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RESEARCH
Science
Archaeology
PRE-COLUMBIAN
CULTURE
Artifact analyses dispute assumptions about a prehistoric
society
Andrea
Lynn, Humanities Editor
(217) 333-2177; a-lynn@uiuc.edu
8/1/2001
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. Fragments of red stone artifacts bits
of smoking pipes, decorative ear lobe spools and a figurine, all plucked
out of rich prehistoric soil in the U.S. Midwest used to tell
one story about the complex culture and the ancient people who left
them behind. Now they tell another.
So say University of Illinois scientists, whose recent mineral analyses
of red stone artifacts from Cahokia are upsetting an apple cart of important
archaeological assumptions. Among other things, their study shoots down
the idea that the great mound-building mecca in what now is southwestern
Illinois traded extensively with distant cultures to the northwest.
One of several Middle Mississippian chiefdoms, Cahokia was inhabited
from A.D. 700 to 1400, and at its peak at about 1100, it had a population
of 20,000. Cahokia was the most sophisticated prehistoric native civilization
north of Mexico, a culture that seems to have been focused on religion.
The new findings about the ancient culture are discussed in the current
issue of Plains Anthropologist.
Using X-ray diffraction and spectroscopic analysis, Thomas Emerson,
an archaeologist, and Randall Hughes, a geologist, have discovered that
most of the red stone fragments found at Cahokia are not made of the
rare catlinite stone that originates in western Minnesota, but rather,
are a more local Missouri red flint clay. This finding shatters the
long-held belief that the presence of catlinite in Cahokia proved that
the Cahokian people traded on a large scale with their Upper Mississippi
River Valley neighbors. The new tests also show that the catlinite that
was found at Cahokia arrived after the great Cahokian culture had disappeared
with Oneota people in the 14th century or with later protohistoric
or historic groups in the 16th and 17th centuries.
Extensive trade, Emerson said, "is often touted as an important
factor in early civilizations," but, based on the new evidence,
such was not the case for Cahokia. "Essentially, our argument is
that
large-scale political and social complexity does not automatically entail
large-scale economic networks."
False assumptions have always colored the study of red stone artifacts
in general and red stone pipes in particular, the UI researchers wrote,
including the general consensus that all aboriginal red pipes were made
of catlinite. Because most investigators have been unable to distinguish
between visually similar red siltstones, pipestone and catlinite, they
have misidentified most archaeological specimens as catlinite. Moreover,
until now, few mineralogical studies of red pipes have been conducted.
The new study demonstrates that catlinite is mineralogically different
from similar stones in that it doesnt contain quartz.
In their work, the UI team used a new piece of experimental equipment
in the field: the Portable Infrared Mineral Analyzer (PIMA), which they
are testing under a National Science Foundation grant. "The technique
appears to be most useful as a first-line method of mineral identification
and in those instances where destructive sampling is prohibited,"
the authors wrote.
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