2007 Fiscal Year Final Research Report Summary
Excavation at the cliff bottom site of the Gushikawa Gusuku, Okinawa
Project/Area Number |
17570195
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Research Category |
Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C)
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Allocation Type | Single-year Grants |
Section | 一般 |
Research Field |
Anthropology
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Research Institution | University of the Ryukyus |
Principal Investigator |
DOI N. University of the Ryukyus, Faculty of Medicine, Associate Professor (30128053)
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Co-Investigator(Kenkyū-buntansha) |
SHINODA K National Science Museum, Anthropology Dep., Chief (30131923)
YONEDA M The University of Tokyo, Graduate School of Frontier Science, Division of Integrated Biosciences, Associate Professor (30280712)
TAKENAKA M University of the Ryukyus, Kagoshima Woman's Junior College, Associate Professor (70264439)
TAKAMIYA H Sapporo University, Faculty of Cultural Studies, Professor (40258752)
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Project Period (FY) |
2005 – 2007
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Keywords | Human skeletal remains / Okinawa / Ryukyu islands / Prehistoric Okinawa / Gusuku age / excavation |
Research Abstract |
To investigate a blank period in population history of the Ryukyu Islanders, we conducted excavation at the cliff bottom burial site of the Gushikawa Gusuku. Age of the site was considered archaeologically from late Yayoi (layer 3) to medieval Gusuku (layers 1 and 2). Layer 3 produced abundant human skeletal remains. Shell beads, rings and other ornaments and Kyushu-type Yayoi pottery were amongst the artifacts associated with these skeletal remains. By counting well-preserved fragments of skull and limb bones, we tried to estimate total number of individuals buried in this site. Then, we could estimate the least number as 62 (17 adult males, 10 adult females, 17 sex-unknown adult, 18 immature) in Grid 1 (3m×4m). These results suggest that more than 100 individuals may be in this site. In addition, two lower jaws with the tooth extraction were detected from the layer 3. One was extracted all incisors (2I_1 2I_2), and the other was extracted right central and lateral incisors (I_1 I_2) (left side was damaged and unobservable). The extraction of lower jaw incisors might have been the major type of ablation in the Okinawa islands. Moreover, a large amount of burnt bones were also detected at this site. These findings are interesting to know about burial practices in southwestern islands.
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Research Products
(24 results)
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[Presentation] Archaeological excavation at burial site of the Gushikawa-Gusuku, Uruma-city, Okinawa (preliminary report)2005
Author(s)
MIYAGI, H., NISHIME, A., KATAGIRI, C, OSHIRO, T., DOI, N.
Organizer
The 59th Annual Meeting of the Anthropological Society of Nippon
Place of Presentation
Yokohama
Year and Date
2005-11-05
Description
「研究成果報告書概要(欧文)」より
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[Book] 宮古の自然と文化2008
Author(s)
土肥直美(共著)
Total Pages
200
Publisher
ボーダーインク
Description
「研究成果報告書概要(和文)」より
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