Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-m6dg7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-19T15:30:48.923Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Problems of Ceramic Chronology in the Southeast: Does Shell-Tempered Pottery Appear Earlier than We Think?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

James K. Feathers*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, Box 353100, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195-3100 ([email protected])

Abstract

The chronology of shell-tempered pottery in the eastern United States is poorly understood, preventing any resolution to the question of how this pottery came to dominate ceramic assemblages in the late prehistoric period. Part of the problem lies in traditional dating methods that either provide only average dates that suppress variation or address depositional rather than manufacturing events. Better resolution can be obtained by dating individual artifacts. Luminescence dates for 67 ceramics from several sites in the mid-South show variation in age of ceramics from a single assemblage, strong chronological overlap between shell- and grog-tempered pottery, and suggest that shell-tempered pottery may have been present in low frequencies earlier than generally assumed and before it rose in frequency sometime after A.D. 900.

Résumé

Résumé

Nuestro conocimiento sobre la cronología de cerámica con desgrasante de concha del Este de los Estados Unidos es pobre, impidiendo que podamos resolver de forma adecuada la cuestión sobre el por qué este tipo de cerámica dominó los inventarios característicos del último periodo prehistórico. Parte del problema radica en la aplicación de métodos cronométricos tradicionales que o bien proporcionan una fecha media eliminando todo tipo de variabilidad, o bien están enfocados hacia los procesos de deposición y no los de manufactura. Fechas obtenidas mediante el método de luminiscencia de 67 piezas de cerámica provenientes de varios yacimientos del Medio Sur. presentan una variabilidad en edad de un mismo inventario y sugieren la posibilidad de que cerámica con desgrasante haya estado presente en bajas frecuencias antes previamente y antes de que sur frecuencia aumentara después del 900 d. C.

