Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-ndw9j Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-06T12:09:42.374Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Early Woodland Ritual use of Caves in Eastern North America

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

George M. Crothers*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, 211 Lafferty Hall, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506 ([email protected])

Abstract

Mammoth and Salts caves in west-central Kentucky were Intensively mined for gypsum and other sulfate minerals during the Early Woodland period (ca. 1000–200 B.C.). I propose that this mining was part of a larger ritual performance assodated with the initiation of adolescent males into adulthood. Drawing on ethnological literature, I suggest that, beginning in the Early Woodland, caves became integral settings for male rites of passage. This argument is based on (1) ethnographic examples of male initiation that invokes the use of caves for secrecy and seclusion, (2) fecal steroid analysis that indicates exclusive male activity, (3) medicinal use of cave minerals as a purgative, (4) evidence of sensory deprivation and possible use of psychotropic substances to heighten states of consciousness, and (5) collection of gypsum as a symbolic marker of transitional rites. Using an institutional economic approach, I further suggest that Early Woodland ritual cave use is correlated with the formation of new social institutions and new forms of property relations stemming from the emergence of horticultural economies in the Eastern Woodlands.

Resumen

Resumen

El yeso y otros minerales sulfatados fueron explotados intensamente durante el periodo Woodland temprano (1000–200 a.C.) en las cuevas Mammoth y Salts en el centro-oeste de Kentucky. Propongo que esta minería fue parte de una práctica ritual mayor asociada con la iniciación de los adolescentes varones a la edad adulta. Basándose en la literatura etnológica, sugiero que, a partir del periodo Woodland temprano, las cuevas se convirtieron en las ubicaciones sistémicas para los ritos de paso masculinos. Este argumento se basa en: 1) ejemplos etnográficos de iniciación masculina que demandan el uso de las cuevas como lugares secretos y de encierro; 2) análisis fecal de esferoides que indican actividad exclusiva de hombres; 3) uso medi-cinai de minerales de la cueva como purgantes; 4) evidencia de privación sensorial y el posible uso de sustancias sicotrópi-cas para alcanzar estados elevados de conciencia; y 5) la recolección de yeso como marcador simbólico de los ritos de transición. Utilizando un enfoque económico, sugiero además que el uso ritual de las cuevas durante el periodo Woodland temprano se relaciona con la formación de nuevas instituciones sociales y nuevas formas de relaciones de propiedad derivadas del desarrollo de economías horticultoras en la región este de Woodlands.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 2012

