Wednesday Morning
10:00-12:00 Registration in the Lobby of Munwon Hall
Wednesday Afternoon
2:00 Opening Ceremony
Room: Munwon Hall
Opening Session: Korean Archaeology at the Crossroads: Retrospect
and Prospect
Room: Munwon Hall
Chair: Sarah M. NELSON and PAK Yangjin
2:20 PAK Yangjin (Chungnam National University): Introduction
2:40 SEONG Chuntaek (Chungnam National University): Forty Years of
Palaeolithic
Research in Korea: Achievements and Problems
3:00 KIM Jangsuk (Chonnam National University): Review of Neolithic
Archaeology
3:20 PAK Yangjin (Chungnam National University): Issues in Korean Bronze
Age
Archaeology
Break
3:50 CHOI Jongtaek (Korea University): Review of Goguryeo Archaeology
4:10 PARK Soonbal (Chungnam National University): Review of Baekje
Archaeology
4:30 LEE Sung-joo (Gangneung National University): Review of Shilla and
Gaya
Archaeology
5:00 Discussion
5:30 Welcoming Reception
Thursday Morning
Session I-A: Aspects of Social Archaeology from Kyushu, Japan
Room: Baekma Hall
Chair: MIZOGUCHI Koji
9:30 MIZOGUCHI Koji (Kyushu University):
Introduction
9:40 ITAKURA Yudai (Kyushu University): Emergence and Transformation of
Sedentism
in the Jomon Period
9:55 ISHIKAWA Takeshi (Kyushu University): Social transformation from the
Late to the
Final Jomon period in the Kyushu region, Japan
10:10 SHIGEMATSU Tatsuji (Kyushu University): Dynamics of the Regional
Society as
Seen from the Study of Yayoi Pottery
10:25 KANEGAE Kenji (Kyushu University): Production and Distribution Mode
of the
Yayoi Pottery of Northern Kyushu
10:40 Break
10:55 TAJIRI Yoshinori (Kyushu University): The Context and Social
Significance of the
Small Bronze Mirrors Imitating the Chinese Originals Excavated from the
Korean
Peninsula
11:10 MIZOGUCHI Koji (Kyushu University): Ritual and Social Stratification:
the Case of
Middle and Late Yayoi Period Northern Kyushu, Japan
11:25 FUNAHASHI Kyoko (Kyushu University): Ritual Tooth Ablation and Social
Organization from the Final Jomon to the Yayoi in Northern Kyushu, Japan
11:40 WATANABE Makoto (Kyushu University): Pottery and Social Strategy: the
Introduction of a New Pottery Assemblage in the Yayoi-Kofun Transitional
Period
of San’in Region, Western Japan
11:55 ODA Yuki (Kyushu University): The Adaptation of Cremation Practices
in Ancient
Japan: a Case Study in the Northern Kyushu Region
Session I-B: Xiongnu and Mongolian Archaeology
Room: Museum Auditorium
Chair:
9:30 KANG In-Uk (Seoul National University): Historical Review on
the Ordos Bronzes
and Pre-Xiongnu Culture Problems in the Northern Steppe Zone of China
9:45 Bryan Kristopher MILLER (National Chengchi University): Xiongnu Mortuary
Analysis
10:00 Francis ALLARD (Indiana University of Pennsylvania): The Khanuy Valley
International Collaborative Project on Early Nomadic Pastoralism in Mongolia
10:15 YUN Hyeung-won (National Museum of Korea): Hudgiin-Tolgoi Hunnu Tombs
in
Mongolia
10:30 Naran BASARZAD (Institute of Archaeology): Pathological Cases from the
Bronze
and Early Iron Age in Mongolia
Session I-C: Issues in Environmental Archaeology in China
Room: Munwon Hall
Chair: Rowan FLAD and YUAN Jing
9:30 Rowan FLAD (Harvard University):
Introduction
9:40 QI Wuyun (Institute of Archaeology, CASS): A Study of Environmental
