Academic literature on the topic 'Prehistoric Neolithic period China China'

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Journal articles on the topic "Prehistoric Neolithic period China China"

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Dong, Guanghui, Ruo Li, Minxia Lu, Dongju Zhang, and Nathaniel James. "Evolution of human–environmental interactions in China from the Late Paleolithic to the Bronze Age." Progress in Physical Geography: Earth and Environment 44, no. 2 (September 26, 2019): 233–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0309133319876802.

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Exploring prehistoric variation in human–environmental interaction is critical for understanding the historical patterns and mechanisms of long-term human–land evolution. In this paper we review the published radiocarbon and optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) data from Late Paleolithic, Neolithic and Bronze Age sites in China, analyze the spatial–temporal distribution of these sites, and compare it with the results of recent paleoclimatic and archaeological studies. We seek to study the trajectory and influencing factors of human–environmental interactions in late prehistoric China. We detect changing patterns in the relationship between humans and the environment during different phases of the prehistoric era in China. Climate change clearly affected the environment of hunter-gatherer groups between 50,000–10,000 BP (before present, defined as 1950AD), and variation in human population in Neolithic China (∼10,000–4000 BP) was likely influenced primarily by the development of agriculture, in addition to substantial climate events. The spatial scale of human settlements expanded in the Bronze Age (∼4000–2200 BP) in a period of cooling climate. During this time the impact of human activities on the environment increased significantly, primarily caused by technological innovations related to the onset of prehistoric transcontinental cultural exchange in Eurasia.
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JUE, RAO, LONGDI CHENG, and YUNYING LIU. "The development of the spinning wheel in ancient China." Industria Textila 70, no. 02 (2019): 120–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.35530/it.070.02.1524.

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As textile demand increased in ancient China, the spinning wheel became more widely used in the Neolithic era and was responsible for the main spinning tasks over the last few thousand years. This work explores the changes over time in the shape, diameter, and thickness of the spinning wheel in the Cross-lake Bridge, Hemudu, Yangshao, Qujialing, and Shijiahe cultures. The disc-like shape, mound-like shape, bead shape, and truncated cone shape are deemed to have been the best spinning wheel forms in the later stages – especially the disc-like spinning wheel. The spinning wheel with a diameter of 2–9 cm and a thickness of 0.1 to 9.0 cm was used throughout prehistoric times. In the late Neolithic period, a disc-like spinning wheel with a diameter of 3–4 cm and a thickness of less than a cm was the most frequently used design. This study shows that the change in the shape, diameter, and thickness of the spinning wheel is the inevitable result of the change in the tool’s design points, thereby revealing improvements in spinning efficiency
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Rapp, George. "Johan Gunnar Andersson: Archaeological Geologist and Pioneer." Earth Sciences History 33, no. 1 (January 1, 2014): 59–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.17704/eshi.33.1.h480243822118q62.

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Johan Gunnar Andersson was a Swedish economic geologist who went to China in 1914 as a mining consultant to the Chinese Government but soon, without prior experience or education in archaeology, became an archaeological geologist who discovered the famous ‘Peking Man’ site at Zhoukoudian and uncovered and defined the prehistoric Chinese Neolithic Period with his excavations and analysis of the site of Yangshao, Henan Province, China. These two discoveries were only the highlights of his pioneering expeditions in China. In his eleven years there he helped open up the country to modern methods in archaeology. As an outgrowth of his excavations in China he founded the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities in Stockholm. This museum became the recipient of a sizeable portion of his many excavated artifacts, some unique in China and in the West.
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Dong, Guang-Hui, Zong-Li Wang, Le-Le Ren, Giedre Motuzaite Matuzeviciute, Hui Wang, Xiaoyan Ren, and Fahu Chen. "A Comparative Study of 14C Dating on Charcoal and Charred Seeds from Late Neolithic and Bronze Age Sites in Gansu and Qinghai Provinces, NW China." Radiocarbon 56, no. 1 (2014): 157–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.2458/56.16507.

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The chronology of the Neolithic and Bronze Age cultures in Gansu and Qinghai provinces, northwest China, is mainly based on conventional radiocarbon dates from unidentified charcoal, which may be inaccurate in view of the possible “old wood” problem of 14C dating. To discuss the reliability of the chronology of those prehistoric cultures, accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) dates of short-lived charred seeds were compared to conventional 14C dates of unidentified charcoal from the same flotation samples in 15 Late Neolithic and Bronze Age sites in the area. The results show that 14C dates of unidentified charcoal are obviously older than those of charred seeds in 5 of the 15 flotation samples. This work suggests that the old-wood problem of 14C dating might be related to human subsistence strategies and local vegetation variation during different prehistoric cultural periods in Gansu and Qinghai provinces, which should be discussed before establishing the chronology of Neolithic and Bronze Age cultures in the area.
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Yang, Yishi, Guanghui Dong, Shanjia Zhang, Yifu Cui, Haiming Li, Guoke Chen, John Dodson, and Fahu Chen. "Copper content in anthropogenic sediments as a tracer for detecting smelting activities and its impact on environment during prehistoric period in Hexi Corridor, Northwest China." Holocene 27, no. 2 (July 28, 2016): 282–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0959683616658531.

