Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jkksz Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-25T08:06:05.308Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Gifts of the Ancestors: Secondary Lithic Recycling in Appalachian Summit Prehistory

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Thomas R. Whyte*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC 28608 ([email protected])

Abstract

Evidence of systematic secondary lithic recycling at the Katie Griffith site and Church Rocksheiter No. 2 in the mountains of western North Carolina is presented. It is proposed that recycling and reuse of found stone artifacts in the Early Woodland period of the Appalachian Summit region of the southeastern United States was a regular lithic procurement option. It is concluded that systematic secondary lithic recycling was widespread in prehistory, provides an avenue for exploring economizing responses to raw material procurement challenges, and must be accounted for when using lithic artifacts in reconstructions and explanations of human mobility, exchange, and technological organization, and in archaeological constructions of lithic artifact typologies.

Resumen

Resumen

Se presenta evidencia de reciclamiento lίtico secundario en el sitio Katie Griffith y Church Rockshelter No. 2 en las montañas occidentales de Carolina del Norte. Se propone que el reciclamiento y reuso de los artefactos de piedra hallados en el periodo Early Woodland de la región de Appalachian Summit del sureste Estado Unidense fue una opción para la obtención regular lίtico. Se concluye que el reciclamiento lίtico sistemático y secundario fue amplio en la prehistoria, provee avenida para explorar respuestas economisadoras (de ahorro) al desafío de la obtención de materias primas y explicaciones de movilidad humana, intercambios, y organización tecnológica, así como en las construcciones arqueológicas de artefactos tipológicos lίticos.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 2014