Archaeology on the Prehistoric Culture
9:55 YUAN Jing (The Institute of Archaeology, CASS): Shell Middens in the
Jiaodong
Peninsula Studying Environmental Archaeology
10:10 JIAO Tianlong (Bishop Museum): Maritime Adaptation and Agriculture in
the
Neolithic of Coastal Southeast China: Implications for Proto-Austronesian
Expansions
10:25 JIA Wei Ming (University of Sydney): The study of Environmental
Reconstruction
and Its Application
10:40 Break
10:55 XIA Zhengkai (Beijing University): Preliminary Study on the
Prehistoric Disasters
at Lajia Site, Qinghai, China
11:10 MO Duowen (Beijing University): Effects of Holocene Environmental
Changes on
the Development of Archaeological Cultures in Different Regions of China
11:25 Arlene ROSEN (University College London): Holocene Environmental
Change and
Agricultural Opportunism in the Development of Early Complex Society
11:40 Rowan FLAD (Harvard University): Zooarchaeology in the Prehistoric
Three
Gorges: A View from Zhongba
11:55 NAKAWO Masayoshi (Research Institute for Humanity and Nature): Water
Shortage in an Oasis-region in Western China in Yuan Dynasty and the Last
Decades
Thursday Afternoon
Session 2-A: Korean Prehistoric and Early Historical
Archaeology
Room: Baekma Hall
Chair:
2:00 SONG Eunsook (Chonnam National University): Subsistence
Patterns of Korean
Neolithic: Osanri and Jigyeongri Adaptations on East Coast of Korea
2:15 SHIN Sook-Chung (Wonju Museum of Yonsei University): Analyses of
Firing
Conditions of Pottery Vessels from Neolithic to Joseon Period
2:30 IM Hyo-jai (Seoul National University): Cultural Interaction Between
Korea and
Northeast China During Neolithic Age
2:45 KIM Gwongu (Keimyung University): A Consideration of Residential
Practices
During the Korean Bronze Age and Its Family System
3:00 Break
3:15 KANG Bong Won (Kyongju University): A Social Reconstruction of the
Korean
Bronze Age: Based on the Dolmens Discovered in the Southeastern Korea
3:30 LEE Hong-jong (Korea University): Cultural Contacts and Cultural
Changes in the
Bronze Age Korea
3:45 LEE Sung-joo (Gangneung National University) & Martin Bale (University
of
Toronto): South-central Korea and the development of complex societies,
circa 300 BC to AD 400
4:00 LEE Sungjoon (Paekche Research Institute) & Kim, Myungjin (Korea
Paleo-Environment Research Institute): Modeling Historical Trade and Economical
Boundaries in the Proto-three Kingdom Period in the Middle Korea Peninsula
4:15 KANG Hyun Sook (Dongguk University): Mural Painting Tombs from
Goguryeo and
Chinese Gansu: A comparative study
4:30 YIM Youngjin (Chonnam National University): Burials and Construction
Context of
the Janggo-shaped Tombs
4:45 Andrey ZAGORULKO (Russian Research Institute for cultural and Natural
Heritage):
Rethinking Sopohang: Evolution of Neolithic Site in North-East Korea
Sesson 2-B: Archaeology in Russian Far East
Room: Museum Auditorium
Chair:
2:00 KATO Hirofumi (Hokkaido University): Emergence of the Oldest
Pottery and
"Oshipovka Culture" in Russian Far East
2:15 Helena SERGUSHEVA (Institute of History, Archaeology and Ethnography,
Russian
Academy of Sciences, Far Eastern Branch): The Plant Cultivation Dynamics of
the
Early Agricultural Societies of Primorye Region.
