Friday, July 29, 2011

Pickawillany Field School 2011

Excavations for the 2011 Hocking College / Pickawillany summer archaeology field school officially got under way on July 25, 2011. This year’s crew is smaller than in seasons past so work is more easily concentrated in specific areas. The primary focus was the continuation of work on feature #10, a large pit feature approximately 1.5 in diameter x 1.2 meters deep identified by remote sensing. It is also in the middle of the greatest concentration of European artifacts that perhaps indicates the location of the trader’s stockade. Feature #10 was actually exposed two years ago adjacent to a large post feature that may have been a flag pole but the inclusion of a prehistoric celt in the chinking stones makes this observation slightly problematic. The mitigation of feature #10 began last season and only about half the feature or less was excavated before the weather and the end of the season made it necessary to secure the feature for continuation this year. Artifacts recovered last year included an iron butt plate for a Stage 3 French fusil or musket dating to about 1730 or 1740. There were also several French spall gunflints a couple of iron strap-like objects and a sizable quantity of faunal remains. This year’s work was to clear off the feature, finish the excavation of the north half and to draw a profile map of the southern half. To help move things along a small backhoe was used to excavate the surrounding soils and expose the pit profile. Near the bottom of the remaining southern half of the feature a known metal detector hit turned out to be the jaw assembly of a leg hold trap. Also recovered were a couple of animal bones, a few beads and few gunflints.
Not far from Feature #10 is the location of Feature #56. It was excavated in 2009 and produced an iron butt plate for a Stage 1 French fusil that dates to the very early years of the 1700’s. One almost identical to it was recovered at Michilimackinac several years ago. There was also a gun barrel section and a pack saddle brace among other items. It seemed a problem that the true bottom of the feature may not have been reached in 2009, so while the backhoe was on site it was decided to relocate the feature and cut it’s profile by digging a trench next to it. As suspected there was still a 15-20 cm lens of feature fill below where loose sands and gravels had caved in on the pit bottom and sealed it off from immediate view. Recovered here were a number of mammal and fish bones, a couple of gunflints and several beads. The back hoe may be brought back to do further work. Additionally Feature #11, though to be another pit feature located just east of Feature #56, is being explored by the Hocking students.
If the weather holds out it looks to be a promising field season at Pickawillany, the place where Ohio history began.
More next week!
A public tour of the site will take place this Thursday August 4, 2011. For information contact Andy Hite at The Johnston Farm & Indian Agency, 9845 North Hardin Rd
Piqua, OH 45356 ph: 937-773-2522 or 1-800-752-2619 or by email: ahite@ohiohistory.org

Bill Pickard

Friday, July 22, 2011

Great Works of the Ancient Hopewell Culture

Experience the "The Great Works of the Ancient Hopewell Culture" with the Arc of Appalachia Reserve System on Saturday, July 30th, 2011. The Arc is sponsoring two back-to-back events at the Fort Hill and Serpent Mound sites:

Morning Trip: Fort Hill Earthworks Tour -- Ridgetop Enclosure and Rarely-Seen Circular earthworks

Presented by Hopewell Culture National Historical Park
Meet at 8:45 am, Trek begins at 9:00 am sharp and will last approximately 4 hours. Meet at the main Fort Hill Parking Lot.

Park Ranger Bruce Lombardo from Hopewell Culture National Historical park will lead a tour through the mature forests of Fort Hill to ancient Native American earthworks. Destinations include viewing the ceremonial ridgetop walled-enclosure built by Native Americans 2000 years ago and the seldom-seen, completely intact circular earthworks located at the south end of the park. The tour will cover 4 miles of trail at an often steady pace, including some ascents and descents on often uneven trails. Hikers should be in good condition. To make the Serpent Mound program in the afternoon, you may need to break away from the guided hike a bit earlier than the rest of the folks and hike back to the parking lot on your own. Pack water and snacks. The hike goes on rain or shine. Be sure to see Fort Hill's Museum while you are there - it's open on weekends from 10 - 5. No registration or fee necessary. However, please RSVP with the number in your party to services@arcofappalachia.org. Rain or shine!