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References Cited

Acheson, James M. 2002 Transaction Cost Economics: Accomplishments, Problems, and Possibilities. In Theory in Economic Anthropology, edited by Jean Ensminger, pp. 2558. AltaMira Press, Walnut Creek, California.Google Scholar
Angier, Bradford 1974 Field Guide to Edible Wild Plants. Stackpole Books, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Barnard, Alan, and Woodburn, James 1988 Property, Power, and Ideology in Hunter-Gatherer Societies: An Introduction. In Hunters and Gatherers 2: Property, Power, and Ideology, edited by Tim Ingold, David Riches, and James Woodburn, pp. 432. Berg, Oxford.Google Scholar
Barrier, Casey R., and Byrd, Myrisa K. 2008 Gypsum Mining at Indian Salts Cave: An Examination of Early Woodland Subterranean Mineral Extraction. In Cave Archaeology of the Eastern Woodlands, edited by David H. Dye, pp. 7995. University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Bowles, Samuel, and Choi, Jung-Kyoo 2002 The First Property Rights Revolution. Working paper presented at the Workshop on Co-evolution of Behaviors and Institutions, Santa Fe Institute, January 10–12, 2003. Electronic document, www.santafe.edu/research/publications/workingpapers/02-11-061.pdf, accessed January 14, 2010.Google Scholar
Bradfield, Maitland 1973 A Natural History of Associations: A Study in the Meaning of Community. International Universities Press, New York.Google Scholar
Brady, James E., and Prufer, Keith M. (editors) 2005 In the Maw of the Earth Monster: Mesoamerican Ritual Cave Use. University of Texas Press, Austin.Google Scholar
Bryant, Vaughn M. 1997 Pollen Analysis of Prehistoric Human Feces from Mammoth Cave. In Archeology of the Mammoth Cave Area, edited by Patty Jo Watson, pp. 203209. Cave Books, St. Louis. Originally published 1974 by Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Carstens, Kenneth C. 2001 A Historiography of Archaeological Research in the Mammoth Cave Area of Kentucky: 1824–2000. Journal of the Kentucky Academy of Science 62:6069.Google Scholar
Claassen, Cheryl 2001 Engendering Appalachian Archaeology. In Archaeology of the Appalachian Highlands, edited by Lynne P. Sullivan and Susan C. Pressano, pp. 300305. University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Claassen, Cheryl 2011 Rockshelters as Women’s Retreats: Understanding Newt Kash. American Antiquity 76:628641.Google Scholar
Clottes, Jean, and Lewis-Williams, David 1998 The Shamans of Prehistory: Trance and Magic in the Painted Caves. Translated by Sophie Hawkes. Harry N. Abrams, New York.Google Scholar
Crothers, George M. 1987 An Archaeological Survey of Big Bone Cave, Tennessee, and Diachronic Patterns of Cave Utilization in the Eastern Woodlands. Unpublished Master’s thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Crothers, George M. 2001 Mineral Mining and Perishable Remains in Mammoth Cave: Examining Social Process in the Early Woodland Period. In Fleeting Identities: Perishable Material Culture in Archaeological Research, edited by Penelope B. Drooker, pp. 314334. Center for Archaeological Investigations, Occasional Paper No. 28, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale.Google Scholar
Crothers, George M. 2008 From Foraging to Farming: The Emergence of Exclusive Property Rights in Kentucky Prehistory. In Economics and the Transformation of Landscape, edited by Lisa Cliggett and Christopher Pool, pp. 127147. Society for Economic Anthropology Monographs, vol. 25. Altamira Press, Lanham, Maryland.Google Scholar
Crothers, George M., and Bernbeck, Reinhard 2004 The Foraging Mode of Production: The Case of the Green River Archaic Shell Middens. In Hunters and Gatherers in Theory and Archaeology, edited by George M. Crothers, pp. 401422. Center for Archaeological Investigations, Occasional Paper No. 31. Southern Illinois University, Carbondale.Google Scholar
Crothers, George M., Faulkner, Charles H., Simek, Jan F., Watson, Patty Jo, and Willey, P. 2002 Woodland Cave Archaeology in Eastern North America. In The Woodland Southeast, edited by David G. Anderson and Robert C. Mainfort, Jr., pp. 502524. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.Google Scholar
