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Using sulfur isotopes to determine the sources of vermillion in ancient burial mounds in Japan

✍ Scribed by Takeshi Minami; Akira Imai; Michiaki Bunno; Kunihiko Kawakami; Setsuo Imazu


Book ID
102222975
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2004
Tongue
English
Weight
107 KB
Volume
20
Category
Article
ISSN
0883-6353

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

This study represents an attempt to determine the sources of vermillion found in ancient Japanese burial mounds of the 1st–6th centuries A.D., by comparing their ratios of sulfur isotopes with those of cinnabar ore samples collected in Japan and China. Cinnabar ore samples were taken from three mines in central Japan (Niu in Mie, Yamato in Nara, and Sui in Tokushima prefectures), and from Wanshan in China, where mining activity has been recorded back to the 6th century A.D. and earlier. When the ratios of a ^34^S and ^32^S were compared with the Canyon Diablo meteorite standard, a high Ξ΄^34^S value of +22.6 Β± 3.6‰ was found for the Wanshan mine, as opposed to low values ranging from βˆ’7.3 Β± 1.9 to βˆ’2.1 Β± 1.6‰ for the Japanese mines. The ratios of sulfur isotopes in vermillion collected from ancient Japanese burial mounds also divided into two groups. High ratios (+11.1 to +22.8‰) were found in 1st‐ and 2nd‐ century burials in the western regions of northern Kyushu and San'in, suggesting that local, powerful chiefs obtained vermillion through relations with China. Lower ratios (βˆ’8.4 to βˆ’2.0‰) were found in burials of the 2nd through 6th centuries in central Japan, where the ancient Yamato dynasty emerged as the first unified polity around the end of the 2nd century A.D. We, therefore, conclude that the Yamato dynasty exploited local sources of vermillion, rather than depending solely on China. The present study demonstrates the feasibility of determining sources of vermillion using sulfur isotope ratios, and the relevance of such findings for archaeological research. Β© 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.


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