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Research Groningen Institute of Archaeology Research Research groups GIA

ESR 1: Bringing home animals

Aripekka Junno
Aripekka Junno

Aripekka Junno, MA

E-mail: a.o.junno@rug.nl

Supervisor: Prof. dr. Peter Jordan

Co-promotor: Prof. Hirofumi Kato, Dr. Sven Isaksson

Period of employment: 2016 - 2020

Financed by: ArchSci2020

Project Description:

This project is concerned with the long-term human-animal interactions among Okhotsk cultures in Hokkaido, northern Japan. The Okhotsk Culture were maritime foragers and traders who expanded out from the Amur into Hokkaido and Sakhalin Island from about AD 600, with many of their distinctive traits and practices such as elaborate bear ceremonialism and other hunting rituals persisting into the historic Ainu cultures. My ongoing research aims to understand the origins, spatiotemporal variability and long-term change in how communities living along the north coast of Hokkaido were ‘bringing home animals’ and subjecting particular terrestrial and aquatic species to specific processing and consumption practices. To trace the origins of some of these traditions, this PhD study examines cultures that predate the Okhotsk, for instance the Late Jomon period. I am applying organic residue analysis of food processing technologies such as tools and pottery containers to elucidate how different marine and terrestrial animals were treated, for example, according to a common set of procedures or in terms of more specific beliefs for each species.

Last modified:20 February 2018 2.58 p.m.