Afternoon Program at Serpent Mound: The Great Hopewell Road: Ohio's Ancient Superhighway

Special presentation by Brad Lepper of the Ohio Historical Society
1:00pm at Serpent Mound's Picnic Shelter

Archaeological research has uncovered evidence of long parallel earthen walls constructed around 2,000 years ago in southern Ohio. The walls appear to have origniated at the monumental Newark Earthworks and ran southwest in a remarkably straight line. The road's destination is a mystery and up to wonderful speculation. Perhaps it served as a route of pilgrimage -- connecting the two grandest centers of the Hopewell world: the Newark Earthworks and the many Hopewell mounds and enclosures near Chillicothe that lay more than sixty miles away. Explore the evidence with OHS Curator of Archaeology Brad Lepper. The program is free, other than the usual $7/car parking fee at Serpent Mound. Please RSVP with the number in your party to services@arcofappalachia.org. Rain or shine!

Both programs are free of charge - other than a $7/car parking fee at Serpent Mound.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

BURNING TREE MASTODON PODCAST

The Wilderness Center, a non-profit nature center and land trust, offers a weekly podcast called "Wild Ideas." The program features a variety of topics that are mostly related to Natural History, but would be interesting to a wide audience.

I was pleased to be interviewed for the program recently. The topic is the extinction of the Ice Age "megafauna" and the insights contributed by the Burning Tree Mastodon to our understanding of that catastrophic event (or series of events). It was my privilege to have been a part of the discovery of that amazing critter and the scientific odyssey that resulted from its sudden reappearance after 13,000 years of slumber.

Here is a link to the podcast:
http://www.wildernesscenter.org/podcasts/default.aspx?a=133&c=0&k==

If you listen to the podcast and still want more information about the Burning Tree Mastodon, check out my article "Forensic Mystery: the Burning Tree Mastodon" in the October-December 2006 issue of Timeline.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

NEWARK EARTHWORKS AND FLINT RIDGE FEATURED ON NBC4

Mindy Drayer and Marshall McPeek, co-anchors of NBC4 Today Weekend Edition, featured the Newark Earthworks and Flint Ridge on the July 20th segment of “Where in Ohio are Mindy and Marshall?” Snippets of video from their visit appeared in the 5:00, 5:30 and 6:00 PM broadcasts.

It was a pleasure showing them around Newark’s Great Circle. They seemed genuinely impressed with the scale and sophistication of the ancient monumental architecture.

They also went to Flint Ridge where Bill and Pat Weaver served as their hosts and had them throw a spear with the atlatl and make a shell necklace with a pump drill. This was great publicity for these amazing sites!

Here's a link to one of the segments on the Newark Earthworks:
http://video.nbc4i.com/v/43001548/newark-earthworks.htm?q=marshall+and+mindy+newark

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

ALLIGATOR MOUND

Ohio’s other effigy mound, Alligator Mound, is located in Granville. The mound is over 200 feet long and between four and five and feet high at its highest point. It is located on the top of a bluff overlooking the Raccoon Creek valley.
In spite of its name, the mound doesn’t really look anything at all like an alligator. It is in the shape of a four-footed creature with a round head and a long tail that curls at the end. For a lot of reasons, I think it represents the Underwater Panther, a powerful and dangerous supernatural creature thought by many American Indian tribes to reside in lakes and other bodies of water.

This may be why the early Granville settlers ended up calling it “Alligator” Mound. If they had asked local Native people what the mound represented and had been told it was a large and dangerous creature with a long tail that lived in the water the settlers may have jumped to the conclusion that the Indians were talking about an alligator. If so, this would explain why the seemingly incongruous name stuck. It was an alligator because the people who would know said it was!

Some years ago, my wife Karen and our two sons Ben and Peter, much younger then, made a model of the “Alligator” out of Lego bricks for a homeschool project. I recently came across a picture of the model and thought I’d post it here to see if it inspired anyone to create models of some of Ohio’s other ancient earthworks.

The Alligator Mound is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It is owned by the Licking County Historical Society. It may not be as impressive as the Great Serpent Mound, but it’s worth a visit.

For more information about Alligator Mound, check out my article “Ohio’s ‘Alligator’” in the March-April 2001 issue of Timeline.

Brad Lepper

Great Circle Excavations


Last week OHS staff and volunteers did a small excavation at the Great Circle in Newark in preparation for a powwow. For more information please see this article from the Newark Advocate.

Immerse Yourself in an Entire Day of Southern Ohio Archaeology & Natural History

Thanks to our site partner the Arc of Appalachia for putting together these facinating programs!