Type
Reports
Copyright
Copyright © Society for American Archaeology 2009

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

Aitken, Martin J. 1985 Thermoluminescence Dating. Academic Press, London.Google Scholar
Aitken, Martin J. 1998 An Introduction to Optical Dating. Academic Press, London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allsbrook, Colby, Krause, Richard A., and Shinn, Orville 1997 The Red Fox Mound (1Li15): An Enigma in Search of a Cipher. Journal of Alabama Archaeology 43:115153.Google Scholar
Banerjee, Deba, Murray, Andrew S., Bøtter-Jensen, Lars, and Lang, Andreas 2001 Equivalent Dose Estimation Using a Single Aliquot of Polymineral Fine Grains. Radiation Measurements 33:7394.Google Scholar
Barnett, Sarah M. 2000 Luminescence Dating Pottery from Later Prehistoric Britain. Archaeometry 42:431157.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bense, Judith A. 1983 Archaeological Investigations at Site 22It581, Itawamba County, Mississippi. Office of Archaeological Research, Report of Investigations 19, the University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa.Google Scholar
Blitz, John H., and Lorenz, Karl G. 2002 The Early Mississippian Frontier in the Lower Chattahoochee-Apalachicoa River valley. Southeastern Archaeology 21:117135.Google Scholar
Bohannon, Charles F. 1972 Excavations at the Pharr Mounds, Prentiss and Itawamba Counties, Mississippi and Excavations at the Bear Creek Site, Tishomingo County, Mississippi. National Park Service Department of the Interior, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
Bøtter-Jensen, Lars, and Mejdahl, Vagn 1988 Assessment of Beta Dose-Rate Using a GM Multi-counter System. Nuclear Tracks and Radiation Measurements 14:187191.Google Scholar
Boudreaux, Edmund A., and Johnson, Hunter B. 2000 Test Excavations at the Florence Mound: A Middle Woodland Platform Mound in Northwest Alabama. Journal of Alabama Archaeology 46:87130.Google Scholar
Brock, Oscar W. Jr., and Clayton, Margaret V. 1966 Archaeological Investigations in the Mud Creek-Town Creek Drainage Area of Northwestern Alabama. Journal of Alabama Archaeology 12:79137.Google Scholar
Buck, Caitlin E., Litton, Clifford D., and Smith, Adrian F. M. 1992 Calibration of Radiocarbon Results Pertaining to Related Archaeological Events. Journal of Archaeological Science 19:497512.Google Scholar
Clayton, Margaret V. 1967 The Boydston Creek Bluff Shelter. Journal of Alabama Archaeology 13:141.Google Scholar
Connaway, John M., and McGahey, Samuel O. 1971 Archaeological Excavation at the Boyd site, Tunica County, Mississippi. Mississippi Department of Archives and History Technical Report #1, Jackson.Google Scholar
Cotter, John L., and Corbett, John M. 1951 Archaeology of the Bynum Mounds, Mississippi. National Park Service, Department of Interior, Archaeological Research Series Number One, Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
DeJarnette, David L., and Kurjack, Edward B. 1973 Archaeological investigations of the Weiss Reservoir of the Coosa River, Alabama. Journal of Alabama Archaeology 19:1226.Google Scholar
Duller, Geoffrey A. T. 2004 Luminescence Dating of Quaternary Sediments: Recent Advances. Journal of Quaternary Science 19:183192.Google Scholar
Dunnell, Robert C. 1970 Seriation Method and Its Evaluation. American Antiquity 53:305319.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dunnell, Robert C. 1971 Systematics in Prehistory. The Free Press, New York.Google Scholar
Dunnell, Robert C. 1978 Style and Function: A Fundamental Dichotomy. American Antiquity 43:192202 Google Scholar
Dunnell, Robert C. 2000 Dating. In Archaeological Theory and Method: an Encyclopedia, edited by Linda Ellias, pp. 143150. Garland Publishing, New York.Google Scholar
Dunnell, Robert C. 2008 Archaeological Things: Language of Observation. In Time’s River: Archaeological Synthesis for the Central and Lower Mississippi River Valley, edited by Janet Rafferty and Evan Peacock, pp. 4568. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.Google Scholar
Dunnell, Robert C., and Feathers, James K. 1994 Thermoluminescence Dating of Surficial Archaeological Materials. In Dating in Exposed and Surface Contexts, edited by Charlotte Beck, pp. 115137. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Dykeman, Douglas D., Towner, Ron H., and Feathers, James K. 2002 Correspondence in Tree-Ring and Thermoluminescence Dating: A Protohistoric Navajo Pilot Study. American Antiquity 67:145164.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ensor, H. Blaine 1979 Archaeological Investigations in the Upper Cahaba River Drainage, North Central Alabama. Journal of Alabama Archaeology 25:162.Google Scholar
