Wooden material culture and long-term historical processes in Heping Dao (Keelung, Taiwan)
Ver/ Abrir
Registro completo
Mostrar el registro completo DCFecha
2021Derechos
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Publicado en
Journal of Archaeological Science, 133, 2021, 105443
Editorial
Elsevier
Enlace a la publicación
Palabras clave
Asia-Pacific
Softwoods
Crafts
Aboriginal knowledge
Prehistory
European colonialism
Japanese colonialism
Resumen/Abstract
Despite being a perishable material, wood can nonetheless show in its full complexity the materiality of daily life activities, identity construction, economic exploitation, and adaptation in colonial processes. The study of two sets of wood samples in well-defined archaeological colonial contexts from the site of Heping Dao, on the northern coast of Taiwan, has unveiled otherwise unknown aspects of native exchange, adoption of indigenous practices, and differences and similarities between early European colonialism and Japanese imperialism in Asia- Pacific. Despite the constraints of taxonomic identification in subtropical (and tropical) areas, the use of different coniferous wood types has been recorded: Cupressaceae, cf. Chamaecyparis spp., cf. Cryptomeria japonica and cf. Cunninghamia spp. The paper highlights the close relationship between wooden objects and diachronic historical processes and stresses the complexity of their study in colonial contexts, with implications toward the prehistoric period.
Colecciones a las que pertenece
- D04 Artículos [362]
- D04 Proyectos de investigación [193]
- D54 Artículos [194]
- D54 Proyectos de investigación [104]