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

Alexander, Catherine, and Reno, Joshua (editors) 2012 Economies of Recycling: The Global Transformation of Materials, Values and Social Relations. Zed Books, New York.Google Scholar
Amick, Daniel S. 2007 Investigating the Behavioral Causes and Archaeological Effects of Lithic Recycling. In Tools versus Cores: Alternative Approaches to Stone Tool Analysis, edited by Shannon P. McPherron, pp. 223252. Cambridge Scholars Publishing, Newcastle.Google Scholar
Andrefsky, William Jr. 2009 The Analysis of Stone Tool Procurement, Production, and Maintenance. Journal of Archaeological Research 17:65103.Google Scholar
Arakawa, Fumiyasu, Nicholson, Christopher, and Rasic, Jeff 2013 The Consequences of Social Process: Aggregate Populations, Projectile Point Accumulation, and Subsistence Patterns in the American Southwest. American Antiquity 78:147165.Google Scholar
Ascher, Robert 1968 Time's Arrow and the Archaeology of a Contemporary Community. In Settlement Archaeology, edited by K. C. Chang, pp. 4352. National Press Books, Palo Alto, California.Google Scholar
Bass, Quentin R. 1977 Prehistoric Settlement and Subsistence Patterns in the Great Smoky Mountains. Unpublished Master's thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Benthall, Joseph L. 1990 Dougherty's Cave: A Stratified Site in Russell County, Virginia. Special Publication No. 18. Archaeological Society of Virginia, Richmond.Google Scholar
Binford, Lewis R. 1979 Organization and Formation Processes: Looking at Curated Technologies. Journal of Anthropological Research 35:255273.Google Scholar
Burns, Jonathan A., and Lyren, Mia 2005 Spatial Analysis of Camelback Rockshelter (36MR180), a Multicomponent Upland Bivouac: We've Upped Our Standards, Now Up Yours! In Uplands Archaeology in the East: Symposia VIII & IX, edited by Carole L. Nash and Michael B. Barber, pp. 121132. Special Publication 38'7. Archeological Society of Virginia, Richmond.Google Scholar
Callahan, Errett 1979 The Basics of Biface Knapping in the Eastern Fluted Point Tradition: A Manual for Flintknappers and Lithic Analysts. Archaeology of Eastern North America 7:1180.Google Scholar
Camilli, Eileen L. 1988 Lithic Raw Material Selection and Use in the Desert Basins of South-Central New Mexico. Kiva 53:147163.Google Scholar
Chapman, Jefferson 1979 The Howard & Calloway Island Sites. Report of Investigations No. 27. Department of Anthropology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Collins, Michael B., and Fenwick, Jason M. 1974 Heat Treating of Chert: Methods of Interpretation and their Application. Plains Anthropologist 19:134145.Google Scholar
Connor, Melissa A., Cannon, Kenneth P., and Carlevato, Denise 1989 The Mountains Burnt: Forest Fires and Site Formation Process. North American Archaeologist 10:293310.Google Scholar
Cooney, Gabriel 2002 So Many Shades of Rock: Colour Symbolism and Irish Stone Axeheads. In Colouring the Past: The Significance of Colour in Archaeological Research, edited by Andrew Jones and Gavin MacGregor, pp. 93107. Berg, Oxford.Google Scholar
Crabtree, Don E. 1972 An Introduction to Flintworking. Occasional Papers No. 28. Idaho State University Museum, Pocatello.Google Scholar
Debénath, André 1992 The Place of the Mousterian of the Charente in the Middle Paleolithic of Southwest France. In The Middle Paleolithic: Adaptation, Behavior and Variability, edited by Harold L. Dibble and Paul Mellars, pp. 5357. University Museum, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Delcourt, Paul A., Delcourt, Hazel R., Ison, Cecil R., Sharp, William E., and Gremillion, Kristen J. 1998 Prehistoric Human Use of Fire, the Eastern Agricultural Complex, and Appalachian Oak-Chestnut Forests: Paleoecology of Cliff Palace Pond, Kentucky. American Antiquity 63:263278.Google Scholar
Dickens, Roy S. Jr. 1976 Cherokee Prehistory. University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Freeman, John D. 1957 Stemmed and Notched Fluted Points. Tennessee Archaeologist 13:8891.Google Scholar
Goodwin, Astley J. H. 1960 Chemical Alteration (Patination) of Stone. In The Application of Quantitative Methods in Archaeology, edited by Robert F. Heizer and Sherburne F. Cook, pp. 300324. Viking Fund Publications in Anthropology 28. Wenner-Gren Foundation, New York.Google Scholar
Gould, Richard A., Koster, Dorothy A., and Sontz, Ann H. L. 1971 The Lithic Assemblage of the Western Desert Aborigines of Australia. American Antiquity 36:149169.Google Scholar
Hayden, Julian D. 1976 Pre-Altithermal Archaeology in the Sierra Pinacate, Sonora, Mexico. American Antiquity 41:274289.Google Scholar
Hill, Willard Williams 1938 The Agricultural and Hunting Methods of the Navaho Indians. Publications in Anthropology No. 18. Yale University Press, New Haven, Connecticut.Google Scholar
Jeter, Marvin D., and Jackson, Edwin H. 1990 Poverty Point Extraction and Exchange: The Arkansas Lithic Connections. Louisiana Archaeology 17:133206.Google Scholar
Jolly, Fletcher III 1970 Fluted Points Reworked by Later Peoples. Tennessee Archaeologist 26:2842.Google Scholar
Jones, George T., Fontes, Lisa M., Horowitz, Rachel A., Beck, Charlotte, and Bailey, David G. 2012 Reconsidering Paleoarchaic Mobility in the Central Great Basin. American Antiquity 77:351367.Google Scholar
Keel, Bennie C. 1976 Cherokee Archaeology: A Study of the Appalachian Summit. University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Kimball, Larry R., Whyte, Thomas R., and Crites, Gary D. 2010 The Biltmore Mound and Hopewellian Mound Use in the Southern Appalachians. Southeastern Archaeology 29:4458.Google Scholar
Kneberg, Madeline 1956 Some Important Projectile Point Types Found in the Tennessee Area. Tennessee Archaeologist 12:1728.Google Scholar
Kroeber, Alfred L. 1939 Cultural and Natural Areas of Native North America. Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology No. 38. University of California, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Lafferty, Robert H. III 1981 The Phipps Bend Archaeological Project. TVA Publications in Anthropology No. 26. Tennessee Valley Authority, Norris.Google Scholar
Lewis, T. M. N., and Kneberg, Madeline 1957 The Camp Creek Site. Tennessee Archaeologist 13:148.Google Scholar