2:30 Yuri VOSTRETSOV (Institute of History, Archaeology and Ethnography,
Russian
Academy of Sciences, Far Eastern Branch): Environment Changes and
Migrations: Case Study
2:45 Evgenia GELMAN (Institute of History, Archaeology and Ethnography of
peoples of
the Far East): Evolution of the Bohai Tail and Periodization of Buddhist
Temples
3:00 Yuri NIKITIN (Far Eastern State Technical University): Excavation of
Bohai Tomb in
Primorye in 2003
Session 2-C: Various Issues in Chinese Archaeology
Room: Munwon Hall
Chair:
2:00 CHEN Pochan (University of California, Los Angeles):
Rethinking of Leixingxue
2:15 TOKUDOME Daisuke (Kyushu University): The Changes and Distribution
Patterns
of House Forms during the Prehistoric Period in China
2:30 HUNG Ling-yu (Washington University): Decoration Analysis and Social
Units - a
Case Study of Fish-motifs on Yangshao Pottery
2:45 Gwen P. BENNETT (Washington University): Salt Production and Changjiang
Region Lithics
3:00 Break
3:15 CHIOU-PENG TzeHuey (University of Illinois Urbana Champaign): Stone
Ornaments from the Bronze Age Sites of Yunnan: New Lights on Cultural
Interactions between Yunnan and Its Surrounding Regions
3:30 Luisa-Elena MENGONI (University of College London): Copying with
Changes:
Patterns of Social and Cultural Diversification in Pre-Imperial Sichuan (5th
and 3rd
Century B.C.)
3:45 Barry ROLETT (University of Hawaii): Early Seafaring and Exchange in
Southeast
China: New Evidence for the Austronesian Homeland
4:00 Walburga Maria WIESHEU (National School of Anthropology and History,
Mexico):
Inner and Outer Walls in Urban Development in China
4:15 Robert D. DRENNAN & Christian E. PETERSON (University of Pittsburgh):
Comparative Settlement Pattern Research on Early Chiefdom Communities in
Eastern Inner Mongolia, the Northern Andes, and Mesoamerica
Thursday Evening, June 17, 2004
Business Meeting of the Society for East Asian Archaeology
Room: To Be Announced
Time: To Be Announced
Friday Morning
Session 3-A: Current Researches
in Shang Archaeology
Room: Baekma Hall
Chair:
9:30 Minna HAAPANEN (University of California, Los Angeles): The
Social Role of Eating
in the Context of Shang Bronze Manufacturing
9:45 SONG Guoding (The Institute of Archaeology of Henan Province): The
Human
Sacrifice of the Mid-Shang Dynasty
10:00 ZHANG Liangren (University of California, Los Angeles): The Mode of
the
Wucheng Community’s Economic connection with the Shang Metropolitan Centers
10:15 MENG Xianwu & Li, Guichang (Archaeology Team of Anyang City): The
Houses
with Courtyard (Siheyuan) at Yinxu
10:30 Break
10:45 SUN Yan (Gettysburg College): Bronzes from Xin'gan: Local Response to
the
Cultural and Political Expansion of the Shang
11:00 FANG Hui (Shandong University): Daxinzhuang Site and Shang Culture in
Eastern China
11:15 LI Min (University of Michigan): Becoming Shang: The Perspective from
Animal
Bones at Daxinzhuang
11:30 XU Jay (The Art Institute of Chicago): Southern Influence in the
Northern Zone:
Evidence from Bronze Vessels of the Anyang Period
Session 3-B: Tsushima Archaeology: Cross-cultural perspectives on
Korea and Japan"
Room: Museum Auditorium
Chair: TAWARA Kanji & Barbara SEYOCK
9:30 TAWARA Kanji (Tsushima Museum
of History and Folklore): Tsushima in the
Focus of Cross-cultural Relations
9:45 SHODA Sinya (Chungnam National University): The First Bronze Dagger in
the
Southern Part of the Korean Peninsula and Related Problem
10:00 NAGAMOTO Tomoko (Otemae University): The Relation of the Korea
Peninsula
and the Japanese Islands in the proto-Three Kingdoms Period
