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Japan: Pottery vessel with characteristic cord-marking decoration, Middle Jomon period (c. 3500 - 2500 BCE), Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Japan: Pottery vessel with characteristic cord-marking decoration, Middle Jomon period (c. 3500 - 2500 BCE), Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

The Jomon period is the time in Prehistoric Japan from about 16,500 years ago to about 2,300 years ago when Japan was inhabited by a hunter-gatherer culture, which reached a considerable degree of sedentism and cultural complexity.

The name Jomon or 'cord-marked' was first applied by the American scholar Edward S. Morse who discovered shards of pottery in 1877. The pottery style characteristic of the first phases of Jomon culture was decorated by impressing cords into the surface of wet clay. This pottery, dated to around 16,000 years ago, seems to be the second oldest in the world; the oldest one has now been found in China.

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