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Obsidian provenance for prehistoric complexes in the Amur River basin (Russian Far East)
Authors:Michael D. Glascock  Yaroslav V. Kuzmin  Andrei V. Grebennikov  Vladimir K. Popov  Vitaly E. Medvedev  Igor Y. Shewkomud  Nikolai N. Zaitsev
Affiliation:1. Research Reactor Center, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211, USA;2. Institute of Geology & Mineralogy, Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Koptyug Ave. 3, Novosibirsk 630090, Russia;3. Far Eastern Geological Institute, Far Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 100-Letiya Vladivostoku Ave., 159, Vladivostok 690022, Russia;4. Institute of Archaeology & Ethnography, Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Lavrentiev Ave. 17, Novosibirsk 630090, Russia;5. N.I. Grodekov’s Khabarovsk State Museum, Shevchenko St. 11, Khabarovsk 680000, Russia;6. Center for Preservation of Historic-Cultural Heritage of Amur Province, Krasnoarmeiskaya St. 173, Blagoveshchensk 675000, Russia
Abstract:The sources of high quality volcanic glass (obsidian) for archaeological complexes in the Amur River basin of the Russian Far East have been established, based on geochemical analyses by neutron activation and X-ray fluorescence of both ‘geological’ (primary sources) and ‘archaeological’ (artifacts from the Neolithic and Early Iron Age cultural complexes) specimens. A major obsidian source identified as the Obluchie Plateau, located in the middle course of the Amur River, was found to be responsible for supplying the entire middle and lower parts of the Amur River basin during prehistory. The source has been carefully studied and sampled for the first time. Minor use of three other sources was established for the lower part of the Amur River basin. Obsidian from the Basaltic Plateau source, located in the neighboring Primorye (Maritime) Province, was found at two sites of the Initial Neolithic (dated to ca. 11,000–12,500 BP). At two other sites from the same time period, obsidian from a still unknown source called “Samarga” was established. At the Suchu Island site of the Early Neolithic (dated to ca. 7200–8600 BP), obsidian from the ‘remote’ source of Shirataki (Shirataki-A sub-source) on Hokkaido Island (Japan) was identified. The range of obsidian transport in the Amur River basin was from 50 to 750 km within the basin, and from 550 to 850 km in relation to the ‘remote’ sources at the Basaltic Plateau and Shirataki-A located outside the Amur River valley. The long-distance transport/exchange of obsidian in the Amur River basin in prehistory has now been securely established.
Keywords:Obsidian   Geochemistry   Neutron activation analysis   Sources   Amur River basin   Russian Far East
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