10:15 Barbara SEYOCK (University of Munich): The Wei-chih Tung-i-chuan as a
Source
for the Perception of the Metal Age Cultures in the Korean Straits Region
10:30 Break
10:45 NAKAMURA Daisuke (Osaka University): Relationship in Ritual of
Funeral
Between Japan and Korea
11:00 FURIYA Tetsuo (Kyushu University): A Study of the Distribution of
Korean Ceramic
-Based on the Analysis of Celadon Ware During the Medieval Period of Japan-
Session 4-B: Yayoi in the East Asian Interaction Sphere: Problems
presented by the AMS Radiocarbon Dates for the Yayoi Period in Japan
Room: Museum Auditorium
Chair: IKAWA-SMITH Fumiko
Participants:
11:30 IKAWA-SMITH Fumiko (McGill University): Yayoi in the East Asian
Interaction
Sphere: Introduction and Background
11:45 FUJIO Shinichiro & SAKAMOTO Minoru (National Museum of Japanese
History):
AMS Radiocarbon Dating for the Beginning of the Yayoi Period in Japan
12:00 TAKAKURA Hiroaki (Seinan Gakuin University) & MIZOGUCHI Koji (Kyushu
University): Some Problems with the Outcome of the A.M.S. Dating of the
Yayoi
Period by the National Museum of Japan
12:15 Discussion: Sarah M. NELSON (University of Denver), Gina L. BARNES
(University of
Durham)
Friday Afternoon
Session 4-A: Prospects of Gender Archaeology in East Asia
Room: Baekma Hall
Chair: MATSUMOTO Naoko & NAKANISHI Yumiko
2:00 MATSUMOTO Naoko (Okayama
University): Introduction
2:10 Sarah M. NELSON (University of Denver): Gendered Archaeology and the
Question
of Power in East Asia
2:25 NAMBA Junko (Tenri University): Gender Archaeology of China
2:40 MATSUMOTO Naoko (Okayama University): Why Gender Archaeology is not
Popular in Japan
2:55 IWASAKI Kumi (Okayama University): Anthropomorphic Clay Figurines in
the
Prehistoric Japanese Archipelago: Ideological and Gendered Perspective
3:10 Gina L. BARNES & KANEKO Masumi (University of Durham): Roles of Women
in
Nihon Shoki
Session 5-A: New Perspectives in Japanese Archaeology
Room: Baekma Hall
Chair:
3:45 Gina L. BARNES (University of Durham): The Japanese Islands
from Fifteen to Half
a Million Years Ago: Implications for Archaeology
4:00 MITSUMOTO Jun (Okayama University): New Direction in the Archaeology
of Human
Body in Japan and its Application to the Social Body in the Kofun Period
4:15 Mark HUDSON (Hokkaido University): World System Incorporation and the
Okhotsk
Culture of Hokkaido
4:30 MIZOGUCHI Koji (Kyushu University): Fragmentation and identity
politics: Hyper-Capitalism and Archaeological Discursive Formation
Session 5-B: Palaeolithic Archaeology in East Asia
Room: Museum Auditorium
Chair:
2:00 TAKAKURA Jun (Hokkaido University): The Middle to Upper
Palaeolothic
Transitional Process in East Asia: A Preliminary Approach
2:15 CHOI Mou-chang (Konkuk University): The Stone Artifacts from the
Wondang-ri
Site of the Sixth Excavation in 2003
2:30 KATO Hirofumi (Hokkaido University): A Study of the Microblade Flaking
Technology in Northeast Asia
2:45 Break
3:00 IZUHO Masami (Sapporo Buried Cultural Property Center): A Chronology
of Late
Pleistocene Sites in Hokkaido, Japan
3:15 CHOI Bok-kyu (Kangwon National University): The Mesolithic Culture in
Korea
Saturday Morning
Session 6-A: Subsistence, Mortuary Practice, and Interdisciplinary
Approaches in Japanese Archaeology
Room: Baekma Hall
Chair:
9:30 Dawn KAUFMANN (Washington University in St. Louis):
Paleoethnobotanical
Investigation of Subsistence Practices in Northern Japan During Two Time
Periods
9:45 KIM Minkoo (University of California): Cultural Complexity of Jomon
