Shinichi Fujimura
Template:Short description Template:Infobox person Template:Nihongo is a Japanese amateur archaeologist who claimed he had found a large number of stone artifacts dating back to the Lower Paleolithic and Middle Paleolithic periods. These objects were later revealed to be forgeries.
SuccessEdit
Fujimura was born in Kami, Miyagi, in 1950. After graduating from a high school in Sendai, he obtained a job in a manufacturing company. He became intrigued by archaeology when he was a child, finding shards of Jōmon pottery in the backyard of his house.<ref name="netsuzo">発掘捏造, 毎日新聞旧石器遺跡取材班, 毎日新聞社, 2001.</ref>
In 1972 Fujimura began to study archaeology and to look for Paleolithic artifacts during his holidays. Within the few years to follow, he rose to fame among amateur and academic archaeologists in Sendai by which he was appointed the head of the NGO group, Sekki Bunka Kenkyukai (石器文化硏究会, literally translated to stone tool culture research association) in 1975. Fujimura discovered and excavated many Paleolithic stone artifacts in Miyagi prefecture, such as at Zazaragi site in 1981, Nakamine C site in 1983 and Babadan A site in 1984. From a cross-dating investigation of the stratum these stone tools were estimated to be about 50,000 years old.
He established his reputation as a leading amateur archaeologist because he found most of the artifacts on his own.<ref name="netsuzo"/> He even became known as the archaeologist with the "divine hands".
After this success, he participated in 180 archaeological digs in northern Japan and almost always found artifacts, of increasing age. Based on his discoveries the history of the Japanese Paleolithic period was extended to about 300,000 years. Most of the archaeologists did not question Fujimura's work and this discovery was written in the history textbooks. Later he gained a position as a deputy director at the private NGO group Tohoku Paleolithic Institute.
CriticismEdit
Despite the acquiescence from the archeologists, some geologists and anthropologists claimed the discovery was dubious and lacked consistency with the geologic analysis of the sites.
Takeoka Toshiki at the Kyoritsu Joshi University published an article<ref>『前期旧石器』とはどのような石器群か, 旧石器考古学56, 石器文化談話会, 1998</ref>
Shizuo Oda and Charles T. Keally also mentioned some peculiarities in their article<ref>(1986):A Critical Look at the Palaeolithic and "Lower Palaeolithic" Research in Miyagi Prefecture., 人類学雑誌, vol. 94-3, 1986</ref>
DisclosureEdit
On October 23, 2000, Fujimura and his team announced another finding at the Kamitakamori ruins near Tsukidate in Miyagi Prefecfure. Fujimura claimed to have found the postholes of an early Paleolithic period dwelling, which would have been the nation's oldest, between 600,000 and 120,000 years old.<ref name=":0">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
On November 5, 2000, the newspaper Mainichi Shimbun published pictures of Fujimura digging holes and burying 61 objects at Kamitakamori, which he and his team later unearthed.<ref name=":0" /> The pictures had been taken one day before his Kamitakamori discovery was announced. Fujimura confessed and apologized the same day in a press conference, saying that he had been "possessed by an uncontrollable urge".<ref name="netsuzo" /> At first, Fujimura denied his previous discoveries were faked.<ref name=":1">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
In 2001 the Japanese Archaeological Association reviewed all of Fujimura's "discoveries" and concluded that he'd planted artifacts at 42 excavation sites.<ref name=":1" /> The following year, the association formally concluded that none of the objects supposedly found by Fujimura were correctly dated, finding that some bore marks from metal implements, and that some were just stones.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Fujimura was expelled from both the Japanese Archaeological Association and the Tōhuku Paleolithic Institute, whose chairman resigned as a result of the scandal.<ref name=":0" />
See alsoEdit
ReferencesEdit
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External linksEdit
- Japanese Archeology, Web page by C. T. Keally
- 前・中期旧石器問題関連文書総覧, 日本考古学協会