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The Hexi Corridor of northwestern China was a principal axis of cultural interchange between eastern and western Eurasia during the prehistoric and historic epochs. Neolithic groups began dense settlements in Hexi Corridor after 4300 BP with millet crops and polychrome pottery from north China and bronze from Central Asia around 4000 BP accompanied by wheat, barley, and sheep. The impact of these activities on the environment during the late Neolithic and Bronze Age is not clearly understood. Therefore, we analyzed the Cu concentrations of samples collected within cultural layers of anthropogenic sediments from 17 Late Neolithic and Bronze Age sites located within the Hexi Corridor. The Cu content is reported in view of the archaeological and paleoclimatic research undertaken in the area. Our results enabled us to explore the variety of human impact on the environment before and after the introduction of bronze technology into Hexi Corridor. During 4300–4000 BP, Cu concentrations of the anthropogenic sediments were constrained within natural background values. However, from 4000 to 3400 BP, they increased substantially and far exceeded the natural background. The Cu concentrations then declined and remained above the natural background from 3000 to 2400 BP. Our work suggests that the introduction of copper melting technology led to human alteration of sediments’ chemical properties in their surrounding environments in Hexi Corridor since 4000 BP; its intensity was closely related to human settlement density, which was further affected by climate change and livelihood transition in the area during Bronze period.
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Dong, Guanghui, Xin Jia, Chengbang An, Fahu Chen, Yan Zhao, Shichen Tao, and Minmin Ma. "Mid-Holocene climate change and its effect on prehistoric cultural evolution in eastern Qinghai Province, China." Quaternary Research 77, no. 1 (January 2012): 23–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.yqres.2011.10.004.

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We studied the mid-Holocene climate change in eastern Qinghai Province, China and its impact on the evolution of Majiayao (3980–2050 BC) and Qijia (2183–1635 BC) cultures, near the important Neolithic site of Changning. The investigation focused on analyses of grain size, magnetic susceptibility, ratios of elemental contents, and pollen assemblage from a loess-paleosol sequence. The results indicate that the climate was wet during 5830–4900 cal yr BP, which promoted the development of early-mid Majiayao culture in eastern Qinghai Province. However, 4900–4700 cal yr BP were drought years in the region, responsible for the decline and eastward movement of prehistoric culture during the period of transition from early-mid to late Majiayao culture. The climate turned wet again during 4700–3940 cal yr BP, which accelerated the spread of Qijia culture to the middle reaches of the Huangshui River, including the Changning site.
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Qu, Feng. "Rice Ecology and Ecological Relations: An Ontological Analysis of the Jiangjunya Masks and Crop Images from China's East Coast." Cambridge Archaeological Journal 29, no. 4 (June 10, 2019): 571–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0959774319000210.

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Depictions of human faces and rice-crop images found at the Jiangjunya rock-art site in Lianyungang City, Jiangsu Province, China, reveal entangling relationships between spiritual and economic aspects. Drawing on the relational ecology model and animist ontology theory, the author provides an analysis of the Jiangjunya rock art in its economic, social, spiritual and historical contexts, proposing that prehistoric farmers along China's east coast perceived rice plants as relating to persons. Rice was conceptualized not in utilitarian terms as a means of subsistence (used and consumed by humans) but rather as subjects capable of action. The human masks of Jiangjunya hence suggest a personhood for rice, rather than representing humans or anthropomorphic gods. Furthermore, the history of the Jiangjunya rock-art site corresponds with the history of local economics. The relational ontologies might have transformed gradually from human–animal interactions in the Late Palaeolithic and Early Neolithic periods to human–plant interactions in Late Neolithic societies. The author concludes that the art site was possibly treated as a mnemonic maintaining interpersonal and intersubjective relationships across thousands of years.
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Huang, Jing, Shao Lei, Liang Tang, Aihua Wang, and Zhanghua Wang. "Mid-Holocene environmental change and human response at the Neolithic Wuguishan site in the Ningbo coastal lowland of East China." Holocene 30, no. 11 (July 15, 2020): 1591–605. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0959683620941070.

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Coastal wetlands provided a favorable settling site for Neolithic people because of their highly exploitable biomass, but were vulnerable to marine hazards such as coastal flooding. The Chinese Hemudu culture persisted for ~2000 years (7200–5300 cal. year BP) in the Ningbo coastal lowland of East China. This study explores the Hemudu people’s survival strategy using sedimentological and chronological records, and organic and acetic-acid-leachable alkaline-earth (Ca, Sr, and Ba) chemistry on a well-dated profile from the coastal Wuguishan site in the Ningbo Plain. Analyses of alkaline-earth elements in surficial sediments collected from present-day alluvial plain, tidal river, and saltmarsh/tidal flat environments in the Ningbo Plain were also undertaken to explain sedimentary environmental changes and their linkage to Hemudu activity at the Wuguishan site. Results indicate high sediment acetic-acid-leachable Ca and Sr contents with high Sr/Ba ratios, and high sediment total inorganic carbon contents at the site during 6300–6000 cal. year BP, which coincided with a marine incursion at the nearby Neolithic Yushan site. However, the increasing sediment total organic carbon contents and decreasing δ13C values suggest that the Wuguishan site evolved from an upper tidal flat to a saltmarsh environment, attracting settlement by the prehistoric Hemudu people after ~6200 cal. year BP. Sr and Ca contents and Sr/Ba ratios decreased after ~6000 cal. year BP, indicating that the site developed into a low-salinity marsh in the supratidal environment after rapid accumulation caused by a storm event at ~6020 cal. year BP. Furthermore, the high Sr and Ba contents in the layers of Hemudu Culture Period III indicate the Hemudu people’s consumption of seafood and their adaption strategy for living in the vulnerable coastal wetland.
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Jones, Andy M. "Monuments and Memories Set in Stone: a Cornish Bronze Age Ceremonial Complex in its Landscape (on Stannon Down)." Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 72 (2006): 341–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0079497x00000888.