Hunter-Gatherers and Changes in Plant Exploitation at Sannai Maruyama
10:00 MIYAMOTO Kazuo (Kyushu University): Emergence and Spread of
Agriculture in
East Asia
10:15 TANI Naoko (Kyushu University): The Formation Process of the Custom
of Jar
Burial in Northern Kyushu, Japan
10:30 Break
10:45 KUTSUNA Keizo (Okayama University): The Treatment of Children by
Their
Society in Ancient Western Japan
11:00 Walter EDWARDS (Tenri University): How Many Mirrors? A Simulation of
the
Discovery of Triangular-Rimmed Mirrors in Japan
11:15 MATSUGI Takehiko (Okayama University): A New Perspective on the
Beginning of
the Kofun Period Protohistoric Japan: From Group Oriented to Individual
Oriented
11:30 TSUMURA Hiro’omi & ANEZAKI Tomoko (National Museum of Japanese
History): A
New Approach to Palaeo-topography Using GIS for an Archaeological
Perspective: a Case Study in the Kanto Plain, Japan
11:45 Walter EDWARDS & OKITA Masaaki (Tenri University): Reconstruction of
Japanese
Kofun (Mounded Tombs) Using Radar and Resistivity Prospection
12:00 Wendy FREDERICK (San Francisco State University): Ainu Archaeology &
Ethnogenesis
Session 6-B: East Asian Archaeology and Related Issues
Room: Museum Auditorium
Chair:
9:30 Christine FINN & Robin CONINGHAM (University of Bradford):
Ancient Belief,
Contemporary Ritual: Modern Use of Buddhist Artifacts
9:45 YANG Tanya (University of Arizona): The Stupa-Pagoda Tradition in East
Asia
10:00 Mahammed A. BEKHECHI (The World Bank): The World Bank and the
Protection
of Cultural Heritage. Recent Policy Development and Practice
10:15 Siva Rama Kirshna PISIPATY (Deemed To Be University, India):
Environmental
Constraints and Cultural Adoptions During the Third Millennium BC
10:30 Om Prakash SRIVASTAV (Aligarh Muslim University): Terracotta Beads in
Ancient
India: An Archaeological Approach
10:45 Vinod Kumar SINGH (Aligarh Muslim University): Pre-modern Irrigation
Technology in Bundelkhand: Based on the Survey of Waterworks
Session 6-C: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Chinese Neolithic
and Bronze Age Archaeology
Room: Munwon Hall
Chair: LIU Li & CHEN Xingcan
9:30 LIU Li (La Trobe University):
Introduction
9:40 Lu Tracey Lie-Dan (Chinese University of Hong Kong): Intra-Disciplinary
or Multidisciplinary·Some Thoughts on Current Archaeological Research Approaches
9:55 LEE Gyoung-Ah & Gary W. Crawford (University of Toronto at
Mississauga):
Changes in Plant Use in the Yi-Luo Basin
10:10 LIU Li (La Trobe University): Wild and domestic water buffaloes in
China:
zooarchaeological investigations
10:25 YANG Dongya (Simon Fraser University) and LIU Li (La Trobe
University): Wild and
Domestic Water Buffaloes in Ancient China: Ancient DNA Analysis
10:40 Break
10:55 CHEN Xingcan (Institute of Archaeology, CASS): Ethnoarchaeology on
Stone
and Lime Production - a Case from Huizui
11:10 Elizabeth CHILDS-JOHNSON (American Council of Learned Societies
2003-2004):
Early Shang China: Metropolitan Ding Vessels and the Question
11:25 JIN Zhengyao (Research Institution of World Religions, CASS): A
Reassertion
that the High-Radiogenic-Lead in Shang Bronzes Originated in South-western
China
11:40 LI Yung-ti (Institute of History and Philology, Academia Sinica):
Anyang Bronze
Casting Technology: a Study of Section-mold Technology and Compositional
Analysis of Molds
11:55 Lothar von FALKENHAUSEN (University of California, Los Angeles): The
Burial
Population of the Qucun Cemetery
Closing Session (Round-table Discussion): The Future of East
Asian Archaeology
Room: Munwon Hall
Chair:
Discussants:
Time: 2:00 - 4:00