English-Language Bibliography for Jomon Subsistence and Diet Studies [Supplement]
Aikens, C. Melvin, and Takeru Akazawa. (1992). Fishing and farming in early Japan: Jomon littoral tradition carried into Yayoi times at the Miura caves on Tokyo Bay. In: C. Melvin Aikens and Song Nai Rhee (eds), Pacific Northeast Asia in Prehistory: Hunter-Fisher-Gatherers, Farmers, and Sociopolitical Elites, pp. 75-82. Pullman: Washington State University Press.
Aikens, C. Melvin, and Takeru Akazawa. (1996). The Pleistocene-Holocene transition in Japan and adjacent northeast Asia: Climate and biotic change, broad-spectrum diet, pottery and sedentism. In: Lawrence Guy Strauss, Berit Valentin Eriksen, John M. Erlandson and David R. Yesner (eds), Humans at the End of the Ice Age: The Archaeology of the Pleistocene-Holocene Transition, pp. 215-227. Interdisciplinary Contributions to Archaeology. New York: Plenun Press.
Akazawa, Takeru. (1999). Regional variation in Jomon hunting-fishing-gathering societies. In: Keiichi Omoto (ed.), Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the Origins of the Japanese, pp. 223-231. Kyoto: International Research Center for Japanese Studies.
Bleed, Peter. (1978). Origins of the Jomon technical tradition. Asian Perspectives, 19: 107-115.
Bleed, Peter, Carl Falk, Ann Bleed and Akira Matsui. (1989). Between the mountains and the sea: Optimal hunting patterns and faunal remains at Yagi, an Early Jomon community in southwestern Hokkaido. Arctic Anthropology, 26(2): 107-126.
Bleed, Peter, John Weymouth and Connie Bennett. (2001). A nice place to live and work: Community structure at Yagi. Bulletin of the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association 21 (Melaka Papers, vol. 5): 3-8.
Chisholm, Brian, and Hiroko Koike. (1999). Reconstructing prehistoric Japanese diet using stable isotope analysis. In: Keiichi Omoto (ed.), Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the Origins of the Japanese, pp. 199-222. Kyoto: International Research Center for Japanese Studies.
Crawford, Gary W. (1992a). Prehistoric plant domestication in East Asia. In: C. Wesley Cowan and Patty Jo Watson (eds), The Origins of Agriculture: An International Perspective, pp. 7-38. Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press.
Crawford, Gary W. (1992b). The transition to agriculture in Japan. In: Anne Birgette Gebauer and T. Douglas Price, (eds), Transitions to Agriculture in Prehistory, pp. 117-132. Madison: Prehistory Press.
D'Andrea, A. Catherine. (1995). Later Jomon subsistence in northeastern Japan: New evidence from palaeoethnobotanical studies. Asian Perspectives, 34: 195-227.
D'Andrea, A. Catherine, Gary W. Crawford, Masakazu Yoshizaki, and Takehisa Kudo. (1995). Late Jomon cultigens in northeastern Japan. Antiquity, 69: 146-152.
Habu, Junko, Minkoo Kim, Mio Katayama and Hajime Komiya. (2001). Jomon subsistence-settlement systems at the Sannai Maruyama site. Bulletin of the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association 21 (Melaka Papers, vol. 5): 9-21.
Iba, Isao, Akira Matsui and Tsuneo Nakajima. (1999). The Awazu Shell Midden. In: Hiroya Kawanabe, George W. Coulter, and Anna C. Roosevelt (eds), Ancient Lakes: Their Cultural and Biological Diversity, pp. 135-145. Ghent, Belgium: Kenobi Productions.
Inoue, Naohiko, Gakuji Ito and Tetsuya Kamegai. (1986). Dental pathology of hunter-gatherers and early farmers in prehistoric Japan. In: Takeru Akazawa and C. Melvin Aikens (eds), Prehistoric Hunter-Gatherers in Japan: New Research Methods, pp. 163-198. Bulletin No. 27. Tokyo: The University Museum, The University of Tokyo.
Kidder, J. Edward, Jr. (1968). Agriculture and ritual in the Middle Jomon Period. Asian Perspectives, 11: 19-41.
Matsui, Akira. (1992). Wetland sites in Japan. In: Bryony Coles (ed.), The Wetland Revolution in Prehistory, pp. 5-14. University of Exeter Wetland Archaeology Research Project Occasional Papers 6. Exeter: WARP and the Prehistoric Society.
Matsui, Akira. (1995). Postglacial hunter-gatherers in the Japanese Archipelago:
Marine adaptations. In: Anders Fischer (ed.), Man and Sea in the Mesolithic: Coastal Settlement above and below Present Sea Level, pp. 327-334. Oxbow Monograph
53. Oxford: Oxbow Books.
Matsui, Akira. (1999). Wetland archaeology in Japan: Key sites and features in the research history. In: Bryony Coles, John Coles and Mogens Schou Jorgensen (eds), Bog Bodies, Sacred Sites and Wetland Archaeology, pp. 147-156. University of Exeter Wetland Archaeology Research Project Occasional Papers 12. Exeter: Wetland Archaeology Research Group.
Nishimura, Masao. (1986). A study of late Early Jomon culture in the Tone River area. In: Richard J. Pearson, Gina Lee Barnes and Karl L. Hutterer (eds), Windows on the Japanese Past: Studies in Archaeology and Prehistory, pp. 421-447. Ann Arbor: Center for Japanese Studies, University of Michigan.
Suzuki, Kimio. (1986). Volumetry and nutritional analysis of a Jomon shell-midden. In: Takeru Akazawa and C. Melvin Aikens (eds), Prehistoric Hunter-Gatherers in Japan: New Research Methods, pp. 55-71. Bulletin No. 27. Tokyo: The University Museum, The University of Tokyo.
Twiss, Katheryn C. (2001). Problems of cultural change in the Late and Final Jomon. Bulletin of the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association 21 (Melaka Papers, vol. 5): 30-36.
Watanabe, Hitoshi. (1986). Community habitation and food gathering in prehistoric Japan: An ethnographic interpretation of the archaeological evidence. In: Richard J. Pearson, Gina Lee Barnes and Karl L. Hutterer (eds), Windows on the Japanese Past: Studies in Archaeology and Prehistory, pp. 229-254. Ann Arbor: Center for Japanese Studies, University of Michigan.