Eliade, Mircea 1958 Birth and Rebirth: The Religious Meanings of Initiation in Human Culture. Translated by Willard R. Trask. Harper & Brothers, New York.Google Scholar
Faulkner, Charles H. (editor) 1986 The Prehistoric Native American Art of Mud Glyph Cave. University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Faulkner, Charles H., and Simek, Jan 2001 Variability in the Production and Preservation of Prehistoric Mud Glyphs from Southeastern Caves. In Fleeting Identities: Perishable Material Culture in Archaeological Research, edited by Penelope B. Drooker, pp. 335356. Occasional Paper No. 28. Center for Archaeological Investigations. Southern Illinois University, Carbondale.Google Scholar
Faulkner, Charles T. 1991 Prehistoric Diet and Parasitic Infection in Tennessee: Evidence from the Analysis of Desiccated Human Paleofeces. American Antiquity 56:687700.Google Scholar
Fink, H., Rex, A., Voits, M., and Voigt, J. P. 1998 Major Biological Actions of CCK–A Critical Evaluation of Research Findings. Experimental Brain Research 123:7783.Google Scholar
Freeman, John P., Smith, Gordon L., Poulson, Thomas L., Watson, Patty Jo, and White, William B. 1973 Lee Cave, Mammoth Cave National Park, Kentucky. Bulletin of the National Speleological Society 35:109126.Google Scholar
Greenough, A., Cole, G., Lewis, J., Lockton, A., and Blundell, J. 1998 Untangling the Effects of Hunger, Anxiety, and Nausea on Energy Intake during Intravenous Cholecystokinin Octapeptide (CCK-8) Infusion. Physiological Behavior 65:303310.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gremillion, Kristen J., and Sobolik, Kristin D. 1996 Dietary Variability among Prehistoric Forager-Farmers of Eastern North America. Current Anthropology 37:529539.Google Scholar
Hadley, Alison M. 2006 Early Woodland Gypsum Mining and Torch Debris in Mammoth Cave National Park, Kentucky. Unpublished Master’s thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Kentucky, Lexington.Google Scholar
Hann, C. M. 1998 Property Relations: Renewing the Anthropological Tradition. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Henry, Edward R., and Crothers, George M. 2007 Archaeological Investigations at Cave Site 15AL22, Allen County, Kentucky. Report No. 141, Kentucky Archaeological Survey, University of Kentucky, Lexington. Submitted to State Nature Preserves Commission, Frankfort. On file Office of State Archaeology, University of Kentucky, Lexington.Google Scholar
Hiatt, Lester R. 1971 Secret Pseudo-Procreation Rites among the Australian Aborigines. In Anthropology in Oceania: Essays Presented to Ian Hogbin, edited by Lester R. Hiatt and Chandra Jayawardena, pp. 7788. Angus and Robertson, London.Google Scholar
Hill, Carol, and Forti, Paolo 1997 Cave Minerals of the World. 2nd Edition. National Speleological Society, Huntsville, Alabama.Google Scholar
Kennedy, Mary C. 1996 Radiocarbon Dates from Salts and Mammoth Caves. In Of Caves and Shell Mounds, edited by Kenneth C. Carstens and Patty Jo Watson, pp. 4881. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.Google Scholar
Kennedy, Mary C., and Watson, Patty Jo 1997 The Chronology of Early Agriculture and Intensive Mineral Mining in the Salts Cave and Mammoth Cave Region, Mammoth Cave National Park, Kentucky. Journal of Cave and Karst Studies 59:59.Google Scholar
Kidder, Tristram R. 2006 Climate Change and the Archaic to Woodland Transition (3000–2500 Cal B.P.) in the Mississippi River Basin. American Antiquity 71:195231.Google Scholar
Kistler, Logan J. 2007 Prehistoric Drawings in Mammoth Cave. Kaleidoscope 6:6982.Google Scholar
Lewis-Williams, J. D., and Dowson, T. A. 1988 The Signs of All Times: Entoptic Phenomena in Upper Paleolithic Art. Current Anthropology 29:201245.Google Scholar
Meek, Charles K. 1970 Law and Authority in a Nigerian Tribe: A Study in Indirect Rule. Barnes and Noble, New York.Google Scholar
