Title: Early and Middle Woodland: Adena and Hopewell
1Early and Middle Woodland Adena and Hopewell
2Early Woodland Period (1000 B.C.-A.D. 100)
- The Early Woodland period is an elaboration of
Archaic trends. - A greatly increased use of earthen burial mounds
and pottery making make Early Woodland sites more
visible to the archaeologist than most Archaic
sites.
3Late Archaic-Woodland trends include
- More intensive exploitation of diverse food
sources in highly localized environments (part
of'primary forest efficiency'). - More sedentary living, with more clearly
recognizable territorial boundaries. - More intensive exchange of scarce materials.
- More complex social orders.
- Increasing cultivation of native and foreign
plants. - Larger populations living in more geographically
and socially circumscribed territories.
4Container Revolution
- The widespread appearance of pottery is thought
to be related to a "container revolution"associate
d with an increased exploitation of wild and
domesticated seed crops. - Many native and foreign plants were cultivated by
the Early Woodland period (with some appearing in
the Middle Archaic period).
5Early Woodland Pottery
http//www.museum.state.il.us/muslink/nat_amer/pre
/htmls/woodland.html
6Indigenous cultigens
- Indigenous cultigens include sunflower, Jerusalem
artichoke, sumpweed, goosefoot, knotweed,
maygrass, and little barley. - Cultivated plants remained a supplementary food
in the Eastern Woodlands until after AD 800.
7Technology
- Used flint blades, drills, scrapers, stone axes
and adzes, bone tools, atlatl weights, projectile
points .
Yadkin points
http//www.cr.nps.gov/seac/outline/042Dwoodland/
early
8Early Woodland Points
Dickson
Waubesa
Kramer
http//www.uwlax.edu/mvac/_private/PointGuideOld/P
oints.htmWood
9Burial and Trade
- Two Early Woodland characteristics that separate
it from the Archaic are an elaboration of
archaeologically visible burial customs and an
intensification of local and inter-regional
exchange. - Burial of high status in earthen mounds.
- High status trade goods.
10Burial Mounds
http//www.uiowa.edu/osa/learn/prehistoric/ancien
tmounds.htm
11Trade
- Widespread trading contacts
- Ohio pipestone from the lower Scioto Valley to
Lake Huron and the upper St Lawrence Valley - Copper from Lake Superior
- Sea shells from the Gulf Coast
- Intensified local and inter-regional trade
12Social Organization, Population Settlement
- Probably clans and lineages controlled the
resources. - Social standing was extremely important,
especially for burial. - Population size and growth
- villages held as many as 40 people
- had very localized population density
- Settlement pattern
- Early Woodland settlement distribution
resemblesthe Late Archaic communities - Adena lived by basically every major Ohio
Rivertributary
13Ideology
- Religious beliefs and rituals
- Burial mounds
- death was extremely symbolic
- contained tools, exotic ornaments, bracelets,
rings - Adena
- painted corpses (red ochre)
14Early Woodland Models for Behavior
- Population growth led to better defined and more
circumscribed local territories. - Stylistic boundary markers" (e.g., projectile
point and pottery styles), - More formal exchange mechanisms that structured
the bartering of essentials and prestigious
luxuries from one area to another in a web of
reciprocal obligations and formal gift giving.
15Early Woodland Behavior
16Adena complex (c. 1000 BC-AD 100)
- The Adena complex was a mortuary-ceremonial
complex centered in the central Ohio Valley that
was shared by many local cultures. - Earlier Adena burial centers are marked by a
basically egalitarian burial program, utilitarian
grave goods, and smaller earthen burial mounds.
17Grave Creek Mound, WV
- Construction of the mound took place in
successive stages from about 250-150 B.C., as
indicated by the multiple burials at different
levels within the structures. - In 1838, road engineers measured its height at 69
feet and its at the base as 295 feet. - Originally a moat of about 40 feet in width and
five feet in depth with one causeway encircled
it.
18Grave Creek Mound
http//www.wvculture.org/sites/gravecreek.html
19Miamisburg Mound, OH
- Archaeological investigations of the surrounding
area suggest that it was constructed ca. 800 BC -
AD 100. - Built on a 100-foot-high bluff, the mound
measures 877 feet in circumference. - It was originally more than 70 feet high.
20Miamisburg Mound
http//www.ohiohistory.org/places/miamisbg/
21Shrum Mound, Oh
- Shrum Mound is one of the last remaining conical
burial mounds in the city of Columbus. - The 20-foot-high and 100-foot-diameter mound is
located in the one-acre Campbell roadside park. - The mound is grass-covered and steps lead to its
summit. - It was probably constructed about 2000 years ago
by the prehistoric Adena people.
22Shrum Mound, Oh
http//www.ohiohistory.org/places/shrum/
23Story Mound, Ohio
- Story Mound consists of a large, rounded earthen
mound located on slightly less than an acre of
ground in Chillicothe. - This mound stands 19.5 feet high, with a basal
diameter of 95 feet. - Dating to ca. 800 BC-AD 100 it was excavated in
1897 by Clarence Loveberry. - It yielded the first documented example of a
circular Adena timber building, a structural type
now known as the norm in Adena ceremonial and
domestic architecture.