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Three seasons of archaeological fieldwork were carried out in 1998–2000 by Cornwall Archaeological Un within the Imerys Stannon China Clay Works, Bodmin Moor. The first two seasons involved the excavation of an Early Bronze Age cairn group and Middle Bronze Age and Middle Iron Age settlement activity. The third season on the Northern Downs involved the evaluation a number of cairns, field systems, and palaeoenvironmental sites.The cairn group consisted of three earlier Bronze Age ring-cairns and two ‘tailed’ cairns. One ring-cairn continued to be used as a ceremonial monument in the Middle Bronze Age and was reused during the Iron Age as a dwelling. An artefact assemblage including Bronze and Iron Age pottery and stonework was recovered. Two prehistoric beads one of faience, the other of amber, were also found.Ten Bronze Age radiocarbon determinations spanning 2490–1120 cal BC and two Iron Age determinations (370–40 cal BC) were obtained from three of the cairns. Two pollen columns on the Northern Downs were also dated. Significantly, a series of eight determinations was obtained from a single column, which provided environmental information from the Mesolithic through to the early medieval period. The radiocarbon dating showed that impact on the vegetation of the Down commenced during the Neolithic, with larger-scale clearance during the Bronze Age. Widespread open grassland was established by the Middle Bronze Age.It is suggested here that use of space within the cairn group was structured and that the cairns formed a monument complex which was part of a wider landscape cosmology, involving groupings of particular monument types and the referencing of rocky outcrops and tors.The investigations on Stannon Down were important as an opportunity to study an Early Bronze Age ceremonial landscape and reconsider how later Middle Bronze Age and Iron Age peoples on Bodmin Moor might have engaged with and interpreted the materiality of earlier prehistoric monuments.
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Derevianko, A. P., Yu A. Azarenko, and S. A. Komissarov. "Changbin culture on Taiwan: history of investigations and basic characteristics." Archaeology and Ethnography 17, no. 5 (2018): 21–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.25205/1818-7919-2018-17-5-21-29.

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Purpose. The paper describes the most ancient archaeological culture of Taiwan and its significance for the reconstruction of the early stage of the human society’s development in the region. Results. Changbin, the culture of the Late Paleolithic Age, named after Changbin Township in Taidong County on the eastern coast of the island and its southern extremities where it was discovered. Excavations of the primary site, Baxiandong (Baxian caves; or Pahsientung), started in 1968, with new findings being made nowadays. The Baxian sea-cave samples were tested with radiocarbon measurement to have been dated from 15 to 5 thousand years ago, making earlier dates (around 50,000 years ago) debatable. The bulk of artifacts found includes chipped stone and bone tools, mainly of them are flint scrapers, sharp-edged flake tools, pebble chopping tools, shell scrapers and also tools made of bone, such as wedges, stitching awls and fish hooks. The ancient people, who lived in the caves, hunted, fished and gathered seafood on the coast. Typlogically, the Changbin tools are similar to the Hoabinhian industry. It is possible that Changbinhians came to Taiwan from the Southeast China, but also probably from the Phillipines. At its late stage, the Changbin culture overlaps with the Neolithic Dabenkeng culture (about 5000–2500 years BC), but there is no evidence to any contacts between them. Conclusion. Changbin Culture is extremely important for the understanding of the origin of the first settlements in prehistorical Taiwan. Farther research can bring new results in revealing the features of anthropogenesis on the territory of the Eastern Asia. Detailed reconstruction of the stages of development of this territory, with special attention to the initial settlement of Taiwan, is necessary to understand the basic characteristics of the cultural evolution of the early cultures in the region and can help solve the problem of the spread of a modern anthropological type in ecumene, make possible the identifying the ways of ancient migrations in the Asia-Pacific region. The initial period of studies of Baxian caves made possible to formulate the tasks for the new search, the answers to which will be received within the next stage of the archaeological works, having begun about 10 years ago.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Prehistoric Neolithic period China China"

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Liu, Li. "The Chinese neolithic : trajectories to early states /." Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press, 2004. http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/cam051/2004049440.html.

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Pechenkina, Ekaterina A. "Diet and health changes among the millet growing farmers of northern China in prehistory /." free to MU campus, to others for purchase, 2002. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/mo/fullcit?p3075414.