Meloy, Harold, and Watson, Patty Jo 1969 Human Remains: “Little Alice” of Salts Cave and Other Mummies. In The Prehistory of Salts Cave, Kentucky, by Patty Jo Watson, pp. 6569. Reports of Investigations No. 16. Illinois State Museum, Springfield.Google Scholar
Morgan, George R. 1980 The Ethnobotany of Sweet Flag among North American Indians. Botanical Museum Leaflets 28:235246.Google Scholar
Motley, Timothy J. 1994 The Ethnobotany of Sweet Flag, Acorus calamus (Araceae). Economic Botany 48:397412.Google Scholar
Munson, Cheryl Ann, Munson, Patrick J., Tankersley, Kenneth B., and Rogers, Bruce 1997 Prehistoric Uses of Caves in North America: A Regional Synthesis. In Proceedings of the 12th International Congress of Speleology, edited by Pierre-Yves Jeannin, Volume 3, pp. 4548. La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland.Google Scholar
Munson, Patrick J., and Munson, Cheryl Ann 1990 The Prehistoric and Early Historic Archaeology of Wyandotte Cave and Other Caves in Southern Indiana. Prehistory Research Series Vol. VII, No. 1, Indiana Historical Society, Indianapolis.Google Scholar
Munson, Patrick J., Tankersley, Kenneth B., Munson, Cheryl Ann and Watson, Patty Jo 1989 Prehistoric Selenite and Satinspar Mining in the Mammoth Cave System, Kentucky. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 14:119145.Google Scholar
Myerhoff, Barbara G., Caino, Linda A., and Turner, Edith 2005 Rites of Passage: An Overview. In The Encyclopedia of Religion, edited by Lindsay Jones, pp. 77967801. Gale. Farmington Hills, Michigan.Google Scholar
Nelson, Nels C. 1924 Contributions to the Archaeology of Mammoth Cave and Vicinity, Kentucky. In Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History. vol. 22, part 1, New York.Google Scholar
Neumann, Georg K. 1938 The Human Remains from Mammoth Cave, Kentucky. American Antiquity 3:339353.Google Scholar
North, Douglass C. 1981 Structure and Change in Economic History. W.W. Norton, New York.Google Scholar
North, Douglass C. 1990 Institutions, Institutional Change and Economic Performance. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
North, Douglass C. 2005 Understanding the Process of Economic Change. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.Google Scholar
North, Douglass C., and Thomas, Robert P. 1977 The First Economic Revolution. Economic History Review 30:229241.Google Scholar
Ottenberg, Simon 1989 Boyhood Rituals in an African Society: An Interpretation. University of Washington Press, Seattle.Google Scholar
Owens, D’Ann, and Hayden, Brian 1997 Prehistoric Rites of Passage: A Comparative Study of Transegalitarian Hunter-Gatherers. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 16:121161.Google Scholar
Parin, Paul, Morgenthaler, Fritz, Parin-Matthey, Goldy, and Schütze, Frieda 1963 The Whites Think Too Much: Psychoanalytic Investigations Among the Dogon in West Africa. Atlantis Verlag, Zurich.Google Scholar
Pond, Alonzo 1937 Lost John of Mummy Ledge. Natural Historv 39:176184.Google Scholar
Pritchard, Erin E. 2001 The Prehistoric Use of Hubbards Cave, Warren County, Tennessee. Unpublished Master’s thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Prufer, Keith M., and Brady, James E. (editors) 2005 Stone Houses and Earth Lords: Maya Religion in the Cave Context. University Press of Colorado, Boulder.Google Scholar
Rafferty, Janet 1994 Gradual or Step-Wise Change: The Development of Sedentary Settlement Patterns in Northeast Mississippi. American Antiquity 59:405425.Google Scholar
Railey, Jimmy A. 1996 Woodland Cultivators. In Kentucky Archaeology, edited by R. Barry Lewis, pp. 79125. University Press of Kentucky, Lexington.Google Scholar
Robbins, Louise M. 1971 A Woodland “Mummy” from Salts Cave, Kentucky. American Antiquity 36:200206.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robbins, Louise M. 1997 Prehistoric People of the Mammoth Cave Area. In Archeology of the Mammoth Cave Area, edited by Patty Jo Watson, pp. 137166. Cave Books, St. Louis. Originally published 1974 by Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Schoenwetter, James 1997 Pollen Analysis of Human Paleofeces from Upper Salts Cave. In Archeology of the Mammoth Cave Area, edited by Patty Jo Watson, pp. 4958. Cave Books, St. Louis. Originally published 1974 by Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Schoenwetter, James 1998 Rethinking the Paleoethnobotany of Early Woodland Caving. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 23:2344.Google Scholar
