Point

Arrowhead

29-183-17

From: Japan | Samani

Curatorial Section: Asian

Native Name Samani
Object Number 29-183-17
Current Location Collections Storage
Culture Late Paleolithic (uncertain) | Jomon (uncertain) | Yayoi (uncertain) | Japanese
Provenience Japan | Samani
Period Late Paleolithic (uncertain) | Jomon (uncertain) | Yayoi (uncertain)
Date Made Late Paleolithic, Japan - Yayoi
Section Asian
Materials Obsidian
Technique Flaked
Description

Point or arrowhead. Nearly diamond shaped bifacially retouched tool. Long point with projections at widest point. Tip broken off. Rounded end. Opaque obsidian. Arrowheads were used during the Late Paleolithic age and continued to be used during the Yayoi period. They appear in sites throughout Japan. Arrowheads hafted onto arrow shafts and harpoons have been found in archaeological contexts. Thus their use is indicative of the importance of hunting and fishing throughout early Japan. Diamond shaped bifacially retouched points or arrowheads appear at Paleolithic sites such as Uenodaira, Nagano Prefecture in central Honshu. On the eve of the Jomon period, Uenodaira is dated 12,000-10,000 BC. But diamond shaped types also have been found in Yayoi contexts such as at Uriyudo, Osaka Prefecture in south-central Honshu.

Length 4 cm
Width 1.5 cm
Thickness 0.4 cm
Credit Line Received from various sources, pre-1929
Other Number None - Field No SF

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