Espenshade, Christopher T. 2004 Applauding Mediocrity: TL Dating and the Navajo Tree Ring Dates Revisited. North American Archaeologist 25:5763.Google Scholar
Feathers, James K. 1993 Radioactive Disequilibrium in the TL Dating of Southeast Missouri Pottery. Radiation Protection Dosimetry 47:655658.Google Scholar
Feathers, James K. 2000a Luminescence Dating and Why It Deserves Wider Application. In It’s About Time: A History of Archaeological Dating in North America, edited by Stephen E. Nash, pp. 152166. The University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Feathers, James K. 2000b Date List 7: Luminescence Dates on Prehistoric and Proto-Historic Pottery from the American Southwest. Ancient TL 18:5161.Google Scholar
Feathers, James K. 2003 Use of Luminescence Dating in Archaeology. Measurement Science and Technology 14:14931500.Google Scholar
Feathers, James K. 2006a Explaining Shell-Tempered Pottery in Prehistoric Eastern North America. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 13:89133.Google Scholar
Feathers, James K. 2006b Understanding Dating Applications: Reply to Espenshade. North American Archaeologist 26:257261.Google Scholar
Feathers, James K. 2008 Absolute Dating in the Mississippi Delta. In Time’s River: Archaeological Synthesis for the Central and Lower Mississippi River Valley, edited by Janet Rafferty and Evan Peacock, pp. 168181. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.Google Scholar
Ford, James A., and Griffin, James B. 1938 Report of the Conference on Southeastern Pottery Typology. Newsletter of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference 7(1):1022.Google Scholar
Fox, Gregory L. 1998 An Examination of Mississippian-Period Phases in Southeastern Missouri in Changing Perspectives on the Archaeology of the Central Mississippi Valley , edited by Michael J. O’Brien and Robert C. Dunnell, pp. 3158. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.Google Scholar
Futato, Eugene M. 1998 Ceramic Complexes of the Tennessee River Drainage, Alabama. Journal of Alabama Archaeology 44:208241.Google Scholar
Futato, Eugene M., and Solis, Carlos 1983 Archaeology at site IJA78, the B.B. Comer Brady site, Jackson County, Alabama. Journal of Alabama Archaeology 29:1123.Google Scholar
Godfrey-Smith, Dorothy I., Deal, Michael, and Kunelius, Iliana 1997 Thermoluminescence Dating of St. Croix Ceramics: Chronology Building in Southwestern Nova Scotia. Geoarchaeology 12:251273.Google Scholar
Griffin, James B. 1938 The Ceramic Remains from the Norris Basin, Tennessee. In An Archaeological Survey of the Norris Basin in Eastern Tennessee, edited by William S. Webb, pp. 253358. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 118, Smithsonian Institution.Google Scholar
Griffin, James B. 1939 Report on the Ceramics from the Wheeler Basin. In An Archaeological Survey of Wheeler Basin on the Tennessee River in Northern Alabama, edited by William S. Webb, pp. 127165. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 122, Smithsonian Institution.Google Scholar
Haag, William G. 1939 Description of Pottery Types. News Letter of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, vol. 1 (1–6).Google Scholar
Haag, William G. 1942 A Description and Analysis of the Pickwick Pottery. In An Archaeological Survey of Pickwick Basin in the Adjacent Portions of Alabama, Mississippi and Tennessee, edited by William S. Webb and David L. DeJarnette, pp. 509526. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 129, Smithsonian Institution.Google Scholar
Heimlich, Marion D. 1952 Guntersville Basin Pottery. Geological Survey of Alabama, Museum Paper 32.Google Scholar
Holt, Julie Z., and Feathers, James K. 2003 Dating the Middle to Late Woodland Transition in the Illinois Valley: Radiocarbon and Thermoluminescence Dates from the Baehr-Gust Site. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 28:7393.Google Scholar
Huntley, David J., and Lamothe, Michel 2001 Ubiquity of Anomalous Fading in K-feldspars, and Measurement and Correction for It in Optical Dating. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 38:10931106.Google Scholar
Huntley, David J., Berger, G. W., and Bowman, S. G. E. 1988 Thermoluminescence Responses to Alpha and Beta Irradiations, and Age Determination When the High Dose Response in Non-Linear. Radiation Effects 105:279284.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jenkins, Ned J. 1981 Gainesville Lake Area Ceramic Description and Chronology. Report of Investigations No. 12, Office of Archaeological Research, the University of Alabama.Google Scholar
Jenkins, Ned J. 1982 Archaeology of the Gaineville Lake Area: Synthesis. Report of Investigations No. 23, Office of Archaeological Research, the University of Alabama.Google Scholar
Jenkins, Ned J. 2003 The Terminal Woodland/Mississippian Transition in West and Central Alabama. Journal of Alabama Archaeology 49:162.Google Scholar
