Around 20,000 years ago, someone living in what is now northeastern China shaped clay into a vessel and fired it — producing the oldest pottery yet identified anywhere on Earth. The discovery didn’t announce itself dramatically. It survived as fragments: bag-shaped sherds buried deep in the floor of Xianrendong Cave, waiting nearly two centuries of modern archaeology to be properly understood.
Key findings
- Early pottery China: Ceramic vessel remains at Xianrendong Cave in Jiangxi province date to between 19,200 and 20,900 calendar years before present — the oldest securely dated pottery yet identified in the world.
- Xianrendong Cave sherds: An international team led by Wu Xiaohong obtained 10 AMS radiocarbon dates from the lowest sherd-bearing levels in 2009, placing pottery production firmly in the Late Upper Paleolithic period, well before the emergence of farming.
- Independent invention: Scholars regard early pottery in China, the Russian Far East, the Japanese Jomon culture, and later in Europe and the Americas as separate, parallel inventions — each arising independently from different peoples responding to local conditions.
A cave at the foot of Xiaohe mountain
Xianrendong Cave sits in Wannian county, northeastern Jiangxi province, about 100 kilometers south of the Yangtze River. Its entrance is narrow — barely 2.5 meters wide and 2 meters high — opening into a hall that stretches 5 to 7 meters tall. For tens of thousands of years, people returned to this shelter repeatedly, leaving behind stone tools, bone, ash lenses, and eventually, pottery.
Four distinct cultural layers have been identified inside the cave. The deepest represent the transition from Upper Paleolithic to early Neolithic times in China. The people who left these earliest layers were hunter-fisher-gatherers, eating deer and collecting wild rice. There is no evidence yet that they farmed. What they did do — fire clay into durable vessels — was something no confirmed human culture had done before them.
About 800 meters away and 60 meters higher in elevation sits the Diaotonguan rock shelter, which contains the same cultural strata. Archaeologists believe it served as a campsite for Xianrendong’s occupants, suggesting these groups moved fluidly across their landscape, using multiple sites in coordination.
Yuchanyan and the broader picture
Xianrendong is not the only site that rewrote the timeline. Roughly 400 kilometers to the southwest, Yuchanyan Cave in Hunan province contained the remains of at least two nearly complete ceramic pots, dated to between 18,300 and 15,430 calendar years before present. These were left by Late Upper Paleolithic people during brief occupations of the shelter, at a time when the regional climate was warm and fertile, rich with bamboo and deciduous forest.
Yuchanyan’s preservation was exceptional. Stone, bone, and shell tools survived alongside plant and animal remains. The cave floor was deliberately layered with alternating red clay and ash — likely the remnants of deconstructed hearths, not kilns. The pottery itself appears to have been brought in, not made on-site.
Further north and east, sites in the Russian Far East have also yielded pottery from roughly the same period. The pattern that emerges is not of a single invention spreading outward, but of multiple groups in East Asia, facing similar environmental pressures, converging independently on the same technology at roughly the same time in deep history.
Why hunter-gatherers made pots
For a long time, pottery was assumed to be a Neolithic invention — a byproduct of settled farming life, useful for storing grain. The evidence from Xianrendong and Yuchanyan dismantled that assumption decisively.
These early vessels were made by mobile hunter-gatherers, not farmers. The leading hypothesis is that they were used for cooking and processing food — particularly aquatic resources like fish and shellfish, which benefit from boiling. The emergence of pottery in ice-age East Asia may have been a response to intensifying subsistence pressure, a way to extract more nutrition from available resources during periods of environmental stress.
The Xianrendong sherds are bag-shaped jars, low-fired and relatively coarse. By the Early Neolithic layers above them, the pottery had diversified: more varied clay compositions, geometric decorations, and a wider range of vessel forms. The technology didn’t leap forward all at once — it evolved slowly, over thousands of years, in the hands of people experimenting with what clay could do.
Lasting impact
Pottery is one of the foundational technologies of human civilization. It made food storage, fermentation, and long-distance trade in liquids and grains far more practical. It contributed to the rise of settled communities and, eventually, to the emergence of agriculture-based societies across Asia, Africa, Europe, and the Americas.
The realization that pottery predates farming by thousands of years also reshaped how archaeologists understand the relationship between technology and social organization. Innovation doesn’t wait for the right conditions — it emerges from people solving immediate problems, often in circumstances far less stable than the ones we associate with “civilization.”
The Xianrendong site also sits near one of the most important early centers of rice domestication. The early Neolithic layers in the cave show evidence of both wild and domesticated rice phytoliths, suggesting the same region that produced the world’s oldest pottery may also have been central to one of humanity’s most consequential agricultural transitions.
Xianrendong was first excavated in 1961 and 1964 by the Jiangxi Provincial Committee for Cultural Heritage, with subsequent work in the 1990s and early 2000s involving Peking University and international collaborators. Yuchanyan was investigated extensively between 1993 and 1995, and again from 2004 to 2005. These excavations were led by Chinese archaeologists and supported by institutions across multiple countries — a genuinely collaborative effort to understand a moment that belongs to all of human history.
Blindspots and limits
The record from both caves is incomplete. Upper deposits at Yuchanyan were removed during the historical period, and the full picture of how often and by whom these sites were occupied remains unclear. Identifying the oldest pottery in the world is also a moving target: new excavations across East Asia and elsewhere continue to push boundaries, and the current record may not hold indefinitely. The people who made these vessels left no written record of themselves — their names, languages, and social structures are lost entirely to time.
Read more
For more on this story, see: ThoughtCo — Yuchanyan Cave
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous land rights: 160 million hectares recognized at COP30
- Ghana establishes marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- The Good News for Humankind archive on prehistory
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