Misari type is a culture type associated with Doldaemun pottery on stone floor-stone-lined hearth in the Bronze Age, which began to come to the fore in academia with an investigation on the ruins related to the determination of the early period in the early 2000s. Till now, most studies of the Misari type have been conducted, concerning the types of residence and Doldaemun pottery, and this study took stoneware as the main subject of research. This study first divided the entire Misari type ruins in South Korea into five regions and classified them into three stages based on the properties through which studies of stoneware could obtain significant results, based on the research results till now. In Stage 1, arrowheads without tang and rectangular biface stone blades with hole, having flat bases and round bases with a low degree of indentation form a large majority. In Stage 2, hilted stone daggers, arrowheads with tang and biface stone blades without hole are observed, so it is judged that polishing of the arrowheads with tang are not even, so stoneware processing technology was not developed yet, and various shapes of stone blades are observed, which were mostly rectangular shaped, in the previous stage. Characteristically, from this stage, flat biface handaxes appear and beak-shaped stoneware is observed, and it is assumed that the Shandong Peninsula may be its origin. In Stage 3, deeply pushed-in and slender arrowheads without tang are observed, and the ratio of arrowheads with tang increases and the division between the neck part and the body part becomes clear. As for stone blades, biface stone blades without hole disappear, and polished stone blades with hole form a considerable majority. The number of flat biface handaxes decreases from the previous stage, but they become more distinct morphologically. Next, Misari type ruins are observed in the River alluvial fans in a small scale, and they were sub-divided based on their basic water system. Flat bases and round bases with a low degree of indentation occupy most of the Han River basin, and only biface stone blades are observed. In Bukhan River and Namhan River, stone blades without a hole show somewhat higher ratio of that in the Han River basin, and it is judged that a biface stone blade without a hole is relic with strong regional characteristics of Yeongseo region different from that of other regions. In the Geumgang River basin, the division between the neck part and the body part of a tang with double wings becomes clear, so it is likely that Misari type has long coexisted with Garak-dong type. The Nakdong River basin has a high proportion of beak-shaped stoneware, and a few is observed in the Namhan River basin, too, so it is judged that it went through a process of propagation via these two areas. Like this, the Misari type stoneware mostly consisted of arrowheads without tang and biface stone blades, and later, flat biface handaxes was added. In addition, through the processes of transmission and spread with spatio-temporal changes, it came to coexist and be integrated into the local culture of each region.