The Yubetsu technique (湧別技法 Yubetsu gihō ) is a special technique to make microblades, proposed by Japanese scholar Yoshizaki in 1961, based on his finds in some Upper Palaeolithic sites in Hokkaido, Japan, which date from c 13,000 bp.
The name comes from the Yūbetsu River (湧別川 Yubetsugawa ), on the right bank of which the Shirataki (白滝遺跡 Shitaraki Iseki ) Palaeolithic sites were discovered.
To make microblades by this technique, a large biface is made into a core which looks like a tall carinated scraper. Then one lateral edge of the bifacial core is removed, producing at first a triangular spall. After, more edge removals will produce ski spalls of parallel surfaces.
This technique was also used from Mongolia to Kamchatka Peninsula during the later Pleistocene.