24Story Mound, Ohio
http//www.ohiohistory.org/places/story/
25Mound construction
http//www.adena.com/adena/ad/ad01.htm
26Adena Artifacts
- 800 B.C. - A.D. 100
- This carved pipe was found in the Adena mound in
Chillicothe. - It shows us an Adena man wearing typical clothing
and jewelry.
27Other Artifacts
http//www.civilization.ca/cmc/archeo/cvh/maritim/
v65-13.htm
28Ohio, Adena CultureStone Tablet
http//iml.umkc.edu/art/faculty/wahlman/quizzes/Na
tAmNorthAmAdenaStoneTabletB.htm
29Birdstones Saddleback Popeyed Birdstone
http//welcome.to/Birdstone
30the Hopewell (200 BC-400 Ad)
31Middle Woodland
- The middle period or stage of the Woodland
tradition in eastern North America. - Many trends that began thousands of years earlier
in the Archaic reach their climax in the Middle
Woodland in some resource rich regions.
32Middle Woodland Traits
- an increasing efficiency in harvesting a wide
variety of productive and nutritious wild food
resources - an increasing emphasis on the gathering and
gardening of seed-bearing plants - an intensification of food procurement
- smaller, better defined, and more circumscribed
group territories - more sedentary lifeways
33Traits Continued
- "packing" in resource rich environments caused by
increasing population sizes, group fissioning,
and inward migration - a sense of corporate, or "ethnic," identity
- increasingly conspicuous group boundary markers
to legitimize a corporate right to local
resources - more elaborate burial rites
- more complex intra- and intercommunity social
arrangements and - increasingly formal inter-group exchange
mechanisms.
34Hopewell
- Hopewell ceremonial sites are in the Sciota
Valley near Chillicothe, Ohio. - These religious and political centers typically
contain a burial mound and geometric earthwork
complex that covers 10 to hundreds of acres and
sparse evidence of large resident populations is
lacking. Larger mounds can be up to 12 m high,
150 m long, and 55 m wide. - Multiple mortuary structures under the mounds
were often log tombs that contained the remains
of skeletons that had been cremated, bundled, or
interred in some other manner.
35Hopewell Artifacts
- Exotic raw materials and "art" objects, the
diagnostic artifacts of the Hopewell Interaction
Sphere, accompanied some of the burials. - Included were
- Lake Superior copper,
- galena,
- obsidian from Wyoming,
- Knife River flint from North Dakota,
- And also pipestone, silver, meteoric iron, mica,
chlorite, quartz crystal, petrified wood, foreign
nodular flints, - From the gulf and atlantic coasts large and
small marine shell, ocean turtle shells,
alligator and shark teeth, barracuda jaws - clay figurines, platform effigy pipes, and
two-dimensional representational art cut from
sheets of copper or mica, among other items.
36Trade
37Copper artifacts
- Sources
- Lake Superior area
- Kewanaw Peninsula
- Isle Royale
- Essential two ways of making cold copper objects
- Beaten
- Cutouts
38Copper artifact types
- Ear spools
- Artificial noses
- Beads
- Gorgets
- Panpipes
- Relief drawings
- Breastplates
- Fake deer antlers
- Coverings for wooden artifacts (e.g., covering
for a wooden representation of a hallucinogenic
or poisonous mushroomthe famous "Shaman's
baton") - Ax heads
39Copper Artifacts
40Mica artifacts
- Source
- southwest North Carolina
- Mica is a sometimes almost perfectly transparent
laminated mineral that can be carefully separated
into clear sheets that can then be cut into
shapes - Serpents
- Animal claws
- Human heads
- Human hands
- Geometric forms
- As many as 3,000 sheets of worked mica have been
recovered from one mound (at the original
Hopewell Site)
41Mica Artifacts
42Obsidian and Ground Stone artifacts
- Source
- appears to be Yellowstone, Wyoming
- Technology employed
- developed pressure flaking
- Artifact types
- Knives
- Projectile points
- Ritual, non-utilitarian forms of the above (too
big and too brittle to have been used
practically) - Ground-stone artifacts
- Probably the most famous Hopewell artifact is the
platform pipe - Platform pipes depict a wide range of animals
forming the tobacco bowloften in rather
whimsical forms
43Flaked and Ground Stone artifacts
Ground Stone Shaman
44Bone and Wood Artifacts
- Bone artifacts
- Wolf's upper palette with upper fangs still
intact (may have been a mouth mask that was held
in the teeth of a shaman) - Wooden artifacts
- Preservation of wood is often poor in the Eastern
Woodlands, but luckily some of these had been
covered with thin sheets of copper - Copper acids inhibit biological activity, thus
sometimes preserving organic material adjacent to
it - Copper sometimes remains long after wood has
disappeared (requiring careful excavation
techniques!)
