University of Alabama Press, 2007 Paper: 978-0-8173-5452-7 | eISBN: 978-0-8173-8430-2 Library of Congress Classification E99.M6815M56 2007 Dewey Decimal Classification 975.01
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
This collection, addressing a topic of ongoing interest and debate in American archaeology, examines the evolution of ranked chiefdoms in the Midwestern and Southeastern United States during the period A.D. 700–1200. The volume brings together a broad range of professionals engaged in the fieldwork that has vitalized the theoretical debates on the development of Mississippi Valley cultures. The initial chapter provides a general discussion of various explanations for the rise of these distinctive ranked societies in the eastern United States (A.D. 750-1050) and sets the stage for the interdisciplinary analysis from multiple viewpoints that follows. The first section discusses a cluster of individual sites in the Midwest and Southeast and reveals the parallel—and occasionally divergent—paths followed by the inhabitants as they transitioned from Late Woodland into Mississippian lifeways. The chapters in the second half discuss by region the emergence of ranked agricultural societies and examine how these networks played a role in the large-scale and roughly contemporaneous socio-political development.
Contributors:
C. Clifford Boyd Jr.
James A. Brown
R. P. Stephen Davis Jr.
John House
John E. Kelly
Richard A. Kerber
Dan F. Morse
Phyllis Morse
Martha Ann Rolingson
Gerald F. Schroedl
Bruce D. Smith
Paul D. Welch
Howard D. Winters
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Bruce D. Smith is an Archaeologist at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History and editor of Rivers of Change.
REVIEWS
“What is particularly useful in this volume is the inclusion of tremendous amounts of data distilled into tabular and graphic forms. . . . They make this work not only a theoretical or model-building contribution but also a substantial data base permitting readers to acquire a formidable knowledge of the cultural history of this period from a single source. . . . Both theoreticians and cultural historians will be pleased by the contributions in this volume.”
—Journal of Interdisciplinary History
— -
“The papers take a strong ecological and adaptationist perspective, although there is an increased awareness of the ideological and symbolic components of the development. . . . The volume lays the groundwork for further studies of Emergent Mississippian focused on particular explanatory models.”
—Man
— -
“It will be required reading for those working on the later prehistory of the Southeast or just interested in the social process of the Mississippian time range.”
—American Antiquity
“The final chapter is a superb summary of (Mississippian exchange and prestige goods) that may prove to be the most cited chapter in this volume.”
—American Anthropologist
— -
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
List of Illustrations
List of Tables
Foreword
Williams,
Stephen
Preface to the New Edition
Contributors
1
Introduction
Smith,
Bruce D.
Archaeological Chiefdoms and the Eastern Woodlands
The Analogy-Homology Dilemma
Nested Black Boxes
Selective Multiple-Level Comparison
2
Powell Canal: Baytown Period Adaptation on Bayou Macon, Southeast Arkansas
House,
John
Introduction
Physical Setting
Cultural and Temporal Context
Excavations at Powell Canal
The Formal-Spatial Structure and Past Community Patterns of Powell Canal
Technology
Subsistence and Seasonality
Bioarchaeology
Baytown Period Adaptation on Bayou Macon
Comparative Discussion
Conclusion
3
Trie Tbltec Mounds Site: A Ceremonial Center in the Arkansas River Lowland
Rolingson,
Martha Ann
Location and Environmental Setting
History of Research in Central Arkansas
Research at the Toltec Mounds Site
Site Description
Mound Construction and History
Material Culture
Stratigraphy
Mound Function
Internal Settlement Plan
Settlement Pattern
Comparisons with Lower Mississippi Valley Sites
The Place of Toltec Mounds Site in Lower Valley Prehistory
4
The Zebree Site: An Emerged Early Mississippian Expression in Northeast Arkansas
Morse,
Phyllis
Morse,
Dan F.
The Bay town Period Dunklin Phase Component
Big Lake Phase Artifacts
Environment and Subsistence
The Big Lake Phase Village
5
Range Site Community Patterns and the Mississippian Emergence
Kelly,
John E.