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Braghin, Cecelia. "Beads and pendants in ancient China (Neolithic and Western Zhou period c. 6000-770 BC) : an archaeological study to illuminate patterns of social interaction and cultural exchange." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2000. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.365602.

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"Prehistoric cultural development at Yung Long." 2011. http://library.cuhk.edu.hk/record=b5896674.

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Lai, Pak Kin Patrick.
Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2011.
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 139-146).
Abstracts in English and Chinese.
Chapter CHAPTER 1 --- INTRODUCTION --- p.1
Chapter 1.1 --- Definition of Stone Spade --- p.2
Chapter 1.2 --- Importance of Stone Spade Research --- p.3
Chapter 1.3 --- Structure of the Thesis --- p.6
Chapter CHAPTER 2 --- LITERATURE REVIEW --- p.7
Chapter 2.1 --- The Neolithic Chronology in Hong Kong --- p.7
Chapter 2.2 --- Lithic studies: Typological Analysis and Functional Analysis --- p.12
Chapter 2.3 --- Chaine Operatoire and Cognitive Archaeology --- p.26
Chapter 2.4 --- Research on Stone Spades --- p.34
Chapter CHAPTER 3 --- RESEARCH QUESTIONS AND METHODOLOGY --- p.37
Chapter 3.1 --- Research Questions --- p.37
Chapter 3.2 --- Fieldsite specification --- p.38
Chapter 3.3 --- Research methods --- p.41
Chapter 3.4 --- Use Wear Analysis --- p.43
Chapter CHAPTER 4 T --- HE YUNG LONG NORTH ARCHAEOLOGICAL ASSEMBLAGE --- p.52
Chapter 4.1 --- Yung Long and the surrounding area --- p.52
Chapter 4.2 --- Lithic assemblage of Yung Long North (YLN) --- p.55
Chapter 4.3 --- Correlation Tests on Selected Artefacts --- p.67
Chapter 4.4 --- Results of Use Wear Analysis --- p.78
Chapter 4.5 --- Preliminary Summary --- p.96
Chapter CHAPTER 5 --- THE CHAINE OPERATOIRE OF STONE SPADES AND THE LITHIC ASSEMBLAGE FROM YUNG LONG NORTH --- p.99
Chapter 5.1 --- Lithic Manufacturing as Part of the Cultural Development --- p.99
Chapter 5.2 --- What are the choices selected in the design and planning of lithic manufacturing? --- p.101
Chapter 5.3 --- Standardisation --- p.110
Chapter 5.4 --- What is the function of stone spades and its relationship with agriculture? --- p.118
Chapter 5.5 --- Where to Discard? ´ؤ the Cognitive Map on Space Utilisation --- p.127
Chapter 5.6 --- What subsistence strategies are reflected in the lithic assemblage? --- p.128
Chapter 5.7 --- How the manufacturing is organized? --- p.130
Chapter 5.8 --- What is the Cultural Development represented in the Late Neolithic Yung Long? --- p.134
Chapter 5.9 --- Conclusion --- p.135
Chapter 5.10 --- Some final remarks --- p.137
REFERENCES --- p.139
APPENDIX A --- p.147
APPENDIX B --- p.160
List of Tables
Table 3.1 Average dimension of adzes and roughouts from YLN
Table 4.1 Counts of the whole Late Neolithic lithic assemblage from YLN
Table 4.2 Correlations of 20 Spades from Late Neolithic YLN
Table 4.3 Correlations of 41 regular adzes from Late Neolithic YLN
Table 4.4 Correlations of 71 adzes from Late Neolithic YLN
Table 4.5 Adze measurements from YLN and SKSH (after Chan 2005)
"Table 4.6 Correlations of summarized adze typologies (Regular, Single-Shouldered and Double Shouldered adzes) from Late Neolithic YLN and SKSH"
Table 4.7 Correlations of 35 Projectile Points from Late Neolithic YLN
Table 4.8 Correlations of 11 Yues from Late Neolithic YLN
Table 4.9 Correlations of 12 Netsinkers from Late Neolithic YLN
Table 4.10 Correlations of 16 Picks from Late Neolithic YLN
Table 4.11 Correlations of 29 Hammerstones from Late Neolithic YLN
Table 4.12 Use wears on replicas after task-oriented experiments
Table 5.1 Comparison among the Late Neolithic lithic assemblages around Yung Long (North) (Ng Ka Yuen and Chan Ka Yuen: after Au 2004)
List of Figures
"Figure 1.1 Hong Kong in its regional setting (Source: Lands Department, HKSAR 2010)"
Figure 4.1 Bar Chart Showing the Number of Pieces of Implements from YLN in terms of materials
Figure 4.2 Pie Chart showing the Percentage of Implements Materials from YLN
Figure 4.3 Pie Chart showing the Percentage of Implements Types from YLN
Figure 4.4 Radar Diagram of 20 Spades Measurements from YLN
Figure 4.5 Radar Diagram of Adze Measurements from YLN and SKSH (after Chan 2005)
Figure 4.6 Radar Diagram of 71 Adzes Measurements from YLN
Figure 4.7 Radar Diagram of 35 Projectile Points Measurements from YLN
Figure 4.8 Radar Diagram of 11 Yue Measurements from YLN
Figure 4.9 Radar Diagram of 12 Netsinkers from YLN
Figure 4.10 Radar Diagram of 16 Picks Measurements from YLN
Figure 4.11 Radar Diagram of 29 Hammerstones Measurements from YLN
Appendices
Chapter Appendix A --- Artefact Statistics
Chapter Appendix B --- Maps and Plates
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"尖狀器與香港史前物質文化." 2010. http://library.cuhk.edu.hk/record=b5894316.