Schoenwetter, James 2001 Paleoethnobotanical Expressions of Prehistoric Ritual: An Early Woodland Case. In Fleeting Identities: Perishable Material Culture in Archaeological Research, edited by Penelope B. Drooker, pp. 273282. Occasional Paper No. 28. Center for Archaeological Investigations. Southern Illinois University, Carbondale.Google Scholar
Schultes, Richard E., and Hofmann, Albert 1980 The Botany and Chemistry of Hallucinogens. Thomas, Springfield, IL.Google Scholar
Schwartz, Douglas W. 1960 Prehistoric Man in Mammoth Cave. Scientific American 203:130140.Google Scholar
Seeman, Mark F. 1986 Adena “Houses” and the Implications for Early Woodland Settlement Models in the Ohio Valley. In Early Woodland Archaeology, edited by Kenneth B. Farnsworth and Thomas E. Emerson, pp. 564595. Center for American Archaeology, Kampsville, Illinois.Google Scholar
Smith, Bruce D. 1992 Rivers of Change: Essays on Early Agriculture in Eastern North America. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington.Google Scholar
Smith, Bruce D. 2006 Eastern North America as an Independent Center of Plant Domestication. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 103:1222312228.Google Scholar
Smith, Bruce D., and Yarnell, Richard A. 2009 Initial Formation of an Indigenous Crop Complex in Eastern North America at 3800 B .P. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 106:65616566.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sobolik, Kristin D., Gremillion, Kristen J., Whitten, Patricia L., and Watson, Patty Jo 1996 Sex Determination of Prehistoric Human Paleofeces. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 101:283290.Google Scholar
Tankersley, Kenneth B. 1996 Prehistoric Salt Mining in the Mammoth Cave System. In Of Caves and Shell Mounds, edited by Kenneth Carstens and Patty Jo Watson, pp. 8839. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.Google Scholar
Tankersley, Kenneth B., Frushour, Samuel S., Nagy, Frank, Tankersley, Stephen L., and Tankersley, Kevin O. 1994 The Archaeology of Mummy Valley, Salts Cave, Mammoth Cave National Park, Kentucky. North American Archaeologist 15:129145.Google Scholar
Turner, Victor W. 1969 The Ritual Process: Structure and Anti-Structure. Aldine, Chicago.Google Scholar
van Gennep, Arnold 1960 The Rites of Passage. Translated by Monika B. Vizedom and Gabrielle L. Caffee. University of Chicago Press, Chicago. Originally published 1908 as Les Rites de Passage.Google Scholar
Watson, Patty Jo 1969 The Prehistory of Salts Cave, Kentucky. Reports of Investigations No. 16. Illinois State Museum, Springfield.Google Scholar
Watson, Patty Jo (editor) 1997 Archeology of the Mammoth Cave Area. Cave Books, St. Louis. Originally published 1974 by Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Watson, Patty Jo, Kennedy, Mary, Willey, Patrick, Robbins, Louise, and Wilson, Ronald 2005 Prehistoric Footprints in Jaguar Cave, Tennessee. Journal of Field Archaeology 30:2543.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watson, Patty Jo, and Yarnell, Richard A. 1986 Lost John’s Last Meal. Missouri Archaeologist 47:241255.Google Scholar
Winterhalder, Bruce, and Kennett, Douglas J. 2009 Four Neglected Concepts with a Role to Play in Explaining the Origins of Agriculture. Current Anthropology 50:645648.Google Scholar
Woodburn, James 1980 Hunters and Gatherers Today and Reconstruction of the Past. In Soviet and Western Anthropology, edited by Ernest Gellner, pp. 95117. Columbia University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Yarnell, Richard A. 1969 Contents of Paleofeces. In The Prehistory of Salts Cave, Kentucky, by Patty Jo Watson, pp. 4154. Reports of Investigations No. 16. Illinois State Museum, Springfield.Google Scholar