45Textile fragment from Hopewell Mound
46Other artifacts
- Freshwater mollusks
- Freshwater clamshell to make beads
- Freshwater pearl for beads, etc.
- Ceramics
- Vessels
- Utilitarian
- Luxury/funerary
- Figurines
- Distinct from those of the Southwest and
Mesoamerica
47Hopewell Interaction Sphere
- Smaller amounts of Hopewell Interaction Sphere
items are found in Havana graves in Illinois and
in other Hopewellian complexes. - Differences in regional burial practices,
ceramics, settlement pattern, and other aspects
of the archaeological record suggest that these
items and presumably their associated ritual
practices were grafted onto local cultures.
48Hopewell Phenomenon
- Just what the Hopewell phenomenon represents
remains a focus of investigation. - Some researchers view the increase in burial
mound and earthwork construction, the elaboration
of burial ceremonialism, and the presence of
"powerful" exotic substances and manufactured
items as the archaeologically visible
manifestation of a climactic expression of a
cosmology whose roots extend deep into the
Archaic. - According to this view, the spirit world had to
be propitiated to ensure an abundance of food, a
successful raid on a traditional enemy, and so
on, and these items functioned within that
process of communication.
49Other Interpretations
- Others regard the florescence as evidence of the
emergence of regional social ranking. - In this view, heads of high ranking lineages
legitimized their positions in part by obtaining
interaction sphere symbols of power from other
high ranking lineage heads in distant
communities. - Still another interpretation considers the
aspirations of "Big Men" as responsible for
moving interaction sphere items through an
extensive intertribal network. - Here, a potential "Big Man" would attempt to
build his own reputation and a political blee
within the segmented tribal organization by
exchanging locally available items for
interaction sphere raw materials and ritual
items. - Presumably, aspects of all three interpretations
were important to varying degrees in different
Middle Woodland complexes.
50Forms of Hopewell Earthworks
- Enclosures
- Circular
- Rectangular
- Octagonal
- Processionals
- Parallel connecting mounds connecting enclosures
- Internal moats and borrow pits were also part of
such complexes - Effigy Mounds
- Not to be confused with the Effigy Mound Culture
of Northeastern Iowa, which is late, but which
also has Hopewellian affiliations
51Functions of Hopewell Earthworks
- Many mounds were burial mounds (sometimes
containing hundreds of burials) - Some mound complexes may reflect
archaeoastronomic orientations - Definitely not used as temple bases (such as
later Mississippian and Mesoamerican forms)
52Mound City, Ohio Aerial photo
53Mound City Layout
54(No Transcript)
55Seip Mound, Ohio
56Seip Mound Enclosure
57Hopewell Mound Group
58Burial Practices
- The dead were buried in many different ways,
depending upon social status. The majority of the
scientifically studied burials are cremations,
only the elites being buried intact. Both burial
crypts and charnel houses were used. - Crypts
- Large boxes constructed for the storage of the
dead and their grave goods - Simple structures sunk into the ground and
covered with heavy roofs - Often built on isolated high-spots clear of the
settlement - May have served as lineage and/or clan facilities
for a single community - Generally maintenance free
59Charnel Houses
- Structures with thatched roofs and substantial
post frames - used both to shelter the dead
(cremated and /or entire corpses) and the burial
activities associated with them - Bodies often subjected to considerable
preparation - Elites buried in log-lined tombs within the
charnel house and were accompanied by extremely
rich grave offerings - Once house had fulfilled its role, was burned to
the ground and an earthen mound erected over it - A single mound might be used for later burials
which were placed immediately adjacent to, or
partially into, the exisiting burial mound. - Over time a single burial mound would assume
gigantic proportions some as large as 90-100
feet in diameter and 15 feet tall and contain as
many as 200 burials. - May have served as lineage and /or clan
facilities for a single community.
60Effigy Mounds
- Serpent Mound, Ohio
- One of the few effigy mounds in Ohio, Serpent
Mound is the largest and finest serpent effigy in
the United States. - Nearly a quarter of a mile long, Serpent Mound
apparently represents an uncoiling serpent.
Serpent Mound lies on a plateau overlooking the
valley of Brush Creek. - New dating suggests it was built at the end of
the Hopewell period.
61Serpent Mound
The most famous of all such (effigy) mounds is
the Great Serpent Mound in Adams County, 1,330
feet in length along its coils and averaging
three feet in height.
http//www.ohiohistory.org/places/serpent/
62Sources
- http//www.comp-archaeology.org/USWoodlandHopewell
Earthworks.htm - http//www.ohiohistorycentral.org/ohc/archaeol/p_i
ndian/artifact/face.shtml - http//campus.northpark.edu/history/WebChron/North
America/Adena.html - http//www.geocities.com/moore_brandon_54601/Early
WoodlandandAdena.html - http//www.ohiohistorycentral.org/ohc/archaeol/p_i
ndian/tradit/adena.shtml