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楊軻.
"2010年6月"
"2010 nian 6 yue"
Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2010.
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 125-129).
Abstract in Chinese and English.
Yang Ke.
Chapter 第一章 --- 前言 --- p.1
Chapter 第一節 --- 什麼是尖狀器 --- p.2
Chapter 第二節 --- 尖狀器在香港史前研究中的重要性 --- p.4
Chapter 第三節 --- 本文的基本結構 --- p.7
Chapter 第二章 --- 文獻回顧 --- p.9
Chapter 第一節 --- 香港史前考古學概述 --- p.9
Chapter 一、 --- 考古發展簡史 --- p.9
Chapter 二、 --- 考古文化分期 --- p.13
Chapter 第二節 --- 香港史前考古學相關研究回顧 --- p.16
Chapter 一、 --- 田野方法 --- p.16
Chapter 二、 --- 石器研究回顧 --- p.18
Chapter 1. --- 石器研究概述 --- p.18
Chapter 2. --- 尖狀器研究 --- p.20
Chapter 第三節 --- 實驗考古及微痕分析的研究方法 --- p.22
Chapter 一、 --- 微痕分析發展簡史 --- p.22
Chapter 二、 --- "介紹“運作過程""" --- p.24
Chapter 三、 --- 微痕分析在香港的運用 --- p.26
Chapter 第四節 --- 本文研究的目的和方法 --- p.27
Chapter 一、 --- 研究目的 --- p.28
Chapter 二、 --- 研究方法 --- p.29
Chapter 第三章 --- 尖狀器的類型學研究 --- p.31
Chapter 第一節 --- 所選遺址簡介及所選標本描述 --- p.31
Chapter 第二節 --- 香港尖狀器的分類 --- p.34
Chapter 第三節 --- 香港尖狀器的演變特徵 --- p.39
Chapter 一、 --- 形態學和測量學的分析 --- p.39
Chapter 二、 --- 各型式在各期的變化 --- p.44
Chapter 三、 --- 尖狀器與不同時期的工具套 --- p.46
Chapter 第四節 --- 小結 --- p.50
Chapter 第四章 --- 尖狀器的實驗考古學研究 --- p.52
Chapter 第一節 --- 複製品的製作和使用過程 --- p.52
Chapter 第二節 --- 實驗標本的微痕觀察 --- p.59
Chapter 第三節 --- 小結 --- p.64
Chapter 第五章 --- 尖狀器的製作工藝與功能分析 --- p.65
Chapter 第一節 --- 石料分析 --- p.65
Chapter 第二節 --- 出土標本製作工藝觀察 --- p.67
Chapter 第三節 --- 出土標本與實驗標本的微痕對比和功能分析 --- p.73
Chapter 一、 --- 出土標本微痕觀察 --- p.73
Chapter 二、 --- 微痕對比及功能分析 --- p.75
Chapter 第四節 --- 小結 --- p.78
Chapter 第六章 --- 尖狀器與各遺址的物質文化 --- p.82
Chapter 第一節 --- 行為模式 --- p.83
Chapter 一、 --- 深灣遺址 --- p.84
Chapter 二、 --- 沙下遺址 --- p.87
Chapter 三、 --- 東灣仔遺址 --- p.90
Chapter 第二節 --- 生業模式 --- p.93
Chapter 一、 --- 深灣遺址 --- p.93
Chapter 二、 --- 沙下遺址 --- p.96
Chapter 三、 --- 東灣仔遺址 --- p.98
Chapter 第三節 --- 聚落形態 --- p.100
Chapter 一、 --- 深灣遺址 --- p.101
Chapter 二、 --- 沙下遺址 --- p.104
Chapter 三、 --- 東灣仔遺址 --- p.109
Chapter 第四節 --- 小結 --- p.111
Chapter 第七章 --- 結語 --- p.114
Chapter 一、 --- 尖狀器的功能及其從事的經濟活動 --- p.114
Chapter 二、 --- 尖狀器與香港物質史前文化 --- p.116
Chapter 1. --- 不同時期遺址的尖狀器 --- p.117
Chapter 2. --- 不同時期尖狀器的製作工藝 --- p.118
Chapter 3. --- 尖狀器及文化變遷 --- p.120
Chapter 三、 --- 本研究的啟木與局限 --- p.121
參考文獻 --- p.125
圖版 --- p.130
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6

"珠江流域新石器時代文化綜述 =: A study on the neolithic cultures in Zhu Jiang Valley." 1989. http://library.cuhk.edu.hk/record=b5887685.

