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MidWest and Upper Great Lakes

MidWest and Upper Great Lakes. Midwest and Upper Great Lakes. Paleoindian and Archaic foragers of the Midwest and Upper Great Lakes, Woodland and Mississippian periods, sociocultural complexity, and changes during the Protohistoric and Historic periods. MidWest/Great Lakes Subareas.

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MidWest and Upper Great Lakes

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  1. MidWest and Upper Great Lakes

  2. Midwest and Upper Great Lakes • Paleoindian and Archaic foragers of the Midwest and Upper Great Lakes, • Woodland and Mississippian periods, sociocultural complexity, and • changes during the Protohistoric and Historic periods. Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

  3. MidWest/Great Lakes Subareas • The western portions of the Northeast culture area can be subdivided into the Midwest and Upper Great Lakes. • Part of the Central Lowlands and adjacent physiographic provinces • Naturally forested region except for the Prairie Peninsula, which is an area of tall-grass prairie that extends across Illinois and into Indiana • Drained by the Mississippi and St. Lawrence rivers Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

  4. MidWest/Great Lakes Map

  5. Environment • Pleistocene glaciation has sculpted the surface of most of these areas. • The end of the Pleistocene meant change in drainage patterns, vegetation, and available resources. • The Hypsithermal interval brought warm, dry conditions between 9000 and 5000 BP. • Modern conditions have been more or less in existence since 5000 BP, but humans also have altered resource distributions since that time. Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

  6. The Cultural Sequence Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

  7. Hunters and Foragers of the Distant Past The Chesrow complex of southeastern Wisconsin may represent Pre-Clovis butchering of mammoths. Surface finds of fluted points are widespread in the Midwest and Upper Great Lakes. However, dated sites are rare. The fluted point era is between 11,000 and 10,000 BP. Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

  8. Chesrow Complex • Hebior mammoth kill site. • Dates on bone collagen • 12,480 +/- 60 BP, 12,590 +/-50 BP, and 12,520+/-BP. • Cutmarks on bone.

  9. Paleoindian characteristics • Fluted points styles changed over time. • Paleoindians preferred high-quality raw materials. • The Kimmswick site in Missouri is the only one with a clear Clovis mastodon association. • Paleoindians exploited a variety of species and moved frequently. • Large sites may have been used repeatedly. Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

  10. The Archaic period in the Midwest and Great Lakes • This period includes Early (10,000–8000 BP), Middle (8000–5000 BP), and Late Archaic (5000–3000 BP) subperiods. • Appearance of notched projectile points is diagnostic, but bifurcate and stem points predominate as the period continues. • People were generalized foragers. Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

  11. The Middle and Late Archaic • Times of major change, at least in some areas. • Addition of shellfish after 7000 BP • Development of seed plant harvesting, cultivation, and domestication by 5000–3000 BP • Adoption of collector strategies, with base camps being used for longer and longer periods • Trade and exchange—bone pins Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

  12. Late Archaic burial complexes • Old Copper culture • Glacial Kame mortuary complex • Red Ocher mortuary complex Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

  13. Old Copper Culture • Mined on the shores of Lake Superior • Utilitarian for the most part, rather than objects for adornment. • Artifacts that have been recovered include: • spear points, knives, drills, axes, hooks and harpoons. • Some rings, beads and pendants which were probably made for personal adornment. http://www.uwlax.edu/MVAC/PreEuropeanPeople/EarlyCultures/archaic_oldcopperculture.html

  14. Copper Points http://www.uwlax.edu/MVAC/PreEuropeanPeople/EarlyCultures/archaic_oldcopperculture.html

  15. Copper Awl http://www.uwlax.edu/MVAC/PreEuropeanPeople/EarlyCultures/archaic_oldcopperculture.html

  16. Glacial Kame Complex Found in northwestern Ohio and parts of neighboring states as well as southern Ontario. Name from the "glacial kames“ (formed along glaciers), in which they buried their dead. Glacial Kame burials are known for a particular style of shell gorget shaped like the sole of a sandal. http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/entry.php?rec=2049

