The Paleolithic Site of Jeongok-ri

By Jeongok Prehistory Museum

Jeongok Prehistory Museum

The Jeongok-ri Paleolithic Historic Site located along Hantan River is a place where traces of the oldest residential neighborhood in the country are left. It is a very important historic site for those studying the culture of the Paleolithic Period of the country and East Asia. Paleolithic archaeologists the world over also regard it as a very important historic site for their study. An 800,000㎡-wide basalt area southwest of Jeongok-ri was designated and protected as National Historic Site No. 268. The Gyeonggi-Do Office opened the Jeongok Prehistoric Museum in April 2011 for the preservation and positive use of the prehistoric site.

Hand axeJeongok Prehistory Museum

Jeongok-ri – Hand axes

Hand axes are major large-sized tools dating back to the Paleolithic Period. They have a sharp or an oval trimmed blade. They were named “hand axes” since they look similar to the present-day woodcutter’s axe. Hand axes were also used to skin and bone animals and smash their bones. Hand axes were the most recent tool for the Paleolithic people. Thus, they are called the MacGyver knife of the Paleolithic Period. Prof. H. Movius of Harvard University held the view that no Acheulean axe with double-sided blade had been used in ancient times in places east of India, i.e., East Asia, but such view was challenged following the excavation of Acheulean axes in Jeongok-ri, Korea. The Jeongok-ri hand axes provided a turning point in the research on the Paleolithic Period. They led to many treatises reappraising the Acheulean industry. Even now, there is continuing controversy regarding Acheulean axes and Acheulean-type stone tool industry. If Acheulean is a term referring to the archaeological industry of stone tool manufacture of Europe and Africa, Jeongok-rian (Chongoknian) can be said to be a term referring to the archaeological industry of relatively more primitive hand axes in East Asia. Why the thin cutting stone blade of East Asia could not develop into a typical long-blade Acheulean and why the hand axes found in the stone tools industry have low frequency are subjects that need to be studied further.

Hand axeJeongok Prehistory Museum

Hand axeJeongok Prehistory Museum

CleaverJeongok Prehistory Museum

Hand axeJeongok Prehistory Museum

Hand axeJeongok Prehistory Museum

Hand axe & PickJeongok Prehistory Museum

Hand axeJeongok Prehistory Museum

Acheulean Hand Axe
Acheulean refers to stone tools representing the early Paleolithic Period first found in St. Acheul, France. The tools are said to have emerged in present-day Konso-Gardula, Ethiopia 1.4 million years ago, and then disappeared 100,000 years ago. Acheulean hand axes are oval or triangular-shaped, and both sides of their blade are evenly trimmed. Their sides look similar to two palms held together. Many of them dating back to the early period are coarsely trimmed, but they gradually took on more refined shapes.

Many hand axes found in Jeongok-ri appear to be similar to early Acheulean-type ones. There are oval-shaped hand axes made of quartz with trimmed facades.

US GI Greg Bowen, who discovered the Jeongok-ri Paleolithic Historic SiteJeongok Prehistory Museum

Jeongok-ri Paleolithic Historic Site – Discovery and Survey

US GI Greg Bowen happened to find stone tools dating back to the Paleolithic Period while spending time near Hantangang River in 1978. That was how the Jeongok-ri Paleolithic Historic Site came to be known to the world. The stone tools were handed over to Prof. Kim Won-ryong, Director of the Seoul National University Museum. An archaeological field survey was made, and the findings were reported to the academic circles as Acheulean-type hand axes. Between 1979 and 2010, excavation surveys were conducted on more than 17 occasions. Diverse types of stone tools such as hand axes, cleavers, hunting stones, fist-sized picks, scrapers, notched tools, etc., were unearthed from the sedimentary layer whose deepest part measured 8m. Natural science-based academic surveys were also carried out to see how the historic site was formed and how old it was. The researchers concluded that the Jeongok-ri site was at least 350,000 years old as one that was formed during the Paleolithic Period.

First archaeological field survey, 1979Jeongok Prehistory Museum

First excavation survey, 1979Jeongok Prehistory Museum

Second excavation survey, 1979Jeongok Prehistory Museum

Prof. Serizawa’s visit to the site, 1979Jeongok Prehistory Museum

Soil sample collection, 1983Jeongok Prehistory Museum

E1S1 pit excavation, 1980Jeongok Prehistory Museum

TPⅢ B excavation, 1986Jeongok Prehistory Museum

E6S4 pit where relics were concentrated, 1992Jeongok Prehistory Museum

E55S20-Ⅳ pit, southeastern section of the wallJeongok Prehistory Museum

E55S20-Ⅳ pit, basalt rock bottomJeongok Prehistory Museum

Imjingang River and around Hoengsan-ri areaJeongok Prehistory Museum

Jeongok-ri Paleolithic Historic Site – soil quality and layers

Basalt rock, Wangrim-riJeongok Prehistory Museum

Soil quality formation
Hantangang River originates in the northeast part of the Chugaryeong Fault Zone, which longitudinally divides the soil quality of the Korean Peninsula into two, passes through Jeongok-ri, and flows into Imjingang River or passes through Munsan and flows into Hangang River. The Imjin and the Han flow into the West Sea. Jeongok-ri is about 50km from the West Sea. Mountains in Pocheon to the east of Jeongok-ri and in areas to the east of Pocheon are higher than those to their west.

The stream flowed down the valleys formed long ago in the Gyeonggi Gneiss Zone during the Precambrian Era. Basalt formed on the bottom of the valleys during the Quaternary Period of the Cenozoic Era, extending to Munsan along the river.

