The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Face of Yayoi period boy reconstruc­ted

- The Yomiuri Shimbun

TOTTORI — The Tottori prefectura­l government has created a bust of a boy from the Yayoi period (300 B.C.- 300 A.D.) with a face reconstruc­ted using bones found at the Aoya Kamijichi ruins and DNA analysis.

This is the second restored face of a person from the Yayoi period, following an adult male called “Aoya Kamijiro” created in October 2021. The latest re-created person was initially thought to be female, based on the shape of the skull, but DNA analysis revealed the person to be male.

Since 1998, more than 100 human bones have been found in the ruins. In 2021, using DNA collected from one of the skulls, the prefectura­l government became the first entity in Japan to reconstruc­t the face of a man from the Yayoi period, believed to be in his 30s.

In April 2022, the prefectura­l government attempted to reconstruc­t a female face from a well-preserved skull that lacked male features such as protrusion around the eyebrows.

However, DNA analysis revealed a Y chromosome, which does not exist in

females, and the skull was determined to be male. The boy is believed to have been between 10 and 15 years old, and it is thought that his skeletal structure did not show male characteri­stics due to his young age.

Genetic informatio­n revealed that both the boy's paternal and maternal lines were of migratory ancestry, with thicker hair and slightly darker skin color. As for the adult male, his paternal line was from the ingenious Jomon people and his maternal line was of migratory ancestry.

“We now know that people from various regions gathered where the ruins are now to form a community,” said Tatsuhiko Hamada, a prefectura­l official who worked on the reconstruc­tion.

The bust of the boy has been on display at the Aoya Kamijichi Historical Park. (March 26)

 ?? The Yomiuri Shimbun ?? A bust of a boy from the Yayoi period with a reconstruc­ted face is seen in Aoya, Tottori Prefecture.
The Yomiuri Shimbun A bust of a boy from the Yayoi period with a reconstruc­ted face is seen in Aoya, Tottori Prefecture.

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