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First Note on the Archaeology of the Mohawk Town of Ossernenon

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 January 2017

J. Franklin Ewing*
Affiliation:
Fordham University, New York

Extract

The grounds of the shrine dedicated to three of the canonized North American Martyrs, in the township of Auriesville, N.Y., have long been believed to embrace the site of the Mohawk town of Ossernenon. The two reasons for such an opinion have been principally: the topography, and the surface finds. To this evidence may be added the sundry post-contact Indian graves found nearby. In order to locate and study the town accurately, excavations were made on the shrine grounds, during the summer of 1952, under the direction of the writer.

The site is situated on a terrace, some 400 feet above sea level, on the south side of the Mohawk River, 40 miles up the river from its confluence with the Hudson, and a mile upstream from the juncture of the Schoharie River with the Mohawk. The area is represented on the' Fonda Quadrangle of the U.S. Geological Survey maps, and on the map accompanying the monograph of Brigham (1929, p. 60), who calls this terrace the Schoharie Wash Plain, and identifies it to be a lacustrine formation dating from the closing phase of the last glaciation.

Type
Facts and Comments
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 1953

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References

Bsioham, A. P. 1929. Glacial Geology and Geographic Conditions of the Lower Mohawk Valley. New York State Museum Buiietm, No.280. Albany.Google Scholar
Carse, M. R. 1949. The Mohawk Iroquois. Bulletin of the Archeological Society of Connecticut, No. 23, pp. 3–53. New Haven.Google Scholar
Grassmann, T. 1952. The Mohawk-Caughnawaga Excavation. The Pennsylvania Archaeologist, Vol. 22, pp. 33–6. Honesdale.Google Scholar
Thwaites, R. E. 1896. The lesuit Relations and Allied Documents. Cleveland.Google Scholar