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Abstract:
陳玉嬋.
手稿本, 複本據手稿本影印.
論文(哲學碩士)--香港中文大學, 1989.
Shou gao ben, fu ben ju shou gao ben ying yin.
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 455-536).
Chen Yuchan.
Thesis (M.Phil.)--Xianggang Zhong wen da xue, 1989.
全文提要 --- p.5
Chapter 第一章 --- 珠江流域新石器時代自然環境 --- p.8
Chapter 第一節 --- 水文 --- p.8
Chapter 第二節 --- 地質構造與地形 --- p.19
Chapter 第三節 --- 氣候 --- p.29
Chapter 第四節 --- 動物群 --- p.38
Chapter 第五節 --- 植被 --- p.47
Chapter 第二章 --- 珠江流域新石器時代文化發現概況 --- p.53
Chapter 第三章 --- 人種 --- p.60
Chapter 第一節 --- 珠江流域新石器時代人類 --- p.60
Chapter 第二節 --- 人種類別 --- p.66
Chapter 第三節 --- 年齡 --- p.71
Chapter 第四節 --- 拔牙風俗 --- p.74
Chapter 第四章 --- 建築 --- p.75
Chapter 第一節 --- 珠江流域新石器時代早期建築概覽 --- p.77
Chapter 第二節 --- 珠江流域新石器時代中期建築概覽 --- p.80
Chapter 第三節 --- 珠江流域新石器時代晚期建築概覽 --- p.81
Chapter 第四節 --- 新石器時代中國南北建築技術的分別 --- p.117
Chapter 第五節 --- 珠江流域新石器時代建築的發展特色 --- p.121
Chapter 第六節 --- 珠江流域新石器時代建築特色之一:干欄建築 --- p.124
Chapter 第五章 --- 陶器 --- p.132
Chapter 第一節 --- 陶系 --- p.135
Chapter 第二節 --- 紋飾 --- p.137
Chapter 第三節 --- 製法 --- p.147
Chapter 第四節 --- 造型 --- p.151
Chapter 第五節 --- 種類 --- p.155
Chapter 第六章 --- 石器 --- p.184
Chapter 第一節 --- 用料 --- p.203
Chapter 第二節 --- 打製技術 --- p.208
Chapter 第三節 --- 細石器 --- p.210
Chapter 第四節 --- 種類 --- p.237
Chapter 第七章 --- 骨器 --- p.299
Chapter 第一節 --- 用科 --- p.301
Chapter 第二節 --- 種類 --- p.301
Chapter 第三節 --- 製作技術 --- p.317
Chapter 第四節 --- 用途 --- p.319
Chapter 第八章 --- 蚌器 --- p.321
Chapter 第一節 --- 用料 --- p.323
Chapter 第二節 --- 種類 --- p.323
Chapter 第三節 --- 用途 --- p.327
Chapter 第九章 --- 精神文化 --- p.330
Chapter 第一節 --- 墓葬習俗 --- p.330
Chapter 第二節 --- 宗教信仰 --- p.372
Chapter 第十章 --- 經濟活動 --- p.384
Chapter 第一節 --- 漁獵及採集業 --- p.385
Chapter 第二節 --- 農業 --- p.395
Chapter 第三節 --- 養畜業 --- p.401
Chapter 第四節 --- 手工業 --- p.404
Chapter 第十一章 --- 社會生活 --- p.411
Chapter 第一節 --- 生活水準 --- p.411
Chapter 第二節 --- 社會等級 --- p.417
Chapter 第十二章 --- 總論珠江流域新石器時代文化 --- p.425
Chapter 第一節 --- 珠江流城新石器時代文化總述 --- p.425
Chapter 第二節 --- 珠江流域新石器時代與鄰近地區文化的關係 --- p.439
書目 --- p.455
後記 --- p.536
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7

"香港新石器時代中期陶器的製造工藝與文化發展." 2007. http://library.cuhk.edu.hk/record=b5893399.

