描述
开 本: 大16开包 装: 平装是否套装: 否国际标准书号ISBN: 9787030420138
内容简介
Asian Archaeology is an annual English-language academic journal edited by the Research Center for Chinese Frontier Archaeology at Jilin University, a Chinese Ministry of Education Humanities and Social Sciences Key Research Base. This volume of the journal includes nine papers featuring reports on archaeological investigations and research essays. They cover areas across East Asia (including China), Southeast Asia, and the Eurasian Steppe, reporting on new archaeological data and research. They include topics such as environmental archaeology, ancient DNA analysis, materials analysis of ancient objects, and other research results in archaeological science, as well as a summary of the newest discoveries and research in Chinese archaeology from 2013.
目 录
Contents
Intrasite Organization in the Late Bronze-Age: The Application of Full-Coverage Survey Methods at Guicheng, Shandong Province, China
Li Feng, Elizabeth Berger, Liang Zhonghe, Jeremiah Trinidad-Christensen 1
Bronze Age Graves in the Delgerkhaan Mountain Area of Eastern Mongolia and the Ulaanzuukh Culture
Tumen Dashtseveg, Khatanbaatar Dorjpurev, Erdene Myagmar 。。 。。。。…。。…。。…。 4Q
Settlement and Social Dynamics in the Upper Daling and Chifeng Regions of Northeastern China
Robert D. Drennan, Christian E. Peterson, Lii Xueming, Zhu Da, Hou 又’ …-50
Viet Khe Burial 2: Identifying the Exotic Bronze Wares and Assessing Cultural Contact between the Dong Son and Yue Cultures
Wei Weiyan, Shiung Chung-Ching 77
Chinese Lacquered Cups of the Han Dynasty from the Collection of Noyon-Uul, the State Hermitage
Museum: Complex Research Using the Methods of Art History and Natural Science
Julia Elikhina, Olga Novikova, Sergey Khavrin 93
Mitochondrial DNA Analysis of Ancient Dog Bones from the Yanjialiang, Fenglin, and Xicha Sites, China
Naotaka Ishiguro, Akira Matsui, Hiroki Kikuchi, Chen Quanjia, Cai Dawei, Zhang Quanchao,
Wang
Ancient DNA and Kinship-based Burial Patterns at the Han-Jin Dynasty “Taojiazhai Site, Province, China
Li Hongjie, Zhang Ye, Zhao Yongbin, Zhou Hui 115
Revealing a Wall with RTK – A Non-destructive Investigation of a Chinese Medieval Walled Site Pauline Sebillaud, Liu Xiaoxi, Wang Xinsheng, Xing Chunguang .…125
A Brief Introduction to New Discoveries and Research in Chinese Archaeology in 2013
Call for Papers
Intrasite Organization in the Late Bronze-Age: The Application of Full-Coverage Survey Methods at Guicheng, Shandong Province, China
Li Feng, Elizabeth Berger, Liang Zhonghe, Jeremiah Trinidad-Christensen 1
Bronze Age Graves in the Delgerkhaan Mountain Area of Eastern Mongolia and the Ulaanzuukh Culture
Tumen Dashtseveg, Khatanbaatar Dorjpurev, Erdene Myagmar 。。 。。。。…。。…。。…。 4Q
Settlement and Social Dynamics in the Upper Daling and Chifeng Regions of Northeastern China
Robert D. Drennan, Christian E. Peterson, Lii Xueming, Zhu Da, Hou 又’ …-50
Viet Khe Burial 2: Identifying the Exotic Bronze Wares and Assessing Cultural Contact between the Dong Son and Yue Cultures
Wei Weiyan, Shiung Chung-Ching 77
Chinese Lacquered Cups of the Han Dynasty from the Collection of Noyon-Uul, the State Hermitage
Museum: Complex Research Using the Methods of Art History and Natural Science
Julia Elikhina, Olga Novikova, Sergey Khavrin 93
Mitochondrial DNA Analysis of Ancient Dog Bones from the Yanjialiang, Fenglin, and Xicha Sites, China
Naotaka Ishiguro, Akira Matsui, Hiroki Kikuchi, Chen Quanjia, Cai Dawei, Zhang Quanchao,
Wang
Ancient DNA and Kinship-based Burial Patterns at the Han-Jin Dynasty “Taojiazhai Site, Province, China
Li Hongjie, Zhang Ye, Zhao Yongbin, Zhou Hui 115
Revealing a Wall with RTK – A Non-destructive Investigation of a Chinese Medieval Walled Site Pauline Sebillaud, Liu Xiaoxi, Wang Xinsheng, Xing Chunguang .…125
A Brief Introduction to New Discoveries and Research in Chinese Archaeology in 2013