Introduction
The Range Site
Location and Environmental Setting
The I-270 Investigations
Archaeological Overview
The Late Woodland-Emergent Mississippian-Mississippian Sequence at the Range Site
Changing Community Patterns at the Range Site
The Patrick Phase (A.D. 600–750)
The Dohack Phase (A.D. 750–850)
The Range Phase (A.D. 850–900)
The George Reeves Phase (A.D. 900–950)
The George Reeves-Lindeman Phase Transition
The Lindeman Phase (A.D. 950–1000)
The Lindhorst (A.D. 1000–1050) and Stirling (A.D. 1050–1150) Phases
Changing Community Plans and Cultural Process
6
The Emergence of Mississippian Culture in the American Bottom Region
Kelly,
John E.
Introduction
Location and Environmental Setting
Chronological Framework
A Cultural-Historical Framework for the Late Woodland-Mississippian Transition in the American Bottom
The Patrick and Sponemann Phases (A.D. 600–750)
The Collinsville, Loyd, Dohack, and Range Phases (A.D. 750–900)
The Merrell, Edelhardt, George Reeves, and Lindeman Phases (A.D. 800–1000)
The Lohmann and Lindhorst Phases (A.D. 1000–1050)
Previous Models of Mississippian Emergence in the American Bottom
Local Evolution Explanations
Migration-Contact Models
An Alternative Model
Future Research Directions
7
Emergent Mississippian in the Central Mississippi Valley
Morse,
Dan F.
Morse,
Phyllis
Introduction
Ceramic Complexes and Temporal Control A.D. 700–1200
The Baytown Period
The Varney Horizon
The Beaker Horizon
The Matthews Horizon
The Emergence of Mississippian Culture A.D. 700–800
The Dunklin Phase
The Baytown Phase, Plum Bayou Culture, and Flat-Based, Shell-Tempered Ceramics
The Hoecake Phase
Early Mississippian Culture: A.D. 800–1000
The Evolution of Mississippian Culture: A.D. 1000–1200
Theories of Origin and Development
8
Explaining Mississippian Origins in East Tennessee
Schroedl,
Gerald F.
Boyd, Jr.,
C. Clifford
Davis, Jr.,
R. P. Stephen
Introduction
Environment
Culture Chronology
Woodland Period
Emergent and Early Mississippian Periods
The Woodland-Mississippian Transition
Conclusions
9
Mississippian Emergence in West-Central Alabama
Welch,
Paul D.
Introduction
Environment
Mississippian Emergence along the Central Tombigbee River
History of Research
Chronology
Miller III Culture
Summerville Culture
Mississippian Emergence along the Black Warrior Floodplain
History of Research
Chronology
West Jefferson Culture in the Moundville Area
Moundville I Culture
Mississippian Emergence in the Bessemer Area
History of Research
Chronology
West Jefferson Culture in the Bessemer Area
Bessemer Phase Culture
Conclusion
10
Mississippian Emergence in the Fort Walton Area: The Evolution of the Cayson and Lake Jackson Phases
Scarry,
John F.
Introduction
Fort Walton Mississippian
Prior Archaeological Research
Moore and Brannon: The Early Investigators
Willey: Synthesis and Foundation
The Post-Willey Era
Culture History in the Southern Portion of the Fort Walton Area
The General Fort Walton Chronology
Woodland
Early Fort Walton
Middle Fort Walton
Late Fort Walton
Woodland-Mississippian Culture History in the Upper Apalachicola Valley and the Tallahassee Hills
The Parrish Lake Phase: Early Weeden Island in the Upper Apalachicola Valley
The Wakulla Phase and Late Woodland in the Tallahassee Hills
The Cayson Phase
The Lake Jackson Phase
Models of Fort Walton Emergence
General Considerations
The Emergence of the Cayson Phase: Subsistence Costs and Information
The Emergence of the Lake Jackson Phase: Demographic Expansion and Elite Alliances
Conclusions
11
Trade and the Evolution of Exchange Relations at the Beginning of the Mississippian Period
Brown,
James A.
Kerber,
Richard A.
Winters,
Howard D.