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Abstract:
黃家儀.
"2007年9月"
論文(哲學碩士)--香港中文大學, 2007.
參考文獻(leaves 94-100).
"2007 nian 9 yue"
Abstract also in English.
Huang Jiayi.
Lun wen (zhe xue shuo shi)--Xianggang Zhong wen da xue, 2007.
Can kao wen xian (leaves 94-100).
中文摘要 --- p.ii
英文摘要 --- p.ii
致謝 --- p.iii
前言 --- p.1
Chapter 第1章 --- 文獻回顧 --- p.3
Chapter 1.1 --- 香港地區新石器時代中期陶器的硏究 --- p.4
Chapter 1.2 --- 其他地區的陶器硏究 --- p.9
Chapter 1.2.1 --- 類型學 --- p.10
Chapter 1.2.2 --- 實驗考古學 --- p.11
Chapter 1.2.3 --- 民族考古學調查 --- p.13
Chapter 1.3 --- 製陶工藝、陶器生產及流動與文化發展及社會結構的關係 --- p.14
Chapter 1.4 --- 綜合硏究 --- p.17
Chapter 1.5 --- 論文結構 --- p.18
Chapter 1.6 --- 小結 --- p.18
Chapter 第2章 --- 本硏究的重要性、硏究方法及田野選址 --- p.20
Chapter 2.1 --- 硏究重要性 --- p.20
Chapter 2.2 --- 硏究方法 --- p.21
Chapter 2.3 --- 田野選址及介紹 --- p.24
Chapter 2.4 --- 小結 --- p.27
Chapter 第3章 --- 製陶工藝實驗方法及結果 --- p.30
Chapter 3.1 --- 深灣出土陶器分期 --- p.30
Chapter 3.2 --- 實驗器物的選擇 --- p.31
Chapter 3.3 --- 原料的選擇、煉土處理及時間 --- p.34
Chapter 3.3.1 --- 原料選擇 --- p.34
Chapter 3.3.2 --- 陶土處理及煉土時間 --- p.37
Chapter 3.4 --- 成型方法 --- p.38
Chapter 3.5 --- 裝飾器物 --- p.41
Chapter 3.6 --- 乾燥時間 --- p.44
Chapter 3.7 --- 燒製工藝 --- p.45
Chapter 3.7.1 --- 燒製溫度和方法 --- p.45
Chapter 3.7.2 --- 燃料 --- p.48
Chapter 3.7.3 --- 燒製時間 --- p.49
Chapter 3.8 --- 小結 --- p.49
Chapter 第4章 --- 香港及鄰近地區新石器時代中期陶器形態分析 --- p.52
Chapter 4.1 --- 香港的代表性遺址 --- p.59
Chapter 4.2 --- 上述遺址的年代序列 --- p.60
Chapter 4.3 --- 陶器形態定性比較 --- p.61
Chapter 4.3.1 --- 陶質及羼料 --- p.62
Chapter 4.3.2 --- 紋飾 --- p.63
Chapter 4.3.3 --- 口沿及足部形態分析 --- p.65
Chapter 4.4 --- 陶器形態定量比較 --- p.69
Chapter 4.5 --- 小結 --- p.71
Chapter 第5章 --- 香港新石器時代中期的製陶工藝及文化發展 --- p.73
Chapter 5.1 --- 製陶工藝 --- p.73
Chapter 5.2 --- 文化發展 --- p.75
Chapter 5.3 --- 香港地區及環珠江口地區的文化交流 --- p.83
Chapter 5.4 --- 小結 --- p.86
Chapter 第6章 --- 結論 --- p.87
參考書目 --- p.94
圖表列 --- p.101
附錄I 2005年深灣出土陶片樣本照片 --- p.103
附錄II 2005年深灣出土陶片樣本顯微鏡照片 --- p.106
附錄III香港及鄰近地區代表性考古學遺址陶器形態分析 --- p.108
附錄IV香港和鄰近地區及長江中下游圈足盤形態主因子分析測量數據 --- p.114
附錄V香港和鄰近地區陶器化學成份主因子分析測量數據 --- p.117
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8

"The manufacturing and functions of stone adzes in the cultural development of Late Neolithic Sha Ha." 2006. http://library.cuhk.edu.hk/record=b5896473.

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Abstract:
Chan Yuet Wah.
Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2006.
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 214-230).
Abstracts in English and Chinese.
List of figures & tables --- p.vi
Chapter Ch. 1 --- Introduction --- p.1
Chapter 1.1 --- Overall objectives --- p.1
Chapter 1.2 --- "The archaeological site of Sai Ha, Sai Kung" --- p.2
Chapter 1.3 --- Major archaeological discoveries --- p.6
Chapter 1.4 --- Unit of analysis: stone adzes --- p.7
Chapter Ch. 2 --- Literature Review --- p.12
Chapter 2.1 --- Archaeological study in Hong Kong --- p.12
Chapter 2.2 --- Approaches in the study of material culture --- p.13
Chapter 2.3 --- The “chaine operatoire´ح approach --- p.18
Chapter 2.4 --- Summary of research questions --- p.24
Chapter Ch. 3 --- Methodology --- p.27
Chapter 3.1 --- The material --- p.27
Chapter 3.2 --- Research methods --- p.32
Chapter 3.2.1 --- The chaine operatoire study of stone adzes --- p.32
Chapter 3.2.2 --- Multi-disciplinary study --- p.48
Chapter Ch. 4. --- The Chaine Operatoire of Stone Adzes in Late Neolithic Sha Ha - Manufacturing --- p.50
Chapter 4.1 --- Raw material procurement --- p.50
Chapter 4.2 --- Manufacturing techniques --- p.51
Chapter 4.3 --- Stone adze production in Bronze Age Sha Ha --- p.65
Chapter Ch. 5. --- The Chaine Operatoire of Adzes in Late Neolithic Sha Ha - Morphologies --- p.69
Chapter 5.1 --- The five types of adzes in Late Neolithic Sha Ha --- p.69
Chapter 5.2 --- Concave working edge --- p.76
Chapter 5.3 --- Skewed working edges --- p.78
Chapter 5.4 --- Morphological changes in Bronze Age Sha Ha --- p.81
Chapter Ch. 6. --- The Chaine Operatoire of Adzes in Late Neolithic Sha Ha - Functions --- p.88
Chapter 6.1 --- Experimental results --- p.88
Chapter 6.2 --- Results of blind tests --- p.98
Chapter 6.3 --- Functional study of adzes in Late Neolithic Sha Ha --- p.99
Chapter 6.4 --- Changes in functions of adzes in Bronze Age Sha Ha --- p.109
Chapter 6.5 --- Stone adzes: other observations --- p.111
Chapter Ch. 7 --- The Material Culture of Adzes and the Socio-Economic Aspects of Late Neolithic Sha Ha and Changes in Bronze Age Sha Ha --- p.116
Chapter 7.1 --- The material culture of stone adzes --- p.116
Chapter 7.2 --- The social and economic aspects: an overview --- p.139
Chapter 7.3 --- Further research --- p.177
Chapter Ch. 8 --- Conclusion --- p.182
"Appendix I Review on Use-Wear Analysis - Development, Limitation & Ways of Improvement" --- p.190
"Appendix II Use-Wear Features and Identification of Work Material, Motion and Use-Incurred Wears" --- p.200
Appendix III Production Stage of Stone Adzes --- p.207
Bibliography --- p.214
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Books on the topic "Prehistoric Neolithic period China China"

