Walk the rim of a Jomon shell midden and the past becomes tactile: layered shells, fish bones, hearthstones and shards of pottery speak of repeated seasons of harvesting and feasting. Archaeological excavations at Sanganji Shell Mound (Fukushima) reveal dense refuse deposits with fish vertebrae, shell fish remains, and burnt botanical remains, indicating reliance on marine and estuarine resources. At Ikawazu (Aichi), settlement traces and associated burials speak to localized occupation and long-term use of coastal ecotones.
Material culture—pit dwellings, stone tools, lacquered wooden objects (where preserved), and distinctive pottery—suggests communities invested in place. Archaeological data indicates craft specialization in some regions, alongside broad-spectrum foraging. Social life likely unfolded in seasonal rhythms: coastal harvests, inland plant and game procurement, and communities linked by exchange of raw materials and stylistic forms. Ethnographic analogy and the archaeological record point to complex, place-centered societies rather than simple mobile bands, though variability across islands and time was great.