He wanted to put Japan on the map for its archaeology. But as Anne McGowan explains, Shinichi Fujimura pushed a little too hard.
In 1972 Shinichi Fujimura was a member of an amateur archaeologist group that worked on discovering and excavating many stone artefacts across Japan.
Fujimura’s first major discovery happened in 1981 when he found some stoneware that dated back 40,000 years. It was the oldest Japanese stoneware ever discovered, and from that time onwards, Fujimura’s career took off. Working in more than 180 ancient sites, he was always guaranteed to come up with new and important artefacts, and in the archaeological world he was rumoured to have “divine hands”.
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