人类学学报 ›› 2016, Vol. 35 ›› Issue (01): 132-148.

• 人类学学报 • 上一篇    下一篇

旧石器时代装饰品研究:现状与意义

魏屹;Francesco D'ERRICO;高星   

  • 出版日期:2016-03-15 发布日期:2016-03-15

Paleolithic Personal Ornaments: A Review of the Evidence

WEI Yi, Francesco d’ERRICO,GAO Xing   

  • Online:2016-03-15 Published:2016-03-15

摘要: 装饰品(personal ornament)是旧石器时代中晚期遗址中一类较特殊的遗存,作为早期人类现代行为的重要标志,它的出现及其学术意义一直受到国际学术界的关注和重视。西方考古学界对装饰品的研究开始较早,理论方法成熟,成果丰硕。我国此遗存发现较少,在研究手段和程度方面与西方存在一定的差距。本文从装饰品的定义与分类、发现与研究现状、功能与作用、出现原因及研究意义的探讨等方面入手,对西方学术界对装饰品的研究现状和进展进行梳理,对我国发现的相关材料与研究进展做简要介绍与评述,希望能对我国旧石器时代装饰品的研究提供有价值的参考资料与思路。

关键词: 装饰品;旧石器时代;象征认知;现代行为

Abstract: Personal ornaments are playing a growing role in Paleolithic Archaeology. Considered for long as a minor source of information, they have attracted considerable attention in the last two decades. This is due to the fact that they are now considered by most researchers as a convincing hallmark of modern behavior and the emergence of cultures comparable to ours, to discoveries demonstrating that they were produced and worn much earlier than previously thought, and to theoretical and methodological developments proving that they can provide hitherto underestimated clues to document the emergence, organization, and spread of modern human cultures. Many archaeologists consider that the use of personal ornaments reflects modern cognition, abstract thinking, and the use of complex communication systems. Scholars conducting research on prehistoric art see personal ornaments, together with rock art, carvings and other types of artifacts, as a form of information technology instrumental for sharing, reinforcing and transmitting symbolic codes. Thousands of beads and pendants have been found at Paleolithic sites from Africa and Eurasia. In spite of the critical information provided this category of the material culture, which cannot be given by other artifacts such as lithic or bone tools, the in-depth study of Paleolithic ornaments is still at an early stage in China. This is due to the relative shortage of discoveries and loss of key collections during WWII. However, key recent discoveries, and the acquisition of up to date research facilities make now cutting edge research in this field possible and promising. Ornaments consist of 94 circular ostrich eggshell beads, found at Shuidonggou, Ningxia Province, at the localities 1, 2, 7 and 8 of this site. The layers from which the beads come are dated to 31 ka-25 ka cal BP. The site of Xiaogushan, Liaoning Province yielded 4 perforated teeth and 1 bone “decorated disc”, discovered in layers dated from 60 ka to 20 ka BP. The most abundant collection of personal ornaments was found during the excavation conducted by Pei, at Zhoukoudian Upper Cave, Beijing. This collection includes 141 beads, among which 1 perforated pebble, 7 stone beads, 125 perforated mammal teeth, 1 perforated supra-orbital bone of fish, 3 perforated shells and 4 bone tubes. The age of the layers that have yielded these objects range from (29.1±0.52) ka BP to (10.47±3.6) ka BP by 14C dating. An equally rich collection, comprising 85 personal ornaments, was found at the site of Shizitan, Shanxi Province. The 49 clam shells, 35 ostrich eggshells and 1 bone tube found at this site are dated from cal. 24950 BP to 11350 BP. Hutouliang site, Hebei Province, dated to c. 11 ka BP has yielded 3 perforated shells, 8 ostrich eggshell beads, 1 stone bead, and 1 bone bead. In addition, one perforated stone bead made of graphite from Shiyu site, Shanxi Province, and one perforated stone bead from Xiaonanhai site, Henan Province, with an age of 28ka BP and 24 ka-11 ka BP respectively, should also be mentioned. Ornaments have been regarded for long as art items witnessing the aesthetic inclinations of their makers and users. Modern research focuses instead on the reconstruction of manufacture processes, length of use, and evaluation of results in terms of cognition, social complexity, and identification of cultural boundaries at regional scale. Although still limited in number when one considers the size of the country, discoveries of personal ornaments from well excavated and dated Paleolithic Chinese sites are increasing gradually. This paper provides an overview of current evidence on the origin of personal ornaments and recent progresses of personal ornament research. It summarizes what we do know, and don’t know on the earliest beads, the possible mechanisms that stimulated their emergence in our lineage, the theories underlying the interpretation of personal ornaments, and the methods allowing their analysis. It proposes the paths that Chinese archaeology may follow to fruitfully explore its rich and rapidly growing archaeological potential in this field of study.

Key words: Personal ornaments; Paleolithic; Symbolic cognition; Modern behavior