Wakasa Mikata Jomon Museum
Wakasa Mikata Jomon Museum (若狭三方縄文博物館) is an archeological museum located in the town of Wakasa, Fukui Prefecture, Japan. It is dedicated to the exhibition of Torihama shell mound as well as varve (annual layer pattern), oldest of which dating back to 70,000 years ago, discovered in the bottom of Lake Suigetsu, one of the Five Lakes of Mikata. The founding chairman is Takeshi Umehara. ![]() ActivitiesPermanent exhibitionArtifacts excavated from Torihama shell mound and others from the Jōmon period are on display. Central to the display is the stratigraphy of the mound. Other objects include a dugout canoe from the Yuri archeological site and its reconstruction, Jōmon pottery from various locations, dogū (clay dolls), and buried trees. Also, research by Takeshi Nakagawa, the Chairman of Archeological Climate Research Center, Ritsumeikan University, is explained to the public.[1][2] Lake Suigetsu Varve Research and Exhibition Center (provisional name) is scheduled to open in September 2018.[3] Visitor participationVisitors can experience making a magatama, clay flute, or clay pottery. They can also experience fire-making and dugout canoe riding. Public educationLectures on Jomon period and on environmental archeology. Outside exhibitionReconstructed pit-house (access without charge). AccessLocated near Lake Mikata, at the mouth of Hasu river.
Open dateThe Wakasa Mikata Jomon Museum is closed on Tuesday (except on holidays, in which case it is closed on Wednesday) and at the end and beginning of the year. References
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