The Great Works of the Ancient Hopewell Culture
Saturday July 30, 2011
Two exciting programs about the 2000 year-old Native American Culture - back-to-back at Fort Hill and Serpent Mound. Attend one or both.

Morning Trip:

Fort Hill Earthworks Tour -- Ridgetop Enclosure and Rarely-Seen Circular earthworks
Presented by Hopewell Culture National Historical Park
Meet at 8:45 am, Trek begins at 9:00 am sharp and will last approximately 4 hours. Meet at the main Fort Hill Parking Lot.

Park Ranger Bruce Lombardo from Hopewell Culture National Historical park will lead a tour through the mature forests of Fort Hill to ancient Native American earthworks. Destinations include viewing the ceremonial ridgetop walled-enclosure built by Native Americans 2000 years ago and the seldom-seen, completely intact circular earthworks located at the south end of the park. The tour will cover 4 miles of trail at an often steady pace, including some ascents and descents on often uneven trails. Hikers should be in good condition. To make the Serpent Mound program in the afternoon, you may need to break away from the guided hike a bit earlier than the rest of the folks and hike back to the parking lot on your own. Pack water and snacks. The hike goes on rain or shine. Be sure to see Fort Hill's Museum while you are there - it's open on weekends from 10 - 5. No registration or fee necessary. However, please RSVP with the number in your party to services@arcofappalachia.org. Rain or shine!

Afternoon Program at Serpent Mound:
The Great Hopewell Road: Ohio's Ancient Superhighway
Special presentation by Bradley T. Lepper of the Ohio Historical Society
1:00pm at Serpent Mound's Picnic Shelter

Archaeological research has uncovered evidence of long parallel earthen walls constructed around 2,000 years ago in southern Ohio. The walls appear to have origniated at the monumental Newark Earthworks and ran southwest in a remarkably straight line. The road's destination is a mystery and up to wonderful speculation. Perhpas it served as a route of pilgrimage -- connecting the two grandest centers of the Hopewell world: the Newark Earthworks and the many Hopewell mounds and enclosures near Chillicothe that lay more than sixty miles away. Explore the evidence with leading researcher on the topic - Bradley Lepper - and open your mind to the startling implications of such a construction. The program is free, other than the usual $7/car parking fee at Serpent Mound. Please RSVP with the number in your party to services@arcofappalachia.org. Rain or shine!

Information & Directions
Both programs are free of charge - other than a $7/car parking fee at Serpent Mound.

Pack your lunch to enjoy between programs, or stop at the Dairy Bar in Locust Grove!

About Fort Hill
Fort Hill is located at 13614 Fort Hill Road, in Hillsboro Ohio. From Highway 50, turn south on SR 41 on the west side of the small town of Bainbridge. Follow SR 41 south through the small village of Cynthiana. Continue on for a few more miles. Just after SR 753 comes in on your right, you will see the wooden entrance signs on your right directing you to Fort Hill. Turn right on Fort Hill Road. The entrance is less than one mile further on your left and is well marked.

About Serpent Mound
Serpent Mound is located at 3850 SR 73, in Peebles Ohio. >From Fort Hill, turn right onto SR 41, and follow it to the small town of Locust Grove. A sign at the traffic light indicates a right hand turn onto SR 73 towards Serpent Mound. Follow SR 73 west four miles, and turn right into the well-marked entrance to Serpent Mound. A sign at the gatehouse will give further parking directions.

Sunday, July 17, 2011

MICRODEBITAGE ANALYSIS MAKES BIG CONTRIBUTION TO ARCHAEOLOGY

Geoarchaeologist Elizabeth Sonnenburg and her geoscientist colleagues at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, are finding ways to track ancient Americans across the now submerged landscapes of the Great Lakes region.

They presented their results in the July issue of the journal Geology and it is the focus of my July 10th column in the Columbus Dispatch.

One of the most remarkable features of this research is how important the smallest class of stone artifacts – microdebitage – is proving to be in the search for ancient Americans.

Microdebitage is produced in enormous profusion during the manufacture of stone tools. According to one estimate cited by Sonnenburg and her co-authors, more than one million pieces of microdebitage can result from the manufacture of a single stone tool. We don't usually think about microdebitage because the tiny flakes are smaller than 1 mm in length and at most terrestrial archaeological sites the benefits to collecting microdebitage largely have been outweighed by the efforts required to recover and analyze the prodigious quantities of it that would be present.