Basalt cliff of Chatancheon Stream as viewed from Jangjingyo BridgeJeongok Prehistory Museum

With small and large lava zones and perpendicular basalt cliffs along Hantangang River, the Jeongok-ri Historic Site area displays very unique natural scenery that you cannot find elsewhere in the country. The unique topographical structure was formed by the flow of lava from the crater in the present-day Orisan Mountain in Pyeonggang and the 680m-high hill near Geombulrang Station during the Quaternary Period of the Cenozoic Era. The lava from the eruption filled the former Hantangang River and flowed to the Munsan area passing through the Jeongok area.

The liquidity of lava at the time was very high that it can flow to very far away, almost around 90km. Recently, a joint team of Korean/Japanese natural scientists found that there are two types of basalt (i.e., Jeongok Basalt and Chatan Basalt) along Hantangang River and Imjingang River, and that they were formed by the lava spewed 500,000 years and 170,000 years ago, respectively.

Hantangang River flowing over the lava field has remaining alluvial sediments like pebbles, sand, and silt. By and by, Hantangang River eroded the lava field, and fine grains of loess taken by winds came to cover river sediments. The stone tools left by people of the Paleolithic Period in Jeongok-ri are found in the clay layer, which appears to have been formed by winds.

Basalt cliff face of Hantangang RiverJeongok Prehistory Museum

Soil layer
Alluvial sediments 4m-8m thick are left on the lava field in Jeongok-ri. In some areas, thick sand layers are left as sediment of the river flow. There are also purely clay layers where basalt accounts for the bulk of the area.

Basalt, Baeguiri layer, and gneissJeongok Prehistory Museum

The clay layer on the upper part of a sedimentary layer comes to 4m ~ 6m in some areas. Aeolian layers (i.e., layers of loess and loess-turned soil) are heaped alternately. There are traces of vertical cracks along the surface of old soil. A typical sediment structure can be found in the E55S20-Ⅳpit, which was excavated in 2000 and whose reproduced copy is displayed at the museum in Jeongok-ri.

E55S20-Ⅳ pit, work of soil analysis sampling, 2002Jeongok Prehistory Museum

Dating of the Jeongok-ri Paleolithic Historic Site

E55S20-Ⅳ pit, work of soil analysis sampling, 2002Jeongok Prehistory Museum

Recently, surveyors found Aira-Tn ash from Japan 30cm below the land surface and Ktz ash from 100,000 years ago 1 meter away from it in the E55S20-IV pit. The discovery of the volcanic ash from two different sources in a sedimentary layer shows that the layer 1 meter below the land surface is more than 100,000 years old. A 70cm-deep sedimentary layer appears to have been formed in about 70,000 years. Based on the foregoing, the stone tools found 3.5m below ground are thought to be 350,000 years old.

E55S20-Ⅳ pit, work of soil analysis sampling, 2002Jeongok Prehistory Museum

It is thought that, as a result of measuring it with two different absolute dating methods, the basalt layer forming the bottom of the Jeongok-ri Historic Site is about 500,000 years old. Many OSL layers between the 95,000-year-old Ktz layer and the bottom layer appear to be 100,000 ~ 200,000 years old; thus bolstering the reliability of the dating of the groups of unearthed stone tools. Stone tools unearthed from Jeongok-ri are very old ones, but Jeongok-ri-related dating has problems to be solved.

Imaginary painting of how Paleolithic people lived in Jeongok-ri by Im Geun-uJeongok Prehistory Museum

How Paleolithic people lived in Jeongok-ri

Looking at the topographical features of the Jeongok area, which is at the center of the Chugaryeong Fault Zone, riverside alluvial plains develop along valleys, and there is a low mountainous area after another. The prevailing westerlies bringing the moisture of the West Sea cause it to rain a lot and help form an abundant natural environment. The area must have been a lot drier during the Ice Age, but the development of diverse kinds of vegetation must have made it a good place for living for Paleolithic people.

Imaginary painting of how Paleolithic people lived in Jeongok-ri by Im Geun-uJeongok Prehistory Museum

It is assumed that, during the Prehistoric Period, locals obtained food from plants and fruits growing in the field and mountains, gathered clams and caught fish in Hantangang River, and hunted animals. They must have built shelters for winter and moved from one place to another to get food.

Stone tools like the hand axes unearthed from the Jeongok-ri Historic Site are those made by Paleolithic people for use in their day-to-day living. Hundreds of stone tools were found in a few sites. It is assumed that the places were sites of production of stone tools used to hunt animals and gather fruit. Thus, Jeongok-ri was a precious living foundation of the Paleolithic people.

Prof. Kim Won-ryong (1922- 1993/penname: Sambul)Jeongok Prehistory Museum

Prof. Kim Won-ryong (1922- 1993/penname: Sambul)

Prof. Kim Won-ryong founded the Department of Archaeology and Anthropology of Seoul National University and led the Jeongok-ri Paleolithic Historic Site excavation survey from the beginning. He played a pivotal role in forming the consensus for the preservation of the site as a national historic site. His remains were scattered in a forest of the site pursuant to his will. A small monument was set up behind the Jeongok-ri Prehistoric Site Hall to commemorate his love of the Jeongok-ri site and his achievements in the research on historic relics.

Credits: Story

Director|Kidong Bae
Planning|Hanyong Lee
Curator|Jonghun Kim, Hyunchul Sim
Photograph|Jeongok Prehistory Museum's Archive
Project Support|Taeyong Kim, Seoyeon Choi, Youngdae Kim, Hakseong Lee, Sohyun Park, Hyungmo Seong, Hogyun Kim, Kyungmin Kim(PR & Marketing Team, Gyeonggi Cultural Foundation)

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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