@article{oai:nagoya.repo.nii.ac.jp:00011530, author = {山本, 直人 and YAMAMOTO, Naoto}, journal = {名古屋大学文学部研究論集. 史学}, month = {Mar}, note = {Compared chronologically between the cooling periods and the calibrated dates of earthenware types from the late phase of the late Jomon period to the early Yayoi period in the Hokuriku District, it can be found that: (i) the boundary dates (1350 cal BC) between both the cooling period of 1400 to 1350 cal BC and the Inoguchi II /Yokaichi-shimbo types closely correlate to each other; (ii) the boundary date (900 cal BC) between the cooling period of 900 cal BC and the Nakaya/Shimono type are also correlated; and, (iii) the boundary dates (800 cal BC) between the cooling period of 850 to 700 cal BC and the Shimono/Nagatake type also show a similar correlation. Cooling resulting from decreases in solar output seriously affected the livelihood of the Jomon people. I have hypothesized that in the critical situation described above, the Jomon people changed the patterns earthenware, patterning tools, and the positions onto which print/patterns were inscribed as part of their prayers for regeneration; and, consequently that the types of earthenware changed chronologically. However, there are three boundary dates in which no evidence of the occurrence of a cooling period was found, despite changes in earthenware types; one is the boundary date (1300 cal BC) between the Yokaichi-shimbo type and the Okyoduka type, another is the boundary date (1100 cal BC) between the Okyoduka type and the Nakaya type, and the other is that (600 cal BC) between the Nagatake type and the Shibayama-demura type. Changes in these earthenware types conceivably resulted from other causes which are yet to be determined.}, pages = {59--67}, title = {縄文時代晩期における気候変動と土器型式の変化}, volume = {56}, year = {2010} }