Class notes for Exam #3 ANTY 351
3/19/24
- Southwest
- Pueblo Bonito, Chaco Canyon - AD 1000-1150
- Very famous site
- Likely a center of sorts
- Could have attached population
- Interaction sphere with other groups in Mesoamerica
- Rock art - Supernova Explosion?
- Long way from timber
- Benson - trying to find timber source, 125 miles away
- Dendrochronology - Boring (like, bores) samples
- Core & Veneer Walls
- 5 floors
- Artifacts
- Chaco pottery - Cylindrical vases
- Turquoise artifacts
- Archaeometry - mechanics of this
- Macaw Feather & Squirrel Pelt Sash - c. AD 920
- Not many macaws in SW (naturally)
- Aviary that contained 20 units to contain birds
- Roads - hard to spot at certain times
- Carved stone steps
- Devin White - remote sensing of roads
- Functional & Ceremonial aspects
- Aztec Ruins, NM
- Known for a long time
- Cement caps in attempt to preserve the site
- Great Houses
- Casa Grande
- Hohokam Trade - Shells, Macaw Feathers, Turquoise
- Maize is Mesoamerican then selected for productivity
- Upping agriculture output
- Craft Specialization
- Pottery - ware shaped from moist clay & hardened by heat
- Made of Clay, Temper, Water
- Temper - material added to clay in the formation of vessels in order to reduce rapid shrinkage and/or expansion during the firing process. Allows for a more even distribution
- Uneven heat distribution can result in cracking and failure during the manufacture process
- Ex. Sand, Fiber, Crushed Rock, crushed shell, crushed pottery (grog)
- 3rd most common study
- Nerds (endearing)
- Acknowledge source of Modern day people
- Question of authenticity
- Lip, Rim, Body, Conoidal Base
- Terms that aren’t quantifiable
- Types
- Plainware
- Surface treatment
- Brushing, Burnishing, Cord or Fabric marking, Incising, Stamping
- Notching, Corrugation (wrapping)
- Decorative
- Smoothing & Burnishing
- Smudging - Putting something in the kiln to have it to look smokey
- Glazes
- Slips - Coating
- Paints (organic and mineral)
- Analyze the pottery through experimental
- Mimbres Bowls
- Hole to release spirits - “Killed”
- Tonto Polychrome
- Casa Grandes Ramos Polychrome
- Maize
- Very early corns
- 1944 filled beans & maize
- Historic Hopi field with corn, beans, & squash
- The Three Sisters - forms complex amino acid
- Archaeological Grid Garden - Preserve soil moisture
- Cool Talk on Water Gathering in Chaco
- Results of Over-Population
- Not enough food - skeletal evidence of health stress
- Increased susceptibility to infectious diseases & parasites
- Violence & Increased Competition
- Evidence of Violence
- Fortifications & Defensive architectural features
- Burned buildings & food storage
- Perimortem wounds
- Parry fractures, head wounds, etc
- Points in human skeletons
- Trophy Collecting
- Human Bone artifacts
- Non-standard or casual burial
- SW Specific Evidence of Warfare
- Enclosed Pueblos
- Burned Rooms with Bodies
- Inaccessible areas with Pueblos - Mesa Top Pueblos
- Lines of Sight - Ex. Fireside & Tower House
- Enclosed Plaza
- Community issues
- Private/public space
- Sanitation
- Access to Resources
- Conflict Resolution
- Cooperative Labor
- Risk-sharing
- Need for centralized decision making
3/21/24 - Complexity
- Sedentism
- Increased variety of artifacts
- Seasonal foods
- Dense scatter of artifacts
- Increase in heavy artifacts
- Cemeteries
- E. Woodlands - Greater Complexity
- Regional variety - cohesive identity
- Water resources & crafts
- Late Archaic
- Woodworking tools: Adze, Axe, & Gouge
- Planes - used for shaping wood
- Pitch - Patching parts of wood
- Indian Knoll, KY (3000-2000 BC)
- Shell Mounds
- Regional Projectile Points
- Serration
- NOT Late Archaic
- Craft Specialization
- Pipe culture - Tobacco
- Nutting Stone
- Watson-Brake, LA - Dated to 5400 BP
- Poverty Point, LA
- Grand Depth
- Variations in Artifacts
- Drills
- Archaeometry: Looking at the edges (of drills)
- Iconography - Birds
- Interaction
- If resources in Valley A are low, Valley B & C are occupied
- Human skeletal evidence
- Harris lines - indicate where a skeleton has stopped growing
- Enamel Lines
- Anemia indicators
- High childhood mortality rate
- Extensive use of “marginal foods”
- Freshwater clams, grass seeds, other foods with poor returns for the effort to collect or process
- Domestication Process
- Food & other useful plants are harvested
- Maize is an export from Mesoamerica
- Dropped (or exerted) seeds grow in disturbed soil close to camp. Some seeds are stored, allowing seeds with thinner coats to survive. Larger seeds outgrow rivals
- Deliberately planted closer to camp
- People (inadvertently) select plants for larger seeds sizes, thinner seed coats, easier harvesting attributes
- Early domesticates
- Squash, sunflower
- Goosefoot - seed heads & eventually fiber
- Marshelder
- Knotweed
- Maygrass & Little Barley
- Wild Tobacco
- “Keep Tobacco Sacred” - Not an endorsement of addiction
- Ohio River Valley
- Big Architecture
- Miamisburg Mound, OH
- Largest conical burial grounds in E. United States
