Ōmori Katsuyama Site


The Ōmori Katsuyama Site is an archaeological site in the city of Hirosaki, Aomori Prefecture, in the Tōhoku region of northern Japan with a late Jōmon period settlement ruins. The remains were designated a National Historic Site in 2012 by the Japanese government.

Site

The site is located at the tip of a 145-meter-high tongue-shaped hill on the northeastern side of the foot of Mount Iwaki in western Aomori Prefecture and was discovered during construction work in 1959. A rescue survey conducted over a three-year period found the remains of a large pit dwelling, at the time the largest to have been discovered in Japan, followed by a stone circle. the site was acquired by the government for preservation in 1961, but was not properly excavated until 2006.

Stone Circle

The stone circle is elliptical, with a length of 48.5 meters and width of 39.1 meters. It was constructed by levelling a hilltop, and then arranging 77 stones assemblies along the margin of an embankment. The stone assemblies consist of approximately 1200 pyroxene andesite stones, which were collected from the river that runs to the north and south of site. This arrangement of small stones marks an advancement of the techniques used at the earlier Komakino Site to the north, and dates it to the first half of the Final Jōmon period. The circle is designed such that it is aligned to the point where the sun sets over the summit of Mount Iwaki on the winter solstice.

Artifacts

, clay objects, and stone tools and stone objects from the early phase of Final Jōmon Period unearthed at site bear designs similar to that found at Kamegaoka Stone Age Site. These included some 250 disk-like stone objects with a diameter of five to ten centimeters, made of the same pyroxene andesite as the stone circles, which presumably had some ritual significance in connection with the stone circle.

Pit Dwelling

A large pit dwelling was located 100 meters southwest of the stone circle. It had a diameter of 13 meters with a hearth in the center.
The site has been submitted for inscription on the UNESCO World Heritage List as one of the Jōmon Archaeological Sites in Hokkaidō, Northern Tōhoku, and other regions