Call for Papers
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Intrasite Organization in the Late Bronze-Age: The Application of Full-Coverage Survey Methods at Guicheng, Shandong Province, China
Li Feng, Elizabeth Berger, Liang Zhonghe, Jeremiah Trinidad-Christensen
Abstract: Most full-coverage surveys have been carried out on a regional scale (a few hundred to over 1,000 km2). Full-coverage survey on a smaller scale has been insufficiently addressed in the literature. Such smaller-scale surveys have the unique potential to uncover sherd-distribution patterns within a large site or site cluster. At the Zhou period site of Guicheng (in Longkou, Shandong, PRC), we covered the entire 8 km2 survey area with a systematic collection strategy. This included recovering sherds at collection points spaced 20 m apart across the entire extent of the survey area, supplemented by three complete collection units of 4,900 m2 each. Combined with systematic coring and test excavation, this survey method enabled us not only to map out the continuum of sherds over the surface of the entire site, but also to detect and interpret correlations between surface remains and subsurface deposits. The survey provided the grounds to tackle questions about the social-political organization of the ancient city and its natural and historical formation processes.
Key Words: intrasite organization; survey design; settlement; full coverage survey; Guicheng; China
Virtually all field archaeological research begins with some sort of surface survey. Surface survey has long been recognized as a critical tool for understanding the organization of a site or the distribution of sites across a region. Of all surface survey strategies, full-coverage survey is the most effective for studying settlement organization and change at both inter-and intra-site levels. Most full-coverage surveys are carried out on a regional scale, though the definition and size of a “region” depends on the condition of the terrain and the research objective (Parsons 1990:10,11).
Full-coverage survey on a smaller scale, designed to detect patterns in the distribution
of remains within a large site or cluster of sites, has been insufficiently discussed in previous literature (Gaffney et al. 1985: 95-107; Walker 1985: 87-94). Such smaller-scale surveys,
usually conducted with much higher resolution than regional scale surveys, have unique potential to establish closer links between surface material and subsurface structures. This method results in better control of site size, and therefore is a better tool for investigating the internal sociopolitical organization of a society. Good examples of the application of this method come from Mediterranean archaeo?logical practice, including early surveys of the Greek countryside (Van Andel and Runnels
Li Feng 李峰:Columbia University, New York, NY. [email protected]. 407 Kent Hall, 1140 Amsterdam Ave., MC 3907, New York, NY 10027 USA. Phone: 1 212-854-2510. Fax: 1 212-678-8629 Elizabeth Berger: University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC
Liang Zhonghe 梁中合:Institute of Archaeology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing, China Jeremiah Trinidad-Christensen: Columbia University, New York, NY Corresponding author: Li Feng. Email: [email protected]
1987: 29-39) and a number of the Greek city-sites conducted as part of the Boeotia survey project in the 1990s (Bintliff 2000: 3-20, discussed below for comparison), as well as at Teotihuacan in Mexico (Millon 1973; also see below).
This paper will discuss the Guicheng 归城 survey, which tested the underlying premises of smaller-scale full-coverage. It is an example of the value of archaeological survey for our understanding of the intra-site organization of large urban settlements in Bronze Age China.