  17. Glacial Kame http://www.physicalgeography.net/fundamentals/10af.html

  18. “Sandal” Shapted Gorget http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/entry.php?rec=2049

  19. Red Ochre Complex Burials were accompanied by ceremonial and exotic goods, such as copper ornaments, fine stone tools made from imported materials, ground-stone artifacts, and bone tools. Exotic materials such as obsidian from Yellowstone, hornstone from Indiana , chalcedony from the Dakotas and marine shell from the Gulf coast. Sometimes caches of fine ceremonial items made of these materials were buried with the dead, and sometimes they were buried as offerings alone. http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/archaeology/mounds/cemetery/roc.asp

  20. Red Ochre sites Most early Red Ochre complex sites in Wisconsin are known from accidental finds and avocational or amateur excavations. The discoverers of the Molash Creek site in Manitowoc County in the early 1900's found human bone in association with a large offering cache of stone and copper spear points, a necklace of copper beads, one white stone "sword", and 165 chipped stone tools. The cache, like the burial, had been coated in red ochre. http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/archaeology/mounds/cemetery/roc.asp

  21. Red Ochre sites con’d • In the 1950's, two burials were found in a sandy knoll in Ozaukee County. • One was a woman buried in a flexed position and covered with ochre. • She was accompanied by a cache of five hornstone knives, two hafted knives, 43 other stone tools, four copper awls and four copper beads. • The grave of a man was found nearby, near a marine shell bead and a polished stone ornament. http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/archaeology/mounds/cemetery/roc.asp

  22. Convent Knoll In the 1970's salvage excavations at Convent Knoll, in Waukesha County , uncovered three intact Red Ochre burial pits. Two pits contained flexed and semi-flexed burials accompanied by mortuary offerings. A third pit contained the disordered remains of six adult males without mortuary offerings. Evidence of violence was found in the first burial pit as well - the adult man buried there had been scalped, and a stone dart point was still lodged in his body. http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/archaeology/mounds/cemetery/roc.asp

  23. Woodland Farmers and Mound Builders • The Woodland begins at 3000 BP. • The mound-building Adena and Hopewell cultures developed in this area in the Early and Middle Woodland subperiods, respectively. Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

  24. Early and Middle Woodland material culture • Early Woodland pottery usually grit-tempered, cord-marked, and thick-walled • Arrives from the east and south as early as 3500 BP in the Upper Ohio drainage and later further west • Middle Woodland pottery of several types, including flat- bottomed Crab Orchard tradition vessels and finely incised Hopewell ware • Contracting stem Early Woodland points and various forms, including the Snyders point in the Middle Woodland • Blades and sometimes exotic raw materials Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

  25. Mound building and mortuary ceremonialism • Adena mound building (2500–2000 BP), conical mounds with ditches, postmolds found beneath mounds, and burials within • Illinois and Ohio centers of Hopewell by the end of the third millennium BP— Hopewell Interaction Sphere • Hopewell earthwork complexes, including mounds and enclosures Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

  26. Stone platform pipes • A diagnostic Hopewell artifact • Made of a variety of materials, including Ohio pipestone • Fairly rare—in caches in mounds • How and by whom were such items made? Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

  27. Subsistence and settlement • Dramatic increase occurred in domesticated and cultivated weedy seed plants at least by Middle Woodland. • Early Woodland settlements often were small with high residential mobility. • Middle Woodland settlement is poorly understood due to the focus on earthwork and mound sites. • One idea is the vacant center model, which sees earthworks as seasonally used centers used by communities of dispersed farmers. • There is no consensus. Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

  28. Middle Woodland beyond Hopewell • Other Middle Woodland peoples were not as tied into Hopewell ceremonialism: • Western Basin tradition of northern Ohio, • southeastern Michigan, and • southwestern Ontario as well as northern complexes grouped under the Lake Forest Middle Woodland. Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