Jenkins, Ned J., and Blaine Ensor, H. 1981 The Gainesville Lake Area Excavations. Report of Investigations No. 11, Office of Archaeological Research, the University of Alabama.Google Scholar
Jenkins, Ned J., and Meyer, Catherine C. 1998 Ceramics of the Tombigbee-Black Warrior River Valleys. Journal of Alabama Archaeology 44:131187.Google Scholar
Jenkins, Ned J., and Nielsen, Jerry J. 1974 Archaeological Salvage Investigations at the West Jefferson Steam Plant, Jefferson County, Alabama. Report on file at Mound State Monument, Moundville, Alabama.Google Scholar
Jenkins, Ned J., and Peebles, Christopher S. 1982 A Seriation of Late Middle Woodland-Late Woodland Features from Gainesville Lake Area. In Archaeology of the Gainesville Lake Area: Synthesis, edited by Ned J. Jenkins, appendix 1, pp. 177182. Report of Investigations 23, Office of Archaeological Research, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa.Google Scholar
Knight, Vernon J., Konigsberg, Lyle W., and Frankenberg, Susan R. 1999 A Gibbs Sampler Approach to the Dating of Phases in the Moundville sequence. Unpublished manuscript on file at the Department of Anthropology, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa.Google Scholar
Kornmeier, Christine M., and Sutton, Stephen R. 1985 Thermoluminescence Dating Results for Ten Ceramics from site 23BU10. Manuscript on file with Midwestern Archaeological Center, National Park Service, Lincoln, Nebraska.Google Scholar
Krause, Richard A. 2008 At the Interface: The Role of the Red Fox Site (1Li15) in Our Understanding of Tennesee Valley prehistory. Unpublished manuscript, submitted to Journal of Alabama Archaeology.Google Scholar
Krieger, Alex D. 1944 The Typological Concept. American Antiquity 9:271288.Google Scholar
Kuzmin, Yaroslav V., Hall, Sara, Tite, Michael S., Bailey, Richard, O’Malley, Jeanette M., and Medvedev, Vitaly E. 2001 Radiocarbon and Thermoluminescence Dating of the Pottery from the Early Neolithic Site of Gasya (Russian Far East): Initial Results. Quaternary Science Reviews 20:945948.Google Scholar
Lafferty, Robert H., and Price, James E. 1996 Southeast Missouri. In Prehistory of the Central Mississippi Valley, edited by Charles H. McNutt, pp. 146. The University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.Google Scholar
Lamothe, Michel 2004 Optical Dating of Pottery, Burnt Stones, and Sediments from Selected Quebec Archaeological Sites. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 41:659667.Google Scholar
Lewis, Thomas M. N., and Kneberg, Madeline 1941 The Prehistory of the Chickamauga Basin in Tennessee. Tennessee Anthropological Papers 1.Google Scholar
Lewis, Thomas M. N., and Kneberg, Madeline 1946 Hiwassee Island: An Archaeological Account of Four Tennessee Indian Peoples. The University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Lewis, Thomas M. N., Kneberg Lewis, Madeline D., and Sullivan, Lynne P. 1995 The Prehistory of the Chicamauga Basin in Tennessee. The University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Lian, Olav, and Roberts, Richard G. 2006 Dating the Quaternary: Progress in Luminescence Dating of Sediments. Quaternary Science Reviews 25:24492468.Google Scholar
Lyman, R. Lee, and O’Brien, Michael J. 2006 Measuring Time with Artifacts. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln.Google Scholar
Lyon, Edwin A. 1996 A New Deal for Southeastern Archaeology. The University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.Google Scholar
McKern, William C. 1939 The Midwestern Taxonomic Method as an Aid to Archaeological Cultural Study. American Antiquity 4:301313.Google Scholar
Mihara, Shozo, Miyamoto, Kazao, Ogawa, Hidefumi, Kurosaka, Teiji, Nakamura, Toshio, and Koike, Hiroko 2004 AMS 14C Dating Using Black Pottery and Fiber Pottery. Radiocarbon 46:407412.Google Scholar
Mistovich, Timothy S. 1988 Early Mississippian in the Black Warrior Valley: The Pace of Transition. Southeastern Archaeology 7:2138.Google Scholar
Mooney, James P., Wilkerson, Susan K., Mead, Troy, and Wilson, James P. 2004 Cultural Resource Phase III Mitigation Of Sites 22C0573/773 and 22C0778 for the Construction of the Coahoma Welcome Center at the Interchange of U.S. Highway 49 and U. S. Highway 61, Coahoma County, Mississippi. Report submitted to the Mississippi Department of Transportation, Environmental Division, by Michael Baker Jr, Inc., White Hall, AR.Google Scholar
Morse, Dan F., and Morse, Phyllis 1990 Emergent Mississippian in the Central Mississippi Valley. In The Mississippian Emergence, edited by Bruce D. Smith, pp. 153173. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington.Google Scholar
Mulvihill, Tim S. 1996 Investigations of a Late Woodland Site in Northeast Arkansas. Paper presented at the 53rd annual meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Birmingham.Google Scholar
Murray, Andrew S., and Olley, Jon M. 2002 Precision and Accuracy in the Optically Stimulated Luminescence Dating of Sedimentary Quartz: A Status Review. Geochronometria 21:116.Google Scholar
Murray, Andrew S., and Wintle, Ann G. 2000 Luminescence Dating of Quartz Using an Improved Single-Aliquot Regenerative-Dose Protocol. Radiation Measurements 32:5773.Google Scholar
Nielsen, Jerry J. 1976 Archaeological Salvage Excavations at Site 1Au28. Journal of Alabama Archaeology 22:91174.Google Scholar
Olley, Jon M., Murray, Andrew, and Roberts, Richard G. 1996 The Effects of Disequilibria in the Uranium and Thorium Decay Chains on Burial Dose Rates in Fluvial Sediments. Quaternary Science Reviews 15:751760.Google Scholar
Peacock, Evan, and Feathers, James K. 2008 AMS Dating of Shell Temper in Mississippian Ceramics: Results of a Pilot Study from Mississippi, USA. American Antiquity, in pressGoogle Scholar
Phillips, Philip, Ford, James A., and Griffin, James B. 1951 Archaeological Survey in the Lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley, 1940–1947. Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Papers 25.Google Scholar
Phillips, Philip, and Willey, Gordon R. 1953 Method and theory in American Archaeology: An Operational Basis for Cultural-Historical Integration. American Anthropologist 55:615633.Google Scholar
Plog, Fred T. 1974 The Study of Prehistoric Change. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Prescott, John R., Huntley, David J., and Hutton, John T. 1993 Estimation of Equivalent Dose in Thermoluminescence Dating—The Australian slide Method. Ancient TL 11:15.Google Scholar
Rafferty, Janet 1990 Test Excavations at Ingomar Mounds, Mississippi. Southeastern Archaeology 9:93102 Google Scholar
Rafferty, Janet 2008 Settlement Patterns, Occupations, and Field Methods. In Time’s River: Archaeological Synthesis for the Central and Lower Mississippi River Valley, edited by Janet Rafferty and Evan Peacock, pp. 99124. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.Google Scholar
Roberts, Helen M., Wintle, Ann G., Maher, B. A., and Hu, M. 2001 Holocene Sediment-Accumulation Rates in the western Loess Plateau, China, and a 2500-year Record of Agricultural Activity, Revealed by OSL Dating. The Holocene 11:477483.Google Scholar
Roberts, Richard G. 1997 Luminescence Dating in Archaeology: From Origins to Optical. Radiation Measurements 27:819892.Google Scholar
Sampson, C. G., Bailiff, Ian, and Barnett, Sarah 1997 Thermoluminescence Dates from Later Stone Age Pottery on Surface Sites in the Upper Karoo. South African Archaeological Bulletin 52:3842.Google Scholar
Staller, John E., and Thompson, Robert G. 2002 A Multidisciplinary Approach to Understanding the Initial Introduction of Maize into Coastal Equador. Journal of Archaeological Science 29:3350.Google Scholar
Steponaitis, Vincas P. 1983 Ceramics, Chronology and Community Patterns. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Webb, William S. 1938 An Archaeological Survey of the Norris Basin in Eastern Tennessee. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 118, Smithsonian Institution.Google Scholar
Webb, William S. 1939 An Archaeological Survey of Wheeler Basin on the Tennessee River in Northern Alabama. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 122, Smithsonian Institution.Google Scholar
Webb, William S., and DeJamette, David L. 1942 An Archaeological Survey of Pickwick Basin in the Adjacent Portions of Alabama, Mississippi and Tennessee. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 129, Smithsonian Institution Google Scholar
Webb, William S., and Wilder, Charles G. 1951 An Archaeological Survey of Guntersville Basin on the Tennessee River in Northern Alabama. University of Kentucky Press, Lexington.Google Scholar
Welch, Paul D. 1994 The Occupational History of the Bessimer site. Southeastern Archaeology 13:126.Google Scholar
Welch, Paul D. 1998 Middle Woodland and Mississippian Occupations of the Savannah Site in Tennessee. Southeastern Archaeology 17:7992.Google Scholar
Welch, Paul D. 2006 Archaeology at Shiloh Indian Mounds. The University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.Google Scholar
Welch, Paul D., Feathers, James, and Stoltman, James B. 2005 Prehistoric Pottery from Shiloh Mound A. Paper presented at the 62nd annual meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Columbia, SC.Google Scholar
Wintle, Ann G., and Murray, Andrew S. 2006 A Review of Quartz Optically Stimulated Luminescence Characteristics and their Relevance in Single-Aliquot Regeneration Dating Protocols. Radiation Measurements 41:369391.Google Scholar