MacDonald, Douglas H., and Cremeens, David L. 2005 Holocene Lithic Raw Material Use at Skink Rockshelter (Site 46Ni445), Nicholas County, West Virginia. In Uplands Archaeology in the East: Symposia VIII & IX, edited by Carole L. Nash and Michael B. Barber, pp. 133172. Special Publication 38–7. Archeological Society of Virginia, Richmond.Google Scholar
McLearen, Douglas C. 1991 Late Archaic and Early Woodland Material Culture in Virginia. In Late Archaic and Early Woodland in Virginia: A Synthesis, edited by Theodore R. Reinhart and Mary Ellen N. Hodges, pp. 89137 Special Publication No. 23. Archaeological Society of Virginia, Richmond.Google Scholar
Nash, Carole L. 2005 Gaps in Our Knowledge: Hunter-Gatherers and High Elevation Blue Ridge Settlement. In Uplands Archaeology in the East: Symposia VIII & IX, edited by Carole L. Nash and Michael B. Barber, pp. 8999. Special Publication 38–7. Archeological Society of Virginia, Richmond.Google Scholar
Oliver, Billy L. 1985 Tradition and Typology: Basic Elements of the Carolina Projectile Point Sequence. In Structure and Process in Southeastern Archaeology, edited by Roy S. Dickens, Jr. and H. Trawick Ward, pp. 125211. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.Google Scholar
Perkinson, Phil H. 1971 North Carolina Fluted Projectile Points—Survey Report Number One. Southern Indian Studies 23:340.Google Scholar
Perkinson, Phil H. 1973 North Carolina Fluted Projectile Points—Survey Report Number Two. Southern Indian Studies 25:360.Google Scholar
Purdy, Barbara A. 1975 Fractures for the Archaeologist. In Lithic Technology: Making and Using Stone Tools, edited by Earl Swanson, pp. 133141. Mouton Publishers, The Hague.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Purrington, Burton L. 1983 Ancient Mountaineers: An Overview of the Prehistoric Archaeology of North Carolina's Western Mountain Region. In The Prehistory of North Carolina: An Archaeological Symposium, edited by Mark A. Mathis and Jeffrey J. Crow, pp. 83160. North Carolina Division of Archives and History, Department of Cultural Resources, Raleigh.Google Scholar
Reynolds, Ffion 2009 Regenerating Substances: Quartz as an Animistic Agent. Time and Mind: The Journal of Archaeology, Consciousness and Culture 2:153166.Google Scholar
Rick, John W. 1996 Projectile Points, Style, and Social Process in the Preceramic of Central Peru. In Stone Tools: Theoretical Insights into Human prehistory, edited by George H. Odell, pp. 245278. Plenum Press, New York.Google Scholar
Ritchie, William A. 1969 The Archaeology of New York State. Natural History Press, Garden City, New York.Google Scholar
Rolland, Nicholas, and Dibble, Harold L. 1990 A New Synthesis of Mousterian Variability. American Antiquity 55:480499.Google Scholar
Sassaman, Kenneth E. 1993 Early Woodland Settlement in the Aiken Plateau: Archaeological Investigations at 38AK157, Savannah River Site, Aiken County, South Carolina. Savannah River Archaeological Research Papers No. 3. Occasional Papers of the Savannah River Archaeological Research Program, South Carolina institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of South Carolina, Columbia.Google Scholar
Schiffer, Michael B. 1983 Toward the Identification of Formation Processes. American Antiquity 48:675706.Google Scholar
Seeman, Mark F. 1994 Intercluster Lithic Patterning at Nobles Pond: A Case for “Disembedded” Procurement among Early Paleoindian Societies. American Antiquity 59:273288.Google Scholar
Sedig, Jakob 2010 Getting to the Point: An Examination of Projectile Point Use in the Northern American Southwest, A.D. 900–1300. Unpublished Master's thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Colorado, Boulder.Google Scholar
Tindale, Norman B. 1965 Stone Implement Making among the Nakako, Ngadadjara, and Pitjandjara of the Great Western Desert. Records of the South Australian Museum 15:131164.Google Scholar
Upchurch, Samuel B. 1984 Petrology of Selected Lithic Materials from the South Carolina Coastal Plain. In An Archaeological Survey of Chert Quarries in Western Allendale County, South Carolina, edited by Albert C. Goodyear and Tommy Charles, pp. 125160. Research Manuscript Series 195. South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of South Carolina, Columbia.Google Scholar
Vaquero, Manuel, Alonso, Susan, García-Catalán, Sergio, García-Hernández, Angélica, de Soler, Bruno Gómez, Rettig, David, and Soto, María 2012 Temporal Nature and Recycling of Upper Paleolithic Artifacts: The Burned Tools from Molí del Salt Site Vimbodí i Poblet, Northeastern Spain. Journal of Archaeological Science 39:27852796.Google Scholar
Ward, H. Trawick, and Stephen Davis, R. P. Jr. 1999 Time before History: The Archaeology of North Carolina. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.Google Scholar
Weigand, Phil C. 1970 Huichol Ceremonial Reuse of a Fluted Point. American Antiquity 35:365367.Google Scholar
Whyte, Thomas R. 1984 Lithic Artifact Burning and Archaeological Deposit Formation on Three Early Archaic Sites in East Tennessee. Unpublished Master's thesis, University of Tennessee, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Whyte, Thomas R. 2003 Prehistoric Sedentary Agriculturalists in the Appalachian Summit of Northwestern North Carolina. North Carolina Archaeology 52:119.Google Scholar
Whyte, Thomas R. 2007 Proto-Iroquoian Divergence in the Late Archaic-Early Woodland Period Transition of the Appalachian Highlands. Southeastern Archaeology 26:134144.Google Scholar
Whyte, Thomas R. 2010 Archaeological Investigations at the Colvard II Site (31AH266) on the South Fork of the New River, Ashe County, North Carolina: Field Season 1. Submitted to the North Carolina Office of State Archaeology, Raleigh. Copies available from the Department of Anthropology, Appalachian State University, Boone, North Carolina.Google Scholar
Whyte, Thomas R. 2011 Collision at the Crossroads: Confusion in the Late Woodland period (AD 800–1400) of Northwestern North Carolina. In The Archaeology of North Carolina: Three Archaeological Symposia, edited by Charles R. Ewen, Thomas R. Whyte, and R. P. Stephen Davis, Jr., pp. 15-115-12. Publication No. 30. North Carolina Archaeological Council, Raleigh.Google Scholar
Whyte, Thomas R. 2013 Archaeological Investigations at Church Rockshelter No. 2 (31WT39), Watauga County, North Carolina. North Carolina Archaeology 62:2754.Google Scholar
Zedeño, María Nieves 2009 Animating by Association: Index Objects and Relational Taxonomies. Cambridge ArchaeologicalJournal 19:407417.Google Scholar