introduction to Japan:
Prehistory
 Archaeological dig at Shijimizuka (Hamamatsu City Government)Palaeolithic tool finds suggest that human settlement in Japan stretches back at least 30,000 years. The first inhabitants of the Japanese islands were hunter-gatherers from the continent who used sophisticated stone tools, but had no settled agriculture or ceramics.
This earliest wave of settlers - from which today's Ainu ethnic minority are descended - are believed to have migrated from Siberia. Initially dispersed widely throughout the Japanese islands, they were subsequently pushed steadily northwards by later migrant groups, forerunners of today's Japanese people, so that today only a small number remain in isolated pockets on Hokkaido.
Incipient Jomon pottery (10,000-8,000 BC), Tokyo National MuseumFrom around 13000 BCE a new wave of hunter-gatherers known as the Jomon settled in the Japanese islands. Known for their exquisite pottery, they acquired their name Jomon (literally 'cord marked') as a result of the unique decorative patterns they created on their ceramics.
The hunter-gatherer Jomon people were gradually superseded by the more advanced Yayoi (c 300 BCE-300 CE), who introduced wet rice cultivation and the use of metal tools.
 
 
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The Japan Cultural Profile was created with financial assistance from the Japan Foundation, the Great Britain Sasakawa Foundation and the Toshiba International Foundation
Date updated: 3 January 2008
 
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