1

The Chinese neolithic: Trajectories to early states. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2004.

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1973-, Chen Pochan, ed. Ancient Central China. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013.

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Jiao, Tianlong. The neolithic of southeast China: Cultural transformation and regional interaction on the coast. Youngstown, N.Y: Cambria Press, 2007.

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Ren Shinan wen ji: Renshinanwenji. Shanghai: Shanghai ci shu chu ban she, 2005.

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Millets, rice and farmers: Phytoliths as indicators of agricultural, social and ecological change in Neolithic and Bronze Age central China. Oxford: Archaeopress, 2014.

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Flad, Rowan K. Salt production and social hierarchy in ancient China: An archaeological investigation of specialization in China's Three Gorges. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011.

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Shelach, Gideon. Prehistoric societies on the northern frontiers of China: Archaeological perspectives on identity formation and economic change during the first millennium BCE. London: Equinox Pub., 2008.

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Yuan gu jiang nan: Hemudu yi zhi = South China in ancient times : Hemudu Site. Tianjin Shi: Tianjin gu ji chu ban she, 2008.

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Yuan gu jiang nan: Hemudu yi zhi = South China in ancient times : Hemudu Site. Tianjin Shi: Tianjin gu ji chu ban she, 2008.

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Zhongguo xin shi qi shi dai kao gu: Neolithic archaeology of China. Nanjing: Nanjing da xue chu ban she, 2004.

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Book chapters on the topic "Prehistoric Neolithic period China China"

1

Pei, Anping. "The Clustering Pattern of Settlements in the Middle Neolithic Age." In A Study of Prehistoric Settlement Patterns in China, 45–95. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-3060-9_2.

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Pei, Anping. "The Clustering Pattern of Settlements in the Middle Reaches of the Yangtze River in the Late Neolithic Age." In A Study of Prehistoric Settlement Patterns in China, 97–165. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-3060-9_3.

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Pei, Anping. "The Clustering Pattern of Settlements in the Middle Reaches of the Yellow River in the Late Neolithic Age." In A Study of Prehistoric Settlement Patterns in China, 167–281. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-3060-9_4.

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Pei, Anping. "The Clustering Pattern of Settlements in the Lower Reaches of the Yellow River in the Late Neolithic Age." In A Study of Prehistoric Settlement Patterns in China, 283–351. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-3060-9_5.

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Pei, Anping. "Case Studies of the Clustering Pattern of Settlements in the Prehistoric Period and the Late Shang Dynasty." In A Study of Prehistoric Settlement Patterns in China, 353–431. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-3060-9_6.

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Zhao, Luo. "Subsistence Patterns Associated with Shell Middens from the Pre-Qin Period in the Coastal Region of China." In Prehistoric Maritime Cultures and Seafaring in East Asia, 89–101. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-32-9256-7_5.

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Galipaud, Jean-Christophe. "The dynamics of human expansion and cultural diversification in Southeast Asia and Oceania during the Neolithic." In Language Dispersal, Diversification, and Contact, 156–66. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198723813.003.0009.

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Abstract:
Human origins in mainland Southeast Asia result from successive waves of migration from the north and west. The first crossing of large water gaps is attested by at least 40,000 BP with the successful colonization of Sahul. The rapid spread of innovative farming economies and their associated cultures develop from 10,000 BP in China and along the main Asian watercourses. Well-established farming cultures interact with coastal fishing communities by 6,000 BP leading to the development of extensive maritime networks. By 3,000 BP most Melanesian and Western Polynesian islands are settled by Lapita potters. The implicit link between the Lapita diaspora and the introduction of Austronesian languages into previously uninhabited islands has resulted in the Lapita period being often perceived as a genuine local expression of the early Austronesian diaspora. The picture that emerges today is a complex one which calls for a reassessment of the generally used ‘Out of Taiwan’ linguistic and archeological model.
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