  29. The Late Woodland (1500–1100 BP) • Except in the north, where it continues to contact Plainer, thinner-walled ceramics • Bow and arrow • Localization of resource use, including some intensification • Variable settlement patterns • Intrusive Mound culture and Effigy Mound culture • End of Late Woodland marked by spread of new type of maize—Eastern Eight Row Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

  30. Midwestern Mississippian subperiods • Emergent Mississippian 1150–950 BP • Early Mississippian 950–800 BP • Middle Mississippian 800–650 BP • Late Mississippian 650–450 BP • Protohistoric 450–350 BP Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

  31. Cahokia is located in the Illinois Mississippi River floodplain east of St. Louis. • Site includes Monks Mound. • Site covers 3.9 square miles, more than 100 mounds, woodhenges. • Plaza was constructed by scraping off and laying new sediments. • Was this site the center of an incipient state? • How centralized was the society? • How much power did elites have? Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

  32. Mississippian cultural remains • Platform mounds with buildings on top • Plaza lined by mounds of various kinds • Wall-trench houses with wattle-and-daub walls • Utilitarian and special-purpose pottery, including effigies • Nature of economic production debated Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

  33. Contemporary traditions have some parallel traits. • Fort Ancient tradition • central Ohio River drainage 950– 250 BP • Oneota tradition (Upper Mississippian) • margins of Midwest and Great Plains (950–350 BP) • Other Late Woodland people to the north and east Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

  34. Fort Ancient and Oneota

  35. Fort Ancient Culture http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/prehistory/northamerica/culture/plains/fort_ancient.html The Fort Ancient culture (beginning circa 950 A.D.) existed along the Ohio River and its tributaries and continued up to the early historical period. Fort Ancient was originally thought to be a later extension of the Mississippian cultures to the southwest but are now generally seen as being contemporaneous. During the 9th and 10th centuries the Fort Ancient culture had become increasingly dependent upon agriculture as a subsistence base, though floral and faunal evidence hunting and gathering continued to play a large role in subsistence.

  36. Fort Ancient Artifacts http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/prehistory/northamerica/culture/plains/fort_ancient.html Fort Ancient is distinguished primarily by its ceramic ware styles, but also by their small triangular arrow points and shouldered pentagonal flint knives. Other artifacts include shell hoes, "weeping eye" gorgets, and other ornamentation, bowl stone pipes and elbow stone pipes, and stone discoidals. Many bone tools are also evident such as deer and elk scapula hoes and awls, punches and fish hooks.

  37. Fort Ancient Pottery http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/entry.php?rec=1265

  38. Fort Ancient “Face” http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/entry.php?rec=1265

  39. Fort Ancient Village http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/entry.php?rec=1265

  40. Oneota Culture • General characteristics of the archaeological Oneota: • Site size varies from 0.5 hectares (1.24 acres) to 14-16 hectares (35.6-40 acres) • Houses: a. Oval or sub-rectangular in floor plan b. 7.5-21.0 meters in length • Many probably were multifamily (i.e., analogueous to "longhouses") • Had deep underground storage pits • Villages Sometimes had 600-800 people Sometimes stockaded Located on flat river terraces above rich bottom lands. http://www.indiana.edu/~arch/saa/matrix/naa/naa_web/mod11.html

  41. Protohistoric and Historic Periods • Europeans arrived in these areas in the seventeenth century from the Great Lakes, • but the Protohistoric began earlier when Native trading networks circulated European goods. • Algonquian and Siouan speakers • Foragers in the north and farmers in the south • Considerable displacement in the Protohistoric and Historic periods Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

  42. French and British colonialism • Champlain’s visit to Huronia in 1615 began French exploration and colonialism. • The French dominated the entire area until 1763 and the end of the Seven Years’ War, when the British came into power. • The French also came up the Mississippi from the south to establish settlements around modern St. Louis. Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

  43. Five key topics of Historic Period: American Revolution and War of 1812 Story of the frontier Urbanization and industrialization American Civil War Development of shipping and commerce on the Great Lakes Copyright 2008 Oxford University Press, Inc.

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