As the work of Sonnenburg and her colleagues make clear, however, the high density of microdebitage makes it an invaluable resource for discovering submerged Stone Age sites, which are not so readily identified using more conventional methods.

An important issue, and one I did not have the space to explore in my column, is the difficulty in reliably distinguishing microdebitage from naturally-produced sedimentary particles.

Sonnenburg and her co-authors list four criteria they used to identify microdebitage:

1. High angularity. Sedimentary particles in most environments would exhibit edges rounded by weathering and erosion due to tumbling against other particles in water or wind. Microdebitage, however, should stand out by having sharp, angular edges as longs as it, too, has not been subjected to that sort of erosion.

2. Particle geometry. Instead of the more usual spheroidal or blocky particles, microdebitage tends to look like typical debitage, but on a much smaller scale. According to Sonnenburg et al. microdebitage consists of "flat or blade-like grains with triangular, subrectangular, [or] trapezoidal shapes."

3. Conchoidal fractures and flake scars. Flint and other stone suitable for making stone tools have the property of conchoidal fracture and flakes produced during the manufacture of artifacts, regardless of size apparently, exhibit features such as previous flake scars on the dorsal (or outside) face of the flake and ripple marks on the ventral (or inside) face.

4. Size of the flake. Microdebitage, though small, tends to be larger than ordinary sediment particles – at least in the sedimentary contexts studied by Sonnenburg and her team.



It will not always be possible to distinguish microdebitage from naturally-produced stone chips. In certain sedimentary contexts, it can be hard to distinguish macrodebitage, or even simple stone tools, from naturally-produced objects. But by using all of these criteria and being mindful of the particular sedimentary environment in which the microdebitage occurs, microdebitage analysis holds much promise for archaeology.

Here is a link to my Columbus Dispatch column: http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/science/stories/2011/07/17/debris-points-to-lost-lake-sites.html?sid=101

Friday, July 08, 2011

Pleistocene fossil finds at Snowmass Colorado may be the greatest of the past 100 years

