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Wooden material culture and long-term historical processes in Heping Dao (Keelung, Taiwan)

Abstract: Despite being a perishable material, wood can nonetheless show in its full complexity the materiality of daily life activities, identity construction, economic exploitation, and adaptation in colonial processes. The study of two sets of wood samples in well-defined archaeological colonial contexts from the site of Heping Dao, on the northern coast of Taiwan, has unveiled otherwise unknown aspects of native exchange, adoption of indigenous practices, and differences and similarities between early European colonialism and Japanese imperialism in Asia- Pacific. Despite the constraints of taxonomic identification in subtropical (and tropical) areas, the use of different coniferous wood types has been recorded: Cupressaceae, cf. Chamaecyparis spp., cf. Cryptomeria japonica and cf. Cunninghamia spp. The paper highlights the close relationship between wooden objects and diachronic historical processes and stresses the complexity of their study in colonial contexts, with implications toward the prehistoric period.

Otras publicaciones de la misma revista o congreso con autores/as de la Universidad de Cantabria

 Autoría: Martín Seijo M., Cruz Berrocal M., Serrano Herrero E., Tsang C.,

 Fuente: Journal of Archaeological Science, 133, 2021, 105443

Editorial: Elsevier

 Año de publicación: 2021

Nº de páginas: 18

Tipo de publicación: Artículo de Revista

 DOI: 10.1016/j.jas.2021.105443

ISSN: 0305-4403,1095-9238

 Proyecto español: HAR2011-16017-E

Url de la publicación: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2021.105443

Autoría

MARIA MARTIN SEIJO

MARÍA CRUZ BERROCAL

ELENA SERRANO HERRERO

TSANG, CHENGHWA