- Adena Earthworks - NOT random
- Societal Organization
- Adena Burial Mound, PA
- Adena Mound, OH
- Mounds on habitation
- Adena Points - Continuity
- Big Whompers (relatively long points)
- Pottery - Not Southwestern, not typological like SW
- Slate Gorget - Part of something to signal with
- “Spider” Tablet
- Wilmington Tablet - Tiny, Ceremonial
- Adena Birdstones - atl-atl weight
- Pipes
- Tubular pipe
- Duck effigy pipe
- Adena pipe
3/26/24 - Hopewell
- “Classification of Societies”
- Service (1971)
- Ranked: States, chiefdoms
- Not-ranked: Tribes, Bands
- Based on increased levels of social complexity from bands to states in multiple ethnographic cases
- Complexity
- Number & Proliferation of specialized political, economic or other social roles & institutions within a given society
- Presence of craft specialization
- How we recognize chiefdoms
- Monumental architecture - Poverty Point
- Commoners attracted to the big things
- How do we see the 99%
- Significant amount of organized labor
- Some levels of settlement hierarchy
- Hopewell Mound Site
- Ceremonial aspects
- Mound City Mound Group
- Features - looking for them even in forests
- Scioto River - Settlement in bottom lands
- Sites - Typically around waterways
- Craft Specialization
- Pipes
- Beaver Effigy Pipe
- Seip Mound Pipe
- Personal Adornment
- Jewelry - Deer horns, earrings
- Copper
- Stone ear spools - gauges
- Beaded necklaces
- Marine Shells
- Copper Breastplate
- Ceramics
- Utilitarian Ceramics (Majority)
- Ceremonial Ceramics
- Materials from lots of areas
- SW is talking to Mesoamerica
- Question is interaction with Eastern areas
- Recent Obsidian from Pachuca
- Trade Networks
- Raw material exports
- Flint from near Newark Site
- Pipestone from near the Tremper Site
- Red Ochre from near the Seip site
- Salt from near the McKittrick site
- Fresh-Water Pearls from the rivers
- Mica - hand, claw with pearl
- Bear Claw & Copies (of stone)
- Canine Teeth
- Carved - might find tools in Mississippian
- Burin, graver, lithic tool
- Copper bird - Bird motif
- Copper cutouts
- Ceremonial blades
- Curved - hard to make without shattering
- Arkansas Quartz - Curved point
- Yellowstone Obsidian - 12 cm, ceremonial
- Symbolic significance
- Color, knapping characteristics, etc, serve as mnemonic to remember relationships, past occurrences, heritage, it is imbued with meaning, not just function
- Lee did research on it: continuance
- Distance decay - how far away disappeared
- Eastern Idaho → CO - Must have transport Animals (horses)
Mississipian
- Chronology
- AD 900-1050 - emergent Mississippian
- AD 1050 - 1350 - Full Mississipian Culture
- AD 1350 - Post Mississippian
- Subsistence
- Maize, beans, squash
- Selected Maize for the environment
- Continuation of earlier domesticated suite of plants
- Marshelder, goosefoot, sunflower
- Deer, other game
- Freshwater shellfish, fish
- Nuts, berries, other gathered food items
- Artifacts
- Stone Hoes
- Fish Effigy Bowl
- Monks Mound
- Largest structure until relatively recent
3/28/24
- Cahokia & Suburbs
- Cahokia proper - social knowledge
- Peripheral cities
- Settlement Pattern
- Complex chiefdoms - Social theory - Wolkenstein
- Mound center
- 2nd line mound centers (Mitchell, E. St. Louis)
Nodal villages, hamlets, & farmsteads
- Burials & ascribed status
- Mound 72 - By central plaza
- Projectile points - 10k, serrated
- Burial mounds
- Guess of high status individual based in grave good quantity
- Burial mica
- 20k “Falcon” beads
- Cape, looks like shell beads
- Individual is on tops
- 10 individuals buried as well
- Mississippian World from AD 1050-1200
- Cahokia (founded AD 900), designated as center in AD 1050
- Etowah (GA) established about AD 1000
- Moundville (AL) founded AD 1050
- Spiro (OK) exists from c. AD 900
- Mound building is extensive & intensive
- Woodhenges are built & maintained
- Trade in exotics is base of power
- Mica from Carolinas
- Obsidian - Yellowstone
- Great Lakes Copper
- Marine shells
- Monks mound
- Next to a channel, unsure on Mississippian
- Plaza - Ball game out front
- Woodhenge - calendar - more work to be done on these
- After AD 1200
- Palisades with Bastions become primary monumental architecture (Cahokia palisade)
- Palisade - walls-ish thing
- Southeastern Ceremonial Complex (Southern Cult) synthesized
- Use of maize increases
- Regional differences increases
- Southeastern Ceremonial Complex (AKA Southern Cult)
- Name given to a broad regional similarity of artifacts, iconography, ceremonies, and mythology of Mississippian period between AD 1000 & AD 1600
- Symbolism
- Chunkey
- Roll stone disk then bet on who wins
- Artifacts
- Stones
- Player statues - ear spool, gauging
- Birdman
- Cross & Circle Pattern
- Spider gorget
- Long nose god
- Mesoamerican connection
- MT - Sweet Grass hills with red ochre
- Birdman or Thunderbird Tablet from Cahokia
- HUman head, bird like beak
- Caves near St. Louis
- Pictograph of birdman
- Tim Pauketaw - did a lot of analysis
- Maya connection - Tim McCleary