Thousands of years ago throughout the Ohio Valley and much of North America in general Mastodons and other forms of large Ice-Age animals or megafauna were the dominant life form. Distant cousins of the modern elephant, Mastodons were a relatively abundant species that seemed well suited to the wet, forested areas of Ohio’s post glacial environment. It roamed these environments for thousands of years before finally becoming extinct 10-12, 000 years ago, not long after humans first entered this part of the world. Other forms of Pleistocene or Ice Age megafauna whose remains are also occasionally unearthed include Mammoth, Cervalces or Stag-Moose, Giant Beaver, Ground Sloths, Musk Ox and Short Faced Bear. For whatever reason these and many other species all seemed to disappear from the landscape at about the same time. Was it over hunting by early humans, or climate change or disease? It’s a debate that has been going on for quite some time now and at present doesn’t appear to be any closer to being resolved than it was at any other time in the past. Skeletal elements of various megafauna can turn up just about anywhere. It isn’t unheard of to find a single mastodon and mammoth tooth along small creek bank that eroded out of its primary context some distance upstream. Despite their rough and tumble trip downstream the teeth usually survive mostly intact because of thier tough enamel make up. Other bone and antler fragments might be overlooked or their ancient age unrecognized unless they are some oversized leg bone or tusk section. However, the largest and best preserved examples are usually found in and around remnant natural ponds, exposed ancient lake bottoms and other boggy, wet areas that are the last vestiges of the environment in which they lived. They are often discovered by farmers expanding or deepening a pond, harvesting peat or during some other type of construction. Complete or nearly complete skeletons of single animals have certainly been discovered in the past, museums are full of them, but finds are sometimes limited to one or two or a few of the larger and more noticeable bones. Discoveries of the bones of great beasts have generated tremendous public interest since the first great mastodon skeleton was unearthed in the Hudson Valley in 1801. Local folk in that area were said to have turned out in droves just to watch the activities. In 1926 the excavation of the Johnstown Ohio Mastodon created similar public interest. It was one of the most complete specimens ever recovered and is now at home at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History. Even at that there is sometimes a certain amount of confusion about exactly what is being unearthed. When the Burning Tree Mastodon was discovered near Newark Ohio in 1989 the equipment operator looked at the skull and thought he had unearthed some sort of bee hive. Go figure. It should also be noted that the Pleistocene was not a time of just giant animals although there were a lot of them. If one were to take the time to look through the anaerobic muck soils where the larger fossil bones are typically found they would likely discover the remains a whole range of small mollusks, fishes, amphibians, tiny mammals, insects, plant seeds, leaves and branches and even pollen grains that became sealed in the deposit. It’s the stuff of the pristine, untouched environment that humans first encountered and if processed properly can provide a wealth of environmental, ecological and climate trend information. Unfortunately until recently this sort of material was largely overlooked. While the bones of the big animals are often seen as spectacular finds (and rightfully so) it is the other “residue” of small animal and plant remains that better sheds light on exactly what the world was all about back in the day.
Although the occasional unexpected fossil find down on the farm might peak local interest for a few months or years, places like Big Bone Lick and other mineral/salt springs in northern Kentucky have been well known as the source of finely preserved fossils for more than two centuries and in that time the Big Bone site has produced the remains of hundreds of animals. As early as the mid 1700’s explorers like Christopher Gist were making note of the scattered bones of “great beasts” lying about the salt springs. It was said that early visitors to the site even used disarticulated mammoth vertebrae as sitting stools. Thomas Jefferson was so intrigued by the site that he would later send William Clark there on a collecting expedition. Unfortunately many of the fine specimens Clark recovered were lost in transit to Jefferson.
The Hiscock Site near the town of Byron in western NY has been known only since the late 1950’s when Mr. Hiscock unearthed a mastodon tusk while expanding a pond. Serious exploration of the site began in the 1980’s by the Buffalo Museum of Science and since then the remains of at least 60 different species have been recovered including those of all things Gymnogyps californianus or California Condor. The 52 acre site was once covered by glacial Lake Tonawanda and even today that part of New York State remains a somewhat boggy region of marshes, wet lands and numerous spring-fed ponds. As the glaciers retreated thousands of years ago both animals and humans became attracted to the area both by the mineral rich springs as well as its general location in a natural east-west migration corridor along the southern edge of Lake Ontario.
However, the greatest paleontological site in North America - if not the world - is the LaBrea Tar Pits in Los Angeles California. The well preserved remains of literally tens of thousands of individual animals, from centipedes to the giant Columbian Mammoth, have been excavated from the Tar pits since the deposit was first discovered in the early 1900’s. Many of these can be viewed at the George Paige Museum at the LaBrea site located on Wilshire Boulevard in downtown L.A. If one such site is to be visited this is it! It is almost appropriate that it would be located just down the street from Hollywood. Where else should such a lost world wonder be found? To be accurate the use of the term “Tar Pit” is somewhat of a misnomer. It has only been a pit or series of pits since the area was mined for asphalt, a sticky tar-like substance related to petroleum. Originally the tar seeped to the surface through mounded vents, eventually covering large areas of the surrounding landscape. The lighter petroleum fraction would evaporate leaving a thick, black residue. This would in turn get covered by dust, plant debris and rain water. Unsuspecting megefauna like the mammoth, mastodon and bison and others would be drawn to the area to water at the “ponds” and become stuck in the tar like giant flies on fly paper. Saber tooth cats, dire wolves, American lions and other predators would show up to take advantage of the great bounty of trapped animals and would themselves get stuck as would vultures, raptors, reptiles, small mammals, birds, insects or any other small critter that made a living scavenging off scavengers. Leaves, seeds and pollen would become part of the mix as well. The petroleum based tar seems to be an excellent preserving agent. Not unlike the muck soils found at the megafauna fossil sites back east, they contain a sampling of just about every type of plant, animal or insect that existed in the L.A. basin over a time span that covered tens of thousands of years. Pretty amazing stuff!
Other than a skeleton of some great beast that shows up on occasion as the result of farming or pond building, like the Chippewa Lake Cervalces scotti or Stag Moose discovered in Medina County Ohio in 2008, it would seem that all the great finds have been made, but perhaps not. Workers digging a retention pond for a ski resort near Snowmass, Colorado last fall brought several large bones to the surface. Subsequent excavations by the Denver Museum of Nature and Science have produced more than 4,500 bones and the identification of at least 20 species from giant mammoths to tiny salamanders that inhabited what was 100,000 years ago, a large, high altitude lake. The excavations have been partially funded by the National Geographic Society and will be featured in a National Geographic television special slated to be aired next year. Attached are a couple of links for further reading.
Bill Pickard

http://www.denverpost.com/popular/ci_18395768?source=pop_hourly

http://www.gjsentinel.com/news/articles/snowmass_fossil_site_continues