The Japanese Archeological Association (JAA) informed its general assembly Sunday that the stone implements discovered at 30 excavation sites by Shinichi Fujimura, the former deputy director of the Tohoku Paleolithic Institute, have no academic value
Archeologists have debated for many years whether Japan had early and middle Paleolithic periods, but the discovery of stone implements at the Zazaragi ruins was supposed to have settled the controversy. The ruins were also designated as a historically significant site by the government
Fujimura's fabricated findings had a far-reaching impact on the field of archeology, and some of his discoveries had even been described in textbooks
Only because they wanted to believe it, no matter how senseless it sounds.