The Guicheng survey was part of a larger project whose aim was to study social changes during the Bronze Age in the eastern Jiaodong 胶东 Peninsula in Shandong Province, China. The project was jointly conducted by Columbia University, the Institute of Archaeology of the Chinese Academy of Social Science, and the Shandong Institute of Archaeology, and ran from 2007 to 2010. The Guicheng site is situated
in the foothills of Mount Lai 莱 in present-day Longkou 龙口 City off the south shore of the Bohai 渤海 Sea (Figure 1). The site was a walled city of 8 km2 (the outer wall of the city measures 12 km in length), easily rivaling the capitals of most powerful contemporaneous states in central China, making it the greatest urban center in the eastern peninsula in its own time. Guicheng was also located on the frontline of expansion of the Western Zhou state (1045-771 BC), and continued to serve, after the waning of Zhou power, as the capital of the indigenous state of Lai 莱 until its eventual destruction by the army of the expansionist state of Qi 齐 in 567 BC, as detailed in the historical text Zuo zhuan 左传(the sixth year of Duke Xiang 襄 of Lu 鲁;see Zuo zhuan: 1937); the location of Lai in Guicheng during the seventh-sixth centuries BC is well supported by the hist
Li Feng, Elizabeth Berger, Liang Zhonghe, Jeremiah Trinidad-Christensen
Abstract: Most full-coverage surveys have been carried out on a regional scale (a few hundred to over 1,000 km2). Full-coverage survey on a smaller scale has been insufficiently addressed in the literature. Such smaller-scale surveys have the unique potential to uncover sherd-distribution patterns within a large site or site cluster. At the Zhou period site of Guicheng (in Longkou, Shandong, PRC), we covered the entire 8 km2 survey area with a systematic collection strategy. This included recovering sherds at collection points spaced 20 m apart across the entire extent of the survey area, supplemented by three complete collection units of 4,900 m2 each. Combined with systematic coring and test excavation, this survey method enabled us not only to map out the continuum of sherds over the surface of the entire site, but also to detect and interpret correlations between surface remains and subsurface deposits. The survey provided the grounds to tackle questions about the social-political organization of the ancient city and its natural and historical formation processes.
Key Words: intrasite organization; survey design; settlement; full coverage survey; Guicheng; China
Virtually all field archaeological research begins with some sort of surface survey. Surface survey has long been recognized as a critical tool for understanding the organization of a site or the distribution of sites across a region. Of all surface survey strategies, full-coverage survey is the most effective for studying settlement organization and change at both inter-and intra-site levels. Most full-coverage surveys are carried out on a regional scale, though the definition and size of a “region” depends on the condition of the terrain and the research objective (Parsons 1990:10,11).
Full-coverage survey on a smaller scale, designed to detect patterns in the distribution
of remains within a large site or cluster of sites, has been insufficiently discussed in previous literature (Gaffney et al. 1985: 95-107; Walker 1985: 87-94). Such smaller-scale surveys,
usually conducted with much higher resolution than regional scale surveys, have unique potential to establish closer links between surface material and subsurface structures. This method results in better control of site size, and therefore is a better tool for investigating the internal sociopolitical organization of a society. Good examples of the application of this method come from Mediterranean archaeo?logical practice, including early surveys of the Greek countryside (Van Andel and Runnels
Li Feng 李峰:Columbia University, New York, NY. [email protected]. 407 Kent Hall, 1140 Amsterdam Ave., MC 3907, New York, NY 10027 USA. Phone: 1 212-854-2510. Fax: 1 212-678-8629 Elizabeth Berger: University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC
Liang Zhonghe 梁中合:Institute of Archaeology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing, China Jeremiah Trinidad-Christensen: Columbia University, New York, NY Corresponding author: Li Feng. Email: [email protected]
1987: 29-39) and a number of the Greek city-sites conducted as part of the Boeotia survey project in the 1990s (Bintliff 2000: 3-20, discussed below for comparison), as well as at Teotihuacan in Mexico (Millon 1973; also see below).
This paper will discuss the Guicheng 归城 survey, which tested the underlying premises of smaller-scale full-coverage. It is an example of the value of archaeological survey for our understanding of the intra-site organization of large urban settlements in Bronze Age China.
The Guicheng survey was part of a larger project whose aim was to study social changes during the Bronze Age in the eastern Jiaodong 胶东 Peninsula in Shandong Province, China. The project was jointly conducted by Columbia University, the Institute of Archaeology of the Chinese Academy of Social Science, and the Shandong Institute of Archaeology, and ran from 2007 to 2010. The Guicheng site is situated
in the foothills of Mount Lai 莱 in present-day Longkou 龙口 City off the south shore of the Bohai 渤海 Sea (Figure 1). The site was a walled city of 8 km2 (the outer wall of the city measures 12 km in length), easily rivaling the capitals of most powerful contemporaneous states in central China, making it the greatest urban center in the eastern peninsula in its own time. Guicheng was also located on the frontline of expansion of the Western Zhou state (1045-771 BC), and continued to serve, after the waning of Zhou power, as the capital of the indigenous state of Lai 莱 until its eventual destruction by the army of the expansionist state of Qi 齐 in 567 BC, as detailed in the historical text Zuo zhuan 左传(the sixth year of Duke Xiang 襄 of Lu 鲁;see Zuo zhuan: 1937); the location of Lai in Guicheng during the seventh-sixth centuries BC is well supported by the hist
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