Difference between revisions of "Pottery"

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Kyushu yields the oldest pottery--dated at approximately 10-11,000 B.C. As one moves from West to East along the archipelago, the disparity of dates of the pottery and our own time becomes less and less<ref>Delmer M. Brown (editor). The Cambridge History of Japan Volume One: Ancient Japan, Page 57</ref>.
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[[Kyushu]] yields the oldest pottery--dated at approximately 10-11,000 B.C. As one moves from West to East along the archipelago, the disparity of dates of the pottery and our own time becomes less and less<ref>Delmer M. Brown (editor). The Cambridge History of Japan Volume One: Ancient Japan, Page 57</ref>.
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==

Revision as of 02:54, 6 January 2007

Kyushu yields the oldest pottery--dated at approximately 10-11,000 B.C. As one moves from West to East along the archipelago, the disparity of dates of the pottery and our own time becomes less and less[1].

Notes

  1. Delmer M. Brown (editor). The Cambridge History of Japan Volume One: Ancient Japan, Page 57

Sources

Delmer M. Brown (editor). The Cambridge History of Japan Volume One: Ancient Japan