Introduction
The Place of Trade in Mississippian Period Studies
University of Alabama Press, 2007 Paper: 978-0-8173-5452-7 eISBN: 978-0-8173-8430-2
This collection, addressing a topic of ongoing interest and debate in American archaeology, examines the evolution of ranked chiefdoms in the Midwestern and Southeastern United States during the period A.D. 700–1200. The volume brings together a broad range of professionals engaged in the fieldwork that has vitalized the theoretical debates on the development of Mississippi Valley cultures. The initial chapter provides a general discussion of various explanations for the rise of these distinctive ranked societies in the eastern United States (A.D. 750-1050) and sets the stage for the interdisciplinary analysis from multiple viewpoints that follows. The first section discusses a cluster of individual sites in the Midwest and Southeast and reveals the parallel—and occasionally divergent—paths followed by the inhabitants as they transitioned from Late Woodland into Mississippian lifeways. The chapters in the second half discuss by region the emergence of ranked agricultural societies and examine how these networks played a role in the large-scale and roughly contemporaneous socio-political development.
Contributors:
C. Clifford Boyd Jr.
James A. Brown
R. P. Stephen Davis Jr.
John House
John E. Kelly
Richard A. Kerber
Dan F. Morse
Phyllis Morse
Martha Ann Rolingson
Gerald F. Schroedl
Bruce D. Smith
Paul D. Welch
Howard D. Winters
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Bruce D. Smith is an Archaeologist at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History and editor of Rivers of Change.
REVIEWS
“What is particularly useful in this volume is the inclusion of tremendous amounts of data distilled into tabular and graphic forms. . . . They make this work not only a theoretical or model-building contribution but also a substantial data base permitting readers to acquire a formidable knowledge of the cultural history of this period from a single source. . . . Both theoreticians and cultural historians will be pleased by the contributions in this volume.”
—Journal of Interdisciplinary History
— -
“The papers take a strong ecological and adaptationist perspective, although there is an increased awareness of the ideological and symbolic components of the development. . . . The volume lays the groundwork for further studies of Emergent Mississippian focused on particular explanatory models.”
—Man
— -
“It will be required reading for those working on the later prehistory of the Southeast or just interested in the social process of the Mississippian time range.”
—American Antiquity
“The final chapter is a superb summary of (Mississippian exchange and prestige goods) that may prove to be the most cited chapter in this volume.”
—American Anthropologist
— -
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
List of Illustrations
List of Tables
Foreword
Williams,
Stephen
Preface to the New Edition
Contributors
1
Introduction
Smith,
Bruce D.
Archaeological Chiefdoms and the Eastern Woodlands
The Analogy-Homology Dilemma
Nested Black Boxes
Selective Multiple-Level Comparison
2
Powell Canal: Baytown Period Adaptation on Bayou Macon, Southeast Arkansas
House,
John
Introduction
Physical Setting
Cultural and Temporal Context
Excavations at Powell Canal
The Formal-Spatial Structure and Past Community Patterns of Powell Canal
Technology
Subsistence and Seasonality
Bioarchaeology
Baytown Period Adaptation on Bayou Macon
Comparative Discussion
Conclusion
3
Trie Tbltec Mounds Site: A Ceremonial Center in the Arkansas River Lowland
Rolingson,
Martha Ann
Location and Environmental Setting
History of Research in Central Arkansas
Research at the Toltec Mounds Site
Site Description
Mound Construction and History
Material Culture
Stratigraphy
Mound Function
Internal Settlement Plan
Settlement Pattern
Comparisons with Lower Mississippi Valley Sites
The Place of Toltec Mounds Site in Lower Valley Prehistory
4
The Zebree Site: An Emerged Early Mississippian Expression in Northeast Arkansas
Morse,
Phyllis
Morse,
Dan F.
The Bay town Period Dunklin Phase Component
Big Lake Phase Artifacts
Environment and Subsistence
The Big Lake Phase Village
5
Range Site Community Patterns and the Mississippian Emergence
Kelly,
John E.
Introduction
The Range Site
Location and Environmental Setting
The I-270 Investigations
Archaeological Overview
The Late Woodland-Emergent Mississippian-Mississippian Sequence at the Range Site
Changing Community Patterns at the Range Site
The Patrick Phase (A.D. 600–750)
The Dohack Phase (A.D. 750–850)
The Range Phase (A.D. 850–900)
The George Reeves Phase (A.D. 900–950)
The George Reeves-Lindeman Phase Transition
The Lindeman Phase (A.D. 950–1000)
The Lindhorst (A.D. 1000–1050) and Stirling (A.D. 1050–1150) Phases
Changing Community Plans and Cultural Process
6
The Emergence of Mississippian Culture in the American Bottom Region
Kelly,
John E.
Introduction
Location and Environmental Setting
Chronological Framework
A Cultural-Historical Framework for the Late Woodland-Mississippian Transition in the American Bottom
The Patrick and Sponemann Phases (A.D. 600–750)
The Collinsville, Loyd, Dohack, and Range Phases (A.D. 750–900)
The Merrell, Edelhardt, George Reeves, and Lindeman Phases (A.D. 800–1000)
The Lohmann and Lindhorst Phases (A.D. 1000–1050)
Previous Models of Mississippian Emergence in the American Bottom
Local Evolution Explanations
Migration-Contact Models
An Alternative Model
Future Research Directions
7
Emergent Mississippian in the Central Mississippi Valley
Morse,
Dan F.
Morse,
Phyllis
Introduction
Ceramic Complexes and Temporal Control A.D. 700–1200
The Baytown Period
The Varney Horizon
The Beaker Horizon
The Matthews Horizon
The Emergence of Mississippian Culture A.D. 700–800
The Dunklin Phase
The Baytown Phase, Plum Bayou Culture, and Flat-Based, Shell-Tempered Ceramics
The Hoecake Phase
Early Mississippian Culture: A.D. 800–1000
The Evolution of Mississippian Culture: A.D. 1000–1200
Theories of Origin and Development
8
Explaining Mississippian Origins in East Tennessee
Schroedl,
Gerald F.
Boyd, Jr.,
C. Clifford
Davis, Jr.,
R. P. Stephen
Introduction
Environment
Culture Chronology
Woodland Period
Emergent and Early Mississippian Periods
The Woodland-Mississippian Transition
Conclusions
9
Mississippian Emergence in West-Central Alabama
Welch,
Paul D.
Introduction
Environment
Mississippian Emergence along the Central Tombigbee River
History of Research
Chronology
Miller III Culture
Summerville Culture
Mississippian Emergence along the Black Warrior Floodplain
History of Research
Chronology
West Jefferson Culture in the Moundville Area
Moundville I Culture
Mississippian Emergence in the Bessemer Area
History of Research
Chronology
West Jefferson Culture in the Bessemer Area
Bessemer Phase Culture
Conclusion
10
Mississippian Emergence in the Fort Walton Area: The Evolution of the Cayson and Lake Jackson Phases
Scarry,
John F.
Introduction
Fort Walton Mississippian
Prior Archaeological Research
Moore and Brannon: The Early Investigators
Willey: Synthesis and Foundation
The Post-Willey Era
Culture History in the Southern Portion of the Fort Walton Area
The General Fort Walton Chronology
Woodland
Early Fort Walton
Middle Fort Walton
Late Fort Walton
Woodland-Mississippian Culture History in the Upper Apalachicola Valley and the Tallahassee Hills
The Parrish Lake Phase: Early Weeden Island in the Upper Apalachicola Valley
The Wakulla Phase and Late Woodland in the Tallahassee Hills
The Cayson Phase
The Lake Jackson Phase
Models of Fort Walton Emergence
General Considerations
The Emergence of the Cayson Phase: Subsistence Costs and Information
The Emergence of the Lake Jackson Phase: Demographic Expansion and Elite Alliances
Conclusions
11
Trade and the Evolution of Exchange Relations at the Beginning of the Mississippian Period
Brown,
James A.
Kerber,
Richard A.
Winters,
Howard D.
Introduction
The Place of Trade in Mississippian Period Studies
Trade and Society
Trade and Redistribution
Prestige Goods Economy
Models of Trade and Social Change
The Context of Trade Between A.D. 800 and 1200
Raw Material Sources and their Identification
Artifact-Oriented Research
Trade in the Southeast
Prestige Goods
Long-Nose God Maskettes
Spatulate Celts
Repoussé Copper Plates
Utilitarian Goods—The Mill Creek Hoe Case
Fall-off Curve Study
Shell Bead Valuables
Contexts of Production
The Organization of Production
Spheres of Utility and Value
Factors of Distribution
Summary and Conclusions
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC