summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/56304-0.txt3875
-rw-r--r--old/56304-0.zipbin72722 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-8.txt3879
-rw-r--r--old/56304-8.zipbin72554 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h.zipbin4307056 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/56304-h.htm3430
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/cover.jpgbin129856 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p001.jpgbin28840 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p002.jpgbin142302 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p003.jpgbin128529 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p005a.jpgbin92607 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p006.jpgbin116419 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p006a.jpgbin64931 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p007.jpgbin47093 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p008.jpgbin246291 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p008a.jpgbin62786 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p009.jpgbin150288 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p009a.jpgbin45865 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p010.jpgbin127773 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p010a.jpgbin67805 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p011.jpgbin217403 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p012.jpgbin36486 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p012a.jpgbin45885 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p013.jpgbin130019 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p013a.jpgbin67140 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p013b.jpgbin78776 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p014.jpgbin65036 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p015.jpgbin150273 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p016.jpgbin82713 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p017.jpgbin165108 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p017a.jpgbin109084 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p017b.jpgbin92960 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p017c.jpgbin30208 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p018.jpgbin64122 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p019.jpgbin86712 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p019a.jpgbin55998 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p020.jpgbin150360 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p020a.jpgbin125310 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p021.jpgbin109054 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p021a.jpgbin48767 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p021b.jpgbin113076 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p021c.jpgbin112707 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p022.jpgbin46821 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p023.jpgbin49725 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p023a.jpgbin104595 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p024.jpgbin118918 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p025.jpgbin48797 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p025a.jpgbin46683 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p026.jpgbin64345 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p026a.jpgbin84450 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/56304-h/images/p027.jpgbin79289 -> 0 bytes
54 files changed, 17 insertions, 11184 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7cd5451
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #56304 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/56304)
diff --git a/old/56304-0.txt b/old/56304-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 5a8abfb..0000000
--- a/old/56304-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3875 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of American Indian Ways of Life: An
-Interpretation of the Archaeolog, by Thorne Deuel
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: American Indian Ways of Life: An Interpretation of the Archaeology of Illinois and Adjoining Areas
- Story of Illinois Series, #9
-
-Author: Thorne Deuel
-
-Release Date: January 4, 2018 [EBook #56304]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AMERICAN INDIAN WAYS OF LIFE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- BOARD OF
- ILLINOIS STATE MUSEUM ADVISORS
-
- M. M. Leighton, Ph. D., _Chairman_
- Illinois Geological Survey, Urbana
- Everett P. Coleman, M. D.
- Coleman Clinic
- Canton
- Percival Robertson, Ph. D.
- The Principia College
- Elsah
- N. W. McGee, Ph. D.
- North Central College
- Naperville
- Sol Tax, Ph. D.
- University of Chicago
- Chicago
-
- Copyright by
- ILLINOIS STATE MUSEUM
- 1958
-
-
-
-
- STATE OF ILLINOIS
- William G. Stratton, _Governor_
-
- DEPT. OF REGISTRATION & EDUCATION—ILLINOIS STATE MUSEUM
- Vera M. Binks, _Director_ Thorne Deuel, _Museum Director_
-
-
- STORY OF ILLINOIS SERIES, No. 9
-
-
-
-
- AMERICAN INDIAN WAYS OF LIFE
-
-
- An Interpretation of the Archaeology of Illinois and Adjoining Areas
-
- by
- Thorne Deuel
-
- [Illustration: Seal of the State of Illinois]
-
- Springfield, Illinois
- 1958
-
- [Printed by authority of the State of Illinois]
-
- [Illustration: Site of the ancient Middle Mississippi religious city
- on the Kincaid farm near Metropolis, Illinois, as it is today. Four
- mounds can be seen; the village area is in the foreground and the
- plaza at the right (south) of the largest mound with house on it.]
-
-
-
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
-
- Introduction 5
- Paleo-Indians 9
- Archaic Man 12
- Cultures and Cultural Change 19
- Initial Woodland 20
- Food Storers (Advanced Phase) 23
- The Hopewellian Civilization (Classic Phase) 26
- Final Woodland 30
- Middle Mississippi 34
- Upper Mississippi 42
- The Illini 45
- The Indians Leave Illinois 54
- Summary of Illinois Prehistory 54
- Glossary 59
- Bibliography 67
- Diagram: Stream of Culture 57
- Table I: Stages and Archaeological Units 4
- Table II: Radiocarbon Dates 8
- Table III: Cultural Characteristics of Archaeological Units 70
-
- [Illustration: TABLE I. STAGES AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL UNITS]
-
- STAGE
- SUBSTAGE
- ARCHAEOLOGICAL UNITS
- PATTERN
- PHASE
- SUBCULTURE
- TYPE STATIONS
- IV. MACHINE AGE
- Lacking in the Americas
- III. FARMING
- DOMESTIC PLANTS AND FOOD-DRAFT ANIMALS
- Lacking in the Americas
- PLANT-RAISING
- MISSISSIPPI
- Historic Illini: 1673-1833
- [Illini Tribes]
- Brandt II (Ra^v1)
- Upper: 1100 (?)-1600 A.D.
- Langford
- Fisher II and III
- Middle: 1000-1500 A.D.
- Cumberland
- Kincaid Site
- Cahokia
- Dickson Mound (F^o34) and Fout’s Village (F^v664)
- Protomiss
- Dillinger Village Site
- WOODLAND (Hoe-culture)
- Final: 200 (?)-1000 A.D.
- Effigy Mound
- Tampico
- Maples Mills Site
- Stone Vault
- Spencer Mound Group
- Jersey Bluff
- Otter Creek Sites
- Raymond
- Raymond Site
- Lewis
- Lewis (Pp^v1A)
- Classic: 500 B.C-500 A.D.
- Hopewell (South)
- Hubele Village (Wh^v30)
- Wilson Mound (Wh^o6)
- Hopewell (North)
- Clear Lake Village (T^v1)
- Liverpool Mound (F^o77-II)
- II. SELF-DOMESTICATION
- FOOD-STORING
- WOODLAND (Ceramic)
- Advanced: 1000 (?)-100 (?) B.C.
- Crab Orchard
- Sugar Camp Hill Village (Wm^v1)
- Baumer
- Baumer Hamlet (Mx^v30)
- HUNTING-COLLECTING
- Initial: 2500-500 B.C.
- Morton
- F^o14-II and F^v35
- Red Ochre
- Hilltop Mound (F^o11)
- Black Sand
- Liverpool Hamlet and Cemetery (F^v88 and F^o77-I)
- LITHIC
- Archaic: 8000-2500 B.C.
- Terminal
- Ferry Site (Hn^v251) and Godar Cemetery
- Medial
- Modoc II
- Simple
- Modoc I
- Paleo-Indian: 50,000 (?)-8,000 (?) B.C.
- Folsom
- Fluted points as isolated finds only.
- Clovis
- I. NATURAL MAN
- PROTO-CULTURAL
- None found in America
-
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
-
-This paper is primarily planned for the layman, the beginning student of
-prehistory and others interested in acquiring a general understanding of
-how primitive man lived during his successive occupations of Illinois
-and neighboring areas in the more important archaeological periods. Most
-of the archaeological data for the chief cultures or ways of life are
-given in references in the accompanying bibliography of technical
-publications selected as those from which (in the opinion of the writer)
-the information can be most easily gleaned.
-
-The reconstructions given of the cultural features, where not those
-ordinarily inferred from archaeological findings, are based on a study
-of the practices commonly found among primitive people now, or until
-recently, living in the same stage or substage. These are tentative
-conclusions resulting from a study of fifty tribes in the
-Self-Domestication (pre-farming) stage and forty in the Plant-Raising
-substage. Because primitive tribes which are under pressure from people
-with advanced food-draft-animal agriculture or with machine industry or
-which are in a transitional condition between two adjacent stages are
-disorganized or drastically changing a formerly stabilized mode of life,
-great care has been exercised in drawing general conclusions from their
-cultural features.
-
-The reconstructions of the perishable objects shown in the drawings are
-generally in keeping with the culture in which they are exhibited but
-cannot be vouched for as to their detailed form. The handle of an adze,
-the shape of a cabin roof, the headdress of a tribal chief each served
-the purpose for which they were made and their exact form was and is of
-no more consequence in the culture than the fashions in women’s hats or
-the fins on an automobile are in our own. The details in cultures serve
-to set them apart from each other; it is the basic and significant
-features and subfeatures that determine relationships and permit the
-most useful classification.
-
-The study mentioned above is still incomplete, but results so far
-obtained indicate:
-
-1. That man in the same stage (and substage) of cultural development
- _tends_ to invent and employ the same broad social and spiritual
- features, regardless of surroundings.
-
-2. That where significant differences arise between substages of the
- same stage, they are (at least sometimes) linked with peculiarities
- of climate and/or natural resources which the people have seized
- upon and exploited to the improvement of their economic situation.
-
-3. That many details within these broad types of economic, social and
- spiritual features appear to vary unpredictably within the range of
- available possibilities.
-
-The stage and criterion for each were proposed in an earlier issue (No.
-6) of this series, _Man’s Venture In Culture_, (Deuel 1950, pp. 5-12)
-as:
-
-1. _Natural Man_ (_Protocultural_), when “man” presumably employed
- sticks and stones as implements and weapons.
-
-2. _Self-Domestication_, following the discovery of the principle of the
- conchoidal fracturing of flint and its control, and the invention of
- tool and weapon types.
-
-3. _Farming_ or _Food-Raising_, due to the discovery that grains
- (grasses) and food-draft animals could be bred and raised in
- captivity.
-
-4. _Inanimate Power Machine_ (_Machine Age_), after the discovery of the
- availability of water and wind as sources for energy and the
- adaptation of animal-driven machines to utilize them.
-
-Man in the wild or Protocultural stage is thought not to have reached
-the Americas. The oxlike mammals were not domesticated in America for
-drawing ploughs and vehicles, turning grain mills or to serve as a
-continuous food supply source. Consequently, we are concerned in the
-following discussion only with peoples in the Self-Domestication stage
-and the Plant-Raising substage of Farming.
-
-In ordinary language, the word “culture” is used in a diversity of
-senses. In these pages it is used in one of two ways, the one employed
-being readily understood from the context. In a general sense, culture
-means the significant beliefs, customary activities and social
-prohibitions that are peculiar to man (together with the man-made tools,
-weapons and other material objects that he finds or has found necessary)
-that modify, limit or enhance in some manner, most of his discernible
-natural activities due to and arising from his physical animal
-inheritance and organization. Culture in a specific sense refers to the
-significant cultural features of a group or period under consideration.
-
-For convenience, any cultural activity according to its dominant purpose
-may be spoken of as belonging to one of three aspects of culture, (a)
-economic (technological and intellectual); (b) social (and political);
-and (c) spiritual (religious, artistic and recreational). To lesser
-degrees, most cultural activities have relationships with the two
-aspects other than the dominant.
-
-Certain prevalent archaeological designations have been changed to
-remove time implications (e.g. “early” and “late” Woodland to _Initial_
-[beginning] and _Final_ [end of an archaeological series]), or to
-shorten (e.g. “Tennessee-Cumberland” or “Gordon-Fewkes” to
-_Cumberland_).
-
-Technical terms have generally been avoided; but where it has seemed
-necessary to retain them or to use words in a special sense, they are
-explained in the text or can be found in the glossary. The terms
-_pattern_ and _phase_ are those generally employed in the McKern system
-of classification, for the larger groupings into which it is customary
-to place the “cultures” as determined from the typology of the
-artifacts, their association in the assemblage and pertinent data
-recovered at a site (or local community) with due regard to
-circumstances of time and location of other sites nearby and over a
-larger area. The largest unit is the _pattern_ which is made up of a
-number of _phases_. Cultural divisions smaller than these units are
-spoken of here as _subcultures_.
-
-The approximate relationships of the archaeological units to the broader
-cultural stages and substages are given in Table I, page 4. The
-succession and coexistence of the archaeological units is indicated in
-the diagram “The Stream of Culture”, p. 57. The summary of
-“Characteristics of the Archaeological-Cultural Units” occurs on pages
-70-76.
-
-This is a story mainly of Illinois when occupied by American Indians but
-it would not give a reasonably true picture without showing the known
-extensions of some of the cultures into surrounding areas and the
-probable intrusions from outside the state.
-
-Of necessity in attempting a summary of the archaeology of Illinois and
-adjacent areas, the writer has had to lean heavily on the field work and
-reports of the many anthropologists who have contributed so much to the
-present understanding of the American Indian in the United States. To
-this invaluable source material and to these able scientists the
-indebtedness of the writer is acknowledged to be very great indeed. In
-the compass of a work of this type it is impossible to name them or give
-them credit for original or similar views, nor is it practicable to
-include in the bibliography all the publications used.
-
-Acknowledgment of assistance is made especially to Georg K. Neumann,
-Joseph R. Caldwell and Melvin L. Fowler, Milton D. Thompson, Ruth Kerr,
-Nora Deuel and Orvetta Robinson for reading and discussing the
-manuscript from various viewpoints, to Dr. James B. Griffin for helpful
-information on the dates of sites and of archaeological data, to Irvin
-Peithmann, Southern Illinois University, for photographs furnished, for
-information on sites he had discovered and the privilege of visiting
-them in his company, to George Langford for photographs and data
-regarding the Fisher site, to Charles Hodge for all photographs
-reproduced not otherwise credited, and to Jerry Connolly, Bettye
-Broyles, Barbara Parmalee and Jeanne McCarty for their excellent
-drawings. Without all this considerable and valuable aid the publication
-could not have been completed.
-
-
- TABLE II. RADIOCARBON DATES[1]
-
- CULTURAL UNIT C14 DATE SITE STATE COUNTY
-
- MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI A.D. 1420±200 Crable Village Illinois Fulton
- MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI 1326±250 Nodena Village Arkansas Arkansas
- MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI 1156±200 Cahokia Illinois Madison
- EFFIGY MOUND[2] 1041±212 Effigy Mounds Iowa Allamakee
- National Park
- HOPEWELLIAN 508±60 Twenhafel Illinois Jackson
- (Weber) Md.
- HOPEWELLIAN 432±200 Rutherford Illinois Hardin
- Mound
- HOPEWELLIAN 256±200 Knight Mound Illinois Calhoun
- HOPEWELLIAN 214±250 Baehr Mound Illinois Brown
- HOPEWELLIAN[2] B.C. 48±160 Hopewellian Ohio Ross
- Group Mound #25
- HOPEWELLIAN[3] 57±108 Wilson Mound Illinois White
- HOPEWELLIAN 315±164 Havana Mound Illinois Mason
- ADENA 423±150 Toepfner Mound Ohio Franklin
- #I
- ADENA 697±170 Dover Mound Kentucky Mason
- ARCHAIC 704±80 Poverty Point Louisiana W. Carroll
- (N.E.) Parish
- ADENA 826±410 Toepfner Mound Ohio Franklin
- #II
- ARCHAIC 904±90 Poverty Point Louisiana W. Carroll
- (N.E.) Parish
- ARCHAIC 1624±300 Kays Landing Tennessee Humphrey
- ARCHAIC[2] 2170±215 Indian Knoll Kentucky Ohio
- ARCHAIC[2] 2360±270 Annis Mound Kentucky Butler
- ARCHAIC 2765±300 Modoc Rock Illinois Randolph
- Shelter
- ARCHAIC 2812±250 Perry Site Alabama Lauderdale
- (N.W.)
- ARCHAIC 2950±250 Annis Shell Kentucky Butler
- Mound
- ARCHAIC 3325±300 Modoc Rock Illinois Randolph
- Shelter
- ARCHAIC 3352±300 Indian Knoll Kentucky Ohio
- ARCHAIC 3646±400 Oconto Old Wisconsin Oconto
- Copper Site (E.)
- ARCHAIC[2] 3657±164 Modoc Rock Illinois Randolph
- Shelter
- ARCHAIC 5194±500 Eva Site Tennessee Benton
- ARCHAIC 5556±400 Oconto Old Wisconsin Oconto
- Copper Site (E.)
- ARCHAIC 5945±500 Graham Cave Missouri Montgomery
- ARCHAIC 6204±300 Russell Cave Alabama Jackson
- ARCHAIC[2] 6219±388 Modoc Rock Illinois Randolph
- Shelter
- ARCHAIC 7310±352 Graham Cave Missouri Montgomery
- ARCHAIC 7922±392 Modoc Rock Illinois Randolph
- Shelter
- PALEO-INDIAN 7934±350 Lubbock Site Texas Lubbock
- (Folsom)[2] (N.W.)
- PALEO-INDIAN 18,000 Sandia Cave New Mexico Bernalillo
- (Sandia) (Center)
- PALEO-INDIAN (?) 22,000 Tule Spring Nevada Clark
- Site (S.E.)
- PALEO-INDIAN 35,000 Lewisville Site Texas Denton
- (Clovis?)[4]
-
-
-[1]These dates are selected as giving a significant picture of sequence
- and contemporaneity of cultures. Dates based on shell specimens are
- excluded on account of their general unreliability. Adena sites are
- not included after 400 B.C. These are burial mounds and with their
- inferred customs may be present in two or more cultural units rather
- than constitute a feature characteristic of one.
-
-[2]An average of at least two dates for this period.
-
-[3]Average of three out of four dates. Libby’s second date disregarded
- as widely out of line.
-
-[4]Two samples gave identical results. Cultural identification as Clovis
- based on single spearhead is doubtful.
-
-
-
-
- PALEO-INDIANS, BIG GAME HUNTERS, DISCOVER A NEW WORLD (50,000? to
- 8,000? B.C.)[5]
-
-
-Man probably discovered America as early as 50,000 years ago and
-gradually occupied the two continents in the succeeding millenia. The
-first discoverers of the New World were of Mongolian racial stock as are
-the American Indians. They crossed from Siberia to Alaska over an
-existing land bridge, over ice, or possibly by wading or by boat over
-the shallow sea in the wake of mammoth, mastodon or musk ox herds on
-whose flesh they lived. Following in the path of the huge animals, they
-made their way possibly up the Yukon from its mouth to the divide,
-thence down into the Mackenzie Basin, and along a great river where now
-exist a chain of lakes and so into the Mississippi Valley.
-
-The migrants trailing each herd doubtless traveled in their several ways
-in family groups, uniting from time to time to trap and kill one of the
-great shaggy beasts. When the animals stopped, the families bedded down
-nearby in the most sheltered spots available taking care not to lose
-touch with the herd. These were wanderers, not explorers, nor were they
-seeking new homes; they were hunters that traveled where the herd led.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 1. Archaic flint drill, stone hammer, and flint
- scraper as used in Archaic period and their modern steel
- counterparts. (B.B.)]
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 2. Paleo-Indians attack a mired-down mammoth.
- (B.G.P.)]
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 3. Paleo-Indian spearheads from the William
- Small collection. A, B, and C are Clovis points; D, a Folsom point.
- All are from Illinois.]
-
-Their belongings, by our standards, were pitifully few, their way of
-life laborious, full of hardship and danger, but their needs were simple
-and their means of meeting them doubtless seemed ample to these hardy
-hunters. The chief weapon was a thrusting spear with a chipped flint
-head and a long shaft to keep the hunter as far from harm’s way as
-possible when attacking the dangerous animal. The narrow width of the
-spearpoint made it easy to withdraw from a wound and attack again. Our
-evidence that the Paleo-Indians (as the Big Game Hunters are commonly
-called) lived in Illinois are these same spearheads (Clovis and Folsom
-types), usually grooved or fluted lengthwise of the blade, which are
-scattered over much of the Illinois prairie as isolated finds. No
-campsites of this people have yet been discovered in Illinois, as they
-have been in Pennsylvania, Alabama and several southwestern states. We
-can only surmise that in Illinois the hunters also had stone hammers and
-chipped flint scrapers as they had elsewhere.
-
-Having arrived in the great central valley between the Rocky Mountains
-and the eastern ranges, the herds probably moved slowly from one
-browsing ground to another in the open corridor between glaciers. It may
-have taken them many years to reach what is now the United States.
-Eventually the herds wandered back and forth across the Mississippi
-Valley, and some favorable spots came to be used as camping grounds
-again and again by the same or different families. Such places would
-appeal immediately to the campers because of their protection from rain
-and the piercing glacial winds, the presence of a plentiful supply of
-wood and water. The possibility of our gaining a better knowledge of
-Paleo-Indian life in Illinois rests on the discovery of such a site,
-difficult now to recognize because it may no longer provide wood, water,
-or shelter of any sort.
-
-There are in southern Illinois a number of simple linear stone piles
-known locally as “stone forts,” all in the same type of land structure.
-Each forms an obstruction five to fifteen feet in height across a narrow
-neck or ridge leading to the plateau top of a near-vertical-sided
-“promontory” projecting out into a stream valley, making an excellent
-corral, with no fence necessary except across the entrance. They may
-have been used in late Paleo-Indian times and on into the Archaic period
-for impounding large game and/or driving them over the cliff.
-
-
-
-
- ARCHAIC MAN, FIRST SETTLER IN ILLINOIS (8000 to 2500 B.C.)[6]
-
-
-We have reason to believe that the Big Game Hunters wandered over
-Illinois and the adjoining states during the last advance of the
-glaciers. Around 12,000 B.C. the climate in the Midwest became milder,
-the glaciers “retreated,” and the mighty torrents—the Mississippi, the
-Ohio and the Illinois that had torn irresistibly down their
-valleys—shrank into smaller, less turbulent rivers that occupied but a
-fraction of their former beds. The great shaggy mammoths, musk oxen, the
-ground sloths and the giant beavers moved westward toward the mountains
-or to the north.
-
-Some of the Big Game Hunters with their families may have followed the
-retreating glacier and the herds; others stayed behind in country to
-which they had grown attached. With the great herds gone, the human
-families remaining in Illinois had to hunt the game animals that now
-frequented the area—deer, elk (wapiti), bear and smaller mammals. The
-large hunting party was no longer practicable. The game roamed over the
-country singly or by twos or threes and had to be stalked by one or two
-hunters. Families were compelled to live widely separated one from
-another in order to secure ample food throughout the year. Thus
-developed a new way of life which we call the Archaic phase or culture.
-
-The hunter, as time passed, learned the secret habits of the deer, bear
-and raccoon and the more sluggish fishes. His wife and daughters learned
-the haunts and ways of the smaller animals, the rodents, turtles and
-lizards, discovered where edible greens, wild tubers, nuts and fruits
-grew and where mussels and snails abounded in creeks and rivers. With
-increasing knowledge Archaic man made better and fuller use of his
-changed and changing surroundings, food became more plentifully
-available, life easier and less hazardous though still very difficult
-from our standpoint.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 4. Hafted primitive stone adze and grooved ax,
- with modern steel-bitted ax in the background. (B.B.)]
-
-With new needs and some leisure from the labor of providing food,
-Archaic man invented specialized devices, new methods of making tools
-and weapons, the more skillful among them shaping the objects carefully
-into symmetrical forms pleasing to the eye of others and strangely
-satisfying to the maker.[7] He pecked a hollow in both sides of his
-cobblestone hammer so he could grip it securely and use it more
-skillfully. He pecked and ground diorite and granite into adzes,
-hatchets (celts), and axes with a groove for hafting. These were a
-decided improvement over flaked choppers. He ground and polished banded
-and highly-colored shale (“slate”) into prismatic and cylindrical
-spearthrower weights and bored them with a tube, sand and water. His own
-person he decked out with necklaces and oval pendants (made by boring a
-hole in smooth flat waterworn pebbles) and with bone ornaments cut to
-shape, ground, engraved and polished. These he and his wife wore as had
-their forefathers but not the skin robes of glacial times.
-
-As life grew easier, the family or local group increased in size. Sons
-brought their wives to the family dwelling place and built windbreaks
-near those of their parents. With food abundant the little settlement
-became a small cluster of households or a hamlet consisting possibly of
-sixty to seventy persons.
-
-
- If Archaic Man Was Like Present-Day Archaic Tribes[8]
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 5. Rock shelter near Cobden. Such shelters were
- used by Archaic and succeeding peoples. (Photograph by Irvin
- Peithmann)]
-
-If Archaic man in Illinois lived as do present-day Archaic peoples, the
-family or local group, though they restricted themselves during most of
-the year to their hunting grounds which they guarded jealously from
-trespassers, did not camp continuously in one spot. At appropriate
-seasons of the year they rotated from one hamlet site to another to take
-advantage of the food resources of that locality. In winter perhaps they
-moved to a rock shelter, like that of Modoc in Randolph County,
-Illinois, near the wooded valleys of streams emptying into the river
-where deer and elk sought protection from the rigors of winter; in
-spring to upland lakes for duck and other waterfowl; and in autumn to
-wooded parklands to harvest acorns, hickory nuts, and berries. The spot
-chosen for each hamlet location was generally one that had been so used
-at that same season from time out of mind by the family and its
-forebears.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 6. Primitive woman carrying a load with the aid
- of a tumpline. (J.C.)]
-
-It is probable, as among most primitive peoples, that men did only work
-thought suitable to men, and women that appropriate for women. Men made
-the weapons and tools they used, did the hunting and fishing, and the
-fighting (when quarrels developed into feuds or wars between local
-groups of the same tribe). The rest of the labor fell to the
-women—caring for the children, collecting edible plants, clams and small
-animals, preparing the food, and carrying burdens. All work was done by
-hand; loads were carried on the back. It is possible that boats, perhaps
-of dugout type, were used as among present-day Archaic peoples living on
-waterways. There was no other specialization and each “household”
-provided for the needs of all its members to the best of its ability. No
-food was grown and no domestic animal except the dog was known.
-
-Once or twice a year when food was easily and bountifully available,
-local groups from nearby hunting territories met together for religious
-rites. These local groups spoke the same dialect, had the same way of
-life, and considered themselves a unit or tribe. They had no political
-form of government but were kept in order through habits formed by early
-training and by extension of the kinship system to the whole tribe. Thus
-the tribal elders were considered fathers and mothers, and to them were
-due obedience and respect, just as children they had been taught to
-regard their own blood fathers, uncles, and other older relatives. The
-elders knew the tribal customs; and to be accepted as a tribal member,
-boys must respect, learn and conform to these customs.
-
-The object of these annual gatherings was to teach the young the tribal
-customs and to perform solemn ceremonies, the purpose of which was to
-insure the security and well-being of the tribe, a continuing abundance
-of the favorite foods, and to express gratitude and thanksgiving to
-unseen Spirits who watched over the game animals (and possibly the
-edible plants) for the blessings received during the past year. These
-gatherings and cooperative undertakings served, on the one hand, as a
-welcome change from the usual daily grind and afforded opportunities for
-the young to get acquainted and choose mates and, on the other, to unify
-the language and customs of the constituent local groups, to enhance the
-influence of the tribal elders and keep fresh in the minds of all the
-history of the tribe, the importance of its activities, and its sacred
-tradition, all essential to the way of life of dynamic Archaic peoples
-of recent times.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 7. Fertility rites were probably performed by
- Archaic peoples to ensure the abundance of game animals for the next
- year. (J.C.)]
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 8. Archaic weapons: A, Hidden Valley type
- spearhead; B, prismatic atlatl weight of polished red shale; C,
- throwing a spear with an atlatl; D, socketed antler spearhead; E,
- short thrusting spear or javelin. A, B, and D are from Modoc Shelter
- in Randolph County, Illinois.]
-
-In the later (Medial) Archaic period at Modoc, the dead were buried in
-the floor of the rock shelter. Burial probably indicates a belief in
-life after death. Care in preparing the body for burial, in the funeral
-rites and burying, and in the customary mourning thereafter was highly
-important so the dead man could go promptly to the spirit world in peace
-and not remain in the neighborhood to disturb his kinsmen. Immediately
-after the burial, it is probable that the little settlement removed to a
-distant location as is customary with peoples in this stage of culture.
-
-The rites for important dead in the Terminal period probably began with
-the conventional mourning of relatives, with painting the body with red
-ochre and grease and adorning it with the dead man’s jewelry, followed
-at the appropriate time by the conveyance of the body to the grave side,
-where the corpse was deposited in a pit together with personal insigne
-and weapons. The grooved stone axe, large spearheads, daggers,
-bannerstones, spearthrower with weight and more rarely copper articles
-were placed alongside or on the corpse. In some instances large stones
-were laid upon the grave probably for one or more of the following
-reasons: (a) to mark the grave of an important tribesman; (b) to keep
-the body from being disturbed by animals; and (c) to hold the dead man’s
-ghost until he departed for the spirit world.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 9. Grooved stone axes are frequently found in
- Archaic graves but were not buried with the dead after this period.
- (J.C.)]
-
-It is very probable that, on occasions of social and religious import,
-Modoc man and other Archaic tribes in Illinois bedecked themselves in
-their best paint and jewelry. Possibly the colorful and intriguing
-bannerstones, which were undoubtedly developed from the spearthrower
-weight, were carried or worn by the local group headmen who had won that
-right because they were skillful hunters, courageous fighters, or
-learned in the tribal customs and beliefs and thus recognized by the
-tribe as leaders for the time being.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 10. Anculosa shell necklace with flat pendant of
- water-worn stone from the Archaic period. Anculosa necklaces were
- worn by many Illinois peoples probably up to the European contact
- period.]
-
-
-
-
- CULTURES AND CULTURAL CHANGE
-
-
-Man can live virtually anywhere on the earth’s surface where he can
-obtain food, water and fuel, and do so without any fundamental change in
-his physical structure. This is largely because he is easily able to
-modify his customary ways of filling his basic needs under new or
-changing conditions of his surroundings. For primitive man to “live
-better” required an increasing knowledge of the resources in his
-locality and ingenuity in devising effective means and contrivances for
-exploiting them.
-
-Because of this ability, the Paleo-Indian wanderers (Big Game Hunters)
-in Illinois around 12,000 to 10,000 B.C., when confronted with rising
-temperatures and other regional changes, could choose whether they would
-follow the mammoth and musk ox herds and familiar subglacial conditions
-elsewhere or adopt new and strange methods of securing food and other
-requirements.
-
-As Big Game Hunters they probably lived as a number of families attached
-to a herd and relatively independent of each other except at hunting
-times. They had no homes, only temporary camps, and were bound to a
-moving herd, not to any particular region. The Paleo-Indian culture
-consisted of methods of trapping and slaying the great beasts and of
-filling other simple physical needs; a simple code of social behavior
-which enabled men and wives to live together with their children and,
-for brief periods, in gatherings of the families in relative peace and
-contentment; with religious beliefs and rites suitable to their cultural
-level that they believed assured them of a continuance of their
-satisfactory existence.
-
-When the climate changed, those families that chose to remain in
-Illinois had to develop, perhaps slowly and painfully, a new way of
-life. The habits and haunts of deer, elk, bear and raccoon had to be
-learned. Other methods of hunting and of making tools and devices to fit
-new conditions were invented as a result of the new fund of knowledge
-assembled. Each family eventually acquired a more or less definite piece
-of land or hunting territory in which it selected certain favorable
-places to build the temporary hamlet at suitable seasons. As the man and
-his family became better adapted to the land and its resources, he
-hunted more successfully, and the family or local group grew larger in
-number.
-
-Probably a number of neighboring families, when food was especially
-abundant, gathered together for social and religious purposes as peoples
-living today in the same status still do. Religious beliefs and other
-customs had all this time doubtless been shifting gradually in meeting
-the needs and dangers of changing conditions to a new way of life we
-call the Archaic culture.
-
-Every way of life is built on an older, often simpler, culture from
-which it has changed more or less rapidly. Due to important inventions,
-the group may modify its economy (ways of securing and processing food,
-etc.) and produce a substantially improved manner of living which, from
-archaeological evidence alone, may be difficult to recognize as a
-development from its earlier phase.
-
-On occasion, people from another region may invade an area, drive out
-the inhabitants and bring in a differing way of life. Usually this
-merely extends, to a desirable region less effectively exploited by
-others, the range of a vigorous cultural group whose territory has
-become too densely populated.
-
-Sometimes newcomers essay to live peaceably with the natives and a new
-cultural blend is developed. If fundamental changes are made in the
-economy by internal development or by imitating another culture, social
-and religious customs are very likely to change too, though usually at a
-slower pace.
-
-As time went on, the Archaic way of life slowly changed and finally
-disappeared, but probably not so suddenly as might at first appear; for
-many Archaic customs, tools, and weapons continued to be made and used
-in the “new” culture by the descendants of rugged earlier people or were
-adopted by newcomers to the region. Other changes were added through new
-inventions and incoming people from other regions producing a new
-culture now generally known as Woodland.
-
-
-
-
- THE INITIAL WOODLAND CULTURES[9] (2500-500 B.C.)
-
-
-After 5000 B.C. the temperatures continued to rise producing a climatic
-interval known as the Thermal Maximum when it was warmer and drier than
-at the present time. After reaching its high point, the temperature
-gradually declined and probably ended in southern Illinois about 2100
-B.C. or later in a climate much like that of today.
-
-By projecting the rate of deposit from the eight- to the eleven-foot
-level of the Modoc Rock Shelter up to the five-foot level where the
-Archaic remains appear to end, we secure a date for its upper limit of
-about 2100 B.C. (Deuel 1957, p. 2). The remains between the five- and
-eight-foot depths are scantier and less varied than in the earlier
-(lower) layers and may indicate a cultural group in a losing struggle to
-maintain itself under changing conditions.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 11. Potsherds from the Lake Baikal in southern
- Siberia resemble those of Initial and Classic Woodland (Hopewellian)
- in Illinois. The letters with subscripts refer to Siberian pottery.
- A-E, reduced to ½ actual size; F-H, reduced to ¹/₁₆ actual size.
- (Siberian pottery from Richthofen in ANTHROPOS, 1932: 128, 129, 130;
- Illinois pottery from Illinois State Museum collections.)]
-
-In northern Illinois, similar climatic conditions were developing.
-There, possibly as early as 2500 B.C., a new culture, the Initial
-(early) Woodland, was coming into existence. At any rate, groups living
-there some time prior to 1000 B.C. made pottery, placed their dead in
-cemeteries and in low burial mounds in a flexed or “doubled-up”
-position, occasionally with food, personal ornaments and other funeral
-offerings.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 12. A flint dagger or hunting knife from “Red
- Ochre subculture” of Initial Woodland. (B.B.)]
-
-The pottery of one Woodland group (Morton) in the Illinois valley
-resembled, in shape, surface treatment, design and area decorated, pots
-made in the Lake Baikal region in Asia some 7000 miles distant. The
-appearance of such striking similarities has long been a puzzle to
-anthropologists. In the first place the detailed likenesses suggest both
-were made by one and the same people. It seems fairly obvious that the
-several resemblances did not travel from tribe to tribe from Asia to
-central North America. The preservation of a pottery tradition during a
-migration of 7000 miles, probably lasting for several generations, seems
-equally incredible. Perhaps the most plausible explanation is that two
-widely separated divisions of a people originating in central Asia with
-the same cultural background and similar surroundings arrived
-independently at a remarkably similar but very simple pottery type.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 13. A copper gorget, A, (possibly patterned
- after the double-bitted ax-shaped bannerstone) and shell gorgets, B
- and C, from “Red Ochre subculture” of Initial Woodland. All from
- Mound 11, Fulton County, Illinois.]
-
-These late migrants probably found groups like the Black Sand (and Red
-Ochre) peoples in Illinois who were just emerging from the Archaic phase
-into Initial Woodland. The settlements of all early Woodland peoples
-were small in extent and poor in cultural remains. The population of
-these hamlets probably seldom exceeded fifty. No traces of house
-structures have yet been discerned. Temporary huts, probably built of
-small poles and brush, may have been conical or hemispherical in shape.
-The artifacts or cultural objects, except for a small amount of jewelry
-(shell and copper beads and pendants) and the few offerings placed in
-graves, show little evidence of any urge to fine workmanship or much
-feeling for beauty of line or form. Life was probably too hard and the
-effort in securing food and other requirements too exacting to leave
-much leisure for artistic workmanship in durable materials.[10]
-
-
-
-
- THE FOOD STORERS (BAUMER AND CRAB ORCHARD CULTURES) (1000?-100 B.C.?)
-
-
-It has been seen that in southern Illinois the Archaic way of life may
-have persisted until 2100 B.C. or perhaps even later. Across the state
-on the Ohio River a Woodland people succeeded the earlier Archaic
-residents. Their culture is known as Baumer and their nearest cultural
-relatives lived south of the Ohio in Kentucky (Round Grave or Upper
-Valley People). The Baumer artifacts do not resemble those of the
-Archaic period very closely, giving one the impression that the Baumer
-people developed their way of life elsewhere and moved into Illinois,
-possibly while Archaic groups were still in the region.
-
-The Baumer culture differs in several ways from the northern Initial
-Woodland; actually it appears to be more advanced although it has been
-termed early Woodland by some archaeologists. In the first place, the
-area of settlement was more extensive which seems to indicate a larger
-population than do early northern Woodland campsites. Their artifacts
-are numerous and varied, suggesting they were well adapted to their
-surroundings. Flat forms of polished stone (resembling in outline
-certain Archaic bannerstones from which they may have derived) served
-presumably as breast ornaments or gorgets (as similar pieces did in the
-Hopewellian period). Tear-shaped stone objects (plummets) were made as
-they had been in Medial and Terminal Archaic. House structures were
-semi-permanent, large, square, made of poles or logs set in holes in the
-ground. Huts with circular floors seem to have been in use also. Most
-important of the cultural habits noted were numerous pits apparently for
-the storage of food. In these the remains of acorns and hickory nuts
-were found. These people, like the acorn gatherers of California and the
-Eskimo, knew how to preserve food over long periods. Acorns were
-probably abundant enough for a Baumer family to lay up several months’
-supply in a short time. This permitted them to live in larger
-settlements and gave them sufficient leisure to build rather substantial
-houses and shape symmetrical ornaments from stone. These facts seem to
-substantiate the hypothesis that they were a sedentary people by virtue
-of their knowledge of how to store food.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 14. Housewife storing roasted acorns in a pit
- near door of her square log cabin dwelling. Characteristic clay
- vessel (“flower-pot” type) with “mat-impressed exterior.” Baumer
- period. (J.C.)]
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 15. A, stone pestle; B, reel-shaped stone
- gorget; C, “spud-shaped” stone gorget or pendant; D, grooved
- plummet. From the Baumer subculture and site.]
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 16. Pots from the Crab Orchard period of Baumer
- subculture recovered from the Sugar Camp Hill Site by Moreau Maxwell
- for Southern Illinois University. Vessel in center is roughly 16″
- tall. (Photographs furnished through courtesy of Dr. James B.
- Griffin, Univ. of Michigan.)]
-
-The size of the Baumer settlement, the semi-permanent houses, the
-presence of chipped spades, stone pestles and pottery might lead one to
-think that these people were plant-growers rather than simple food
-storers. Comparing them with the acorn-gathering tribes of California,
-who were storers and not food growers, it is seen that these, too, had
-permanent settlements with well over one hundred inhabitants, rather
-substantial houses, stone pestles, and some tribes, at least, had
-pottery vessels. The Californians doubtless had digging tools since the
-rooms of some houses were dug four feet down into the soil.
-
-Traces of Hopewellian influence, possibly indicating inter-marriage with
-Hopewellians, have been noted at the Sugar Camp Hill site (date
-undetermined) in Jackson County, which is presumably later than Baumer.
-However, the Baumerians like the native Californians were conservative,
-for four centuries intervened between the oldest Hopewellian village in
-the north and the earliest known station of that culture in southern
-Illinois.[11]
-
-
-
-
- THE HOPEWELLIAN CIVILIZATION[12] (500 B.C.-500 A.D.)
-
-
-Toward the end of the Initial Woodland period maize or corn, as we call
-it today, was introduced into northern Illinois, presumably from Mexico
-and Middle America through the agency of intervening tribes. In an
-apparently short time, its production seems to have been greatly
-intensified and exploited. Other food crops and tobacco may have
-accompanied maize.
-
-About the same time, a formalized religion arose, probably concerned
-with the worship of deities who personified natural forces like the sun,
-rain and thunder, which were important to a plant-growing people. From
-the evidence of burial places, there seem to have been two or possibly
-three social classes. Doubtless the first comprised the families who
-introduced and grew the new food plants and who were inspired to invent
-the complex religion. The burial of the dead, especially those socially
-important and of the highest class, was accompanied by elaborate and
-colorful ceremonies closely bound to the religion. This seems to be a
-continuation in grander form of the earlier Red Ochre funeral and
-burial. It is unfortunate that we do not have tangible evidence of their
-other religious and political ceremonies which may have been even more
-impressive and significant. The official dress and insignia of the
-officials, which we can barely glimpse in the rich and varied remains in
-the tombs, signify a political system of social control and an
-established priesthood for the spiritual guidance of the community.
-Shamans or medicine men probably had only the duty of treating disease.
-Reverence for and possibly worship of ancestors is suggested by the
-impressive tomb chambers and mounds and the care obviously bestowed on
-certain of their socially prominent dead.
-
-Social and political prestige, religious pomp and ceremonial, all seem
-to have combined to stimulate a demand for rare materials, beautiful
-jewels and impressive regalia. This initiated the search for pearls at
-home, the development of skillful and artistic workmanship in flint,
-bone, shell, copper and mica, travel abroad and trade in materials
-obtainable only in distant regions.
-
-Aside from those technologies connected with the growing of plant foods,
-probably few new crafts appeared in the culture; rather those already,
-existing in the Initial Woodland were raised to a high degree of
-excellence. Art in several forms flourished—carving in the round and in
-relief, the making of fine symmetrical polished, decorated and painted
-pottery commonly called typical Hopewellian, hammered copper jewelry,
-the setting of pearls and highly-colored native stones as eyes in
-sculptured animals and in bear-tooth pendants and ear ornaments, etching
-of delicate designs, naturalistic and conventional, on bone and the
-modeling and firing of exquisite statuettes in clay. We admire and
-wonder at the excellence of execution in the best of their small
-sculpture because they are skillfully fashioned and finished and because
-they so accurately portray the characteristics and habits of animals
-with which we are familiar. The artist had the crudest of tools to aid
-him—rough stone hammers and an anvil for pecking stone to the general
-form; sandstone files or abraders; clay and water to polish pieces;
-flint and tubular drills for boring; and flint knives to cut and engrave
-pottery and bone—in spite of which the best craftsmen well knew how to
-bring out the beauty of the piece.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 17. Artist’s idea of a Hopewellian chief or high
- priest in full ceremonial regalia. (J.C.) Evidence for dress (except
- for calumet) has been found in Illinois.]
-
-For the first time in Amerindian history in Illinois we become aware of
-an accumulation of wealth, a surplus of handmade goods over and above
-those needed for survival; many of these were neither well-suited nor
-intended for immediate physical needs, but rather were aimed at social
-display or spiritual enhancement. Wealth reflects a relatively constant
-and abundant supply of food and other necessities and the resulting
-accompaniment of considerable leisure time for a sizable portion of the
-community. It may also mark the beginning of craft specialization.[13]
-
-It is hardly necessary to add that, if such a profusion of grave
-offerings as indicated by Hopewellian tombs—feather cloth robes, pearl
-necklaces, copper hatchets, and beautifully fashioned art objects—were
-left with the dead, that the high political and religious officers were
-correspondingly bedecked in gorgeous apparel for civil and religious
-ceremonies.
-
-Nor should sight be lost of the fact that these creations and materials,
-so commonplace and inexpensive today, were to the Hopewellians as
-valuable and highly desirable as gold, silk, and precious stones are to
-us in Western civilization. For a better perspective these tomb
-offerings should be compared with objects usually found in camp and
-grave sites of the Initial and Final Woodland peoples.
-
-Traders may have gone to distant regions to select and barter for raw
-materials, to the Lake Superior region for copper, to Ohio for
-pipestone, to the south Atlantic and Gulf Coasts for the small
-Marginella and Oliva shells, for the larger Cassis and Busycon shells,
-and to the Yellowstone or Mexico for obsidian (of which little is found
-in Illinois graves). Trade, to some degree, removes the limitations
-imposed by the immediate surroundings. Pearls were secured in quantity
-from the clams of the native streams. Bone, antler, tortoise and clam
-shell, bears’ teeth, bear, wildcat and wolverine jaws from their hunting
-and collecting pursuits were utilized more fully than ever before. Even
-human jaws, possibly of enemies, were cut, polished and bored for use as
-pendants.
-
-Though the Hopewellians may not have been the pacifists they are
-sometimes painted, there must have been long periods of peaceful
-relationships with distant and nearer neighbors with whom they traded or
-through whose territories their traders had to pass. Whether or not a
-condition of peace was maintained within the borders of their culture
-area by the force of arms is an interesting question that cannot now be
-answered.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 18. The Hopewellian assemblage of artifacts that
- collectively identify the Hopewellian (Classic Woodland) period and,
- except for shell spoon, turtle shell dish, and some bead types,
- distinguish it from the other Woodland assemblages. A, drinking cup
- of marine shell (_Cassis madagascarensis_); B, C, D, Hopewellian
- pottery (restored); E, mussel shell spoon with “handle”; F, turtle
- shell dish; G, sheet mica (mirror?); H, antler headdress; I, J,
- platform pipes with effigy mammal bowls, polished stone (Otter and
- bear’s head, eyes set with copper pellets); K, platform pipe (plain
- bowl), curved base, polished stone; L, copper earspools or
- ornaments, pair; M, imitation bear tooth, copper; N, (Below) N₁,
- Bear jaw, cut in half, ground and drilled to be worn as a double
- pendant; (Above) N₂, Fragment of a human jaw that has been similarly
- treated; O, copper hatchet that carries imprint of textile on its
- surface; P, copper adze; Q, R, Hopewellian spearheads; S, massive
- bead of copper; T, bracelet of copper beads; U, necklace of pearls;
- V, necklace of copper beads; W, necklace of graduated ground shell
- beads from columella (central column) of marine shell.]
-
-In southern Illinois the advance of Hopewellian culture was slower. The
-infiltration of new pottery styles noted at Crab Orchard very possibly
-represents intermarriage with Hopewellian women. Possibly through ties
-of relationship and the acceptance of the new food plants, the old
-Baumer way of life was submerged by the Hopewellian customs though here
-and there former habits still are recognizable. Some customs of Baumer
-and Crab Orchard were adopted by the northern Hopewellians—the
-reel-shaped gorget, the plummet and the chipped stone hoe.
-
-In the north of Illinois, Hopewellian lasted until 250 A.D. (Poole site)
-and in the west and south to about 450 or 500 A.D. Though the culture
-died out in Illinois by 500 A.D., it still flourished in Mississippi
-(Bynum site) around 800 A.D. and at Marksville, Louisiana, as late as
-850 A.D.
-
-As was stated earlier, emerging cultures grow out of earlier ones.
-Although it may not yet be generally recognized, the Hopewellian
-civilization probably exerted tremendous influence on the Mississippi
-cultures and on tribes that followed them in the great central valley of
-the United States and beyond, down to historic times. It must be borne
-in mind that in spite of their splendid achievements, the Hopewellians
-had no domestic animals but the dog, no herds for meat and great wealth,
-no draft animals to drag the plough and turn the mill. All labor was “by
-hand,” all transport on the back or in a boat driven by human power.
-
-
-
-
- THE DARK AGE IN ILLINOIS—FINAL WOODLAND (200 to 900 A.D.)
-
-
-The Hopewellian civilization apparently disappeared as suddenly as it
-seems to have arisen. This impression is probably due to the fact that
-the people continued to live in the old villages long after the
-characteristic colorful Hopewell customs were no longer practiced.
-Actually the culture may have declined for a century or more before it
-finally broke down completely. Many of the simpler folk traditions
-probably persisted in the area for some centuries afterward.
-
-Possibly long continued abuses of power and privilege by religious and
-political officials, especially those from the highest social caste,
-weakened the confidence of the lower classes in their leaders and the
-culture. Newcomers from Iowa, Missouri and Kentucky may have further
-disorganized certain settlements and separated areas of the larger
-community from each other. Generally, however, the writer gets the
-impression that the decay began within the civilization although its
-final downfall may have been accelerated by external pressures.
-
-With failing confidence and a rising uneasiness, trade would naturally
-decrease and the incentive to fine workmanship decline. The larger
-cultural community split apart into a number of small tribes, who were
-isolationists and individualists. All the separate little tribal units
-were Woodland culturally with some small evidence of their Hopewellian
-heritage, but each differed in certain respects from its neighbors.
-Villages dwindled to the mere hamlets, widely separated one from
-another. The elaborate ceremonial dress, insignia, and jewelry, and the
-artistic creations (at least in durable materials) became a part of the
-past; the people found themselves reduced to the rude cultural level of
-their early Woodland ancestors. Huts were flimsy and left no discernible
-remains. Tools, weapons, and ornaments were, in general, carelessly made
-and poorly finished. Although tobacco was smoked and small patches of
-maize and beans may have been grown, the chief economic dependence
-undoubtedly was on hunting, fishing and collecting.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 19. Group of mounds exhibiting bird, mammal,
- linear and conical mounds as they occur characteristically in Effigy
- Mound subculture of Final Woodland. (B.B.)]
-
-The religious beliefs, too, were probably simplified and mixed with
-magic and superstition, surviving relics of the religion of the past
-age. In a word, the social and religious customs of the little tribes
-were broadly similar but in minor details differed from each other much
-as do their artifactual remains.
-
-A study of the Final Woodland and other phases of Illinois history
-reveals certain relationships among some distinguishable differences of
-detail:
-
-1. The almost complete lack of evidence of Hopewellian art, trade and
-religion in the late Woodland period gives little apparent indication
-that the people were the direct descendants and heirs of that
-civilization. On the other hand, the general resemblance of Final
-Woodland assemblages to those of the Initial phase seems marked. Let us
-examine further.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 20. Graves near Quincy, Illinois, Stone Vault
- period. (Photographs through courtesy of O. D. Thurber.)]
-
- [Illustration: Stone mound after earth was removed.]
-
- [Illustration: Four excavated “vaults”, the third of which shows a
- “corridor” entrance with stone steps.]
-
-The tobacco pipe of the late phase with the stem projecting beyond the
-bowl is found in most aspects. Likewise, the vertically elongated pot is
-common but not the only form. Burials are often in mounds, frequently in
-a central chamber or grave, with skeletons in the flexed and/or extended
-positions, occasionally accompanied by grave offerings. All these are
-broadly reminiscent of Hopewellian customs and, in the writer’s opinion,
-indicate a continuing thread of tradition from Initial Woodland through
-Hopewellian into the Final phase.
-
-2. The relationship to the Middle Mississippi seems more evident and has
-been attributed by some authors to the “impact” of a high culture on
-that of cruder or “under-developed” neighbors. What are the grounds for
-these conclusions?
-
-New pottery forms were being attempted, the flattened globular pot, the
-shallow bowl (occasionally found in Hopewellian sites), the cup or
-beaker and the plate. In southern counties, a new method of making pits
-is indicated by a tendency of sherds, even grit-tempered ones, to split
-or laminate (see Maxwell, _Woodland Cultures of Southern Illinois_,
-Beloit, 1951, p. 204). Secondary features previously lacking begin to
-appear as “raised points” or knobs on rims, some roughly resembling
-animal heads with ears and a snout. Triangular arrowheads and others
-reflecting larger spearhead types are all made from curved, not flat
-flakes as the Mississippian points are. The stone discoidal that seems
-to be the game piece of the historically known chunkey game, which was
-possibly initiated in late Hopewellian times (see Fowler, _The
-Rutherford Mound_, Springfield, 1957, pp. 31-33) occurs in the Bluff
-subculture and probably in the Tampico also.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 21. Canton ware pot (Tampico subculture) from
- Clear Lake village site in Tazewell County. Designs are formed with
- cord impressions. (From Schoenbeck collection in Illinois State
- Museum. Max. diam. at shoulder 18″.]
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 22. “Handled” pipe in form of raven with head
- projecting from rim, from Jersey Bluff subculture. After
- Titterington. Reduced about ½.]
-
-All these bespeak Middle Mississippian tendencies. A common conclusion,
-as mentioned previously, is that these features were borrowed from
-non-Woodland groups. The writer, however, gets the impression from his
-studies that the Middle Mississippi phase developed through the
-interplay of invention and adoption of improvements, modification and
-re-invention, between the Final Woodland subcultures in Illinois and
-adjacent territory. This does not mean that Illinois communities alone
-were responsible for the emergence of this phase but rather that they
-played an important dynamic role in its development. The Cahokia
-subculture of western and central Illinois probably constituted the
-native local tribe or nation.
-
-
- Final Woodland Archaeology
-
-Archaeologically these peoples are in the Final Woodland phase of
-culture. The Final Phase yields tobacco pipes and crude flint
-arrowheads, its chief artifactual differences with the Initial phase.
-The clay of their pottery was generally mixed with grit or sand to
-prevent firing cracks in the vessel walls. The customary
-vertically-elongated pot with a conical or pointed bottom was
-accompanied by new forms—the globular or flattened globular with “round”
-(spherical) bases, the “coconut shell” cup or larger vessel, and shallow
-bowls. The flattened globular pots and the bowls were occasionally
-decorated with two or four knobs or with “raised points” on the rim,
-sometimes giving a squarish appearance to the mouth. In some instances
-these decorative projections were crudely modeled ears and snout which
-give the effect of animals’ heads facing out and foreshadowing the
-Middle Mississippi effigy shallow bowls. An important invention, the bow
-and arrow, appears in Illinois for the first time in this period.
-Judging by the crudity of the chipped flint arrowheads, these people
-were poor archers and preferred the spear and spearthrower in hunting
-and fighting. Pipes, like most artifacts except weapon heads, are rare.
-The “elbow” or L-shaped pipe is generally representative of the culture.
-
-The six recognized Final Woodland subcultures with their diagnostic
-(though not very significant) traits are (1) Effigy Mound named for its
-distinguishing characteristic; (2) Tampico with pottery decorated with
-designs formed by cord-impressions, in northern Illinois; (3) Stone
-Vault with stone mounds containing walled tomb chambers; (4) Jersey
-Bluff with its unique “handled” tobacco pipes, in the west; (5) Raymond,
-best characterized by the generalized Woodland nature of its artifacts;
-and (6) Lewis with incised spiral designs on pottery, in southern
-Illinois.
-
-
-
-
- A SECOND PLANT-RAISING CIVILIZATION—THE MIDDLE MISSISSIPPIANS
- (1000-1500 A.D.)
-
-
-The Middle Mississippi culture seems to have arisen, as previously
-suggested, in the area where several important highways of aboriginal
-travel converged—the region surrounding the Ohio and Mississippi rivers
-from the mouth of the Wabash to the mouth of the Illinois. Whether or
-not its development was stimulated by the contracts of Muskhogeans and
-Algonkians or whether it was due to interplay between the cultures of
-the Final Woodland petty tribes is unknown.
-
-Two slightly differing subcultures of the Middle phase appeared in the
-state. One, known archaeologically as the Cumberland
-(Tennessee-Cumberland), may have embraced at one time all the southern
-Illinois counties between the mouths of the Kaskaskia and the Wabash.
-[The Angel Site near Evansville, Indiana, may belong to the Cumberland
-subculture.] The other subculture, which may be termed Cahokia,
-flourished in counties bordering on the Mississippi from Union County to
-Wisconsin. As the two periods show few significant cultural differences,
-they will, except as noted hereafter, be treated as a single unit.
-
-The bow and arrow invented in the Final Woodland phase, was developed
-early in the Middle Mississippi period into an effective weapon although
-spear and perhaps spearthrower continued in use. The chunkey game was
-probably played as a part of a religious ceremony though it may quite
-possibly have served as a popular pastime as well.
-
-Pottery was slow at first to change from its more obvious Woodland
-characteristics but new shapes foreshadowing most of those of the fully
-developed (Old Village) cultural phase practically replaced the
-conical-based elongated pot early in the period. Cord-roughening and
-grit-tempering disappeared in the classic Cahokia period, and a fine
-polished blackware and a painted pottery were added to the smooth
-utilitarian ware. An excellent “dull gray” ware with smooth gray to
-brown surfaces was of more common occurrence. It appears to differ from
-the fine ware only in its partially oxidized surfaces probably due to
-poorly controlled firing methods.[14]
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 23. The chunkey game in foreground. Man hunting
- with bow and arrow in background. Middle Mississippi period. (J.C.)]
-
-There were probably two or more social classes among the Middle phase
-people as there were among Hopewellians, Natchez and Polynesians.[15]
-The fine polished black and painted wares may have been marks of
-distinction between the highest and lower classes since it is much less
-common. In Hopewellian times, it is probable that both the fine ware and
-the specialized forms (which were usually of the highest quality) were
-reserved for the highest caste. In the Mississippi period, the shallow
-bowl, the cup or beaker, and the plate of dull gray ware seem to have
-been wide-spread in the village and may indicate a general improvement
-of living conditions among the lower social classes since Hopewellian
-times.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 24. Pottery shapes, Middle Mississippi period.
- A, “bean pot”; B, angular-shouldered pot or olla; C, common pot or
- olla; D, shallow bowl; E, water bottle; F, effigy bowl; G, plate.]
-
-Advances in the economy were obviously present in the fully developed
-Middle phase. The Union County flint “mines” and workshops were
-intensively worked. Trade with the Lake Superior, lower Atlantic and
-Gulf Coast regions was resumed. Chief imports of raw materials were
-copper and marine shells, Busycon, Marginella, Oliva and Olivella. Art,
-while possibly as highly developed as Hopewellian, resulted in a far
-smaller number of art objects in fewer durable media. Intaglio rock
-carvings (chiefly in southern Illinois) of geometric designs, human
-hands, ceremonial paraphernalia, animal outlines, and, in a few
-instances, painted hollowed-out animal silhouettes can probably be
-ascribed to this period on the basis of the symbols employed. Dwellings
-or cabins were relatively substantial structures and the extent of
-village remains indicate a large general population as compared to
-earlier times in the state. Trade and art suggest leisure and wealth or
-surplus available for exchange or to support officials and others in
-non-food productive pursuits. This prosperity was possibly due to newly
-discovered methods of intensive cultivation of maize and possibly to a
-greater diversity of crops than ever before.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 25. Carved stone pipe (fragmentary) from
- Kingston Lake Site (Cahokia subculture, Middle Mississippi period).
- Owned by Donald Wray. Right-hand figure shows the pipe
- reconstructed.]
-
-Territorially the tribe probably consisted of a number of villages and
-the surrounding country. Each tribe may have had a chief village or
-capital that was also a religious center with tribal (public) buildings
-and a temple. Archaeological and historical evidence shows that these
-buildings, presumably temples and the dwellings of tribal chiefs and the
-high priests, were erected on the flat tops of rectangular earthen
-mounds or pyramids, which were grouped around a plaza of ceremonial
-square. Here the tribe gathered for religious and political ceremonies
-and for important funerals. Intertribal negotiations and chunkey games
-were probably also staged on or near the plaza.
-
-Pipes, either of stone or pottery, were generally of the “equal-armed”
-type (where stem length is about equal to bowl height). In numerous
-instances, a short projection resembling the stem in shape but shorter,
-extends beyond the bowl away from the smoker. Massive effigy pipes of
-stone were widespread but not numerous. Some were excellently carved.
-From their construction, it is obvious that they were made to be smoked
-through a reed or hollow wooden stem called in later times the calumet.
-These together probably constituted a form of ceremonial pipe that
-served as a safe conduct between tribes, as a bond and signature at
-peace- and treaty-making ceremonies, and to present tobacco smoke as
-incense to the gods in religious rituals.
-
-Priests and possibly tribal chiefs were interred in the flat tops of
-mounds (e.g. the Powell Mound) near temple or cabin. Generally, however,
-the dead were buried in cemeteries. In some instances, bodies were laid
-on the surface above a “full” cemetery and covered with earth brought
-from outside. Continuing this practice eventually produced a mound (e.g.
-Dickson Mound near Lewistown). Possibly the burial mounds at Cahokia
-were reserved for the socially prominent while the lower classes were
-interred in the cemeteries nearby. The dead, especially important
-personages were attired in their finest apparel, insignia and personal
-ornaments. Beside them in the grave were placed their weapons, favorite
-chunkey stones, food and water in pottery vessels with shell spoons or a
-dipper.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 26. Interior view of Dickson Mound (in Dickson
- Mounds State Park near Lewistown, Illinois), showing pottery and
- other artifacts as originally placed with the dead. Cahokia
- subculture, Middle Mississippi phase.]
-
-Chief villages were large religious centers often protected by an
-encircling palisade or clay wall reinforced with vertical posts or logs.
-Remains of defensive walls can still be readily traced by a trained eye
-at the Kincaid (Massac County) and Lynn (Union County) villages.
-Exploration of the Aztalan village (Wisconsin) yielded remains of a
-reinforced clay wall surmounted at regular intervals with towers of like
-construction. The Cahokia village seems to have been without
-fortifications.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 27. Reconstruction of Kincaid Village
- (Cumberland subculture, Middle Mississippi period) near Metropolis,
- Illinois. (Diorama by Arthur Sieving.)]
-
-Smaller villages occasionally had one or two small flat-topped mounds
-which doubtless served as bases for the cabins of the Village Chief and
-possibly War Chief. Other Middle phase villages had no mounds or
-fortifications.
-
-Cabins were of three or more types. In Illinois, two kinds had
-rectangular floor outlines and may have developed from the earlier
-Baumer square dwelling and the Lewis house. One of these types prevalent
-at Kincaid, as determined from charred remains, had a thatched gable
-roof supported on four corner posts with their lower ends sunk in the
-ground. Walls were made of clay daubed on a latticework of cane (with
-foliage) interlacing vertical wall posts, the interior covered with
-split cane mats. The rafters, corner and wall posts, and wall plates
-were of poles or small logs lashed together and held in place by braided
-ropes. Floors do not appear to have been depressed below surrounding
-ground level. A larger more substantial structure, presumably a temple,
-on a Kincaid mound (Mx^o9) had thick walls of clay mixed with grass, but
-otherwise resembled the dwelling just described. The clay floor and wall
-surfaces were smooth. Fire basins of puddled clay within the building
-may have been the remains of altars.
-
-Cabins in Fulton County (Fout’s Village) and at Cahokia were rectangular
-in floor plan but wall posts were probably bent over to be joined with
-corresponding opposite members to form an arched or vaulted roof, the
-precursor perhaps of the “barrel-shaped” Illini cabins reported by
-French explorers. Floors were sunk somewhat below the ground level.
-Remains of cabins with circular floors occur also at Cahokia and in
-Fulton County.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 28. Petroglyphs from southern Illinois sites
- probably made by Middle Mississippian peoples. All figures are
- hollowed out or _intaglio_. (Photographs by Irvin Peithmann.)]
-
- [Illustration: Back wall of rock shelter near Gorham, Illinois.]
-
- [Illustration: Figure of buffalo calf painted yellow over entire
- depressed area. The outlines were chalked in for the purpose of
- photographing.]
-
-Walls and wall posts of the Fulton County cabins appear in some
-instances to be formed of bundles of small branches or cane set in
-trenches possibly a foot deep. There is no evidence of the
-wattle-and-daub structure. Walls may have been covered with mats, or
-with rectangles of bark. Roofs were probably thatched.
-
-Possibly the Cahokia subculture peoples constituted a single tribe, a
-small nation, or a confederation of tribes. At its most powerful period,
-the Cahokia settlement was perhaps the capital and religious center. The
-region south of a line joining the mouths of the Kaskaskia and Wabash
-rivers at one time probably belonged to another tribe or subtribe whose
-chief village was the Kincaid community in Pope and Massac counties and
-who, linguistically and culturally, were closely related to peoples in
-Tennessee and Kentucky and at the Angel site in Indiana.
-
-Archaeologically speaking, the Middle Mississippi contrasts sharply with
-the Hopewellian culture. Certain artifacts are readily distinguishable
-and easily identified with the craftsman’s cultures. Actually the
-Mississippians differ from the Hopewellians chiefly in having
-substantial cabins, athletic games and the bow and arrow.
-
-Remains of Hopewellian dwellings are rare, but the three or four found
-up to now are characterized by round or oval floor plans outlined with
-post holes of three to four inches in diameter. These seem to indicate
-hemispherical wigwams. No further evidence of wall or roof structure has
-been recovered. The rarity of these dwellings certainly suggests a less
-permanent dwelling than the Mississippi cabin. However, it will be
-remembered that some peoples pattern their tombs upon their dwellings.
-The upper caste Hopewellians built rectangular burial chambers which
-were walled up with logs laid one on another and roofed over with
-half-logs or bark. Similar log house surface structures would seldom
-leave discernible remains on decay. It is possible, though by no means
-certain, that the Hopewellians of highest caste, and perhaps of the
-other castes, built log cabins for dwellings.
-
-The evidence for playing of athletic games in Hopewellian is very late
-and scanty. The only tangible indication are the rings, “pulleys” and a
-stone discoidal found with a skeleton in the Rutherford Mound. (See M.
-L. Fowler, _The Rutherford Mound_, Scientific Papers Series, Vol. VII,
-No. 1, Springfield, Ill. 1957, pp. 31-33). The rings of pottery and of
-cannel coal (or jet) seem too fragile for actual playing pieces and may
-rather be trophies or prizes, replicas of similar pieces made of wood.
-Such wooden pieces may have been used in games throughout middle and
-late Hopewellian times.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 29. (Photographs by Irvin Peithmann.)]
-
- [Illustration: View of a stream-side flint mine and workshop (in
- field alongside) near Cobden, Illinois.]
-
- [Illustration: Close-up showing spherical or “ball-flint” nodules
- from stream banks similar to those worked up by Middle
- Mississippians and others in adjacent workshop.]
-
-The bow and arrow, at least, seems to be a decided improvement over the
-spear. It constituted a repeating weapon. Ammunition could be carried in
-the belt or on the back in a quiver without unduly hampering the bowman.
-On the other hand, it was useless in hand-to-hand fighting and a spear
-or dagger was needed to supplement it. Moreover, the spear with a
-thrower was a more accurate weapon than the bow, unless the arrows were
-carefully made and balanced. The bow never seems to have wholly replaced
-the spear which continued to be a favorite weapon down into the European
-contact period.
-
-The improvements that distinguish the Mississippians above the
-Hopewellians may be more apparent than real in the first two instances
-and, in the third, may represent a significant rather than a fundamental
-advance. Looking at the two periods from the broader cultural viewpoint,
-they appear to have many cultural features in common. The Middle
-Mississippians probably added new food and fibre plants to those of
-earlier periods, and perhaps increased production by improved, more
-intensive methods of cultivation. Their staple crops like those of the
-Hopewellians were corn, beans and tobacco.
-
-The technologies or methods of making the necessary tools in the two
-cultures varied but little. Art was revived or rather re-developed in
-the Mississippian period but fewer media are employed. In artistic
-skill, imagination and productiveness perhaps the Hopewellians had an
-edge on the later people.
-
-Trade and travel, though resumed to distant sections of the continent,
-does not appear so widespread or general as in the Hopewellian period. A
-formalized religion with colorful ceremonies seems to have revitalized
-the life of the people but possibly no more effectively than in the
-earlier period.
-
-There was no significant improvement in labor, power or transportation;
-all were still accomplished wholly by human effort without the aid of
-draft animals. Traveling by boat was known and probably used by both
-cultures.
-
-Comparing the two peoples with other plant growers having no domestic
-food-draft animals, it seems apparent that each had an effective
-political organization, a formalized vital religion with true priests
-(not “self-appointed” shamans) and a system of moral values and tenets
-that “church” and “state” were organized to maintain. All in all, from
-the broader cultural standpoint, they were amazingly alike.
-
-
-
-
- UNDER-DEVELOPED NEIGHBORS—THE UPPER MISSISSIPPIANS (1100?-1600 A.D.)
-
-
-Less advanced Mississippi tribes with customs showing some admixture of
-Woodland cultural elements living contemporaneously in Missouri, Iowa,
-Wisconsin, Indiana and Ohio, encircled the Middle phase peoples on the
-east, north and west. Known generally now as the Upper phase peoples
-their sole representative in Illinois was the people of the Langford
-subculture, who dwelt around the southern end of Lake Michigan as well
-as in adjacent parts of Indiana and Michigan. The type station is the
-Fisher Village and Mounds near Joliet which were ably investigated by
-Mr. George Langford, Sr. some years ago.[16]
-
-They built no flat-topped pyramids and left little, if any, evidence of
-their religious practices. Their art, as exhibited by pottery, personal
-ornaments or weapons was not of a high order. There is no evidence that
-they played the chunkey game. Some copper hatchets and ornaments were in
-use, but these appear to be of Middle Mississippi workmanship and may
-have been trade articles.
-
-On the positive side, they buried their dead in dome-shaped earthen
-mounds, usually in the extended position, frequently with food (in clay
-pots with shell spoons), weapons (arrows and tomahawks or hafted celts),
-personal ornaments and various utilitarian implements. Dwellings had
-subsurface circular floors and were doubtless dome-shaped
-(hemispherical). The bow and arrow were in common use with arrowheads
-primarily of slender simple triangular shape, very rarely with side
-notches. Implements, weapons and ornaments were chiefly of chipped
-flint, ground or polished stone, river clam shells, bone and animal
-teeth. Copper was rarely employed.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 30. Characteristic pottery from the Langford
- subculture, Upper Mississippi phase, (Fisher Site near Channahon,
- Illinois). (Photograph by George Langford, Chicago Natural History
- Museum.)]
-
-Pots were generally of the globular or flattened globular shape (olla or
-jar), tempered with grit (early) and shell (later), and decorated with
-geometric designs in broad lines and dots, drawn (“trailed”) or
-impressed on the shoulder region with a blunt tool (such as an antler
-tine). Lips of vessels were usually pressure-notched and surfaces
-cord-roughened. Loop handles on the jars were common.
-
-Numerous examples of flat stone tablets associated with a number of
-short solid antler cylinders lead one to suspect that a game of chance
-of some sort was played and that gambling was probably indulged in.
-
-Other than pottery and personal adornment, the only art practiced was
-the cutting of mussel shell into handled spoons and outlines of fish and
-other objects. Apparently there was no urge for fine workmanship.
-
-It is highly probable that these Upper Mississippians were plant growers
-who hunted to secure their meat. The extent of village remains and the
-evidence of semi-permanent dwellings point to this type of economy even
-though no grain or seeds of any kind were found in the site. Shell hoes
-of the common type were used. The dog was the only domesticated animal.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 31. Effigy fish and a decorated spoon
- (fragmentary) made of mussel shells. Langford subculture, Upper
- Mississippi phase (Fisher site). (Photograph by George Langford,
- Chicago Natural History Museum.)]
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 32. Stone tablet and gaming pieces from the
- Langford subcultural period, Upper Mississippi phase (Fisher site).
- (Photograph by George Langford, Chicago Natural History Museum.)]
-
-Apparently most of their needs were supplied by their own efforts and
-from local sources. There is no evidence of any trade, except possibly
-of a very limited kind with near neighbors to the west.
-
-The evidence for the residence around the southern lake shores is based
-chiefly on the occurrence of the Fisher pottery type. This area after
-1760 was occupied by the Miami tribe who may possibly have been the
-builders of the Fisher Mounds.
-
-
-
-
- THE ILLINOIS OR ILLINI[17] (1550?-1833 A.D.)
-
-
-The Illinois or Illini Indians are, so far as is now known, the next
-group to occupy the state following the Middle Mississippians. At the
-time of Marquette and Jolliet’s voyage in 1673, six tribes comprised the
-Illinois Confederacy, Kaskaskia, Cahokia, Michigamea, Peoria, Moingwena,
-and Tamaroa[18]. The tribes spoke the same or mutually intelligible
-dialects of the Algonkian language.
-
-Some time before 1650, possibly a century or more, the Illinois
-Confederacy seems to have been a powerful nation but in the latter half
-of the 17th century this was a tradition rather than fact. The
-Confederacy appears to have engaged in no united action after 1650.
-
-The Illini at that time were in the plant-raising stage of culture and
-possessed only the dog as a domesticated animal. Like many other
-plant-raisers, the families deserted the village for the hunt after the
-corn was hilled and again after the harvest.
-
-
- Dress
-
-Men went naked in summer except for mocassins. At times a breech cloth
-was worn; in winter buffalo skin robes were added and belts, leg bands
-and leggings on occasion.
-
-Women when working apparently wore only a girdle (breech cloth), at
-other times a wrap-around skirt of skin with a belt passing over one
-shoulder and under the opposite arm. The skirt dates back to Hopewellian
-times and was used during the Mississippi period in Indiana and probably
-in Illinois. The bosom was covered with a deerskin wrap. Hair was worn
-long and fastened behind the head.
-
-
- Economy
-
-Labor was divided between the men and the women (and children). Men did
-the hunting, fighting and made the weapons. The women (and children) did
-the other work—the housework, planting and harvesting the crops,
-dressing deer and buffalo skins, making twine from bast, weaving cloth
-and, on the hunt, carrying the house parts and setting up the camp.
-
-Buffalo meat was preserved by drying and smoking it over a fire in the
-hunting camp. Vegetable foods, corn, beans and squash were dried or
-parched and buried in containers or in lined pits in the ground and
-covered over. Watermelons, muskmelons (?), gourds and tobacco were also
-grown. Wild strawberries, paw paws, pecans, lotus roots, wild tubers,
-grapes and plums formed part of their diet.
-
-The winter buffalo hunt usually took place a long way from the village.
-The hunting units each consisted of several families under a rigid
-police system and regulation to prevent the herd from being stampeded by
-an over-eager family before all were amply provided with meat.
-Violations of hunting regulations were punished by destruction of the
-offender’s property to which no resistance was ever attempted. The group
-surrounded the herd, at times encircling it with fires made at intervals
-near which the hunters stood and killed the stampeding animals. At times
-as many as 120 buffalo were killed in a day. The women cut out the
-tongues, skinned the animals, and, peeling off the sides of meat, dried
-and smoked them on wooden grates over a slow fire. The smoked sides were
-carried back to the village on the back, or when practicable in dugout
-boats. Carcasses and bones were left on the hunting grounds. Other
-animals were stalked by one or two hunters. Dog meat was considered a
-great delicacy.
-
-Fish were caught in nets, by hook and line, speared or shot with bow and
-arrow. They were dried for preservation. Maple trees were tapped late in
-the winter, the sap caught in bark containers and made into a maple
-drink or reduced by boiling to syrup and sugar. Corn was ground into
-meal and baked into bread, or prepared as hominy.
-
-Vessels and utensils were made of wood or clay, ladles from a section of
-the buffalo skull. Fire was produced by the hand drill in the usual
-manner.
-
-The cabin type seems to have varied at different periods or in different
-tribes. In early times, cabins had rectangular floors and vaulted
-(barrel-shaped) roofs. They were roofed and floored with “double-mats”
-of flat rushes and were impervious to wind or rain. Occasionally they
-were erected on low mounds (two feet high) to keep the floors dry. Large
-cabins of the vaulted type had four fires, with one or two families at a
-fire.
-
-Bark-covered hemispherical huts or wigwams may have been used on hunting
-trips. They were apparently common in some villages in 1723.
-
-Overland travel was on foot. On streams the dugout boat was propelled by
-pole and possibly by paddle. Large boats were 40 to 50 feet long,
-capable of carrying 40 to 50 men. While dugouts were admirably suited
-for travel and trade between the Illini tribes along the Illinois and
-Mississippi rivers, they were, on account of their weight and
-unwieldiness in portaging, generally useless in raids against enemies.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 33. Native Illini artifacts. A, Indian-made gun
- flint; B, C, D, chipped flint arrowheads; E, flint scraper; F,
- grooved abrader of sandstone; G, expanded base drill (grip only,
- point broken off); H, I, polished stone pendants. From Illini
- village site near mouth of Kaskaskia River, Randolph County.]
-
-
- Marriage Customs and the Family
-
-An Illini man, desiring to get married, sent presents to the girl’s
-parents. If the suitor was acceptable, the parents kept the gift and
-took the bride to the man’s hut the following evening. Apparently there
-was no wedding ceremony.
-
-Women had somewhat lower social status than their husbands. Wives did
-not eat with their husbands. A man was permitted two or more wives and
-often married two sisters. Children were well-treated. Infants were
-bound to a cradle board that the mother carried around. The cradle was
-pointed at the lower end and was stuck in the ground when the woman
-wanted to rest. Divorce was accomplished by a simple agreement to
-separate.
-
-
- Political Organization
-
-The explorers and writers to whom we are indebted for our knowledge of
-Illini social and religious organization were, unfortunately, casual and
-untrained observers who, on the whole, held the Indian and his customs
-in contempt. Important activities were often dismissed with meaningless
-generalizations, or omitted entirely, as if generally known.
-Consequently great gaps are left in the information that has come down
-to us.
-
-From the various accounts, the impression is given that the Illini
-tribes (and possibly before the 17th century, the Confederacy) had a
-political government (rather than _family social control_) with formally
-appointed officers or civil chiefs. The Confederacy had one or more
-coats-of-arms (“totems”) that may have been recognized abroad as
-symbolic of the Illini (as was customary among the Natchez and other
-southeastern Indians). It had a Grand Chief, chosen in some manner not
-now known, from one of the constituent tribes. At one period “Prince
-Tamaroa” of the Tamaroas held the post, later Chief Ducoigne of the
-Kaskaskias. Whether or not the Confederacy acted as a nation after 1600
-is doubtful. Each tribe had its own head chief and coat-of-arms, and the
-French appear to have treated directly with the tribal heads in matters
-of importance. Judging from other Indian Confederations, the individual
-tribe had probably retained its full powers, and concerted action by the
-Confederacy was possible only by unanimous consent.
-
-Like most peoples in the simple plant-raising status, the tribe dealt as
-a state with other similar units in intertribal affairs. These included
-alliances and treaties of peace. Ambassadors or tribal representatives
-were sent from Illini tribes to their neighbors. On such occasions, the
-calumet was carried and served as a safe conduct.[19] Tribal
-representatives met approaching strangers (and presumably the
-ambassadors of another tribe), raising the highly adorned calumet (and
-pipe) toward the sun as they advanced. Smoking the calumet—by the
-contracting tribal agents at the conclusion of an agreement—corresponded
-to our signatures and seals at the end of a written treaty.
-
-Each village probably had a chief, whose power (it was sometimes
-reported) was little. However, the chiefs wore, as badges of office, red
-scarfs woven of bear and buffalo hair. Their faces were painted red. The
-village men (or possibly the important men) met before the village
-chief’s cabin or in a large hut built especially for gatherings to
-deliberate on political or religious matters. The entire village often
-seems to have been in audience.
-
-If there were social classes among the Illini, no mention is made of it
-in early reports. Men acquired prestige mainly through skillful hunting
-or success in fighting. The leader in a raid had to recompense the
-families of any followers killed in the fighting.
-
-With so little description of the village and tribal assemblies and the
-chiefs in deliberation and judgment, it is difficult to determine the
-exact status of political organization of the tribe and its officers. It
-may well be that the powers of the chiefs immediately after European
-contact were small, and that in order to deal with the agency of a
-European state, the Illini found it necessary (as did the Delaware
-tribes) to grant greater authority and responsibility to their political
-leaders. It is probably also true that the chiefs would, under pressure
-from the whites, be reluctant to take responsibility for an unpopular
-concession and would declare that only the tribal council or assemblage
-could confirm the agreement under consideration. In any case, the Illini
-were on the threshold of true political control if they had not actually
-adopted it.
-
-
- Raids
-
-The tribe in historic times seems to have been the war-making group.
-Raiding parties tried to sneak undetected into enemy country and conceal
-themselves. From their hiding place, they fell suddenly on small
-unsuspecting enemy bodies, scalping men, killing women and children, and
-slipping away again with a few prisoners if practicable. Back in the
-village, captive warriors were bound to a frame of green wood, suspended
-over a slow fire, and tortured until death released them. Warriors hung
-the scalps taken upon their cabins as evidence of their prowess. The
-Illini claimed not to have tortured or burned captives until their men
-had been taken and so treated by Iroquois raiding parties. On the war
-path warriors carried bundles containing objects sacred to their
-guardian spirits and invoked them frequently to obtain victory.
-
-Bows and arrows in quivers, hatchets or tomahawks, clubs, and
-“arrowproof” shields consisting of several layers of buffalo hide were
-carried on raids. The bow and arrow was considered superior to the gun
-because it could “fire” more rapidly.
-
-
- Trade
-
-Earlier in the European period, the Illini furnished Canadians with
-skins of beaver, raccoon, deer, bear and buffalo, but in 1776 the French
-(in Illinois) compelled them “to devote themselves to producing oil,
-tallow and meat which they traded with them.” (Deliette Memoir. See
-Pease in Bibliography under ILLINI.) The Indians traded for porcupine
-quills with more northern neighbors. After the European came, Illini
-trade was probably overwhelmingly with the whites, exchanging native
-products of the forest for coveted guns, iron knives, hatchets, brass
-kettles, cloth, glass beads and alcoholic liquors.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 34. A, B, common forms of Illini pipes
- (restored) of red Minnesota pipestone, Illinois State Museum
- collections: A, “Siouan”; B, Micmac; C, stone effigy-head type, (A.
- J. Throop collection). All from village near mouth of Kaskaskia
- River, Randolph County. (B.B.)]
-
-
- Religion
-
-The religion of the early historic Illini was apparently a complex one.
-The sun was evidently a powerful deity from whom the calumet pipe had
-perhaps been supposedly received. A special calumet, apparently sacred
-to the sun, was revered as a palladium (like the Hebraic Ark of the
-Covenant) on which rested the safety of the nation. A special official
-had responsibility for its safe keeping. The smoke of the pipe was
-offered to the sun whenever the Illini prayed for rain, fine weather, or
-some other aid. Whether the Grand Manitou (Great Spirit), whom the
-French thought was the Supreme God of the Illini, was identical with the
-sun is not known though it seems probable.
-
-In addition to the above gods, the Illini believed in numerous spirits
-and in reincarnation. A young man sought to secure a spirit as his
-superhuman helper or guardian for life. He fasted and prayed to the
-spirit to come to him in a vision. If successful (as he usually was),
-the spirit appeared to him in a dream and gave him instructions for a
-ritual by which he kept in contact with his protector. The objects
-needed for the ritual he collected on awakening and preserved them
-thereafter in a roll of painted matting. When calling upon his spirit
-protector, the bundle was opened and the rite performed, chiefly prayers
-and smoke offerings from a pipe blown toward the bundle.
-
-It seems probable that there were true priests who were appointed by
-regular procedure and who received their power by virtue of their
-installation into office. The priests, we are told, painted themselves
-all over with clay on which designs were drawn. Their faces were painted
-with red, white, blue, yellow, green and black colors. The “high priest”
-wore a bonnet or crown of feathers and a pair of horns, possibly young
-deer or buffalo.
-
-Medicine men also seem to have existed, persons who sought power from
-spirits to use in behalf of others for private gain or a livelihood.
-Possibly they were interested on the side in black magic or witchcraft,
-an anti-social activity.
-
-Dancing, probably singing, and supplication, together with the
-inevitable smoke offerings from a ceremonial pipe doubtless formed a
-large part of public worship for which the whole community assembled.
-Details of the Illini ceremonies and their meanings are not known.
-
-The French priests severely denounced native religious customs and
-“juggleries” of the Illini. The Peoria chiefs and priests resented this
-and resisted Christian attempts to convert the tribe (1693).
-
-Funeral and burial customs seem to have been generally similar to those
-of other plant-raising peoples. All dead were treated with respect,
-decked in their best apparel, painted in preparation for burial. A dance
-was performed in honor of the deceased. A skin stretched over a large
-pot formed a drum which was beaten with a single stick as accompaniment
-for the dance. The participants were rewarded with presents at the
-conclusion of the dance. The gifts to be distributed were displayed in
-full view of the dancers and the duration of the dance was determined by
-their relative richness. An important personage was given special
-consideration and the whole community probably attended the funeral.
-Corn and a pot to boil it in were placed beside the dead. Friends
-standing around the grave threw into it bracelets, pendants and “pieces
-of earthenware” (pots?). The graves of chiefs were marked by a painted
-wooden post taller than the markers for ordinary people. Illini chiefs
-and persons of distinction as a signal honor were placed in tree-tops in
-a coffin made of bark. The tribe danced and sang for twenty-four hours
-during the funeral of a distinguished man.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 35. Illini arrowshaft “wrench” or straightener
- of bison (?) rib engraved with figure of bison and cross-hatched
- triangles from Illinois village near mouth of Kaskaskia River,
- Randolph County.]
-
-
- Art
-
-Men tattooed their “whole bodies.” They painted themselves in solid
-colors and with designs in red, black, yellow, blue, and other colors.
-The body was adorned with native jewelry, the nose and ears were pierced
-for ornaments, and feathers of many colors were worn attached to the
-scalp lock. Moccasins were decorated with porcupine quill embroidery.
-Men clipped or shaved most of the head, leaving the scalp lock and four
-other tufts of long hair, two on each side, one in front of and behind
-each ear. After European trade goods were available, glass beads and
-cloth were obtainable in considerable quantities and largely replaced
-native dress materials and ornaments.
-
-The Illini played lacrosse, an athletic game. The straw-and-bean game
-was a game of chance in which the players each took a number of straws
-from a bundle. The straws in each hand were discarded by sixes, the
-number left determining the winner of the round. Beans were used as
-counters. The Illini made wagers as to the outcome, even putting up
-their sisters as stakes in the game.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 36. Shapes of Illini pots (Middle Mississippi
- ware) reconstructed from sherds found in association with other
- native and European objects on the Illini village site near mouth of
- Kaskaskia River, Randolph County. (B.B.)]
-
-
- Archaeology of the Illini
-
-Two village sites of the Illini have been investigated by the Illinois
-State Museum, one near Utica, LaSalle County (jointly with the
-University of Chicago) and one in Randolph County near the mouth of the
-Kaskaskia River. This last site was occupied for over a century by
-descendants of the Kaskaskias and other Illini tribes. Except for a
-small area where Archaic artifacts are found, it is a “pure” site.
-
-The Illini tools, weapons and ornaments of native make were the usual
-chipped flint triangular arrowheads, simple flint drills and scrapers,
-rough stone hammers and abrading stones, small ground stone pendants,
-polished stone “Micmac” or “keel-based” pipe bowls (many of catlinite),
-the long-stemmed L-shaped catlinite pipes (sometimes called “Siouan”),
-and cut and engraved bone ornaments. An arrowshaft straightener carries
-an etching of a buffalo cow. Pottery is rare, but the pieces found in
-association with European trade goods are characteristically Middle
-Mississippian.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 37. European trade goods and artifacts made from
- European materials. All from Illini village near mouth of Kaskaskia
- River, Randolph County. A, conical arrowhead of sheet copper; B,
- chipped glass arrowhead; C, brass arrowhead; D, hammer of flintlock
- gun; E, iron blade of clasp knife; F, an iron scissor-blade; G, part
- of a jew’s-harp.]
-
-The Illini made artifacts from fragments of European materials, iron
-spear- and arrowheads, brass and chipped glass arrowheads, brass
-pendants, and beads of broken porcelain.
-
-European trade materials far exceed in number the native products.
-Usually they are fragmentary (except for colored glass beads of many
-kinds): parts of copper and brass kettles, iron handles, gun hammers and
-other parts, lead balls and the molds for making them, molds for casting
-crosses and ornaments, iron spoons, kitchen and clasp knife blades of
-iron, “Dutch” white pottery pipes, scissors, jew’s-harps, bottles for
-wine and olive oil, brass buttons and finger rings.
-
-The Illini seem to have cast lead into musket balls and chipped gun
-flints into shape but beyond that made no attempt to learn machine-age
-technologies. For firearms, gunpowder, iron knives and hatchets they
-were wholly dependent on the white invaders, a great disadvantage in
-event of hostilities and one that eventually cost them ownership of
-their ancient homelands.
-
-
-
-
- THE INDIANS LEAVE ILLINOIS
-
-
-For historic tribes of the state other than the Illini little is known
-of their archaeology. Culturally it is almost a certainty that all were,
-soon after contact, largely disorganized due to partial economic
-dependence, European diseases and the alcohol trade, to diminishing
-game, loss of other resources, and to military pressures from white
-governments and contiguous Indian groups.
-
-Only the broad outlines of the movements of the historic tribes that
-lived, hunted, or made forays in Illinois need to be noted here. The
-Iroquois, Winnebago and Chickasaw made no attempts to permanently occupy
-Illinois territory as a result of their raids.
-
-The Illini came under French influence after 1673 and leaned heavily on
-their military support. At times the Illini warriors fought bravely
-alongside the French, but generally they had little stomach for fighting
-even in their own defense. They shifted their settlements frequently
-after the Iroquois attack of 1680 and later under repeated pressure by
-the Sauk, Fox, Kickapoo and Potawatomi, who invaded and occupied the
-northern part of Illini territory.
-
-Due to their dwindling courage and lack of incentive, more perhaps than
-to their losses in enemy raids, the Illini tribes decreased rapidly in
-numbers and importance. When they were removed to the west of the
-Mississippi in 1832, the population of the once great Illini Confederacy
-totalled little more than one hundred persons.
-
-Even before this, the Miami had been pushed out of Illinois due to
-inroads of the Kickapoo and Potawatomi. The Shawnee, too, probably
-abandoned their permanent settlements in southern Illinois early in the
-contact period though these lower counties may have still been
-considered their territory. Other groups did not settle or hunt there
-and the Shawnee did establish some villages there (e.g. Shawneetown)
-briefly in the eighteenth century. Bands of Shawnee continued to hunt in
-this region until 1828 or later.
-
-The Sauk, Fox, Kickapoo and Potawatomi did not long enjoy the territory
-they had wrested from the Illini and Miami. Immediately after the Black
-Hawk War in 1832, steps were taken to move all Indians from the state.
-By the Treaty of Chicago, the Indians gave up all their lands in
-Illinois, and in 1837 the last bands (Potawatomi) crossed to the western
-bank of the Mississippi. No land is reserved today in this state for
-Indians. Its former resident tribes now live in reservations in Iowa,
-Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska and in the state of Coahuila in Mexico.
-
-
-
-
- SUMMARY OF ILLINOIS PREHISTORY
-
-
-The archaeology of Illinois in its present position seems to indicate
-that the state did not at any time form a distinct single culture or
-subculture but that it was rather the meeting place of many, due
-possibly to the rivers that enclose, lead to and intersect its
-territory. It was at one and the same time a part of one or more
-widespread patterns or phases and a patchwork of subcultures that
-extended into neighboring states. There was a tendency for the cultures
-of the northern four-fifths of the state (roughly north of a line
-joining East St. Louis with Evansville, Indiana) to be more like the
-adjacent regions, while those of the remaining counties were more
-closely related to those of Kentucky, Tennessee, southern Indiana and
-Missouri and rather readily distinguishable from those of their northern
-neighbors.
-
-There are few instances when it appears probable that a part of the
-state was invaded by a people of a distinctly differing culture. The
-Paleo-Indian Big Game Hunters presumably found in Illinois virgin
-country without previous human occupants. The Baumerians probably
-entered Illinois from south of the Ohio and expelled or absorbed the
-conservative Terminal Archaics. Possibly Mortonians intruded into the
-Black Sand-Red Ocre culture of Illinois from the northwest. Less
-plausibly, the Stone Vault Grave people may have pushed their way into
-Adams County from the Gasconade River region of Missouri.
-
-The emphasis in this paper has been placed perhaps on the change of
-cultures. To keep one from getting an erroneous impression of cultural
-stability, it should be said that, in the writer’s opinion, a culture
-and subculture contained in greater or smaller areas change gradually
-through a process of invention here and there and through interchanges
-of improvements back and forth over a long time. When the change is
-sufficient to be noted as a “new” culture, the various cultural elements
-or features are apt to be widely distributed over much the same area.
-Thus, Baumer seems to have existed for a time alongside Terminal Archaic
-but finally spread through the southern counties; Hopewellian may have
-persisted in Calhoun County for a century or more after its collapse to
-the north and east; and the Final phase may have lingered on in remote
-portions of the state until Cahokia was past the height of its glory. In
-general, perhaps it could be said that the southern fifth and the
-remaining four-fifths of the state were out of step with each other most
-of the time.
-
-As previously noted, some of the Paleo-Indian families, upon the retreat
-of the last glacier, settled in Illinois as they did in the neighboring
-states, adapted themselves to the changed surroundings, and in so doing
-developed the Archaic culture or way of life. This phase developed
-through a series of subcultures though not necessarily identical
-sequences in all the states or even within Illinois. In southern
-Illinois, Terminal Archaic seems to have persisted until about 2000 B.C.
-while in the north, it apparently had developed into Initial (early)
-Woodland a few centuries earlier. The Baumer subculture, probably
-arising from the Archaic of Tennessee, appears to have been carried by
-its bearers into southeastern Illinois along the Tennessee and
-Cumberland rivers. Although widespread in the Mississippi Valley, the
-Archaic population was thinly scattered.
-
-In northern Illinois and in Wisconsin the Black Sand-Red Ochre culture
-seems to have developed from the native Terminal Archaic (and Old
-Copper) possibly around 2500 B.C. The Morton (Central Basin) people
-appear to have had their cultural roots outside the state and to have
-combined with the native groups (Black Sand-Red Ochre) they found in the
-northern counties. Average populational distribution was still low with
-the small settlements perhaps somewhat more numerous though no more
-populous than during Archaic times. The early Woodland peoples differed
-from their predecessors mainly in being pottery-makers. In southern
-Illinois only they practiced storage of acorns and hickory nuts
-extensively.
-
-About 500 B.C. in northern Illinois the Morton people more or less
-contemporaneously with similarly advanced peoples in Iowa, Wisconsin,
-Indiana, Michigan and Ohio, passed into the Hopewellian civilization
-which was erected on the cultivation of maize, beans, squash and
-tobacco, and the technologies of the earlier Woodland period. In
-southern Illinois Baumer developed into the Crab Orchard culture whose
-people traded with the more northern Hopewellians, intermarried with
-them and finally adopted the Hopewellian way of life about 100 B.C.
-
-A century or two later, Hopewellian in the north of Illinois began to
-deteriorate and eventually broke up into a number of small subcultures,
-obviously closely related but still distinguishable archaeologically.
-The same disintegration of Hopewellian took place in southern Illinois a
-few centuries later, and by 400 or 450 B.C. Hopewellian had disappeared
-from all Illinois except possibly in Calhoun County in the west, while
-south of the Ohio River it still continued to spread and flourish in
-Mississippi and Louisiana for some centuries.
-
-In Illinois a period of decadence set in for the next few centuries
-(possibly 250 to 1000 A.D.). The larger settlements or settlement
-clusters dwindled to mere hamlets, whose remains are scarcely
-distinguishable from the early Woodland artifacts except that the
-tobacco pipe is present. Though they must still have retained a
-tradition of plant-raising, they seem to have avoided it and reverted to
-a pure hunting-collecting economy. Even in southern Illinois the storage
-of food seems to have played an insignificant role. Nevertheless
-throughout this cultural recession, certain trends occur in all the six
-Final Woodland subcultures which foreshadow later developments in the
-Middle (Mississippi) Phase.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 38. The Stream of Culture. The archaeological
- cultures within Illinois are included within the two heavy lines,
- openings in which indicate cultural extensions beyond or intrusions
- into the state. Vertical positions indicate sequences in a general
- way. (Drawing by Jeanne McCarty.)]
-
-About 1000 A.D. or possibly a little earlier, the Final Woodland
-developed into an early Protomississippi (Protomiss) and, at last,
-(possibly 1000 to 1100 A.D.) into the full-blown Middle Phase
-civilization. The Cahokia subculture appears to be primarily, though not
-exclusively, Illinoisian while the Cumberland development in the
-southeast of the state was shared more generously with adjacent Indiana,
-Kentucky and Tennessee. Judging by the distribution of stone box (cist)
-graves, the Cumberland subculture seems to have expanded westward at the
-expense of the Cahokia peoples to envelope most of the southern counties
-from Monroe to White. (Another interpretation might be that the grave
-type of their eastern Cumberland neighbors was adopted by the
-Cahokians.) The Crable Village, possibly a late Cahokian settlement,
-yields artifacts suggesting cultural influences brought in from Iowa,
-Missouri and possibly Arkansas. It is probable that the culture came to
-an end in Illinois by 1500 or 1550. This fact coupled with the pottery
-evidence makes it highly probable (though possibly not conclusive) that
-the disorganized Illini Confederacy embraced the tribes whose members
-were the descendants of the people of the great Middle Phase
-civilization in Illinois.
-
-More or less contemporaneous with the Middle Phase culture were the
-so-called Upper Phase peoples of Missouri, Iowa, Wisconsin, Michigan and
-Indiana. These were represented in Illinois by the Fisher peoples of the
-Langford subculture known chiefly from sites along the Illinois,
-Kankakee and Des Plaines rivers in northeastern Illinois and (chiefly on
-a pottery basis) in northwestern Indiana and southern Michigan.
-
-Beset by enemies on the east, south, north and northwest, with their
-traditions of former greatness fading, the demoralized Illini tribes
-welcomed the protection of French soldiers. Their own resourcefulness,
-courage, pride, and confidence in themselves and their culture continued
-to deteriorate, their numbers to diminish under the softening influence
-of alcohol and the persistent assaults of the ruder more aggressive
-Winnebago, Sauk, Fox, Potawatomi and Kickapoo tribes invading Illinois
-from the north until they were reduced by 1833 to a mere handful of a
-hundred odd men, women and children. The demands on the part of citizens
-of the United States for Illinois lands was brought to a head by the
-scare of the Black Hawk War, and the Illini, their traditional Indian
-friends and enemies, were transferred to new territory west of the
-Mississippi. Thus ended the aboriginal occupation of Illinois that had
-endured for at least 10,000 years.
-
-
-
-
- GLOSSARY
-
-
-ADVANCED PHASE: The earliest pottery-making cultures of Woodland in
- southern Illinois. The peoples seem to have been storers of acorns
- and hickory nuts. It is sometimes called early Woodland.
-
-AMERINDIAN: The American Indian of Mongolian racial stock so named to
- distinguish him from the Asiatic Indian who is of the white or
- Caucasian race.
-
-ANTHROPOLOGY: The study of man and his cultural activities.
-
-ARCHAEOLOGY: The division of anthropology that studies peoples of the
- past through the remains of their works that are found in the
- ground.
-
-ARCHAIC (SUBCULTURE): An archaeological subdivision of the Lithic
- Pattern characterized by broad-bladed barbed spearheads,
- spearthrower weights and “bannerstones,” small camps, and a
- hunting-collecting economy (without plant-raising or food-storage).
-
-ARROWHEADS: Projectile points less than three inches long presumed to
- have been used to tip arrows.
-
-ART: A form of human endeavor in which the individual or artist, with
- more or less skill, tries to produce an object or activity of such a
- nature that it is esthetically satisfying in some sense both to
- himself and to his group generally.
-
-ARTIFACTS: Any object made by man, or a natural object modified by man,
- in order to satisfy a cultural need. (Only the names and uses of
- artifacts that are not self-explanatory appear in the glossary).
-
-ATLATL: See SPEARTHROWER.
-
-ASSEMBLAGE: In this paper assemblage refers to the selected significant
- artifact types of an archaeological unit. In a more general sense,
- it signifies the aggregate of artifacts found at a particular site,
- or in a deposit belonging to a single culture at the site.
-
-AX: Refers in this paper to the grooved ground stone head resembling the
- modern steel ax in general form and presumably used for chopping in
- a somewhat similar manner.
-
-AZTALAN: The site of a Middle Phase fortified village with mounds in
- Jefferson County, Wisconsin, in the Cahokia Subculture. It was
- investigated by the Milwaukee Public Museum. See S. A. Barrett in
- Bibliography.
-
-BARB: A projection or shoulder near the base of the blade of a spear,
- dart or arrowhead that serves to retain it in a wound and to
- stimulate bleeding. One of a number of “backward” projections on a
- harpoon that serves a similar purpose.
-
-BAST: The inner bark (phloem) of a tree.
-
-BREECH CLOTH or CLOUT: An article of clothing consisting of a narrow
- band or fold of cloth or skin that passes around the waist and
- between the legs.
-
-BURIAL MOUND: Any man-made hill or knoll erected primarily to enclose
- the dead.
-
-CACHE: A deposit of a large number of artifacts in a grave or, in
- general, a number of artifacts found together in the earth.
-
-CALUMET: See note, page 48.
-
-CELT: An ungrooved stone or copper hatchet head.
-
-CHIEF: An official selected and formally installed in office by some
- social process who exercises civil authority by virtue of office.
-
-CHIPPING: See Flaking.
-
-CHOPPER: Generally any tool used for chopping, hewing, or hacking.
- Specifically, a chipped flint tool roughly hatchet shaped. Some hand
- choppers have the edge of the blade paralleling the longer axis of
- the piece.
-
-CHUNKEY STONE: A polished stone disk that was used as a bowl in various
- types of games.
-
-CIVILIZATION: See note, page 26.
-
-CLASSIC: The term used in this paper to designate the phase to which the
- Hopewellian Civilization of the Woodland pattern belongs.
-
-CLOVIS POINT: A type of leaf-shaped spearhead with a longitudinal groove
- (channel or fluting) generally extending one fourth to one half the
- length of the piece from its base toward its tip.
-
-CLUB: An adaptation of a stick for a weapon or a tool for hurling
- (throwing stick) or battering (war club). The war club is often
- weighted with a stone head for greater effectiveness. It differs
- from the tomahawk in that it has no cutting edge.
-
-CONCHOIDAL FRACTURE: The property of flint and certain other stones when
- struck with a hammer of chipping away in flakes which leave concave
- or shell-like scars or hollows. By suitable control methods, tool
- and weapon heads of desired types can be produced.
-
-CONOIDAL or CONICAL BASE: The characteristic pointed base of Woodland
- pots.
-
-CRAB ORCHARD: A division of the Baumer subculture.
-
-CULTURE: Culture as used in this paper has one of two meanings, each
- readily understood in its context. In a general sense, it means the
- significant beliefs, customary activities and social prohibitions
- peculiar to man (together with the man-made tools, weapons and other
- material objects that he finds or has found necessary) that modify,
- limit or enhance in some manner, most of his discernible natural
- activities due to his physical animal inheritance and organization.
- Culture in a specific sense refers to the significant cultural
- features of the group or period under consideration, the way of
- life. See FEATURE, CULTURAL.
-
-CUMBERLAND: A subculture of the Middle (Mississippi) Phase that
- flourished in southern Illinois, western Kentucky and Tennessee,
- archaeologically known as Gordon-Fewkes or Tennessee-Cumberland.
-
-DAGGER: A long sharp-pointed blade of flint (or a copper pin) presumably
- hafted with a wooden handle, used as a hunting knife or in
- hand-to-hand fighting.
-
-DARTHEADS: Medium-sized weapon heads (2½ to 4 inches long) presumably
- used to tip lances or javelins.
-
-DICKSON MOUND: A burial mound near Lewistown in Fulton County where some
- three hundred skeletons together with their grave offerings have
- been exposed to view. It is now a State Park and open to visitors.
-
-DIGGING STICK: A conveniently-shaped stick used by primitive peoples in
- collecting tubers and roots and small animals, digging storage pits,
- and for preparing the soil for planting. Antler was sometimes shaped
- and presumably employed in like manner.
-
-DIGGING TOOL: Any implement employed by primitive peoples in digging—a
- digging stick, a shell hoe, or a chipped flint hoe.
-
-DOMESTICATION: The breeding and rearing of plants and animals under
- man’s control and for his needs.
-
-DRIFT (rarely drifter): A blunt tool of antler or bone presumably held
- in the hand and pressed against a flint to flake it, or one held
- against the flint piece and struck with a hammer for a like purpose.
-
-DUGOUT: A boat made by hollowing out a log with fire and tools and
- shaping its exterior suitably for water travel.
-
-ECONOMIC ASPECT: That division of primitive culture concerned primarily
- with securing and preparing food, shelter, clothing, and raw
- materials for tools, weapons and other material devices, and the
- technologies involved. This required considerable knowledge of
- natural resources, properties of materials, and lay of the land and
- permits freer direct creative intellectual effort than does any
- other aspect.
-
-ECONOMY: The chief means of securing food and other basic physical
- requirements of man, as a hunting-collecting economy.
-
-EFFIGY: Any artifact resembling in outline, in relief, or in the round
- some living organism or mythical being.
-
-EFFIGY MOUND: A mound of earth in low relief shaped in outline form to
- resemble an animal or some geometric or other conventionalized form.
- They are often found in groups together with conical and elongated
- or linear mounds in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa and Illinois.
-
-EFFIGY POT: A pottery vessel made in the form of an animal, human being,
- or a part of one, or having conventionalized bird or animal head and
- tail projecting from opposite sides of rim or mouth (generally of
- shallow bowls), occurring most commonly in the Middle (Mississippi)
- Phase.
-
-EXTENDED: As applied to burials, a skeleton lying at full length usually
- on its side or back.
-
-FAMILY, EXTENDED: A man, his wife or wives, their descendants in the
- male or female line as custom dictates, and their families who
- consider themselves as a distinct social unit usually with an
- acknowledged leader or headman. The extended family usually lives in
- a local settlement or a limited territory.
-
-FAMILY, SIMPLE: A man, his wife or wives and their unmarried children.
-
-FAMILY-TYPE SOCIAL CONTROL: The manner of maintaining peace, order, and
- obedience to elders and to custom in tribes and local groups in the
- Self-Domestication Stage secured by early and strict indoctrination
- of the young in the family and through public opinion (social
- approval and disapproval) rather than by force and political
- agencies.
-
-FEATHER CLOTH: Robes or blankets made by attaching overlapping feathers
- to the outer surface of a textile or netting to simulate a bird
- skin.
-
-FEATURE, CULTURAL: Any type of cultural organization (or institution)
- within a tribe or independent cultural unit such as marriage, the
- family division of labor, social control, political governing
- agency, Sacred Tradition (“mythology”), etc.
-
-FERTILITY RITES: The religious ceremonies performed in a primitive tribe
- for the purpose of insuring its welfare, the continuance of an
- abundant supply of food animals and other natural resources on which
- it depends, and possibly with expressions of gratitude for past
- benefits.
-
-FESTIVALS: The term applied to the religious ceremonies of plant-raising
- peoples that relate to planting and the harvesting of crops.
-
-FINAL PHASE: The decadent Woodland culture, archaeologically known as
- late Woodland, is characteristic of much of Illinois in the interval
- between the fall of Hopewellian and the rise of Mississippi.
-
-FLAKER (DRIFT): A flint-working tool either used alone with simple
- pressure or as a punch struck by a stone hammer (indirect
- percussion).
-
-FLAKING or CHIPPING: The method of working flint into tools and weapons
- by direct hammer blows, indirect percussion or by pressure with a
- flaker.
-
-FLEXED: As applied to burials, a skeleton (generally lying on its side)
- with knees drawn up to or near chest, arms close to side or with
- hand(s) near head.
-
-FLINT: In this paper, any stone that flakes with a conchoidal fracture
- that was so used by Amerindians to make chipped tools and weapons.
-
-FOLSOM POINT: A flint spearhead having the faces of the blade hollowed
- out by chipping (channeling or fluting) except for a narrow strip
- paralleling each edge including the tip (see Figure 3, page 11).
-
-FOOD-DRAFT ANIMALS: The large mammals (especially the ox) that were
- domesticated by man and besides providing him with a continuously
- available supply of meat, served as a beast of burden or to draw a
- wheeled vehicle, to drag the plough, and as a source of energy to
- turn the mill. Animals were not generally so used in North America.
-
-FOOD-STORERS: Those peoples who by virtue of native ingenuity and some
- special natural resource in their region were enabled to store up
- sufficient food supplies to last them for several months.
-
-FORMALIZED RELIGION: The forms of prayer, worship, devotion and ritual
- and the organization of priests, etc. by which plant-raising tribes
- carry on their assumed relationships with the world of the unknown
- agents of natural forces.
-
-GORGET: (pronounced gor´-jet) A large flat artifact, possibly at times
- an insigne, of stone, shell, copper or bone worn on the chest.
-
-GRAVE GOODS: The jewelry, insignia, weapons or implements of a dead
- tribesman together with offerings that may have been placed in his
- grave by friends or relatives, including vessels containing food and
- water. Also called beigaben, funeral offerings, grave furniture,
- etc.
-
-GRINDING: The process by which a stone, bone, shell or metal artifact
- was shaped by rubbing with sand and water or against a piece of
- sandstone (abrader).
-
-GRINDING STONE: A large flat or slightly hollowed stone on which seeds,
- berries, or nuts were crushed or ground by a smaller hand stone
- (muller or pestle).
-
-GUARDIAN SPIRIT: Among primitive peoples, a being from the invisible
- spirit world who appeared to a person in a dream and was believed to
- serve the dreamer thereafter as his personal protector.
-
-HAMLET: The name used in this paper for local settlements of Archaic and
- Initial Woodland sites. They probably had populations of less than
- one hundred persons.
-
-HAMMERSTONE: A stone hammer. Any native or modified cobblestone used as
- a hammer.
-
-HATCHET: A ground stone or copper celt head. Tomahawk or hafted hatchet.
-
-HOUSEHOLD: A man, his wife, and children, married and unmarried together
- with slaves and others, if any, who customarily in their culture
- live under one shelter or roof.
-
-INDIRECT PERCUSSION: The use of a punch with a hammer, especially in the
- chipping of stone.
-
-INITIAL PHASE: The earliest pottery-making cultures of Woodland in
- northern Illinois, archaeologically known as early Woodland.
-
-INITIATION RITES: Puberty rites. As used in this paper, the ceremonies
- by which a boy on “becoming of age” is admitted to adult membership
- in the tribe. Somewhat simpler rites are performed for girls also in
- some tribes.
-
-INSIGNE: (Plural _insignia_) Any artifact worn by primitive people as a
- symbol of rank or class, birth (in a particular family), office,
- priesthood, or of individual prowess.
-
-INSTITUTIONS: See Social Structure.
-
-JEWELRY: Any object other than insignia, paint, or clothing worn by
- primitive man as personal adornment.
-
-KINCAID COMMUNITY: The site of a Middle Phase village, mounds,
- fortifications and other cultural remains in Pope and Massac
- counties, Illinois, on the Ohio River a few miles above Paducah,
- Kentucky.
-
-LAKE BAIKAL: A large inland lake in the south of Siberia. Pottery from
- the surrounding region resembles generalized Woodland ware,
- especially that of the Initial Phase.
-
-LINEAGE: The social group (including dead persons) whose members are
- descended from some certain or mythical ancestor, either male or
- female as the custom prevails, and which considers itself a distinct
- social unit. (See also Extended Family.)
-
-LITHIC: A term employed in this paper as embracing cultures roughly
- equivalent to those of the Self-Domestication Stage, but without
- pottery.
-
-MANA: Superhuman power that primitive man believed to reside in certain
- inanimate objects, in certain persons at times and in spirits, that
- under suitable conditions could be transferred either wholly or in
- part to other objects or persons. Improperly handled it was a source
- of grave danger.
-
-MIDDLE PHASE: The archaeological term for the highest development of the
- Mississippi pattern in the United States. In Illinois it is
- represented by the Cahokia and Cumberland subcultures.
-
-MISSISSIPPI: The major archaeological pattern that succeeded the earlier
- Woodland in most of the United States east of the Rocky Mountains
- and High Plains and that was still in existence in some parts of
- this country as late as 1700 A.D. It is characterized by relatively
- intensive plant-raising, political government, walled villages,
- temples (or sacred groves) and a priesthood, semi- to permanent
- dwellings, pottery of varied shapes, with globular bodies and
- secondary features, the bow and arrow.
-
-MODOC ROCK SHELTER: An ancient settlement of Archaic peoples in Randolph
- County, Illinois, dating from 8000 to 2100 B.C. See Bibliography
- under Deuel, and Fowler and Winters.
-
-MOUND: Any rise or hill of earth and/or stone that resulted from some
- activity of man, such as refuse mound, shell mound, burial mound,
- temple mound, etc. See BURIAL, EFFIGY, TEMPLE.
-
-MOUND BUILDERS: A term having little significance, meaning any group
- that erected mounds. In American archaeology it sometimes refers
- specifically to Hopewellians, to Mississippians or to both.
-
-MYTHOLOGY: See SACRED TRADITION.
-
-OBSIDIAN: Volcanic glass, a material imported by Hopewellians possibly
- from Wyoming. Rare in Illinois.
-
-PALEO-INDIAN (See Clovis and Folsom): Hunters of big game who roamed
- over North America in glacial times.
-
-PATTERN: The largest archaeological unit in the McKern Classification
- System.
-
-PECKING: The process (other than chipping) by which a stone artifact was
- brought to general shape by breaking off small particles with a
- stone hammer.
-
-PEOPLE: The term “people” as used in this paper does not refer to a
- physical type but simply to cultural groups unless specifically
- stated to the contrary.
-
-PERIOD: Unless otherwise specifically stated, the word applies to a
- cultural level regardless of time and place.
-
-PHASE: The major division of the pattern as used in the McKern
- Classification System.
-
-PLANT-RAISING: The economy or cultural status of a cultural group who
- grew food (and fibre) plants but were without domesticated
- food-draft animals.
-
-POLITICAL ORGANIZATION: A formalized social means of controlling the
- members of a nation or tribe and compelling compliance with
- established customs or laws with defined customary or lawful
- penalties for violations together with the machinery for determining
- equity, rights, or damages in non-criminal disputes through
- governmental agencies such as officers (chiefs) and official bodies
- (councils) regularly selected for these purposes.
-
-POLISHING: A process by which the surface of a ground stone artifact was
- brought to a high degree of smoothness and gloss by rubbing with
- fine earth and water. It is readily distinguishable from polish due
- to wear in digging.
-
-PRIEST: Any person selected in a regular and customary manner for
- religious office who by virtue of installation into that office and
- acceptance of the duties is (believed to be) invested with the power
- to communicate and intercede with members of the spirit world, a god
- or gods or in certain instances to act for them on behalf of his
- group.
-
-PRIMITIVE PEOPLE: Refers to any people in the Self-Domestication Stage
- and to the simple plant-growers of the Farming Period.
-
-PROTOCULTURAL: A stage presumed to have existed prior to man’s discovery
- of the principle of conchoidal fracturing of flint, when he used
- native sticks and stones as tools, and sometimes by haphazard
- breaking of these secured new forms more suitable for his purposes.
-
-PROTOMISS: An abbreviated form for Protomississippi, the earliest known
- subculture of the Middle (Mississippi) Phase in southwestern
- Illinois. Dillinger is the type site.
-
-RELIGION: The set of beliefs (Sacred Tradition), rules (tabus), and
- activities (including rituals) that govern the life of a society
- with regard to those superhuman forces with which the individual
- feels himself surrounded and which neither he nor his group by
- themselves can control. Religious practice includes prayers or
- requests for the continuance of well-being and life’s necessities,
- thanksgiving for past blessings, and a belief in the necessity of
- right conduct of the individuals in their daily living. In all known
- primitive religions, a belief in some form exists of spirit beings
- and/or gods with superhuman powers. See FORMALIZED RELIGION.
-
-ROCK SHELTER: An overhanging rock ledge facing away from the prevailing
- wind that afforded protection to a primitive family from the
- elements and wild animals.
-
-ROUGH STONE: This term refers to stone used as it occurs in nature with
- virtually no artificial modification other than that resulting from
- use such as a common hammerstone, an unworked abrader, or a grinding
- stone. The stone may have a relatively smooth surface due to natural
- causes.
-
-SACRED TRADITION: The term used here to signify the embodiment of the
- significant (effective) beliefs and rules that governed the behavior
- and activities of a primitive tribe in matters relating to the
- unseen world of spirits (or gods) and unknown forces, which were
- handed down from generation to generation. It is usually included in
- the inept term “mythology” which may also contain tales and legends
- that serve for mere entertainment.
-
-SELF-DOMESTICATION STAGE: The earliest stage of true human culture which
- began presumably with the discovery of controlled flint chipping and
- the invention of flint tool types. During this stage, man is enabled
- to secure a fairly constant food supply by hunting and collecting,
- keeps his young under parental care and control for several years
- and learns to accommodate himself more or less peaceably to his
- family and to fellow tribesmen during brief periods of religious and
- social gatherings.
-
-SHAMAN: A person who by virtue of dreams or visions believes he can
- communicate with spirits, obtain from them superhuman powers for the
- benefit of his social group and tribe and who has demonstrated these
- abilities over a greater or longer time to the satisfaction of his
- fellows.
-
-SHELLS, MARINE: Shells from the ocean or Gulf of Mexico, raw materials
- secured by traders or through exchange for other goods. The most
- common marine shells found in Illinois cultures are the _Cassis
- madagascarensis_ (Hopewellian), the Busycon or Fulgar (Middle
- Mississippi and Hopewellian), _Marginella_ (Initial Woodland,
- Hopewellian and Middle Mississippi), _Oliva_ (Middle Mississippi),
- and _Olivella_ (Hopewellian).
-
-SOCIAL ASPECT: That division of primitive culture that is concerned
- preeminently with preserving and stabilizing fundamental customs,
- with the maintenance of peace and order within its primary social
- units, and to this end, in the organization, functioning and
- continuation of such units.
-
-SOCIAL CONTROL: Any general social means by which a social or political
- group preserves peace and order within itself and group protection
- against outsiders (see Family-type and Political Agency).
-
-SOCIAL STRUCTURE: The persisting system of significant relationships in
- a society that prevails without regard to the particular individuals
- involved.
-
-SPEARHEADS: Projectile points 3 to 6 or 6½ inches long presumed to have
- been used to tip spears.
-
-SPEARTHROWER (ATLATL): A short stick by which increased leverage is
- obtained in hurling a spear. It gives greater range and an accuracy
- comparable to the bow at shorter distances.
-
-SPEARTHROWER WEIGHT: A weight secured to the spearthrower for
- controlling it and increasing the speed of the spear.
-
-SPEAR, THRUSTING: A long spear that is fitted with a long, narrow head
- generally without barbs or shoulders, that can be easily withdrawn
- from a wound. It is primarily for use in the hand, not for throwing.
-
-SPECIALIZATION (CRAFT): An occupation in which a man or household of a
- primitive community engages primarily to the considerable exclusion
- of the general economic pursuits or the remainder of his group. It
- should not be confused with the production of a highly skilled
- craftsman.
-
-SPECIALIZATION (OF TOOLS): Applies to numerous variations in the forms
- derived from a general artifact type presumably to accomplish better
- and more easily certain special requirements of construction or
- manufacture.
-
-STAGE (CULTURAL): One of the major periods into which cultures may be
- divided by virtue of its degree of development which depends
- primarily on the fundamental invention that ushered it in.
-
-SPIRITUAL ASPECT: That division of primitive culture concerned primarily
- with tribal values, religion, recreation and the arts.
-
-STATUS (CULTURAL): A subdivision of a stage. A substage.
-
-STONE: Unless otherwise noted any kind of stone generally used by
- primitive peoples for pecking, grinding and polishing into weapons,
- tools, etc., for example, granite, greenstone, gneiss, shale,
- limestone, basalt.
-
-STONE VAULT GRAVE: A type of burial mound consisting chiefly of flat
- stones enclosing a walled-up tomb chamber, the whole covered with
- earth. In Illinois known at present only from Adams County.
-
-STONE VAULT SUBCULTURE: A division of Final Woodland Phase that is
- characterized by stone vault graves.
-
-SUBCULTURE: Any archaeological grouping smaller than a phase.
-
-SUBSTAGE or STATUS: A subdivision of a _Stage_ that develops as the
- result of a significant invention, discovery of a special resource,
- or some other condition of the surroundings.
-
-TECHNOLOGY: The processes by which any artifact is produced.
-
-TEEPEE: A conical framework of poles covered with bark, skins, brush,
- mats, etc. used as a shelter or hut by primitive peoples.
-
-TEMPERING: Foreign material such as sand, crushed limestone, plant
- fibers, crushed shell, etc. mixed with the clay in pottery-making to
- render the vessel less likely to crack in firing.
-
-TEMPLE MOUND: A rectangular pyramid with a flat top on which a temple
- was built. Similar mounds were used for council and chief’s houses
- among historic Mississippi peoples. Flat-topped pyramidal mounds are
- characteristic of the important Middle Mississippi sites in
- Illinois.
-
-THERMAL MAXIMUM: A time interval (roughly between 5000 and 2000 B.C.) in
- which the climate was warmer and drier than at present.
-
-TOMAHAWK: A hafted hatchet of stone or metal used in fighting.
-
-TOTEM: An animal, plant or inanimate object that is regarded as the
- symbol of a social or political group.
-
-TUMPLINE: A sling or pack strap that rests on the forehead, passes over
- the shoulders, and is used for carrying a load on the back.
-
-TURKEY-TAIL: A large spearhead, broadly oval in the middle and
- double-pointed with notches near one end.
-
-TYPE STATION(S): The site (or sites) that at present seem, to the
- author, to give the fullest view of life in a subculture, including
- as far as possible a village (or camp) and burial site.
-
-WAR (ARCHAIC): The blood feud. In the Archaic period, this was the
- method of interfamily or intergroup retaliation for murder or other
- serious injury to one family or local group by a member of another.
- It was carried on by alternate sneak raids between the local
- settlements involved, with the object of killing one or more members
- of the group attacked, (destroying property), and escaping without
- loss.
-
-WAR (PLANT-RAISERS): Hostilities between plant-raising tribes were
- pursued by sneak raids having for their objectives the surprise and
- attack of villages, the ambush of enemy parties, and the capture of
- prisoners. (Murder, black magic, and other crimes committed within
- the tribe were generally dealt with by socio-judicial custom).
-
-WATTLE AND DAUB: A framework of posts, interlaced with branches and
- twigs and plastered over with clay for house and fortification walls
- common in Middle Phase and probably in other periods.
-
-WIGWAM: As used here, a roughly hemispherical hut having a framework of
- poles set in the ground with their tops arched over and secured
- together, the whole covered over with leafy branches, skins, bark,
- mats or thatch.
-
-WINDBREAK: A vertical or inclined framework of poles covered with
- branches and leaves, skins, bark, etc. erected by primitive peoples
- as a shelter against wind, sun, and storm.
-
-WOODLAND: One of the major archaeological patterns of the eastern,
- southern and central United States, characterized by plant-raising
- (except possibly in its Initial Phase), by elongated globular clay
- pots (with cord-roughened exteriors, pointed bottoms, and incised
- line and punctate decoration), hamlets or small villages (except in
- the Classic Phase), with flint spearheads (but no arrowheads except
- in Final Phase).
-
-WRAP-AROUND-SKIRT: A rectangular piece of clothing made of skin, fur, or
- cloth worn by Hopewellian and Middle Mississippi women. It was
- wrapped around the body from the waist to the knees or below and was
- secured at the top by a belt or other means.
-
-YUMA POINTS: Chipped spearheads of various general shapes including
- leaf-shaped forms, without channeling.
-
-
-
-
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
-
-
- ADVANCED (WOODLAND) PHASE
-
- 1951 Cole, F. C. et al in _The Baumer Focus_, in KINCAID, A
- PREHISTORIC ILLINOIS METROPOLIS, pp. 184-210, University of
- Chicago, Chicago (Baumer Subculture).
- 1951 Maxwell, Moreau S. _The Woodland Cultures in Southern
- Illinois_, pp. 232-243. Beloit College, Beloit, Wisconsin
- (Baumer Subculture).
- 1951 _Ibid._, pp. 78-183 (Crab Orchard Subculture).
- Tennessee
- 1922 Harrington, M. R. _Cherokee and Earliest Remains on Upper
- Tennessee River_, INDIAN NOTES AND MONOGRAPHS, No. 24, New York
- (Round Grave People or Baumer Subculture).
- 1952 Kneberg, Madeline. _The Tennessee Area_ in Griffin, Ed.,
- ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE EASTERN UNITED STATES, p. 192 and Fig. 102.,
- University of Chicago, Chicago (Round Grave, Upper Valley or
- Baumer).
-
- ARCHAIC PHASE
-
- 1950 Deuel, Thorne. _Man’s Venture in Culture_, STORY OF ILLINOIS
- SERIES, No. 6, pp. 5-12, Illinois State Museum, Springfield.
- 1957 Deuel, Thorne, _The Modoc Shelter_, REPORT OF INVESTIGATIONS,
- No. 7, Springfield, revised and reprinted from _Natural
- History_, October, 1957, pp. 400-405 (Simple and Medial).
- 1956 Fowler, Melvin L. and Winters, Howard. _Modoc Rock Shelter,
- Preliminary Report_, REPORT OF INVESTIGATIONS, No. 4, Illinois
- State Museum, Springfield. (Simple and Medial).
- 1957 Fowler, Melvin L. _Ferry Site, Hardin County, Illinois_,
- SCIENTIFIC PAPERS SERIES, Vol. VIII, No. 1, Illinois State
- Museum, Springfield. (Terminal Subculture).
- 1950 Titterington, P. F. _Some Non-Pottery Sites in the St. Louis
- Area_ in ILLINOIS STATE ARCHAEOLOGICAL JOURNAL, N.S. Vol. I,
- pp. 19-31 (Terminal Subculture).
- Tennessee
- 1947 Lewis, T. M. N. and Kneberg, Madeline. _The Archaic Horizon in
- Western Tennessee_, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville (Eva
- focus or subculture).
- United States generally
- 1957 Wormington, H. M. _Ancient Man in North America_, POPULAR
- SERIES, No. 4, 4th Edition, revised, Denver (Archaic and
- Paleo-Indian Assemblages).
-
- CLASSIC (HOPEWELLIAN) PHASE
-
- 1937 Cole, F. C. and Deuel, Thorne. _Rediscovering Illinois_, pp.
- 130-191. University of Chicago, Chicago.
- 1952 Deuel, Thorne, Ed. _Hopewellian Communities_, SCIENTIFIC PAPERS
- SERIES, Vol. V, Illinois State Museum, Springfield.
- 1957 Fowler, Melvin L. _Rutherford Mound, Hardin County, Illinois_,
- SCIENTIFIC PAPERS SERIES, Vol. VII, No. 1, Illinois State
- Museum, Springfield.
-
- MIDDLE (MISSISSIPPI) PHASE
-
- Cahokia Subculture
- 1937 Cole, F. C. and Deuel, Thorne. _Rediscovering Illinois_, pp.
- 75-94, 111-125, 127, University of Chicago, Chicago.
- 1928 Moorehead, W. K. _The Cahokia Mounds_, University of Illinois,
- BULLETIN, Vol. 26, No. 4, Urbana.
- 1939 Simpson, A. M. _The Kingston Village Site_, Peoria Academy of
- Science, Peoria. (Privately printed.)
- 1952 Smith, Hale G. _The Crable Site, Fulton County, Illinois_,
- ANTHROPOLOGY PAPERS No. 7, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
- 1938 Titterington, P. F. _The Cahokia Mound Group and Its Village
- Site Materials_, St. Louis. (Privately printed.)
- Cahokia Subculture (Wisconsin)
- 1933 Barrett, S. A. _Ancient Aztalan_, BULL. PUBLIC MUSEUM OF
- MILWAUKEE, Vol. 13.
- Cumberland Subculture
- 1951 Cole, F. C. et al. _Kincaid, A Prehistoric Illinois
- Metropolis_, pp. 29-164, 293-366, University of Chicago,
- Chicago.
- Cumberland Subculture (Tennessee)
- 1928 Myer, William, Ed. _Two Prehistoric Villages in Middle
- Tennessee_, 41st ANNUAL REPORT, BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY,
- pp. 485-614, Washington.
- Cumberland Subculture (Kentucky)
- 1929 Webb, William S. and Funkhouser, W. D. _The Williams Site in
- Christian County, Kentucky_, UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY REPORTS IN
- ANTHROPOLOGY AND ARCHAEOLOGY, Vol. I, No. 1, pp. 5-23 followed
- by 36 figs., Lexington.
-
- PALEO-INDIAN PHASE
-
- 1954 Kleine, Harold K. _A Remarkable Paleo-Indian Site in Alabama_
- in TEN YEARS OF THE TENNESSEE ARCHAEOLOGIST, Lewis and Kneberg,
- Ed., reprinted from TENNESSEE ARCHAEOLOGIST, 1954.
- 1951 Smail, William. _Some Early Projectile Points from the St.
- Louis Area_, in ILLINOIS STATE ARCHAEOLOGICAL JOURNAL, N. S.,
- Vol. II, No. 1, pp. 11-16.
- 1957 Wormington, H. M. _Ancient Man in North America_, POPULAR
- SERIES, No. 4, 4th Edition, revised, Denver.
-
- UPPER (MISSISSIPPI) PHASE
-
- 1927 Langford, George, Sr. _The Fisher Mound Group, Successive
- Aboriginal Occupations near the Mouth of the Illinois River_,
- in AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGIST, Vol. XXIX, No. 3, pp. 153-206,
- Menasha.
-
- FINAL WOODLAND
-
- Bluff Subculture
- 1935 Titterington, P. F. _Certain Bluff Mounds of Western Jersey
- County, Illinois_ in AMERICAN ANTIQUITY, Vol. I, No. 1, pp.
- 6-46.
- 1943 Titterington, P. F. _The Jersey County, Illinois, Bluff
- Culture_, in AMERICAN ANTIQUITY, Vol. IX, No. 2, pp. 240-245.
- Effigy Mound Subculture (Wisconsin)
- 1932 Barrett, S. A. and Skinner, Alanson. _Certain Mound and Village
- Sites of Shawano and Oconto Counties, Wisconsin_, BULL. PUBLIC
- MUSEUM OF MILWAUKEE, Vol. 10, No. 5, Milwaukee.
- 1928 McKern, W. C. _The Neal and McClaughry Mound Groups_, BULL.
- PUBLIC MUSEUM OF MILWAUKEE, Vol. 3, No. 3, Milwaukee.
- 1933 Nash, Philleo. _The Excavation of the Ross Mound Group I_,
- BULL. PUBLIC MUSEUM OF MILWAUKEE, Vol. 16, No. 1.
- 1956 Rowe, Chandler. _The Effigy Mound Culture of Wisconsin_,
- MILWAUKEE PUBLIC MUSEUM PUBLICATIONS IN ANTHROPOLOGY, No. 3.
- Lewis Subculture
- 1951 Cole, F. C. et al. _The Lewis Focus_ in KINCAID, A PREHISTORIC
- ILLINOIS METROPOLIS, pp. 165-183, University of Chicago,
- Chicago.
- Raymond Subculture
- 1952 Maxwell, Moreau S. _Archaeology of the Lower Ohio Valley_ in
- Griffin, Ed., COLE ANNIVERSARY VOLUME, ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE
- EASTERN UNITED STATES, pp. 186-187 and Fig. 100, University of
- Chicago, Chicago.
- 1951 Maxwell, Moreau S. _The Woodland Cultures in Southern
- Illinois_, pp. 78-172, 194-211, Beloit College, Beloit,
- Wisconsin.
- Stone Vault Subculture
- 1935 Thurber, O. D. _New Type of Burial Mound Near Quincy_ in
- TRANSACTIONS ILLINOIS STATE ACADEMY OF SCIENCE, Springfield,
- Vol. XXVIII, No. 2, pp. 67-68.
- 1910 Fowke, Gerard. _Antiquities of Central and Southeastern
- Missouri_, BULL. BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY, No. 37,
- Washington.
- Tampico Subculture
- 1937 Cole, F. C. and Deuel, Thorne. _Rediscovering Illinois_, pp.
- 191-198, University of Chicago, Chicago.
-
- ILLINI TRIBES
-
- 1934 Pease, Theodore Calvin and Werner, Raymond C. THE FRENCH
- FOUNDATIONS, 1680-1693 (_Memoirs of De Gannes_ by Sieur
- Deliette) pp. 302-395, Springfield, Illinois.
- 1958 Temple, Wayne C. _Historic Tribes, Part 2 of Indian Villages of
- the Illinois Country_ by Sara J. Tucker and Wayne Temple,
- SCIENTIFIC PAPERS SERIES, Vol. II, Illinois State Museum,
- Springfield.
-
- INITIAL (WOODLAND) PHASE
-
- 1937 Cole, F. C. and Deuel, Thorne. _Rediscovering Illinois_ (Red
- Ochre, pp. 57-69; Black Sand, pp. 69-75, 136-149; Morton, pp.
- 39-46, 126, 128-130; 102-104, 106-108), University of Chicago,
- Chicago.
-
-
-
-
- CULTURAL CHARACTERISTICS OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL UNITS
-
-
- ARCHAEOLOGICAL UNITS
-
-
- ARTIFACTS[20]
-
-
- RECONSTRUCTION OF ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL FEATURES
-
-
- RECONSTRUCTION OF RELIGIOUS, ARTISTIC, AND RECREATIONAL FEATURES
-
-
- PALEO-INDIAN PHASE 50,000(?)-8000 B.C.(?)
-
- Narrow leaf-shaped spearheads
- Folsom points
- Clovis points
- Stone hammer (?)
- Flint scrapers (?)
- Personal ornaments (?)
-
- Thrusting weapons
- Simple family (?)
- Lineage in male line (?)
- Big game hunting
- Roving habits following herd
- Temporary camps
- Energy sources for labor, travel and transportation wholly human
-
- Religion based on spirits, mana and on the chief game species hunted
- (?)
-
-
- ARCHAIC PHASE 8000-2500 B.C.
-
- Stone hammers, rough or pitted
- Broad barbed flint spearheads
- Flint dartheads
- Flint scrapers
- Flint awls
- Chipped choppers
- Spearthrower (atlatl) weights
- Grooved stone axes (ground)
- Ground stone celts
- Chipped flint digging tools (hoes)
- Small area settlement sites in the open
- Rock shelters
- Post holes in line
- Necklaces and pendants
- Plummets
- Copper tools
- Dog bones
- Bone-awls
- Whet- or abrading stones
- Bannerstones (with cylindrical hole)
- Flexed burials in Medial and Terminal subculture
-
- Projectile weapon
- Hunting of deer and small mammals and collecting edible plants, clams,
- etc.
- Technologies: flint-chipping, pecking, grinding and polishing of
- stone, grinding and polishing bone, boring bone and stone with
- flint drills and with tube, sand and water, making string
- (from hides and [?] plant-fibers), weaving (?), basket-making
- (?)
- Dog the only domesticated animal
- Marriage
- Family
- Extended family or lineage
- “Independent” local groups
- Windbreaks or flimsy shelters
- Family hunting territory
- Rotating hamlet
- Non-political tribe
- “Family-type” social control
- Puberty rites (Initiation ceremonies)
- Tribal elders and temporary headmen
- Insignia possibly as social acceptance of personal achievement, or as
- family crest
-
- Belief in friendly and ancestral spirits, in mana and in revelation by
- vision or dream
- Sacred tradition (“mythology”)
- The shaman—intercessor with spirits and healer of sick—magic medicines
- Fertility ceremonies—to insure abundant game and to perpetuate sacred
- traditions
- Recreational activities and creative arts practiced chiefly in
- connection with religious ceremonies
- Funeral rites for all deceased tribal members
- Socially important persons on death given special care and preparation
- for burial, and possibly buried in a specially selected place
- Mourning period for dead
- Food and grave offerings left especially for important dead
-
-
- INITIAL (WOODLAND) PHASE 1500-500 B.C.
-
- Elongated globular pots with pointed (conoidal) bases
- Copper ornaments
- Burial mounds and cemeteries
-
- Probably very similar to Archaic
- Copper breastplate or gorgets
- Socially important persons buried in mounds (?)
-
- Very similar to Archaic
- Dog graves in burial mounds
-
-
- ADVANCED (WOODLAND) PHASE 1000(?)-100(?) B.C.
-
- Numerous storage pits containing acorn and hickory nut remains
- Medium-sized settlement sites
- Post holes outlining a square area
- Post holes outlining a circular or oval area
- Flat-bottomed flaring-walled Woodland pots (“flower pots”)
- Polished stone gorgets
- Burials in settlement sites
-
- Storage of acorns, nuts and seeds
- Larger population concentrations of perhaps a 100 or 150 persons
- Semi- to permanent log dwellings, logs upright
- Possibly insignia or badges of leadership or individual prowess
-
- Religion probably transitional between Archaic and plant-raising types
-
-
- CLASSIC (WOODLAND) PHASE [HOPEWELLIAN] 500 B.C.-500 A.D.
-
- Chipped limonite hoes
- Charred maize kernels and cobs (and in Ohio, beans and squash seeds)
- Cloth and feather cloth remains
- Basketry, matting and colored textile impressions
- Marine shell vessels
- Tortoise shell dishes
- River mussel shell spoons with “handles”
- Excellent polished black and painted pottery with occasional variation
- of form—shallow bowls, beakers, effigy and globular shapes
- A coarser duty Woodland ware with elongated bodies and pointed or
- flattened bases
- Large areas with village refuse and numerous mounds
- Post holes outlining an oval or circular area (rare)
- Pottery statuettes showing dress and ornaments worn
- Jewelry of copper, silver, meteoric iron, cut and polished shell
- beads, small marine shells, bears teeth sometimes set with
- copper, pearls or colorful stones, etc.
- Ear ornaments of copper, etc.
- Marine shells from south Atlantic and Gulf Coasts of United States
- Mica from North Carolina
- Obsidian from Wyoming (?)
- Copper from Lake Superior region
- Galena from northwestern Illinois
- Native pearls from river clams
- Gorgets of stone, shell and copper (breastplates)
- Pearls and ground shell beads distributed over the torso of skeleton
- Deer antlers near human skull in grave
- Cut maxillaries (more rarely mandibles) of bear or man on skeletons as
- if worn as pendants
- _Cassis madagascarensis_ shell vessels
- Copper hatchets and adzes etc.
- Platform type tobacco pipes
- Medium to large “dome-shaped” burial mounds enclosing
- Log (rarely stone) tomb chambers
- Bundle burials and ossuaries in mounds with central tomb (northern
- Illinois)
- Cemeteries near mounds (southern Illinois)
- Bodies buried generally in extended position rarely flexed and often
- accompanied by pots, weapons and artistic products
- “Pipes of Pan”
- Beautifully chipped broad spearheads of special subtypes
- Effigy dagger with sheath made from bears’ teeth
-
- Planting-raising economy supplemented by hunting and collecting
- Crops: Maize, beans, squash, tobacco
- Weaving of cloth, basket- and mat-making
- Clothing: Wrap-around-skirt for women, breech cloth for men,
- supplemented by robes in cold weather, feather cloth robes in
- ceremonies. Mocassins for women and probably for men.
- Large villages (or clusters of villages) as well as small settlements
- The wigwam (for lower classes?)
- Possibly log cabin dwellings for highest social class, logs laid
- horizontal as in tomb chambers
- Rise of wealth, rich and extensive trade
- Dug-out boats (?)
- Two or three social classes seem to be indicated by burial customs
- Chiefs—a political form of government, with some of the clans,
- possibly bear, wolverine and bobcat, predominant in certain
- areas
- A tribe organized either politically or into clans with subsidiary
- districts or villages and political or clan chiefs.
- Chiefs may have worn deer antler headdresses.
- Chiefs probably wore feather headdresses, feather cloth robes, mantles
- embroidered with pearls shells and cut shell beads, and other
- insignia of office.
- Tomb chambers probably for chiefs with relatives and retainers slain
- to accompany them
- Chief person in tomb sometimes woman (May indicate matrilineal descent
- or simply ranking woman of highest caste)
- Maxillary (jaw) pendants worn maybe as trophies of war and hunt, or to
- indicate clan of a chief (?)
- Doubtless the pipe served (as it did later) as a safe conduct to
- visiting officials, travellers and traders, and a signature
- and seal to important agreements whether economic, political
- or intertribal
-
- Probably a formalized religion based on the chief food plant, maize
- Regularly appointed priests
- The priest probably wore feather robes and insignia of rank and
- position
- Religion probably included ceremonies connected with plant- or
- maize-raising
- Deities or gods with special powers related to food-raising, etc.
- The spring or planting festival
- The green corn or first fruits festival
- The harvest festival and perhaps minor festivals revolving about the
- deer
- High-ranking priests were probably of the highest caste and their
- bodies given special care on death, elaborate funeral
- ceremonies and burial in the tomb chambers of mounds, with
- tribal mourning
- Beautiful pipes either with or without long wooden items probably
- figured largely in the religious ceremonies
- Shamans probably still practiced the healing art (and black magic).
- They probably used herbals instead of mineral medicines
- High development of art in pottery, ceramic, copper and stone
- sculpture, in engraving on bone in personal adornment and
- technological expertness
-
-
- FINAL (WOODLAND) PHASE 200(?)-1000 A.D.
-
- Boatstones and bar “amulets”
- L-shaped pipe, long-stemmed
- Crude flint arrowheads
- Flexed and semi-flexed skeletons in mound graves and tomb chambers
- Except for above, much like Initial Phase
-
- Spear and spearthrower still the chief weapon, weights tied (?) to
- spearthrower
- Small hamlets
- Bow and arrow known but as yet ineffective as a practical weapon
- Otherwise very similar to Initial Phase
-
- Religion probably with shamans rather than priests and a mixture of
- Initial and Classic Phase religious beliefs and practices and
- superstitions
- Some considerable sanctity probably still attached to tobacco, tobacco
- smoke and the pipe
- Shamans undoubtedly still practiced the healing arts (as well as black
- magic) and possibly simple religious rites
-
-
- MIDDLE (MISSISSIPPI) PHASE 1000-1500 A.D.
-
- Hoes of chipped flint and numerous digging tools
- Charred maize kernels and cobs
- Large settlement areas with flat-topped pyramidal mounds, with cabin
- remains on summits, surrounded by palisade remains in low
- ridges of earth
- Post holes and/or trenches outlining rectangular house floors. Fired
- clay from wattle and daub structure, burned house with charred
- thatch, timbers, rafters, mats, etc.
- Fire pits or fireplaces within house
- Fine polished black and painted wares with globular and flattened
- globular bodies, in many shapes—water bottles, shallow bowls,
- beakers, ollas or jars and effigy forms
- An excellent, dull-gray service ware with similar varieties of shapes
- An excellent storage ware of medium to large size, chiefly globular in
- form
- Busycon, marginella, olivella shells from south Atlantic and Gulf
- Coasts
- Copper from Lake Superior region
- Busycon dippers and drinking cups
- L-shaped pipe (“equal armed” and and medium long-stemmed varieties)
- Massive effigy stone pipes
- Skeletons, in extended positions, (distributed) in single and multiple
- graves throughout mounds and in cemeteries
- Pottery Vessels, weapon heads, jewelry, and polished stone discoidals,
- etc. associated with skeletons
- Shell gorgets engraved with realistic and conventional designs
- Repoussee copper eagle gorgets or plaques
- Copper sheeted ornaments and jewelry of pottery, bone, shell, wood and
- leather
- Polished stone disks or “wheels”
- Ground and squared astragalus bone of deer and elk
-
- Intensive maize growing with other crops supplemented by hunting
- Repeating weapon (bow and arrows)
- Energy sources for labor and transportation still entirely human
- The finer pottery and burials in mounds and cemeteries may reflect
- class differences. The extension of the pottery shapes from
- the fine black ware to the less decorative service ware may
- indicate an improvement of lower class conditions over those
- in Hopewellian times
- Clothing much like Hopewellian in general styles
- Large villages, small cities and small villages
- Large centers or cities had temples and tribal officers’ cabins on
- flat-topped mounds, and were protected by palisades and/or mud
- walls
- Dwellings semi- to permanent, with rectangular floors, vaulted or
- gabled roofs of thatch, walls consisting of vertical posts,
- wattle and daub construction, covered inside and out with
- mats, sometimes possibly bark-covered. Cabin remains numerous.
- Dug-out boats (?)
- Wealth considerable. Trade in fewer materials than in Hopewellian
- Two or three social classes present in population as in Hopewellian
- Probably a political government with tribal and war chiefs and village
- chiefs. Head tribal chief may have been chief priest also, or
- a member of his family may have filled later office. War chief
- probably also member of ruling caste (as among Natchez). Other
- war chiefs probably of other classes, rank based on their past
- deeds
- Tribal and war chief. In some villages, village chief possibly had
- dwellings on pyramid tops
- Headdresses, probably with feathers, and regalia, including
- feather-cloth robes were probably worn on tribal occasions of
- importance
- Calumet pipe doubtless served as safe conduct to travellers and
- visiting officials, as seal and signature to important
- agreements. Effigy stone pipes may have been Middle Phase
- calumet pipe since it had to be smoked with a stem
- War parties still of simple or no organization except leader and
- followers, object to take prisoners but not territory
-
- Religious ceremonial centers or cities existed to which outlying
- smaller village populations journeyed for religious festivals
- Priesthood with appropriate dress and regalia
- Temples or sacred groves for worship
- Religion with deities having special powers relating to maize-growing.
- Veneration or worship of ancestors
- Spring, first fruits, and harvest festivals
- Tobacco smoke, tobacco pipes used in ceremonies as incense offerings
- Athletic games form part of ceremonies
- Shamans still exist but chiefly for healing, etc. as among
- Hopewellians
- High-ranking officials and priests buried in graves in mounds. Usual
- preparation of body, burial, mourning periods, elaborated
- proportionately to the rank of the deceased.
- Art well developed
- Games of chance were probably known and played
-
-
- UPPER PHASE 1100(?)-1600 A.D.
-
- Note: These are fringe groups in relation to Middle and Lower phases,
- living in more wooded regions perhaps, where game was
- especially abundant and topography less favorable to
- plant-raising by a backward culture and where the social
- impetus for high cultural development was largely lacking
- Artifacts are a mixture of Woodland and Mississippi types
- Generally a single pottery ware with both elongated and globular pots
- is characteristic and there is little other specialization of
- form
-
- A hunting-collecting economy with plant-raising probably in
- garden-like plots
- Large and small villages
- A social development similar to but simpler than the Middle Phase,
- probably a combination of Woodland and Mississippi elements
-
- A religion based on plant-raising but probably with considerable
- emphasis on chief animals hunted.
- Sacred groves and shrines, possibly temples in some of larger villages
- No pyramidal mounds
- Dead buried in mounds and in cemeteries
-
-
- CONTACT PHASE (ILLINI) 1673-1833 A.D.
-
- Note: The artifacts of all tribes in the historic period probably
- became gradually much the same regardless of their prior
- cultural status due to deterioration of native technology and
- trading of furs for European tools, weapons, cloth, etc.
- Arrowheads of chipped flint, and native-made of European copper, brass
- or iron
- Numerous trade articles such as glass beads, gun parts, copper or
- brass kettles, bottles for wine, olives, etc. and other
- objects of European production
- Native stone molds and cast lead balls (for guns) and native chipped
- gun flints
- Rectangular L-shaped (“Siouan type”) pipes of catlinite and other
- stone. Micmac pipes after 1700.
-
- Bow and arrows preferred in war because they could be discharged more
- rapidly than gun could be loaded and fired. Guns and
- ammunition often not available
- Little knowledge of proper care of guns, and no attempt to manufacture
- guns and powder, or iron knives, copper kettles, etc.
- Society largely disorganized, prestige of chiefs largely a matter of
- personal prowess and reputation with some regard for earlier
- methods of appointment and succession.
-
- Religion practiced by a fraction of tribe but falling into dispute
- without adequate substitute
- Probably appointment and succession of priests more or less regular
- and based on earlier customs.
-
-
-
-
- FOOTNOTES
-
-
-[5]All dates, even those determined by radiocarbon methods, should be
- taken as only roughly approximate.
-
-[6]These dates and those given hereafter refer to the earliest and
- latest sites known in Illinois for the cultures under consideration.
- Although supported by radiocarbon dating methods, they are only
- approximate. Undoubtedly also cultures in one area disappeared while
- they continued to flourish in another part of the state or in other
- states.
-
-[7]Generally speaking, each succeeding higher culture in the area made
- most of the tool and weapon types of their predecessors, adding
- certain improvements and sometimes new types. The Archaic people
- used flint scrapers, chipped flint choppers, and native cobblestone
- hammers as had the Paleo-Indians. The narrow-bladed spearheads were
- occasionally made but the fluting or channel is practically always
- lacking. Polished stone forms, possibly the spearthrower, were new
- inventions in Archaic times.
-
-[8]In the page that follows a tentative reconstruction of the less
- tangible customs of these people will be presented, based on a study
- of several tribes now or recently in the Archaic status. The Archaic
- culture as used in this paper refers to those tribes who lived
- mainly by hunting, supplemented to a degree by collecting native
- edible plant foods. They are distinguished here from other peoples
- of the Stone Age or non-farming stage—from Big Game Hunters on the
- one hand (none of whom exist today) and on the other, from Food
- Stores, who were able by one means or another to store food over one
- or more seasons and so establish more or less fixed homes. The
- peoples recently living in the Archaic status include the native
- tribes of Central and Coastal Australia, the Tasmanians, the Andaman
- Island tribes, the Terra del Fuegians, the African Bushmen and a
- number of others.
-
-[9]The Initial Woodland in Illinois is usually considered to consist of
- three cultural divisions or units, the Black Sand, the Red Ochre and
- the Morton. The only known Red Ochre sites are mounds which
- undoubtedly are the burial places of important personages of a
- cultural group whose campsites and artifact assemblages have not as
- yet been identified as such. The graves yield a number of artifact
- types that are identical with those found in Black Sand villages. It
- is possible the Red Ochre mounds belong to the Black Sand people and
- that the mounds and special burial customs may have been continued
- into or adopted by the Morton cultural group and served still later
- as a framework for the highly elaborated Hopewellian funeral
- practices.
-
-[10]The narrow-bladed leaf-shaped spearhead, well-chipped and without
- fluting, reminiscent of the general Yuma, Folsom and Clovis shape,
- are found in the Red Ochre subculture and are worthy of note. This
- type appears rarely in campsites but occurs in relatively large
- numbers in mounds. Profuse amounts of red ochre are found in graves
- as in Terminal Archaic (Titterington focus) in western Illinois.
- Copper ornaments may indicate Wisconsin (Old Copper Culture)
- influence.
-
-[11]The Poole village (Pike County) is dated 550 B.C. and the Wilson
- Mound (White County) about 89 B.C. The Poole village appears to have
- been occupied from 550 B.C. to 200 A.D.
-
-[12]Civilization, as used in this paper, signifies exhaustive
- exploitation of the natural resources and accompanying significant
- elaborations of the social and spiritual aspects (as exemplified by
- ceremonies, regalia, insignia, art and extensive architectural
- structures), accomplished by means of specialization of the existing
- tools and technologies, with or without fundamental inventive
- developments. Artisans of the Initial and Final Woodland cultures
- seem to have practiced all the crafts employed by Hopewellians but
- failed to produce the beautiful chipped spearheads, “pipes of pan”,
- excellent sculpture in stone and pottery, etching in bone, the
- extensive earthworks and the mounds with timbered burial chambers.
- Perhaps some additional stimuli—the introduction of maize or the
- intensification of its cultivation, a satisfying new religion with
- stirring ceremonies together with intergroup competition—gave the
- spiritual impetus that produced the Hopewellian fluorescence.
-
-[13]Specialization was foreshadowed in the Red Ochre culture but the
- small total of grave offerings discovered to date fail to
- demonstrate any greater leisure than occurs at favorable times among
- any simple hunting people.
-
-[14]An early subculture termed Old Village preceding the generally known
- Middle Mississippi (Trappist or Bean Pot) period has been proposed
- on the strength of stratification at the Cahokia village near East
- St. Louis. Although this appears logically sound, the evidence has
- not been published and no pure Old Village site has yet been found
- and reported upon.
-
-[15]Except where noted as based directly on archaeological evidence, the
- broad cultural features suggested in the rest of this section, are
- inferred from similar customs found generally among tribes in the
- plant-raising status without food-draft animals. The results were
- derived by the writer from a study of anthropological reports of the
- following tribes or groups of tribes: Polynesians, Delawares,
- Natchez (and their neighbors) and the western Pueblo Indians. The
- Pueblos, in their social, political and religious customs and
- institutions have been for seven hundred years in a transitional
- status between the Archaic hunters (or possibly “food storers”) and
- a “fully-developed” plant-raising stage.
-
-[16]The archaeological evidence for this section is chiefly from _The
- Fisher Mound Group_, etc. by George Langford in the AMERICAN
- ANTHROPOLOGY, Vol. XXIX, No. 3, pp. 153-205 (July-September, 1927).
-
-[17]These Indians called themselves Ilini (pronounced Il´-i-nee) or
- Illini signifying “man,” in the plural Illiniwek, “the men.” The
- French dropped the -iwek and substituted their own ending whence the
- name Illinois by which they were generally known thereafter. In this
- booklet Illini will be generally used to designate these tribes,
- their culture and language to avoid confusion with other tribes who,
- like the Sauk, Fox, Kickapoo, Potawatomi, and Miami, have occupied
- parts of the state and are sometimes called Illinois Indians.
-
-[18]Information given on historic tribes is from notes and manuscript
- assembled by Dr. Wayne C. Temple.
-
-[19]The term _calumet_, originally applied to the stem of the tobacco
- pipe, is now generally used to designate the pipe and stem. “It is
- fashioned from a red stone, polished like marble, and bored in such
- a manner that one end serves as a receptacle for the tobacco, while
- the other fits into the stem; this is a stick two feet long, as
- thick as an ordinary cane, and bored through the middle. It is
- ornamented with the heads and necks of various birds, whose plumage
- is very beautiful. To these they also add large feathers—red, green,
- and other colors—wherewith the whole is adorned. They have a great
- regard for it....” (R. G. Thwaites, ed., _The Jesuit Relations_,
- Vol. LIX, p. 131.) The war calumet differed from that of peace and
- was decorated with red feathers. See Fig. 34, A.
-
-[20]Artifact types having once appeared are likely to appear again in
- subsequent culture even though rare or even lacking in some
- intervening assemblages (e.g. necklaces of anculosa beads of
- similarly ground [snail] shells found from Medial Archaic through
- Middle Phase; grooved axes from Medial Archaic to Mississippi but
- rare or lacking in most subcultures and cultures except Archaic and
- Initial Woodland). On account of unwieldiness of complete
- accumulative lists only new artifact types when they first appear
- will be recorded here. Exceptions: 1) the name of an artifact
- entered as probably present (indicated by a following ?) will be
- repeated in the first subsequent culture in which definite evidence
- for it has been reported and 2) when an artifact once reported
- assumes a new form or presumably takes on a new significance (e.g.
- Archaic hoe becomes a tool of the plant-raisers in Classic and
- Middle Phases), it will appear again in the text.
-
-
-
-
- STORY OF ILLINOIS SERIES.
-
-
- No. 1. Story of Illinois: Indian and Pioneer, by V. S. Eifert.
- No. 2. Mammals of Illinois Today and Yesterday, by V. S. Eifert.
- No. 3. Exploring for Mushrooms, by V. S. Eifert.
- No. 4. Flowers that Bloom in the Spring, by V. S. Eifert.
- No. 5. Invitation to Birds, by V. S. Eifert.
- No. 6. Man’s Venture in Culture, by Thorne Deuel.
- No. 7. The Past Speaks to You, by Ann Livesay.
- No. 8. Common Insects of Illinois, by A. Gilbert Wright.
- No. 9. American Indian ways of Life, by Thorne Deuel.
- No. 10. Amphibians of Illinois, by Paul W. Parmalee.
- No. 11. The Fossils of Illinois, by Carlton Condit.
-
- _Cost:_ 25c each; 20c each in lots of 25 or more
-
- _Address all enquiries to the_ Museum Director,
- Illinois State Museum, Springfield, Illinois
-
- (80513—6-58)
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-—Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook
- is public-domain in the country of publication.
-
-—Silently corrected a few palpable typos.
-
-—In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
- _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of American Indian Ways of Life: An
-Interpretation of the Archaeolog, by Thorne Deuel
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AMERICAN INDIAN WAYS OF LIFE ***
-
-***** This file should be named 56304-0.txt or 56304-0.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/6/3/0/56304/
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
- restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
- under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
- eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
diff --git a/old/56304-0.zip b/old/56304-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 8df664a..0000000
--- a/old/56304-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-8.txt b/old/56304-8.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index d1879ac..0000000
--- a/old/56304-8.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3879 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of American Indian Ways of Life: An
-Interpretation of the Archaeology of Illinois and Adjoining Areas, by Thorne Deuel
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: American Indian Ways of Life: An Interpretation of the Archaeology of Illinois and Adjoining Areas
- Story of Illinois Series, #9
-
-Author: Thorne Deuel
-
-Release Date: January 4, 2018 [EBook #56304]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AMERICAN INDIAN WAYS OF LIFE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- BOARD OF
- ILLINOIS STATE MUSEUM ADVISORS
-
- M. M. Leighton, Ph. D., _Chairman_
- Illinois Geological Survey, Urbana
- Everett P. Coleman, M. D.
- Coleman Clinic
- Canton
- Percival Robertson, Ph. D.
- The Principia College
- Elsah
- N. W. McGee, Ph. D.
- North Central College
- Naperville
- Sol Tax, Ph. D.
- University of Chicago
- Chicago
-
- Copyright by
- ILLINOIS STATE MUSEUM
- 1958
-
-
-
-
- STATE OF ILLINOIS
- William G. Stratton, _Governor_
-
- DEPT. OF REGISTRATION & EDUCATION--ILLINOIS STATE MUSEUM
- Vera M. Binks, _Director_ Thorne Deuel, _Museum Director_
-
-
- STORY OF ILLINOIS SERIES, No. 9
-
-
-
-
- AMERICAN INDIAN WAYS OF LIFE
-
-
- An Interpretation of the Archaeology of Illinois and Adjoining Areas
-
- by
- Thorne Deuel
-
- [Illustration: Seal of the State of Illinois]
-
- Springfield, Illinois
- 1958
-
- [Printed by authority of the State of Illinois]
-
- [Illustration: Site of the ancient Middle Mississippi religious city
- on the Kincaid farm near Metropolis, Illinois, as it is today. Four
- mounds can be seen; the village area is in the foreground and the
- plaza at the right (south) of the largest mound with house on it.]
-
-
-
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
-
- Introduction 5
- Paleo-Indians 9
- Archaic Man 12
- Cultures and Cultural Change 19
- Initial Woodland 20
- Food Storers (Advanced Phase) 23
- The Hopewellian Civilization (Classic Phase) 26
- Final Woodland 30
- Middle Mississippi 34
- Upper Mississippi 42
- The Illini 45
- The Indians Leave Illinois 54
- Summary of Illinois Prehistory 54
- Glossary 59
- Bibliography 67
- Diagram: Stream of Culture 57
- Table I: Stages and Archaeological Units 4
- Table II: Radiocarbon Dates 8
- Table III: Cultural Characteristics of Archaeological Units 70
-
- [Illustration: TABLE I. STAGES AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL UNITS]
-
- STAGE
- SUBSTAGE
- ARCHAEOLOGICAL UNITS
- PATTERN
- PHASE
- SUBCULTURE
- TYPE STATIONS
- IV. MACHINE AGE
- Lacking in the Americas
- III. FARMING
- DOMESTIC PLANTS AND FOOD-DRAFT ANIMALS
- Lacking in the Americas
- PLANT-RAISING
- MISSISSIPPI
- Historic Illini: 1673-1833
- [Illini Tribes]
- Brandt II (Ra^v1)
- Upper: 1100 (?)-1600 A.D.
- Langford
- Fisher II and III
- Middle: 1000-1500 A.D.
- Cumberland
- Kincaid Site
- Cahokia
- Dickson Mound (F^o34) and Fout's Village (F^v664)
- Protomiss
- Dillinger Village Site
- WOODLAND (Hoe-culture)
- Final: 200 (?)-1000 A.D.
- Effigy Mound
- Tampico
- Maples Mills Site
- Stone Vault
- Spencer Mound Group
- Jersey Bluff
- Otter Creek Sites
- Raymond
- Raymond Site
- Lewis
- Lewis (Pp^v1A)
- Classic: 500 B.C-500 A.D.
- Hopewell (South)
- Hubele Village (Wh^v30)
- Wilson Mound (Wh^o6)
- Hopewell (North)
- Clear Lake Village (T^v1)
- Liverpool Mound (F^o77-II)
- II. SELF-DOMESTICATION
- FOOD-STORING
- WOODLAND (Ceramic)
- Advanced: 1000 (?)-100 (?) B.C.
- Crab Orchard
- Sugar Camp Hill Village (Wm^v1)
- Baumer
- Baumer Hamlet (Mx^v30)
- HUNTING-COLLECTING
- Initial: 2500-500 B.C.
- Morton
- F^o14-II and F^v35
- Red Ochre
- Hilltop Mound (F^o11)
- Black Sand
- Liverpool Hamlet and Cemetery (F^v88 and F^o77-I)
- LITHIC
- Archaic: 8000-2500 B.C.
- Terminal
- Ferry Site (Hn^v251) and Godar Cemetery
- Medial
- Modoc II
- Simple
- Modoc I
- Paleo-Indian: 50,000 (?)-8,000 (?) B.C.
- Folsom
- Fluted points as isolated finds only.
- Clovis
- I. NATURAL MAN
- PROTO-CULTURAL
- None found in America
-
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
-
-This paper is primarily planned for the layman, the beginning student of
-prehistory and others interested in acquiring a general understanding of
-how primitive man lived during his successive occupations of Illinois
-and neighboring areas in the more important archaeological periods. Most
-of the archaeological data for the chief cultures or ways of life are
-given in references in the accompanying bibliography of technical
-publications selected as those from which (in the opinion of the writer)
-the information can be most easily gleaned.
-
-The reconstructions given of the cultural features, where not those
-ordinarily inferred from archaeological findings, are based on a study
-of the practices commonly found among primitive people now, or until
-recently, living in the same stage or substage. These are tentative
-conclusions resulting from a study of fifty tribes in the
-Self-Domestication (pre-farming) stage and forty in the Plant-Raising
-substage. Because primitive tribes which are under pressure from people
-with advanced food-draft-animal agriculture or with machine industry or
-which are in a transitional condition between two adjacent stages are
-disorganized or drastically changing a formerly stabilized mode of life,
-great care has been exercised in drawing general conclusions from their
-cultural features.
-
-The reconstructions of the perishable objects shown in the drawings are
-generally in keeping with the culture in which they are exhibited but
-cannot be vouched for as to their detailed form. The handle of an adze,
-the shape of a cabin roof, the headdress of a tribal chief each served
-the purpose for which they were made and their exact form was and is of
-no more consequence in the culture than the fashions in women's hats or
-the fins on an automobile are in our own. The details in cultures serve
-to set them apart from each other; it is the basic and significant
-features and subfeatures that determine relationships and permit the
-most useful classification.
-
-The study mentioned above is still incomplete, but results so far
-obtained indicate:
-
-1. That man in the same stage (and substage) of cultural development
- _tends_ to invent and employ the same broad social and spiritual
- features, regardless of surroundings.
-
-2. That where significant differences arise between substages of the
- same stage, they are (at least sometimes) linked with peculiarities
- of climate and/or natural resources which the people have seized
- upon and exploited to the improvement of their economic situation.
-
-3. That many details within these broad types of economic, social and
- spiritual features appear to vary unpredictably within the range of
- available possibilities.
-
-The stage and criterion for each were proposed in an earlier issue (No.
-6) of this series, _Man's Venture In Culture_, (Deuel 1950, pp. 5-12)
-as:
-
-1. _Natural Man_ (_Protocultural_), when "man" presumably employed
- sticks and stones as implements and weapons.
-
-2. _Self-Domestication_, following the discovery of the principle of the
- conchoidal fracturing of flint and its control, and the invention of
- tool and weapon types.
-
-3. _Farming_ or _Food-Raising_, due to the discovery that grains
- (grasses) and food-draft animals could be bred and raised in
- captivity.
-
-4. _Inanimate Power Machine_ (_Machine Age_), after the discovery of the
- availability of water and wind as sources for energy and the
- adaptation of animal-driven machines to utilize them.
-
-Man in the wild or Protocultural stage is thought not to have reached
-the Americas. The oxlike mammals were not domesticated in America for
-drawing ploughs and vehicles, turning grain mills or to serve as a
-continuous food supply source. Consequently, we are concerned in the
-following discussion only with peoples in the Self-Domestication stage
-and the Plant-Raising substage of Farming.
-
-In ordinary language, the word "culture" is used in a diversity of
-senses. In these pages it is used in one of two ways, the one employed
-being readily understood from the context. In a general sense, culture
-means the significant beliefs, customary activities and social
-prohibitions that are peculiar to man (together with the man-made tools,
-weapons and other material objects that he finds or has found necessary)
-that modify, limit or enhance in some manner, most of his discernible
-natural activities due to and arising from his physical animal
-inheritance and organization. Culture in a specific sense refers to the
-significant cultural features of a group or period under consideration.
-
-For convenience, any cultural activity according to its dominant purpose
-may be spoken of as belonging to one of three aspects of culture, (a)
-economic (technological and intellectual); (b) social (and political);
-and (c) spiritual (religious, artistic and recreational). To lesser
-degrees, most cultural activities have relationships with the two
-aspects other than the dominant.
-
-Certain prevalent archaeological designations have been changed to
-remove time implications (e.g. "early" and "late" Woodland to _Initial_
-[beginning] and _Final_ [end of an archaeological series]), or to
-shorten (e.g. "Tennessee-Cumberland" or "Gordon-Fewkes" to
-_Cumberland_).
-
-Technical terms have generally been avoided; but where it has seemed
-necessary to retain them or to use words in a special sense, they are
-explained in the text or can be found in the glossary. The terms
-_pattern_ and _phase_ are those generally employed in the McKern system
-of classification, for the larger groupings into which it is customary
-to place the "cultures" as determined from the typology of the
-artifacts, their association in the assemblage and pertinent data
-recovered at a site (or local community) with due regard to
-circumstances of time and location of other sites nearby and over a
-larger area. The largest unit is the _pattern_ which is made up of a
-number of _phases_. Cultural divisions smaller than these units are
-spoken of here as _subcultures_.
-
-The approximate relationships of the archaeological units to the broader
-cultural stages and substages are given in Table I, page 4. The
-succession and coexistence of the archaeological units is indicated in
-the diagram "The Stream of Culture", p. 57. The summary of
-"Characteristics of the Archaeological-Cultural Units" occurs on pages
-70-76.
-
-This is a story mainly of Illinois when occupied by American Indians but
-it would not give a reasonably true picture without showing the known
-extensions of some of the cultures into surrounding areas and the
-probable intrusions from outside the state.
-
-Of necessity in attempting a summary of the archaeology of Illinois and
-adjacent areas, the writer has had to lean heavily on the field work and
-reports of the many anthropologists who have contributed so much to the
-present understanding of the American Indian in the United States. To
-this invaluable source material and to these able scientists the
-indebtedness of the writer is acknowledged to be very great indeed. In
-the compass of a work of this type it is impossible to name them or give
-them credit for original or similar views, nor is it practicable to
-include in the bibliography all the publications used.
-
-Acknowledgment of assistance is made especially to Georg K. Neumann,
-Joseph R. Caldwell and Melvin L. Fowler, Milton D. Thompson, Ruth Kerr,
-Nora Deuel and Orvetta Robinson for reading and discussing the
-manuscript from various viewpoints, to Dr. James B. Griffin for helpful
-information on the dates of sites and of archaeological data, to Irvin
-Peithmann, Southern Illinois University, for photographs furnished, for
-information on sites he had discovered and the privilege of visiting
-them in his company, to George Langford for photographs and data
-regarding the Fisher site, to Charles Hodge for all photographs
-reproduced not otherwise credited, and to Jerry Connolly, Bettye
-Broyles, Barbara Parmalee and Jeanne McCarty for their excellent
-drawings. Without all this considerable and valuable aid the publication
-could not have been completed.
-
-
- TABLE II. RADIOCARBON DATES[1]
-
- CULTURAL UNIT C14 DATE SITE STATE COUNTY
-
- MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI A.D. 1420200 Crable Village Illinois Fulton
- MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI 1326250 Nodena Village Arkansas Arkansas
- MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI 1156200 Cahokia Illinois Madison
- EFFIGY MOUND[2] 1041212 Effigy Mounds Iowa Allamakee
- National Park
- HOPEWELLIAN 50860 Twenhafel Illinois Jackson
- (Weber) Md.
- HOPEWELLIAN 432200 Rutherford Illinois Hardin
- Mound
- HOPEWELLIAN 256200 Knight Mound Illinois Calhoun
- HOPEWELLIAN 214250 Baehr Mound Illinois Brown
- HOPEWELLIAN[2] B.C. 48160 Hopewellian Ohio Ross
- Group Mound #25
- HOPEWELLIAN[3] 57108 Wilson Mound Illinois White
- HOPEWELLIAN 315164 Havana Mound Illinois Mason
- ADENA 423150 Toepfner Mound Ohio Franklin
- #I
- ADENA 697170 Dover Mound Kentucky Mason
- ARCHAIC 70480 Poverty Point Louisiana W. Carroll
- (N.E.) Parish
- ADENA 826410 Toepfner Mound Ohio Franklin
- #II
- ARCHAIC 90490 Poverty Point Louisiana W. Carroll
- (N.E.) Parish
- ARCHAIC 1624300 Kays Landing Tennessee Humphrey
- ARCHAIC[2] 2170215 Indian Knoll Kentucky Ohio
- ARCHAIC[2] 2360270 Annis Mound Kentucky Butler
- ARCHAIC 2765300 Modoc Rock Illinois Randolph
- Shelter
- ARCHAIC 2812250 Perry Site Alabama Lauderdale
- (N.W.)
- ARCHAIC 2950250 Annis Shell Kentucky Butler
- Mound
- ARCHAIC 3325300 Modoc Rock Illinois Randolph
- Shelter
- ARCHAIC 3352300 Indian Knoll Kentucky Ohio
- ARCHAIC 3646400 Oconto Old Wisconsin Oconto
- Copper Site (E.)
- ARCHAIC[2] 3657164 Modoc Rock Illinois Randolph
- Shelter
- ARCHAIC 5194500 Eva Site Tennessee Benton
- ARCHAIC 5556400 Oconto Old Wisconsin Oconto
- Copper Site (E.)
- ARCHAIC 5945500 Graham Cave Missouri Montgomery
- ARCHAIC 6204300 Russell Cave Alabama Jackson
- ARCHAIC[2] 6219388 Modoc Rock Illinois Randolph
- Shelter
- ARCHAIC 7310352 Graham Cave Missouri Montgomery
- ARCHAIC 7922392 Modoc Rock Illinois Randolph
- Shelter
- PALEO-INDIAN 7934350 Lubbock Site Texas Lubbock
- (Folsom)[2] (N.W.)
- PALEO-INDIAN 18,000 Sandia Cave New Mexico Bernalillo
- (Sandia) (Center)
- PALEO-INDIAN (?) 22,000 Tule Spring Nevada Clark
- Site (S.E.)
- PALEO-INDIAN 35,000 Lewisville Site Texas Denton
- (Clovis?)[4]
-
-
-[1]These dates are selected as giving a significant picture of sequence
- and contemporaneity of cultures. Dates based on shell specimens are
- excluded on account of their general unreliability. Adena sites are
- not included after 400 B.C. These are burial mounds and with their
- inferred customs may be present in two or more cultural units rather
- than constitute a feature characteristic of one.
-
-[2]An average of at least two dates for this period.
-
-[3]Average of three out of four dates. Libby's second date disregarded
- as widely out of line.
-
-[4]Two samples gave identical results. Cultural identification as Clovis
- based on single spearhead is doubtful.
-
-
-
-
- PALEO-INDIANS, BIG GAME HUNTERS, DISCOVER A NEW WORLD (50,000? to
- 8,000? B.C.)[5]
-
-
-Man probably discovered America as early as 50,000 years ago and
-gradually occupied the two continents in the succeeding millenia. The
-first discoverers of the New World were of Mongolian racial stock as are
-the American Indians. They crossed from Siberia to Alaska over an
-existing land bridge, over ice, or possibly by wading or by boat over
-the shallow sea in the wake of mammoth, mastodon or musk ox herds on
-whose flesh they lived. Following in the path of the huge animals, they
-made their way possibly up the Yukon from its mouth to the divide,
-thence down into the Mackenzie Basin, and along a great river where now
-exist a chain of lakes and so into the Mississippi Valley.
-
-The migrants trailing each herd doubtless traveled in their several ways
-in family groups, uniting from time to time to trap and kill one of the
-great shaggy beasts. When the animals stopped, the families bedded down
-nearby in the most sheltered spots available taking care not to lose
-touch with the herd. These were wanderers, not explorers, nor were they
-seeking new homes; they were hunters that traveled where the herd led.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 1. Archaic flint drill, stone hammer, and flint
- scraper as used in Archaic period and their modern steel
- counterparts. (B.B.)]
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 2. Paleo-Indians attack a mired-down mammoth.
- (B.G.P.)]
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 3. Paleo-Indian spearheads from the William
- Small collection. A, B, and C are Clovis points; D, a Folsom point.
- All are from Illinois.]
-
-Their belongings, by our standards, were pitifully few, their way of
-life laborious, full of hardship and danger, but their needs were simple
-and their means of meeting them doubtless seemed ample to these hardy
-hunters. The chief weapon was a thrusting spear with a chipped flint
-head and a long shaft to keep the hunter as far from harm's way as
-possible when attacking the dangerous animal. The narrow width of the
-spearpoint made it easy to withdraw from a wound and attack again. Our
-evidence that the Paleo-Indians (as the Big Game Hunters are commonly
-called) lived in Illinois are these same spearheads (Clovis and Folsom
-types), usually grooved or fluted lengthwise of the blade, which are
-scattered over much of the Illinois prairie as isolated finds. No
-campsites of this people have yet been discovered in Illinois, as they
-have been in Pennsylvania, Alabama and several southwestern states. We
-can only surmise that in Illinois the hunters also had stone hammers and
-chipped flint scrapers as they had elsewhere.
-
-Having arrived in the great central valley between the Rocky Mountains
-and the eastern ranges, the herds probably moved slowly from one
-browsing ground to another in the open corridor between glaciers. It may
-have taken them many years to reach what is now the United States.
-Eventually the herds wandered back and forth across the Mississippi
-Valley, and some favorable spots came to be used as camping grounds
-again and again by the same or different families. Such places would
-appeal immediately to the campers because of their protection from rain
-and the piercing glacial winds, the presence of a plentiful supply of
-wood and water. The possibility of our gaining a better knowledge of
-Paleo-Indian life in Illinois rests on the discovery of such a site,
-difficult now to recognize because it may no longer provide wood, water,
-or shelter of any sort.
-
-There are in southern Illinois a number of simple linear stone piles
-known locally as "stone forts," all in the same type of land structure.
-Each forms an obstruction five to fifteen feet in height across a narrow
-neck or ridge leading to the plateau top of a near-vertical-sided
-"promontory" projecting out into a stream valley, making an excellent
-corral, with no fence necessary except across the entrance. They may
-have been used in late Paleo-Indian times and on into the Archaic period
-for impounding large game and/or driving them over the cliff.
-
-
-
-
- ARCHAIC MAN, FIRST SETTLER IN ILLINOIS (8000 to 2500 B.C.)[6]
-
-
-We have reason to believe that the Big Game Hunters wandered over
-Illinois and the adjoining states during the last advance of the
-glaciers. Around 12,000 B.C. the climate in the Midwest became milder,
-the glaciers "retreated," and the mighty torrents--the Mississippi, the
-Ohio and the Illinois that had torn irresistibly down their
-valleys--shrank into smaller, less turbulent rivers that occupied but a
-fraction of their former beds. The great shaggy mammoths, musk oxen, the
-ground sloths and the giant beavers moved westward toward the mountains
-or to the north.
-
-Some of the Big Game Hunters with their families may have followed the
-retreating glacier and the herds; others stayed behind in country to
-which they had grown attached. With the great herds gone, the human
-families remaining in Illinois had to hunt the game animals that now
-frequented the area--deer, elk (wapiti), bear and smaller mammals. The
-large hunting party was no longer practicable. The game roamed over the
-country singly or by twos or threes and had to be stalked by one or two
-hunters. Families were compelled to live widely separated one from
-another in order to secure ample food throughout the year. Thus
-developed a new way of life which we call the Archaic phase or culture.
-
-The hunter, as time passed, learned the secret habits of the deer, bear
-and raccoon and the more sluggish fishes. His wife and daughters learned
-the haunts and ways of the smaller animals, the rodents, turtles and
-lizards, discovered where edible greens, wild tubers, nuts and fruits
-grew and where mussels and snails abounded in creeks and rivers. With
-increasing knowledge Archaic man made better and fuller use of his
-changed and changing surroundings, food became more plentifully
-available, life easier and less hazardous though still very difficult
-from our standpoint.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 4. Hafted primitive stone adze and grooved ax,
- with modern steel-bitted ax in the background. (B.B.)]
-
-With new needs and some leisure from the labor of providing food,
-Archaic man invented specialized devices, new methods of making tools
-and weapons, the more skillful among them shaping the objects carefully
-into symmetrical forms pleasing to the eye of others and strangely
-satisfying to the maker.[7] He pecked a hollow in both sides of his
-cobblestone hammer so he could grip it securely and use it more
-skillfully. He pecked and ground diorite and granite into adzes,
-hatchets (celts), and axes with a groove for hafting. These were a
-decided improvement over flaked choppers. He ground and polished banded
-and highly-colored shale ("slate") into prismatic and cylindrical
-spearthrower weights and bored them with a tube, sand and water. His own
-person he decked out with necklaces and oval pendants (made by boring a
-hole in smooth flat waterworn pebbles) and with bone ornaments cut to
-shape, ground, engraved and polished. These he and his wife wore as had
-their forefathers but not the skin robes of glacial times.
-
-As life grew easier, the family or local group increased in size. Sons
-brought their wives to the family dwelling place and built windbreaks
-near those of their parents. With food abundant the little settlement
-became a small cluster of households or a hamlet consisting possibly of
-sixty to seventy persons.
-
-
- If Archaic Man Was Like Present-Day Archaic Tribes[8]
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 5. Rock shelter near Cobden. Such shelters were
- used by Archaic and succeeding peoples. (Photograph by Irvin
- Peithmann)]
-
-If Archaic man in Illinois lived as do present-day Archaic peoples, the
-family or local group, though they restricted themselves during most of
-the year to their hunting grounds which they guarded jealously from
-trespassers, did not camp continuously in one spot. At appropriate
-seasons of the year they rotated from one hamlet site to another to take
-advantage of the food resources of that locality. In winter perhaps they
-moved to a rock shelter, like that of Modoc in Randolph County,
-Illinois, near the wooded valleys of streams emptying into the river
-where deer and elk sought protection from the rigors of winter; in
-spring to upland lakes for duck and other waterfowl; and in autumn to
-wooded parklands to harvest acorns, hickory nuts, and berries. The spot
-chosen for each hamlet location was generally one that had been so used
-at that same season from time out of mind by the family and its
-forebears.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 6. Primitive woman carrying a load with the aid
- of a tumpline. (J.C.)]
-
-It is probable, as among most primitive peoples, that men did only work
-thought suitable to men, and women that appropriate for women. Men made
-the weapons and tools they used, did the hunting and fishing, and the
-fighting (when quarrels developed into feuds or wars between local
-groups of the same tribe). The rest of the labor fell to the
-women--caring for the children, collecting edible plants, clams and
-small animals, preparing the food, and carrying burdens. All work was
-done by hand; loads were carried on the back. It is possible that boats,
-perhaps of dugout type, were used as among present-day Archaic peoples
-living on waterways. There was no other specialization and each
-"household" provided for the needs of all its members to the best of its
-ability. No food was grown and no domestic animal except the dog was
-known.
-
-Once or twice a year when food was easily and bountifully available,
-local groups from nearby hunting territories met together for religious
-rites. These local groups spoke the same dialect, had the same way of
-life, and considered themselves a unit or tribe. They had no political
-form of government but were kept in order through habits formed by early
-training and by extension of the kinship system to the whole tribe. Thus
-the tribal elders were considered fathers and mothers, and to them were
-due obedience and respect, just as children they had been taught to
-regard their own blood fathers, uncles, and other older relatives. The
-elders knew the tribal customs; and to be accepted as a tribal member,
-boys must respect, learn and conform to these customs.
-
-The object of these annual gatherings was to teach the young the tribal
-customs and to perform solemn ceremonies, the purpose of which was to
-insure the security and well-being of the tribe, a continuing abundance
-of the favorite foods, and to express gratitude and thanksgiving to
-unseen Spirits who watched over the game animals (and possibly the
-edible plants) for the blessings received during the past year. These
-gatherings and cooperative undertakings served, on the one hand, as a
-welcome change from the usual daily grind and afforded opportunities for
-the young to get acquainted and choose mates and, on the other, to unify
-the language and customs of the constituent local groups, to enhance the
-influence of the tribal elders and keep fresh in the minds of all the
-history of the tribe, the importance of its activities, and its sacred
-tradition, all essential to the way of life of dynamic Archaic peoples
-of recent times.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 7. Fertility rites were probably performed by
- Archaic peoples to ensure the abundance of game animals for the next
- year. (J.C.)]
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 8. Archaic weapons: A, Hidden Valley type
- spearhead; B, prismatic atlatl weight of polished red shale; C,
- throwing a spear with an atlatl; D, socketed antler spearhead; E,
- short thrusting spear or javelin. A, B, and D are from Modoc Shelter
- in Randolph County, Illinois.]
-
-In the later (Medial) Archaic period at Modoc, the dead were buried in
-the floor of the rock shelter. Burial probably indicates a belief in
-life after death. Care in preparing the body for burial, in the funeral
-rites and burying, and in the customary mourning thereafter was highly
-important so the dead man could go promptly to the spirit world in peace
-and not remain in the neighborhood to disturb his kinsmen. Immediately
-after the burial, it is probable that the little settlement removed to a
-distant location as is customary with peoples in this stage of culture.
-
-The rites for important dead in the Terminal period probably began with
-the conventional mourning of relatives, with painting the body with red
-ochre and grease and adorning it with the dead man's jewelry, followed
-at the appropriate time by the conveyance of the body to the grave side,
-where the corpse was deposited in a pit together with personal insigne
-and weapons. The grooved stone axe, large spearheads, daggers,
-bannerstones, spearthrower with weight and more rarely copper articles
-were placed alongside or on the corpse. In some instances large stones
-were laid upon the grave probably for one or more of the following
-reasons: (a) to mark the grave of an important tribesman; (b) to keep
-the body from being disturbed by animals; and (c) to hold the dead man's
-ghost until he departed for the spirit world.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 9. Grooved stone axes are frequently found in
- Archaic graves but were not buried with the dead after this period.
- (J.C.)]
-
-It is very probable that, on occasions of social and religious import,
-Modoc man and other Archaic tribes in Illinois bedecked themselves in
-their best paint and jewelry. Possibly the colorful and intriguing
-bannerstones, which were undoubtedly developed from the spearthrower
-weight, were carried or worn by the local group headmen who had won that
-right because they were skillful hunters, courageous fighters, or
-learned in the tribal customs and beliefs and thus recognized by the
-tribe as leaders for the time being.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 10. Anculosa shell necklace with flat pendant of
- water-worn stone from the Archaic period. Anculosa necklaces were
- worn by many Illinois peoples probably up to the European contact
- period.]
-
-
-
-
- CULTURES AND CULTURAL CHANGE
-
-
-Man can live virtually anywhere on the earth's surface where he can
-obtain food, water and fuel, and do so without any fundamental change in
-his physical structure. This is largely because he is easily able to
-modify his customary ways of filling his basic needs under new or
-changing conditions of his surroundings. For primitive man to "live
-better" required an increasing knowledge of the resources in his
-locality and ingenuity in devising effective means and contrivances for
-exploiting them.
-
-Because of this ability, the Paleo-Indian wanderers (Big Game Hunters)
-in Illinois around 12,000 to 10,000 B.C., when confronted with rising
-temperatures and other regional changes, could choose whether they would
-follow the mammoth and musk ox herds and familiar subglacial conditions
-elsewhere or adopt new and strange methods of securing food and other
-requirements.
-
-As Big Game Hunters they probably lived as a number of families attached
-to a herd and relatively independent of each other except at hunting
-times. They had no homes, only temporary camps, and were bound to a
-moving herd, not to any particular region. The Paleo-Indian culture
-consisted of methods of trapping and slaying the great beasts and of
-filling other simple physical needs; a simple code of social behavior
-which enabled men and wives to live together with their children and,
-for brief periods, in gatherings of the families in relative peace and
-contentment; with religious beliefs and rites suitable to their cultural
-level that they believed assured them of a continuance of their
-satisfactory existence.
-
-When the climate changed, those families that chose to remain in
-Illinois had to develop, perhaps slowly and painfully, a new way of
-life. The habits and haunts of deer, elk, bear and raccoon had to be
-learned. Other methods of hunting and of making tools and devices to fit
-new conditions were invented as a result of the new fund of knowledge
-assembled. Each family eventually acquired a more or less definite piece
-of land or hunting territory in which it selected certain favorable
-places to build the temporary hamlet at suitable seasons. As the man and
-his family became better adapted to the land and its resources, he
-hunted more successfully, and the family or local group grew larger in
-number.
-
-Probably a number of neighboring families, when food was especially
-abundant, gathered together for social and religious purposes as peoples
-living today in the same status still do. Religious beliefs and other
-customs had all this time doubtless been shifting gradually in meeting
-the needs and dangers of changing conditions to a new way of life we
-call the Archaic culture.
-
-Every way of life is built on an older, often simpler, culture from
-which it has changed more or less rapidly. Due to important inventions,
-the group may modify its economy (ways of securing and processing food,
-etc.) and produce a substantially improved manner of living which, from
-archaeological evidence alone, may be difficult to recognize as a
-development from its earlier phase.
-
-On occasion, people from another region may invade an area, drive out
-the inhabitants and bring in a differing way of life. Usually this
-merely extends, to a desirable region less effectively exploited by
-others, the range of a vigorous cultural group whose territory has
-become too densely populated.
-
-Sometimes newcomers essay to live peaceably with the natives and a new
-cultural blend is developed. If fundamental changes are made in the
-economy by internal development or by imitating another culture, social
-and religious customs are very likely to change too, though usually at a
-slower pace.
-
-As time went on, the Archaic way of life slowly changed and finally
-disappeared, but probably not so suddenly as might at first appear; for
-many Archaic customs, tools, and weapons continued to be made and used
-in the "new" culture by the descendants of rugged earlier people or were
-adopted by newcomers to the region. Other changes were added through new
-inventions and incoming people from other regions producing a new
-culture now generally known as Woodland.
-
-
-
-
- THE INITIAL WOODLAND CULTURES[9] (2500-500 B.C.)
-
-
-After 5000 B.C. the temperatures continued to rise producing a climatic
-interval known as the Thermal Maximum when it was warmer and drier than
-at the present time. After reaching its high point, the temperature
-gradually declined and probably ended in southern Illinois about 2100
-B.C. or later in a climate much like that of today.
-
-By projecting the rate of deposit from the eight- to the eleven-foot
-level of the Modoc Rock Shelter up to the five-foot level where the
-Archaic remains appear to end, we secure a date for its upper limit of
-about 2100 B.C. (Deuel 1957, p. 2). The remains between the five- and
-eight-foot depths are scantier and less varied than in the earlier
-(lower) layers and may indicate a cultural group in a losing struggle to
-maintain itself under changing conditions.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 11. Potsherds from the Lake Baikal in southern
- Siberia resemble those of Initial and Classic Woodland (Hopewellian)
- in Illinois. The letters with subscripts refer to Siberian pottery.
- A-E, reduced to 1/2 actual size; F-H, reduced to ^1/_1_6 actual
- size. (Siberian pottery from Richthofen in ANTHROPOS, 1932: 128,
- 129, 130; Illinois pottery from Illinois State Museum collections.)]
-
-In northern Illinois, similar climatic conditions were developing.
-There, possibly as early as 2500 B.C., a new culture, the Initial
-(early) Woodland, was coming into existence. At any rate, groups living
-there some time prior to 1000 B.C. made pottery, placed their dead in
-cemeteries and in low burial mounds in a flexed or "doubled-up"
-position, occasionally with food, personal ornaments and other funeral
-offerings.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 12. A flint dagger or hunting knife from "Red
- Ochre subculture" of Initial Woodland. (B.B.)]
-
-The pottery of one Woodland group (Morton) in the Illinois valley
-resembled, in shape, surface treatment, design and area decorated, pots
-made in the Lake Baikal region in Asia some 7000 miles distant. The
-appearance of such striking similarities has long been a puzzle to
-anthropologists. In the first place the detailed likenesses suggest both
-were made by one and the same people. It seems fairly obvious that the
-several resemblances did not travel from tribe to tribe from Asia to
-central North America. The preservation of a pottery tradition during a
-migration of 7000 miles, probably lasting for several generations, seems
-equally incredible. Perhaps the most plausible explanation is that two
-widely separated divisions of a people originating in central Asia with
-the same cultural background and similar surroundings arrived
-independently at a remarkably similar but very simple pottery type.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 13. A copper gorget, A, (possibly patterned
- after the double-bitted ax-shaped bannerstone) and shell gorgets, B
- and C, from "Red Ochre subculture" of Initial Woodland. All from
- Mound 11, Fulton County, Illinois.]
-
-These late migrants probably found groups like the Black Sand (and Red
-Ochre) peoples in Illinois who were just emerging from the Archaic phase
-into Initial Woodland. The settlements of all early Woodland peoples
-were small in extent and poor in cultural remains. The population of
-these hamlets probably seldom exceeded fifty. No traces of house
-structures have yet been discerned. Temporary huts, probably built of
-small poles and brush, may have been conical or hemispherical in shape.
-The artifacts or cultural objects, except for a small amount of jewelry
-(shell and copper beads and pendants) and the few offerings placed in
-graves, show little evidence of any urge to fine workmanship or much
-feeling for beauty of line or form. Life was probably too hard and the
-effort in securing food and other requirements too exacting to leave
-much leisure for artistic workmanship in durable materials.[10]
-
-
-
-
- THE FOOD STORERS (BAUMER AND CRAB ORCHARD CULTURES) (1000?-100 B.C.?)
-
-
-It has been seen that in southern Illinois the Archaic way of life may
-have persisted until 2100 B.C. or perhaps even later. Across the state
-on the Ohio River a Woodland people succeeded the earlier Archaic
-residents. Their culture is known as Baumer and their nearest cultural
-relatives lived south of the Ohio in Kentucky (Round Grave or Upper
-Valley People). The Baumer artifacts do not resemble those of the
-Archaic period very closely, giving one the impression that the Baumer
-people developed their way of life elsewhere and moved into Illinois,
-possibly while Archaic groups were still in the region.
-
-The Baumer culture differs in several ways from the northern Initial
-Woodland; actually it appears to be more advanced although it has been
-termed early Woodland by some archaeologists. In the first place, the
-area of settlement was more extensive which seems to indicate a larger
-population than do early northern Woodland campsites. Their artifacts
-are numerous and varied, suggesting they were well adapted to their
-surroundings. Flat forms of polished stone (resembling in outline
-certain Archaic bannerstones from which they may have derived) served
-presumably as breast ornaments or gorgets (as similar pieces did in the
-Hopewellian period). Tear-shaped stone objects (plummets) were made as
-they had been in Medial and Terminal Archaic. House structures were
-semi-permanent, large, square, made of poles or logs set in holes in the
-ground. Huts with circular floors seem to have been in use also. Most
-important of the cultural habits noted were numerous pits apparently for
-the storage of food. In these the remains of acorns and hickory nuts
-were found. These people, like the acorn gatherers of California and the
-Eskimo, knew how to preserve food over long periods. Acorns were
-probably abundant enough for a Baumer family to lay up several months'
-supply in a short time. This permitted them to live in larger
-settlements and gave them sufficient leisure to build rather substantial
-houses and shape symmetrical ornaments from stone. These facts seem to
-substantiate the hypothesis that they were a sedentary people by virtue
-of their knowledge of how to store food.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 14. Housewife storing roasted acorns in a pit
- near door of her square log cabin dwelling. Characteristic clay
- vessel ("flower-pot" type) with "mat-impressed exterior." Baumer
- period. (J.C.)]
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 15. A, stone pestle; B, reel-shaped stone
- gorget; C, "spud-shaped" stone gorget or pendant; D, grooved
- plummet. From the Baumer subculture and site.]
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 16. Pots from the Crab Orchard period of Baumer
- subculture recovered from the Sugar Camp Hill Site by Moreau Maxwell
- for Southern Illinois University. Vessel in center is roughly 16"
- tall. (Photographs furnished through courtesy of Dr. James B.
- Griffin, Univ. of Michigan.)]
-
-The size of the Baumer settlement, the semi-permanent houses, the
-presence of chipped spades, stone pestles and pottery might lead one to
-think that these people were plant-growers rather than simple food
-storers. Comparing them with the acorn-gathering tribes of California,
-who were storers and not food growers, it is seen that these, too, had
-permanent settlements with well over one hundred inhabitants, rather
-substantial houses, stone pestles, and some tribes, at least, had
-pottery vessels. The Californians doubtless had digging tools since the
-rooms of some houses were dug four feet down into the soil.
-
-Traces of Hopewellian influence, possibly indicating inter-marriage with
-Hopewellians, have been noted at the Sugar Camp Hill site (date
-undetermined) in Jackson County, which is presumably later than Baumer.
-However, the Baumerians like the native Californians were conservative,
-for four centuries intervened between the oldest Hopewellian village in
-the north and the earliest known station of that culture in southern
-Illinois.[11]
-
-
-
-
- THE HOPEWELLIAN CIVILIZATION[12] (500 B.C.-500 A.D.)
-
-
-Toward the end of the Initial Woodland period maize or corn, as we call
-it today, was introduced into northern Illinois, presumably from Mexico
-and Middle America through the agency of intervening tribes. In an
-apparently short time, its production seems to have been greatly
-intensified and exploited. Other food crops and tobacco may have
-accompanied maize.
-
-About the same time, a formalized religion arose, probably concerned
-with the worship of deities who personified natural forces like the sun,
-rain and thunder, which were important to a plant-growing people. From
-the evidence of burial places, there seem to have been two or possibly
-three social classes. Doubtless the first comprised the families who
-introduced and grew the new food plants and who were inspired to invent
-the complex religion. The burial of the dead, especially those socially
-important and of the highest class, was accompanied by elaborate and
-colorful ceremonies closely bound to the religion. This seems to be a
-continuation in grander form of the earlier Red Ochre funeral and
-burial. It is unfortunate that we do not have tangible evidence of their
-other religious and political ceremonies which may have been even more
-impressive and significant. The official dress and insignia of the
-officials, which we can barely glimpse in the rich and varied remains in
-the tombs, signify a political system of social control and an
-established priesthood for the spiritual guidance of the community.
-Shamans or medicine men probably had only the duty of treating disease.
-Reverence for and possibly worship of ancestors is suggested by the
-impressive tomb chambers and mounds and the care obviously bestowed on
-certain of their socially prominent dead.
-
-Social and political prestige, religious pomp and ceremonial, all seem
-to have combined to stimulate a demand for rare materials, beautiful
-jewels and impressive regalia. This initiated the search for pearls at
-home, the development of skillful and artistic workmanship in flint,
-bone, shell, copper and mica, travel abroad and trade in materials
-obtainable only in distant regions.
-
-Aside from those technologies connected with the growing of plant foods,
-probably few new crafts appeared in the culture; rather those already,
-existing in the Initial Woodland were raised to a high degree of
-excellence. Art in several forms flourished--carving in the round and in
-relief, the making of fine symmetrical polished, decorated and painted
-pottery commonly called typical Hopewellian, hammered copper jewelry,
-the setting of pearls and highly-colored native stones as eyes in
-sculptured animals and in bear-tooth pendants and ear ornaments, etching
-of delicate designs, naturalistic and conventional, on bone and the
-modeling and firing of exquisite statuettes in clay. We admire and
-wonder at the excellence of execution in the best of their small
-sculpture because they are skillfully fashioned and finished and because
-they so accurately portray the characteristics and habits of animals
-with which we are familiar. The artist had the crudest of tools to aid
-him--rough stone hammers and an anvil for pecking stone to the general
-form; sandstone files or abraders; clay and water to polish pieces;
-flint and tubular drills for boring; and flint knives to cut and engrave
-pottery and bone--in spite of which the best craftsmen well knew how to
-bring out the beauty of the piece.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 17. Artist's idea of a Hopewellian chief or high
- priest in full ceremonial regalia. (J.C.) Evidence for dress (except
- for calumet) has been found in Illinois.]
-
-For the first time in Amerindian history in Illinois we become aware of
-an accumulation of wealth, a surplus of handmade goods over and above
-those needed for survival; many of these were neither well-suited nor
-intended for immediate physical needs, but rather were aimed at social
-display or spiritual enhancement. Wealth reflects a relatively constant
-and abundant supply of food and other necessities and the resulting
-accompaniment of considerable leisure time for a sizable portion of the
-community. It may also mark the beginning of craft specialization.[13]
-
-It is hardly necessary to add that, if such a profusion of grave
-offerings as indicated by Hopewellian tombs--feather cloth robes, pearl
-necklaces, copper hatchets, and beautifully fashioned art objects--were
-left with the dead, that the high political and religious officers were
-correspondingly bedecked in gorgeous apparel for civil and religious
-ceremonies.
-
-Nor should sight be lost of the fact that these creations and materials,
-so commonplace and inexpensive today, were to the Hopewellians as
-valuable and highly desirable as gold, silk, and precious stones are to
-us in Western civilization. For a better perspective these tomb
-offerings should be compared with objects usually found in camp and
-grave sites of the Initial and Final Woodland peoples.
-
-Traders may have gone to distant regions to select and barter for raw
-materials, to the Lake Superior region for copper, to Ohio for
-pipestone, to the south Atlantic and Gulf Coasts for the small
-Marginella and Oliva shells, for the larger Cassis and Busycon shells,
-and to the Yellowstone or Mexico for obsidian (of which little is found
-in Illinois graves). Trade, to some degree, removes the limitations
-imposed by the immediate surroundings. Pearls were secured in quantity
-from the clams of the native streams. Bone, antler, tortoise and clam
-shell, bears' teeth, bear, wildcat and wolverine jaws from their hunting
-and collecting pursuits were utilized more fully than ever before. Even
-human jaws, possibly of enemies, were cut, polished and bored for use as
-pendants.
-
-Though the Hopewellians may not have been the pacifists they are
-sometimes painted, there must have been long periods of peaceful
-relationships with distant and nearer neighbors with whom they traded or
-through whose territories their traders had to pass. Whether or not a
-condition of peace was maintained within the borders of their culture
-area by the force of arms is an interesting question that cannot now be
-answered.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 18. The Hopewellian assemblage of artifacts that
- collectively identify the Hopewellian (Classic Woodland) period and,
- except for shell spoon, turtle shell dish, and some bead types,
- distinguish it from the other Woodland assemblages. A, drinking cup
- of marine shell (_Cassis madagascarensis_); B, C, D, Hopewellian
- pottery (restored); E, mussel shell spoon with "handle"; F, turtle
- shell dish; G, sheet mica (mirror?); H, antler headdress; I, J,
- platform pipes with effigy mammal bowls, polished stone (Otter and
- bear's head, eyes set with copper pellets); K, platform pipe (plain
- bowl), curved base, polished stone; L, copper earspools or
- ornaments, pair; M, imitation bear tooth, copper; N, (Below) N_1,
- Bear jaw, cut in half, ground and drilled to be worn as a double
- pendant; (Above) N_2, Fragment of a human jaw that has been
- similarly treated; O, copper hatchet that carries imprint of textile
- on its surface; P, copper adze; Q, R, Hopewellian spearheads; S,
- massive bead of copper; T, bracelet of copper beads; U, necklace of
- pearls; V, necklace of copper beads; W, necklace of graduated ground
- shell beads from columella (central column) of marine shell.]
-
-In southern Illinois the advance of Hopewellian culture was slower. The
-infiltration of new pottery styles noted at Crab Orchard very possibly
-represents intermarriage with Hopewellian women. Possibly through ties
-of relationship and the acceptance of the new food plants, the old
-Baumer way of life was submerged by the Hopewellian customs though here
-and there former habits still are recognizable. Some customs of Baumer
-and Crab Orchard were adopted by the northern Hopewellians--the
-reel-shaped gorget, the plummet and the chipped stone hoe.
-
-In the north of Illinois, Hopewellian lasted until 250 A.D. (Poole site)
-and in the west and south to about 450 or 500 A.D. Though the culture
-died out in Illinois by 500 A.D., it still flourished in Mississippi
-(Bynum site) around 800 A.D. and at Marksville, Louisiana, as late as
-850 A.D.
-
-As was stated earlier, emerging cultures grow out of earlier ones.
-Although it may not yet be generally recognized, the Hopewellian
-civilization probably exerted tremendous influence on the Mississippi
-cultures and on tribes that followed them in the great central valley of
-the United States and beyond, down to historic times. It must be borne
-in mind that in spite of their splendid achievements, the Hopewellians
-had no domestic animals but the dog, no herds for meat and great wealth,
-no draft animals to drag the plough and turn the mill. All labor was "by
-hand," all transport on the back or in a boat driven by human power.
-
-
-
-
- THE DARK AGE IN ILLINOIS--FINAL WOODLAND (200 to 900 A.D.)
-
-
-The Hopewellian civilization apparently disappeared as suddenly as it
-seems to have arisen. This impression is probably due to the fact that
-the people continued to live in the old villages long after the
-characteristic colorful Hopewell customs were no longer practiced.
-Actually the culture may have declined for a century or more before it
-finally broke down completely. Many of the simpler folk traditions
-probably persisted in the area for some centuries afterward.
-
-Possibly long continued abuses of power and privilege by religious and
-political officials, especially those from the highest social caste,
-weakened the confidence of the lower classes in their leaders and the
-culture. Newcomers from Iowa, Missouri and Kentucky may have further
-disorganized certain settlements and separated areas of the larger
-community from each other. Generally, however, the writer gets the
-impression that the decay began within the civilization although its
-final downfall may have been accelerated by external pressures.
-
-With failing confidence and a rising uneasiness, trade would naturally
-decrease and the incentive to fine workmanship decline. The larger
-cultural community split apart into a number of small tribes, who were
-isolationists and individualists. All the separate little tribal units
-were Woodland culturally with some small evidence of their Hopewellian
-heritage, but each differed in certain respects from its neighbors.
-Villages dwindled to the mere hamlets, widely separated one from
-another. The elaborate ceremonial dress, insignia, and jewelry, and the
-artistic creations (at least in durable materials) became a part of the
-past; the people found themselves reduced to the rude cultural level of
-their early Woodland ancestors. Huts were flimsy and left no discernible
-remains. Tools, weapons, and ornaments were, in general, carelessly made
-and poorly finished. Although tobacco was smoked and small patches of
-maize and beans may have been grown, the chief economic dependence
-undoubtedly was on hunting, fishing and collecting.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 19. Group of mounds exhibiting bird, mammal,
- linear and conical mounds as they occur characteristically in Effigy
- Mound subculture of Final Woodland. (B.B.)]
-
-The religious beliefs, too, were probably simplified and mixed with
-magic and superstition, surviving relics of the religion of the past
-age. In a word, the social and religious customs of the little tribes
-were broadly similar but in minor details differed from each other much
-as do their artifactual remains.
-
-A study of the Final Woodland and other phases of Illinois history
-reveals certain relationships among some distinguishable differences of
-detail:
-
-1. The almost complete lack of evidence of Hopewellian art, trade and
-religion in the late Woodland period gives little apparent indication
-that the people were the direct descendants and heirs of that
-civilization. On the other hand, the general resemblance of Final
-Woodland assemblages to those of the Initial phase seems marked. Let us
-examine further.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 20. Graves near Quincy, Illinois, Stone Vault
- period. (Photographs through courtesy of O. D. Thurber.)]
-
- [Illustration: Stone mound after earth was removed.]
-
- [Illustration: Four excavated "vaults", the third of which shows a
- "corridor" entrance with stone steps.]
-
-The tobacco pipe of the late phase with the stem projecting beyond the
-bowl is found in most aspects. Likewise, the vertically elongated pot is
-common but not the only form. Burials are often in mounds, frequently in
-a central chamber or grave, with skeletons in the flexed and/or extended
-positions, occasionally accompanied by grave offerings. All these are
-broadly reminiscent of Hopewellian customs and, in the writer's opinion,
-indicate a continuing thread of tradition from Initial Woodland through
-Hopewellian into the Final phase.
-
-2. The relationship to the Middle Mississippi seems more evident and has
-been attributed by some authors to the "impact" of a high culture on
-that of cruder or "under-developed" neighbors. What are the grounds for
-these conclusions?
-
-New pottery forms were being attempted, the flattened globular pot, the
-shallow bowl (occasionally found in Hopewellian sites), the cup or
-beaker and the plate. In southern counties, a new method of making pits
-is indicated by a tendency of sherds, even grit-tempered ones, to split
-or laminate (see Maxwell, _Woodland Cultures of Southern Illinois_,
-Beloit, 1951, p. 204). Secondary features previously lacking begin to
-appear as "raised points" or knobs on rims, some roughly resembling
-animal heads with ears and a snout. Triangular arrowheads and others
-reflecting larger spearhead types are all made from curved, not flat
-flakes as the Mississippian points are. The stone discoidal that seems
-to be the game piece of the historically known chunkey game, which was
-possibly initiated in late Hopewellian times (see Fowler, _The
-Rutherford Mound_, Springfield, 1957, pp. 31-33) occurs in the Bluff
-subculture and probably in the Tampico also.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 21. Canton ware pot (Tampico subculture) from
- Clear Lake village site in Tazewell County. Designs are formed with
- cord impressions. (From Schoenbeck collection in Illinois State
- Museum. Max. diam. at shoulder 18".]
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 22. "Handled" pipe in form of raven with head
- projecting from rim, from Jersey Bluff subculture. After
- Titterington. Reduced about 1/2.]
-
-All these bespeak Middle Mississippian tendencies. A common conclusion,
-as mentioned previously, is that these features were borrowed from
-non-Woodland groups. The writer, however, gets the impression from his
-studies that the Middle Mississippi phase developed through the
-interplay of invention and adoption of improvements, modification and
-re-invention, between the Final Woodland subcultures in Illinois and
-adjacent territory. This does not mean that Illinois communities alone
-were responsible for the emergence of this phase but rather that they
-played an important dynamic role in its development. The Cahokia
-subculture of western and central Illinois probably constituted the
-native local tribe or nation.
-
-
- Final Woodland Archaeology
-
-Archaeologically these peoples are in the Final Woodland phase of
-culture. The Final Phase yields tobacco pipes and crude flint
-arrowheads, its chief artifactual differences with the Initial phase.
-The clay of their pottery was generally mixed with grit or sand to
-prevent firing cracks in the vessel walls. The customary
-vertically-elongated pot with a conical or pointed bottom was
-accompanied by new forms--the globular or flattened globular with
-"round" (spherical) bases, the "coconut shell" cup or larger vessel, and
-shallow bowls. The flattened globular pots and the bowls were
-occasionally decorated with two or four knobs or with "raised points" on
-the rim, sometimes giving a squarish appearance to the mouth. In some
-instances these decorative projections were crudely modeled ears and
-snout which give the effect of animals' heads facing out and
-foreshadowing the Middle Mississippi effigy shallow bowls. An important
-invention, the bow and arrow, appears in Illinois for the first time in
-this period. Judging by the crudity of the chipped flint arrowheads,
-these people were poor archers and preferred the spear and spearthrower
-in hunting and fighting. Pipes, like most artifacts except weapon heads,
-are rare. The "elbow" or L-shaped pipe is generally representative of
-the culture.
-
-The six recognized Final Woodland subcultures with their diagnostic
-(though not very significant) traits are (1) Effigy Mound named for its
-distinguishing characteristic; (2) Tampico with pottery decorated with
-designs formed by cord-impressions, in northern Illinois; (3) Stone
-Vault with stone mounds containing walled tomb chambers; (4) Jersey
-Bluff with its unique "handled" tobacco pipes, in the west; (5) Raymond,
-best characterized by the generalized Woodland nature of its artifacts;
-and (6) Lewis with incised spiral designs on pottery, in southern
-Illinois.
-
-
-
-
- A SECOND PLANT-RAISING CIVILIZATION--THE MIDDLE MISSISSIPPIANS
- (1000-1500 A.D.)
-
-
-The Middle Mississippi culture seems to have arisen, as previously
-suggested, in the area where several important highways of aboriginal
-travel converged--the region surrounding the Ohio and Mississippi rivers
-from the mouth of the Wabash to the mouth of the Illinois. Whether or
-not its development was stimulated by the contracts of Muskhogeans and
-Algonkians or whether it was due to interplay between the cultures of
-the Final Woodland petty tribes is unknown.
-
-Two slightly differing subcultures of the Middle phase appeared in the
-state. One, known archaeologically as the Cumberland
-(Tennessee-Cumberland), may have embraced at one time all the southern
-Illinois counties between the mouths of the Kaskaskia and the Wabash.
-[The Angel Site near Evansville, Indiana, may belong to the Cumberland
-subculture.] The other subculture, which may be termed Cahokia,
-flourished in counties bordering on the Mississippi from Union County to
-Wisconsin. As the two periods show few significant cultural differences,
-they will, except as noted hereafter, be treated as a single unit.
-
-The bow and arrow invented in the Final Woodland phase, was developed
-early in the Middle Mississippi period into an effective weapon although
-spear and perhaps spearthrower continued in use. The chunkey game was
-probably played as a part of a religious ceremony though it may quite
-possibly have served as a popular pastime as well.
-
-Pottery was slow at first to change from its more obvious Woodland
-characteristics but new shapes foreshadowing most of those of the fully
-developed (Old Village) cultural phase practically replaced the
-conical-based elongated pot early in the period. Cord-roughening and
-grit-tempering disappeared in the classic Cahokia period, and a fine
-polished blackware and a painted pottery were added to the smooth
-utilitarian ware. An excellent "dull gray" ware with smooth gray to
-brown surfaces was of more common occurrence. It appears to differ from
-the fine ware only in its partially oxidized surfaces probably due to
-poorly controlled firing methods.[14]
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 23. The chunkey game in foreground. Man hunting
- with bow and arrow in background. Middle Mississippi period. (J.C.)]
-
-There were probably two or more social classes among the Middle phase
-people as there were among Hopewellians, Natchez and Polynesians.[15]
-The fine polished black and painted wares may have been marks of
-distinction between the highest and lower classes since it is much less
-common. In Hopewellian times, it is probable that both the fine ware and
-the specialized forms (which were usually of the highest quality) were
-reserved for the highest caste. In the Mississippi period, the shallow
-bowl, the cup or beaker, and the plate of dull gray ware seem to have
-been wide-spread in the village and may indicate a general improvement
-of living conditions among the lower social classes since Hopewellian
-times.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 24. Pottery shapes, Middle Mississippi period.
- A, "bean pot"; B, angular-shouldered pot or olla; C, common pot or
- olla; D, shallow bowl; E, water bottle; F, effigy bowl; G, plate.]
-
-Advances in the economy were obviously present in the fully developed
-Middle phase. The Union County flint "mines" and workshops were
-intensively worked. Trade with the Lake Superior, lower Atlantic and
-Gulf Coast regions was resumed. Chief imports of raw materials were
-copper and marine shells, Busycon, Marginella, Oliva and Olivella. Art,
-while possibly as highly developed as Hopewellian, resulted in a far
-smaller number of art objects in fewer durable media. Intaglio rock
-carvings (chiefly in southern Illinois) of geometric designs, human
-hands, ceremonial paraphernalia, animal outlines, and, in a few
-instances, painted hollowed-out animal silhouettes can probably be
-ascribed to this period on the basis of the symbols employed. Dwellings
-or cabins were relatively substantial structures and the extent of
-village remains indicate a large general population as compared to
-earlier times in the state. Trade and art suggest leisure and wealth or
-surplus available for exchange or to support officials and others in
-non-food productive pursuits. This prosperity was possibly due to newly
-discovered methods of intensive cultivation of maize and possibly to a
-greater diversity of crops than ever before.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 25. Carved stone pipe (fragmentary) from
- Kingston Lake Site (Cahokia subculture, Middle Mississippi period).
- Owned by Donald Wray. Right-hand figure shows the pipe
- reconstructed.]
-
-Territorially the tribe probably consisted of a number of villages and
-the surrounding country. Each tribe may have had a chief village or
-capital that was also a religious center with tribal (public) buildings
-and a temple. Archaeological and historical evidence shows that these
-buildings, presumably temples and the dwellings of tribal chiefs and the
-high priests, were erected on the flat tops of rectangular earthen
-mounds or pyramids, which were grouped around a plaza of ceremonial
-square. Here the tribe gathered for religious and political ceremonies
-and for important funerals. Intertribal negotiations and chunkey games
-were probably also staged on or near the plaza.
-
-Pipes, either of stone or pottery, were generally of the "equal-armed"
-type (where stem length is about equal to bowl height). In numerous
-instances, a short projection resembling the stem in shape but shorter,
-extends beyond the bowl away from the smoker. Massive effigy pipes of
-stone were widespread but not numerous. Some were excellently carved.
-From their construction, it is obvious that they were made to be smoked
-through a reed or hollow wooden stem called in later times the calumet.
-These together probably constituted a form of ceremonial pipe that
-served as a safe conduct between tribes, as a bond and signature at
-peace- and treaty-making ceremonies, and to present tobacco smoke as
-incense to the gods in religious rituals.
-
-Priests and possibly tribal chiefs were interred in the flat tops of
-mounds (e.g. the Powell Mound) near temple or cabin. Generally, however,
-the dead were buried in cemeteries. In some instances, bodies were laid
-on the surface above a "full" cemetery and covered with earth brought
-from outside. Continuing this practice eventually produced a mound (e.g.
-Dickson Mound near Lewistown). Possibly the burial mounds at Cahokia
-were reserved for the socially prominent while the lower classes were
-interred in the cemeteries nearby. The dead, especially important
-personages were attired in their finest apparel, insignia and personal
-ornaments. Beside them in the grave were placed their weapons, favorite
-chunkey stones, food and water in pottery vessels with shell spoons or a
-dipper.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 26. Interior view of Dickson Mound (in Dickson
- Mounds State Park near Lewistown, Illinois), showing pottery and
- other artifacts as originally placed with the dead. Cahokia
- subculture, Middle Mississippi phase.]
-
-Chief villages were large religious centers often protected by an
-encircling palisade or clay wall reinforced with vertical posts or logs.
-Remains of defensive walls can still be readily traced by a trained eye
-at the Kincaid (Massac County) and Lynn (Union County) villages.
-Exploration of the Aztalan village (Wisconsin) yielded remains of a
-reinforced clay wall surmounted at regular intervals with towers of like
-construction. The Cahokia village seems to have been without
-fortifications.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 27. Reconstruction of Kincaid Village
- (Cumberland subculture, Middle Mississippi period) near Metropolis,
- Illinois. (Diorama by Arthur Sieving.)]
-
-Smaller villages occasionally had one or two small flat-topped mounds
-which doubtless served as bases for the cabins of the Village Chief and
-possibly War Chief. Other Middle phase villages had no mounds or
-fortifications.
-
-Cabins were of three or more types. In Illinois, two kinds had
-rectangular floor outlines and may have developed from the earlier
-Baumer square dwelling and the Lewis house. One of these types prevalent
-at Kincaid, as determined from charred remains, had a thatched gable
-roof supported on four corner posts with their lower ends sunk in the
-ground. Walls were made of clay daubed on a latticework of cane (with
-foliage) interlacing vertical wall posts, the interior covered with
-split cane mats. The rafters, corner and wall posts, and wall plates
-were of poles or small logs lashed together and held in place by braided
-ropes. Floors do not appear to have been depressed below surrounding
-ground level. A larger more substantial structure, presumably a temple,
-on a Kincaid mound (Mx^o9) had thick walls of clay mixed with grass, but
-otherwise resembled the dwelling just described. The clay floor and wall
-surfaces were smooth. Fire basins of puddled clay within the building
-may have been the remains of altars.
-
-Cabins in Fulton County (Fout's Village) and at Cahokia were rectangular
-in floor plan but wall posts were probably bent over to be joined with
-corresponding opposite members to form an arched or vaulted roof, the
-precursor perhaps of the "barrel-shaped" Illini cabins reported by
-French explorers. Floors were sunk somewhat below the ground level.
-Remains of cabins with circular floors occur also at Cahokia and in
-Fulton County.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 28. Petroglyphs from southern Illinois sites
- probably made by Middle Mississippian peoples. All figures are
- hollowed out or _intaglio_. (Photographs by Irvin Peithmann.)]
-
- [Illustration: Back wall of rock shelter near Gorham, Illinois.]
-
- [Illustration: Figure of buffalo calf painted yellow over entire
- depressed area. The outlines were chalked in for the purpose of
- photographing.]
-
-Walls and wall posts of the Fulton County cabins appear in some
-instances to be formed of bundles of small branches or cane set in
-trenches possibly a foot deep. There is no evidence of the
-wattle-and-daub structure. Walls may have been covered with mats, or
-with rectangles of bark. Roofs were probably thatched.
-
-Possibly the Cahokia subculture peoples constituted a single tribe, a
-small nation, or a confederation of tribes. At its most powerful period,
-the Cahokia settlement was perhaps the capital and religious center. The
-region south of a line joining the mouths of the Kaskaskia and Wabash
-rivers at one time probably belonged to another tribe or subtribe whose
-chief village was the Kincaid community in Pope and Massac counties and
-who, linguistically and culturally, were closely related to peoples in
-Tennessee and Kentucky and at the Angel site in Indiana.
-
-Archaeologically speaking, the Middle Mississippi contrasts sharply with
-the Hopewellian culture. Certain artifacts are readily distinguishable
-and easily identified with the craftsman's cultures. Actually the
-Mississippians differ from the Hopewellians chiefly in having
-substantial cabins, athletic games and the bow and arrow.
-
-Remains of Hopewellian dwellings are rare, but the three or four found
-up to now are characterized by round or oval floor plans outlined with
-post holes of three to four inches in diameter. These seem to indicate
-hemispherical wigwams. No further evidence of wall or roof structure has
-been recovered. The rarity of these dwellings certainly suggests a less
-permanent dwelling than the Mississippi cabin. However, it will be
-remembered that some peoples pattern their tombs upon their dwellings.
-The upper caste Hopewellians built rectangular burial chambers which
-were walled up with logs laid one on another and roofed over with
-half-logs or bark. Similar log house surface structures would seldom
-leave discernible remains on decay. It is possible, though by no means
-certain, that the Hopewellians of highest caste, and perhaps of the
-other castes, built log cabins for dwellings.
-
-The evidence for playing of athletic games in Hopewellian is very late
-and scanty. The only tangible indication are the rings, "pulleys" and a
-stone discoidal found with a skeleton in the Rutherford Mound. (See M.
-L. Fowler, _The Rutherford Mound_, Scientific Papers Series, Vol. VII,
-No. 1, Springfield, Ill. 1957, pp. 31-33). The rings of pottery and of
-cannel coal (or jet) seem too fragile for actual playing pieces and may
-rather be trophies or prizes, replicas of similar pieces made of wood.
-Such wooden pieces may have been used in games throughout middle and
-late Hopewellian times.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 29. (Photographs by Irvin Peithmann.)]
-
- [Illustration: View of a stream-side flint mine and workshop (in
- field alongside) near Cobden, Illinois.]
-
- [Illustration: Close-up showing spherical or "ball-flint" nodules
- from stream banks similar to those worked up by Middle
- Mississippians and others in adjacent workshop.]
-
-The bow and arrow, at least, seems to be a decided improvement over the
-spear. It constituted a repeating weapon. Ammunition could be carried in
-the belt or on the back in a quiver without unduly hampering the bowman.
-On the other hand, it was useless in hand-to-hand fighting and a spear
-or dagger was needed to supplement it. Moreover, the spear with a
-thrower was a more accurate weapon than the bow, unless the arrows were
-carefully made and balanced. The bow never seems to have wholly replaced
-the spear which continued to be a favorite weapon down into the European
-contact period.
-
-The improvements that distinguish the Mississippians above the
-Hopewellians may be more apparent than real in the first two instances
-and, in the third, may represent a significant rather than a fundamental
-advance. Looking at the two periods from the broader cultural viewpoint,
-they appear to have many cultural features in common. The Middle
-Mississippians probably added new food and fibre plants to those of
-earlier periods, and perhaps increased production by improved, more
-intensive methods of cultivation. Their staple crops like those of the
-Hopewellians were corn, beans and tobacco.
-
-The technologies or methods of making the necessary tools in the two
-cultures varied but little. Art was revived or rather re-developed in
-the Mississippian period but fewer media are employed. In artistic
-skill, imagination and productiveness perhaps the Hopewellians had an
-edge on the later people.
-
-Trade and travel, though resumed to distant sections of the continent,
-does not appear so widespread or general as in the Hopewellian period. A
-formalized religion with colorful ceremonies seems to have revitalized
-the life of the people but possibly no more effectively than in the
-earlier period.
-
-There was no significant improvement in labor, power or transportation;
-all were still accomplished wholly by human effort without the aid of
-draft animals. Traveling by boat was known and probably used by both
-cultures.
-
-Comparing the two peoples with other plant growers having no domestic
-food-draft animals, it seems apparent that each had an effective
-political organization, a formalized vital religion with true priests
-(not "self-appointed" shamans) and a system of moral values and tenets
-that "church" and "state" were organized to maintain. All in all, from
-the broader cultural standpoint, they were amazingly alike.
-
-
-
-
- UNDER-DEVELOPED NEIGHBORS--THE UPPER MISSISSIPPIANS (1100?-1600 A.D.)
-
-
-Less advanced Mississippi tribes with customs showing some admixture of
-Woodland cultural elements living contemporaneously in Missouri, Iowa,
-Wisconsin, Indiana and Ohio, encircled the Middle phase peoples on the
-east, north and west. Known generally now as the Upper phase peoples
-their sole representative in Illinois was the people of the Langford
-subculture, who dwelt around the southern end of Lake Michigan as well
-as in adjacent parts of Indiana and Michigan. The type station is the
-Fisher Village and Mounds near Joliet which were ably investigated by
-Mr. George Langford, Sr. some years ago.[16]
-
-They built no flat-topped pyramids and left little, if any, evidence of
-their religious practices. Their art, as exhibited by pottery, personal
-ornaments or weapons was not of a high order. There is no evidence that
-they played the chunkey game. Some copper hatchets and ornaments were in
-use, but these appear to be of Middle Mississippi workmanship and may
-have been trade articles.
-
-On the positive side, they buried their dead in dome-shaped earthen
-mounds, usually in the extended position, frequently with food (in clay
-pots with shell spoons), weapons (arrows and tomahawks or hafted celts),
-personal ornaments and various utilitarian implements. Dwellings had
-subsurface circular floors and were doubtless dome-shaped
-(hemispherical). The bow and arrow were in common use with arrowheads
-primarily of slender simple triangular shape, very rarely with side
-notches. Implements, weapons and ornaments were chiefly of chipped
-flint, ground or polished stone, river clam shells, bone and animal
-teeth. Copper was rarely employed.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 30. Characteristic pottery from the Langford
- subculture, Upper Mississippi phase, (Fisher Site near Channahon,
- Illinois). (Photograph by George Langford, Chicago Natural History
- Museum.)]
-
-Pots were generally of the globular or flattened globular shape (olla or
-jar), tempered with grit (early) and shell (later), and decorated with
-geometric designs in broad lines and dots, drawn ("trailed") or
-impressed on the shoulder region with a blunt tool (such as an antler
-tine). Lips of vessels were usually pressure-notched and surfaces
-cord-roughened. Loop handles on the jars were common.
-
-Numerous examples of flat stone tablets associated with a number of
-short solid antler cylinders lead one to suspect that a game of chance
-of some sort was played and that gambling was probably indulged in.
-
-Other than pottery and personal adornment, the only art practiced was
-the cutting of mussel shell into handled spoons and outlines of fish and
-other objects. Apparently there was no urge for fine workmanship.
-
-It is highly probable that these Upper Mississippians were plant growers
-who hunted to secure their meat. The extent of village remains and the
-evidence of semi-permanent dwellings point to this type of economy even
-though no grain or seeds of any kind were found in the site. Shell hoes
-of the common type were used. The dog was the only domesticated animal.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 31. Effigy fish and a decorated spoon
- (fragmentary) made of mussel shells. Langford subculture, Upper
- Mississippi phase (Fisher site). (Photograph by George Langford,
- Chicago Natural History Museum.)]
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 32. Stone tablet and gaming pieces from the
- Langford subcultural period, Upper Mississippi phase (Fisher site).
- (Photograph by George Langford, Chicago Natural History Museum.)]
-
-Apparently most of their needs were supplied by their own efforts and
-from local sources. There is no evidence of any trade, except possibly
-of a very limited kind with near neighbors to the west.
-
-The evidence for the residence around the southern lake shores is based
-chiefly on the occurrence of the Fisher pottery type. This area after
-1760 was occupied by the Miami tribe who may possibly have been the
-builders of the Fisher Mounds.
-
-
-
-
- THE ILLINOIS OR ILLINI[17] (1550?-1833 A.D.)
-
-
-The Illinois or Illini Indians are, so far as is now known, the next
-group to occupy the state following the Middle Mississippians. At the
-time of Marquette and Jolliet's voyage in 1673, six tribes comprised the
-Illinois Confederacy, Kaskaskia, Cahokia, Michigamea, Peoria, Moingwena,
-and Tamaroa[18]. The tribes spoke the same or mutually intelligible
-dialects of the Algonkian language.
-
-Some time before 1650, possibly a century or more, the Illinois
-Confederacy seems to have been a powerful nation but in the latter half
-of the 17th century this was a tradition rather than fact. The
-Confederacy appears to have engaged in no united action after 1650.
-
-The Illini at that time were in the plant-raising stage of culture and
-possessed only the dog as a domesticated animal. Like many other
-plant-raisers, the families deserted the village for the hunt after the
-corn was hilled and again after the harvest.
-
-
- Dress
-
-Men went naked in summer except for mocassins. At times a breech cloth
-was worn; in winter buffalo skin robes were added and belts, leg bands
-and leggings on occasion.
-
-Women when working apparently wore only a girdle (breech cloth), at
-other times a wrap-around skirt of skin with a belt passing over one
-shoulder and under the opposite arm. The skirt dates back to Hopewellian
-times and was used during the Mississippi period in Indiana and probably
-in Illinois. The bosom was covered with a deerskin wrap. Hair was worn
-long and fastened behind the head.
-
-
- Economy
-
-Labor was divided between the men and the women (and children). Men did
-the hunting, fighting and made the weapons. The women (and children) did
-the other work--the housework, planting and harvesting the crops,
-dressing deer and buffalo skins, making twine from bast, weaving cloth
-and, on the hunt, carrying the house parts and setting up the camp.
-
-Buffalo meat was preserved by drying and smoking it over a fire in the
-hunting camp. Vegetable foods, corn, beans and squash were dried or
-parched and buried in containers or in lined pits in the ground and
-covered over. Watermelons, muskmelons (?), gourds and tobacco were also
-grown. Wild strawberries, paw paws, pecans, lotus roots, wild tubers,
-grapes and plums formed part of their diet.
-
-The winter buffalo hunt usually took place a long way from the village.
-The hunting units each consisted of several families under a rigid
-police system and regulation to prevent the herd from being stampeded by
-an over-eager family before all were amply provided with meat.
-Violations of hunting regulations were punished by destruction of the
-offender's property to which no resistance was ever attempted. The group
-surrounded the herd, at times encircling it with fires made at intervals
-near which the hunters stood and killed the stampeding animals. At times
-as many as 120 buffalo were killed in a day. The women cut out the
-tongues, skinned the animals, and, peeling off the sides of meat, dried
-and smoked them on wooden grates over a slow fire. The smoked sides were
-carried back to the village on the back, or when practicable in dugout
-boats. Carcasses and bones were left on the hunting grounds. Other
-animals were stalked by one or two hunters. Dog meat was considered a
-great delicacy.
-
-Fish were caught in nets, by hook and line, speared or shot with bow and
-arrow. They were dried for preservation. Maple trees were tapped late in
-the winter, the sap caught in bark containers and made into a maple
-drink or reduced by boiling to syrup and sugar. Corn was ground into
-meal and baked into bread, or prepared as hominy.
-
-Vessels and utensils were made of wood or clay, ladles from a section of
-the buffalo skull. Fire was produced by the hand drill in the usual
-manner.
-
-The cabin type seems to have varied at different periods or in different
-tribes. In early times, cabins had rectangular floors and vaulted
-(barrel-shaped) roofs. They were roofed and floored with "double-mats"
-of flat rushes and were impervious to wind or rain. Occasionally they
-were erected on low mounds (two feet high) to keep the floors dry. Large
-cabins of the vaulted type had four fires, with one or two families at a
-fire.
-
-Bark-covered hemispherical huts or wigwams may have been used on hunting
-trips. They were apparently common in some villages in 1723.
-
-Overland travel was on foot. On streams the dugout boat was propelled by
-pole and possibly by paddle. Large boats were 40 to 50 feet long,
-capable of carrying 40 to 50 men. While dugouts were admirably suited
-for travel and trade between the Illini tribes along the Illinois and
-Mississippi rivers, they were, on account of their weight and
-unwieldiness in portaging, generally useless in raids against enemies.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 33. Native Illini artifacts. A, Indian-made gun
- flint; B, C, D, chipped flint arrowheads; E, flint scraper; F,
- grooved abrader of sandstone; G, expanded base drill (grip only,
- point broken off); H, I, polished stone pendants. From Illini
- village site near mouth of Kaskaskia River, Randolph County.]
-
-
- Marriage Customs and the Family
-
-An Illini man, desiring to get married, sent presents to the girl's
-parents. If the suitor was acceptable, the parents kept the gift and
-took the bride to the man's hut the following evening. Apparently there
-was no wedding ceremony.
-
-Women had somewhat lower social status than their husbands. Wives did
-not eat with their husbands. A man was permitted two or more wives and
-often married two sisters. Children were well-treated. Infants were
-bound to a cradle board that the mother carried around. The cradle was
-pointed at the lower end and was stuck in the ground when the woman
-wanted to rest. Divorce was accomplished by a simple agreement to
-separate.
-
-
- Political Organization
-
-The explorers and writers to whom we are indebted for our knowledge of
-Illini social and religious organization were, unfortunately, casual and
-untrained observers who, on the whole, held the Indian and his customs
-in contempt. Important activities were often dismissed with meaningless
-generalizations, or omitted entirely, as if generally known.
-Consequently great gaps are left in the information that has come down
-to us.
-
-From the various accounts, the impression is given that the Illini
-tribes (and possibly before the 17th century, the Confederacy) had a
-political government (rather than _family social control_) with formally
-appointed officers or civil chiefs. The Confederacy had one or more
-coats-of-arms ("totems") that may have been recognized abroad as
-symbolic of the Illini (as was customary among the Natchez and other
-southeastern Indians). It had a Grand Chief, chosen in some manner not
-now known, from one of the constituent tribes. At one period "Prince
-Tamaroa" of the Tamaroas held the post, later Chief Ducoigne of the
-Kaskaskias. Whether or not the Confederacy acted as a nation after 1600
-is doubtful. Each tribe had its own head chief and coat-of-arms, and the
-French appear to have treated directly with the tribal heads in matters
-of importance. Judging from other Indian Confederations, the individual
-tribe had probably retained its full powers, and concerted action by the
-Confederacy was possible only by unanimous consent.
-
-Like most peoples in the simple plant-raising status, the tribe dealt as
-a state with other similar units in intertribal affairs. These included
-alliances and treaties of peace. Ambassadors or tribal representatives
-were sent from Illini tribes to their neighbors. On such occasions, the
-calumet was carried and served as a safe conduct.[19] Tribal
-representatives met approaching strangers (and presumably the
-ambassadors of another tribe), raising the highly adorned calumet (and
-pipe) toward the sun as they advanced. Smoking the calumet--by the
-contracting tribal agents at the conclusion of an
-agreement--corresponded to our signatures and seals at the end of a
-written treaty.
-
-Each village probably had a chief, whose power (it was sometimes
-reported) was little. However, the chiefs wore, as badges of office, red
-scarfs woven of bear and buffalo hair. Their faces were painted red. The
-village men (or possibly the important men) met before the village
-chief's cabin or in a large hut built especially for gatherings to
-deliberate on political or religious matters. The entire village often
-seems to have been in audience.
-
-If there were social classes among the Illini, no mention is made of it
-in early reports. Men acquired prestige mainly through skillful hunting
-or success in fighting. The leader in a raid had to recompense the
-families of any followers killed in the fighting.
-
-With so little description of the village and tribal assemblies and the
-chiefs in deliberation and judgment, it is difficult to determine the
-exact status of political organization of the tribe and its officers. It
-may well be that the powers of the chiefs immediately after European
-contact were small, and that in order to deal with the agency of a
-European state, the Illini found it necessary (as did the Delaware
-tribes) to grant greater authority and responsibility to their political
-leaders. It is probably also true that the chiefs would, under pressure
-from the whites, be reluctant to take responsibility for an unpopular
-concession and would declare that only the tribal council or assemblage
-could confirm the agreement under consideration. In any case, the Illini
-were on the threshold of true political control if they had not actually
-adopted it.
-
-
- Raids
-
-The tribe in historic times seems to have been the war-making group.
-Raiding parties tried to sneak undetected into enemy country and conceal
-themselves. From their hiding place, they fell suddenly on small
-unsuspecting enemy bodies, scalping men, killing women and children, and
-slipping away again with a few prisoners if practicable. Back in the
-village, captive warriors were bound to a frame of green wood, suspended
-over a slow fire, and tortured until death released them. Warriors hung
-the scalps taken upon their cabins as evidence of their prowess. The
-Illini claimed not to have tortured or burned captives until their men
-had been taken and so treated by Iroquois raiding parties. On the war
-path warriors carried bundles containing objects sacred to their
-guardian spirits and invoked them frequently to obtain victory.
-
-Bows and arrows in quivers, hatchets or tomahawks, clubs, and
-"arrowproof" shields consisting of several layers of buffalo hide were
-carried on raids. The bow and arrow was considered superior to the gun
-because it could "fire" more rapidly.
-
-
- Trade
-
-Earlier in the European period, the Illini furnished Canadians with
-skins of beaver, raccoon, deer, bear and buffalo, but in 1776 the French
-(in Illinois) compelled them "to devote themselves to producing oil,
-tallow and meat which they traded with them." (Deliette Memoir. See
-Pease in Bibliography under ILLINI.) The Indians traded for porcupine
-quills with more northern neighbors. After the European came, Illini
-trade was probably overwhelmingly with the whites, exchanging native
-products of the forest for coveted guns, iron knives, hatchets, brass
-kettles, cloth, glass beads and alcoholic liquors.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 34. A, B, common forms of Illini pipes
- (restored) of red Minnesota pipestone, Illinois State Museum
- collections: A, "Siouan"; B, Micmac; C, stone effigy-head type, (A.
- J. Throop collection). All from village near mouth of Kaskaskia
- River, Randolph County. (B.B.)]
-
-
- Religion
-
-The religion of the early historic Illini was apparently a complex one.
-The sun was evidently a powerful deity from whom the calumet pipe had
-perhaps been supposedly received. A special calumet, apparently sacred
-to the sun, was revered as a palladium (like the Hebraic Ark of the
-Covenant) on which rested the safety of the nation. A special official
-had responsibility for its safe keeping. The smoke of the pipe was
-offered to the sun whenever the Illini prayed for rain, fine weather, or
-some other aid. Whether the Grand Manitou (Great Spirit), whom the
-French thought was the Supreme God of the Illini, was identical with the
-sun is not known though it seems probable.
-
-In addition to the above gods, the Illini believed in numerous spirits
-and in reincarnation. A young man sought to secure a spirit as his
-superhuman helper or guardian for life. He fasted and prayed to the
-spirit to come to him in a vision. If successful (as he usually was),
-the spirit appeared to him in a dream and gave him instructions for a
-ritual by which he kept in contact with his protector. The objects
-needed for the ritual he collected on awakening and preserved them
-thereafter in a roll of painted matting. When calling upon his spirit
-protector, the bundle was opened and the rite performed, chiefly prayers
-and smoke offerings from a pipe blown toward the bundle.
-
-It seems probable that there were true priests who were appointed by
-regular procedure and who received their power by virtue of their
-installation into office. The priests, we are told, painted themselves
-all over with clay on which designs were drawn. Their faces were painted
-with red, white, blue, yellow, green and black colors. The "high priest"
-wore a bonnet or crown of feathers and a pair of horns, possibly young
-deer or buffalo.
-
-Medicine men also seem to have existed, persons who sought power from
-spirits to use in behalf of others for private gain or a livelihood.
-Possibly they were interested on the side in black magic or witchcraft,
-an anti-social activity.
-
-Dancing, probably singing, and supplication, together with the
-inevitable smoke offerings from a ceremonial pipe doubtless formed a
-large part of public worship for which the whole community assembled.
-Details of the Illini ceremonies and their meanings are not known.
-
-The French priests severely denounced native religious customs and
-"juggleries" of the Illini. The Peoria chiefs and priests resented this
-and resisted Christian attempts to convert the tribe (1693).
-
-Funeral and burial customs seem to have been generally similar to those
-of other plant-raising peoples. All dead were treated with respect,
-decked in their best apparel, painted in preparation for burial. A dance
-was performed in honor of the deceased. A skin stretched over a large
-pot formed a drum which was beaten with a single stick as accompaniment
-for the dance. The participants were rewarded with presents at the
-conclusion of the dance. The gifts to be distributed were displayed in
-full view of the dancers and the duration of the dance was determined by
-their relative richness. An important personage was given special
-consideration and the whole community probably attended the funeral.
-Corn and a pot to boil it in were placed beside the dead. Friends
-standing around the grave threw into it bracelets, pendants and "pieces
-of earthenware" (pots?). The graves of chiefs were marked by a painted
-wooden post taller than the markers for ordinary people. Illini chiefs
-and persons of distinction as a signal honor were placed in tree-tops in
-a coffin made of bark. The tribe danced and sang for twenty-four hours
-during the funeral of a distinguished man.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 35. Illini arrowshaft "wrench" or straightener
- of bison (?) rib engraved with figure of bison and cross-hatched
- triangles from Illinois village near mouth of Kaskaskia River,
- Randolph County.]
-
-
- Art
-
-Men tattooed their "whole bodies." They painted themselves in solid
-colors and with designs in red, black, yellow, blue, and other colors.
-The body was adorned with native jewelry, the nose and ears were pierced
-for ornaments, and feathers of many colors were worn attached to the
-scalp lock. Moccasins were decorated with porcupine quill embroidery.
-Men clipped or shaved most of the head, leaving the scalp lock and four
-other tufts of long hair, two on each side, one in front of and behind
-each ear. After European trade goods were available, glass beads and
-cloth were obtainable in considerable quantities and largely replaced
-native dress materials and ornaments.
-
-The Illini played lacrosse, an athletic game. The straw-and-bean game
-was a game of chance in which the players each took a number of straws
-from a bundle. The straws in each hand were discarded by sixes, the
-number left determining the winner of the round. Beans were used as
-counters. The Illini made wagers as to the outcome, even putting up
-their sisters as stakes in the game.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 36. Shapes of Illini pots (Middle Mississippi
- ware) reconstructed from sherds found in association with other
- native and European objects on the Illini village site near mouth of
- Kaskaskia River, Randolph County. (B.B.)]
-
-
- Archaeology of the Illini
-
-Two village sites of the Illini have been investigated by the Illinois
-State Museum, one near Utica, LaSalle County (jointly with the
-University of Chicago) and one in Randolph County near the mouth of the
-Kaskaskia River. This last site was occupied for over a century by
-descendants of the Kaskaskias and other Illini tribes. Except for a
-small area where Archaic artifacts are found, it is a "pure" site.
-
-The Illini tools, weapons and ornaments of native make were the usual
-chipped flint triangular arrowheads, simple flint drills and scrapers,
-rough stone hammers and abrading stones, small ground stone pendants,
-polished stone "Micmac" or "keel-based" pipe bowls (many of catlinite),
-the long-stemmed L-shaped catlinite pipes (sometimes called "Siouan"),
-and cut and engraved bone ornaments. An arrowshaft straightener carries
-an etching of a buffalo cow. Pottery is rare, but the pieces found in
-association with European trade goods are characteristically Middle
-Mississippian.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 37. European trade goods and artifacts made from
- European materials. All from Illini village near mouth of Kaskaskia
- River, Randolph County. A, conical arrowhead of sheet copper; B,
- chipped glass arrowhead; C, brass arrowhead; D, hammer of flintlock
- gun; E, iron blade of clasp knife; F, an iron scissor-blade; G, part
- of a jew's-harp.]
-
-The Illini made artifacts from fragments of European materials, iron
-spear- and arrowheads, brass and chipped glass arrowheads, brass
-pendants, and beads of broken porcelain.
-
-European trade materials far exceed in number the native products.
-Usually they are fragmentary (except for colored glass beads of many
-kinds): parts of copper and brass kettles, iron handles, gun hammers and
-other parts, lead balls and the molds for making them, molds for casting
-crosses and ornaments, iron spoons, kitchen and clasp knife blades of
-iron, "Dutch" white pottery pipes, scissors, jew's-harps, bottles for
-wine and olive oil, brass buttons and finger rings.
-
-The Illini seem to have cast lead into musket balls and chipped gun
-flints into shape but beyond that made no attempt to learn machine-age
-technologies. For firearms, gunpowder, iron knives and hatchets they
-were wholly dependent on the white invaders, a great disadvantage in
-event of hostilities and one that eventually cost them ownership of
-their ancient homelands.
-
-
-
-
- THE INDIANS LEAVE ILLINOIS
-
-
-For historic tribes of the state other than the Illini little is known
-of their archaeology. Culturally it is almost a certainty that all were,
-soon after contact, largely disorganized due to partial economic
-dependence, European diseases and the alcohol trade, to diminishing
-game, loss of other resources, and to military pressures from white
-governments and contiguous Indian groups.
-
-Only the broad outlines of the movements of the historic tribes that
-lived, hunted, or made forays in Illinois need to be noted here. The
-Iroquois, Winnebago and Chickasaw made no attempts to permanently occupy
-Illinois territory as a result of their raids.
-
-The Illini came under French influence after 1673 and leaned heavily on
-their military support. At times the Illini warriors fought bravely
-alongside the French, but generally they had little stomach for fighting
-even in their own defense. They shifted their settlements frequently
-after the Iroquois attack of 1680 and later under repeated pressure by
-the Sauk, Fox, Kickapoo and Potawatomi, who invaded and occupied the
-northern part of Illini territory.
-
-Due to their dwindling courage and lack of incentive, more perhaps than
-to their losses in enemy raids, the Illini tribes decreased rapidly in
-numbers and importance. When they were removed to the west of the
-Mississippi in 1832, the population of the once great Illini Confederacy
-totalled little more than one hundred persons.
-
-Even before this, the Miami had been pushed out of Illinois due to
-inroads of the Kickapoo and Potawatomi. The Shawnee, too, probably
-abandoned their permanent settlements in southern Illinois early in the
-contact period though these lower counties may have still been
-considered their territory. Other groups did not settle or hunt there
-and the Shawnee did establish some villages there (e.g. Shawneetown)
-briefly in the eighteenth century. Bands of Shawnee continued to hunt in
-this region until 1828 or later.
-
-The Sauk, Fox, Kickapoo and Potawatomi did not long enjoy the territory
-they had wrested from the Illini and Miami. Immediately after the Black
-Hawk War in 1832, steps were taken to move all Indians from the state.
-By the Treaty of Chicago, the Indians gave up all their lands in
-Illinois, and in 1837 the last bands (Potawatomi) crossed to the western
-bank of the Mississippi. No land is reserved today in this state for
-Indians. Its former resident tribes now live in reservations in Iowa,
-Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska and in the state of Coahuila in Mexico.
-
-
-
-
- SUMMARY OF ILLINOIS PREHISTORY
-
-
-The archaeology of Illinois in its present position seems to indicate
-that the state did not at any time form a distinct single culture or
-subculture but that it was rather the meeting place of many, due
-possibly to the rivers that enclose, lead to and intersect its
-territory. It was at one and the same time a part of one or more
-widespread patterns or phases and a patchwork of subcultures that
-extended into neighboring states. There was a tendency for the cultures
-of the northern four-fifths of the state (roughly north of a line
-joining East St. Louis with Evansville, Indiana) to be more like the
-adjacent regions, while those of the remaining counties were more
-closely related to those of Kentucky, Tennessee, southern Indiana and
-Missouri and rather readily distinguishable from those of their northern
-neighbors.
-
-There are few instances when it appears probable that a part of the
-state was invaded by a people of a distinctly differing culture. The
-Paleo-Indian Big Game Hunters presumably found in Illinois virgin
-country without previous human occupants. The Baumerians probably
-entered Illinois from south of the Ohio and expelled or absorbed the
-conservative Terminal Archaics. Possibly Mortonians intruded into the
-Black Sand-Red Ocre culture of Illinois from the northwest. Less
-plausibly, the Stone Vault Grave people may have pushed their way into
-Adams County from the Gasconade River region of Missouri.
-
-The emphasis in this paper has been placed perhaps on the change of
-cultures. To keep one from getting an erroneous impression of cultural
-stability, it should be said that, in the writer's opinion, a culture
-and subculture contained in greater or smaller areas change gradually
-through a process of invention here and there and through interchanges
-of improvements back and forth over a long time. When the change is
-sufficient to be noted as a "new" culture, the various cultural elements
-or features are apt to be widely distributed over much the same area.
-Thus, Baumer seems to have existed for a time alongside Terminal Archaic
-but finally spread through the southern counties; Hopewellian may have
-persisted in Calhoun County for a century or more after its collapse to
-the north and east; and the Final phase may have lingered on in remote
-portions of the state until Cahokia was past the height of its glory. In
-general, perhaps it could be said that the southern fifth and the
-remaining four-fifths of the state were out of step with each other most
-of the time.
-
-As previously noted, some of the Paleo-Indian families, upon the retreat
-of the last glacier, settled in Illinois as they did in the neighboring
-states, adapted themselves to the changed surroundings, and in so doing
-developed the Archaic culture or way of life. This phase developed
-through a series of subcultures though not necessarily identical
-sequences in all the states or even within Illinois. In southern
-Illinois, Terminal Archaic seems to have persisted until about 2000 B.C.
-while in the north, it apparently had developed into Initial (early)
-Woodland a few centuries earlier. The Baumer subculture, probably
-arising from the Archaic of Tennessee, appears to have been carried by
-its bearers into southeastern Illinois along the Tennessee and
-Cumberland rivers. Although widespread in the Mississippi Valley, the
-Archaic population was thinly scattered.
-
-In northern Illinois and in Wisconsin the Black Sand-Red Ochre culture
-seems to have developed from the native Terminal Archaic (and Old
-Copper) possibly around 2500 B.C. The Morton (Central Basin) people
-appear to have had their cultural roots outside the state and to have
-combined with the native groups (Black Sand-Red Ochre) they found in the
-northern counties. Average populational distribution was still low with
-the small settlements perhaps somewhat more numerous though no more
-populous than during Archaic times. The early Woodland peoples differed
-from their predecessors mainly in being pottery-makers. In southern
-Illinois only they practiced storage of acorns and hickory nuts
-extensively.
-
-About 500 B.C. in northern Illinois the Morton people more or less
-contemporaneously with similarly advanced peoples in Iowa, Wisconsin,
-Indiana, Michigan and Ohio, passed into the Hopewellian civilization
-which was erected on the cultivation of maize, beans, squash and
-tobacco, and the technologies of the earlier Woodland period. In
-southern Illinois Baumer developed into the Crab Orchard culture whose
-people traded with the more northern Hopewellians, intermarried with
-them and finally adopted the Hopewellian way of life about 100 B.C.
-
-A century or two later, Hopewellian in the north of Illinois began to
-deteriorate and eventually broke up into a number of small subcultures,
-obviously closely related but still distinguishable archaeologically.
-The same disintegration of Hopewellian took place in southern Illinois a
-few centuries later, and by 400 or 450 B.C. Hopewellian had disappeared
-from all Illinois except possibly in Calhoun County in the west, while
-south of the Ohio River it still continued to spread and flourish in
-Mississippi and Louisiana for some centuries.
-
-In Illinois a period of decadence set in for the next few centuries
-(possibly 250 to 1000 A.D.). The larger settlements or settlement
-clusters dwindled to mere hamlets, whose remains are scarcely
-distinguishable from the early Woodland artifacts except that the
-tobacco pipe is present. Though they must still have retained a
-tradition of plant-raising, they seem to have avoided it and reverted to
-a pure hunting-collecting economy. Even in southern Illinois the storage
-of food seems to have played an insignificant role. Nevertheless
-throughout this cultural recession, certain trends occur in all the six
-Final Woodland subcultures which foreshadow later developments in the
-Middle (Mississippi) Phase.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 38. The Stream of Culture. The archaeological
- cultures within Illinois are included within the two heavy lines,
- openings in which indicate cultural extensions beyond or intrusions
- into the state. Vertical positions indicate sequences in a general
- way. (Drawing by Jeanne McCarty.)]
-
-About 1000 A.D. or possibly a little earlier, the Final Woodland
-developed into an early Protomississippi (Protomiss) and, at last,
-(possibly 1000 to 1100 A.D.) into the full-blown Middle Phase
-civilization. The Cahokia subculture appears to be primarily, though not
-exclusively, Illinoisian while the Cumberland development in the
-southeast of the state was shared more generously with adjacent Indiana,
-Kentucky and Tennessee. Judging by the distribution of stone box (cist)
-graves, the Cumberland subculture seems to have expanded westward at the
-expense of the Cahokia peoples to envelope most of the southern counties
-from Monroe to White. (Another interpretation might be that the grave
-type of their eastern Cumberland neighbors was adopted by the
-Cahokians.) The Crable Village, possibly a late Cahokian settlement,
-yields artifacts suggesting cultural influences brought in from Iowa,
-Missouri and possibly Arkansas. It is probable that the culture came to
-an end in Illinois by 1500 or 1550. This fact coupled with the pottery
-evidence makes it highly probable (though possibly not conclusive) that
-the disorganized Illini Confederacy embraced the tribes whose members
-were the descendants of the people of the great Middle Phase
-civilization in Illinois.
-
-More or less contemporaneous with the Middle Phase culture were the
-so-called Upper Phase peoples of Missouri, Iowa, Wisconsin, Michigan and
-Indiana. These were represented in Illinois by the Fisher peoples of the
-Langford subculture known chiefly from sites along the Illinois,
-Kankakee and Des Plaines rivers in northeastern Illinois and (chiefly on
-a pottery basis) in northwestern Indiana and southern Michigan.
-
-Beset by enemies on the east, south, north and northwest, with their
-traditions of former greatness fading, the demoralized Illini tribes
-welcomed the protection of French soldiers. Their own resourcefulness,
-courage, pride, and confidence in themselves and their culture continued
-to deteriorate, their numbers to diminish under the softening influence
-of alcohol and the persistent assaults of the ruder more aggressive
-Winnebago, Sauk, Fox, Potawatomi and Kickapoo tribes invading Illinois
-from the north until they were reduced by 1833 to a mere handful of a
-hundred odd men, women and children. The demands on the part of citizens
-of the United States for Illinois lands was brought to a head by the
-scare of the Black Hawk War, and the Illini, their traditional Indian
-friends and enemies, were transferred to new territory west of the
-Mississippi. Thus ended the aboriginal occupation of Illinois that had
-endured for at least 10,000 years.
-
-
-
-
- GLOSSARY
-
-
-ADVANCED PHASE: The earliest pottery-making cultures of Woodland in
- southern Illinois. The peoples seem to have been storers of acorns
- and hickory nuts. It is sometimes called early Woodland.
-
-AMERINDIAN: The American Indian of Mongolian racial stock so named to
- distinguish him from the Asiatic Indian who is of the white or
- Caucasian race.
-
-ANTHROPOLOGY: The study of man and his cultural activities.
-
-ARCHAEOLOGY: The division of anthropology that studies peoples of the
- past through the remains of their works that are found in the
- ground.
-
-ARCHAIC (SUBCULTURE): An archaeological subdivision of the Lithic
- Pattern characterized by broad-bladed barbed spearheads,
- spearthrower weights and "bannerstones," small camps, and a
- hunting-collecting economy (without plant-raising or food-storage).
-
-ARROWHEADS: Projectile points less than three inches long presumed to
- have been used to tip arrows.
-
-ART: A form of human endeavor in which the individual or artist, with
- more or less skill, tries to produce an object or activity of such a
- nature that it is esthetically satisfying in some sense both to
- himself and to his group generally.
-
-ARTIFACTS: Any object made by man, or a natural object modified by man,
- in order to satisfy a cultural need. (Only the names and uses of
- artifacts that are not self-explanatory appear in the glossary).
-
-ATLATL: See SPEARTHROWER.
-
-ASSEMBLAGE: In this paper assemblage refers to the selected significant
- artifact types of an archaeological unit. In a more general sense,
- it signifies the aggregate of artifacts found at a particular site,
- or in a deposit belonging to a single culture at the site.
-
-AX: Refers in this paper to the grooved ground stone head resembling the
- modern steel ax in general form and presumably used for chopping in
- a somewhat similar manner.
-
-AZTALAN: The site of a Middle Phase fortified village with mounds in
- Jefferson County, Wisconsin, in the Cahokia Subculture. It was
- investigated by the Milwaukee Public Museum. See S. A. Barrett in
- Bibliography.
-
-BARB: A projection or shoulder near the base of the blade of a spear,
- dart or arrowhead that serves to retain it in a wound and to
- stimulate bleeding. One of a number of "backward" projections on a
- harpoon that serves a similar purpose.
-
-BAST: The inner bark (phloem) of a tree.
-
-BREECH CLOTH or CLOUT: An article of clothing consisting of a narrow
- band or fold of cloth or skin that passes around the waist and
- between the legs.
-
-BURIAL MOUND: Any man-made hill or knoll erected primarily to enclose
- the dead.
-
-CACHE: A deposit of a large number of artifacts in a grave or, in
- general, a number of artifacts found together in the earth.
-
-CALUMET: See note, page 48.
-
-CELT: An ungrooved stone or copper hatchet head.
-
-CHIEF: An official selected and formally installed in office by some
- social process who exercises civil authority by virtue of office.
-
-CHIPPING: See Flaking.
-
-CHOPPER: Generally any tool used for chopping, hewing, or hacking.
- Specifically, a chipped flint tool roughly hatchet shaped. Some hand
- choppers have the edge of the blade paralleling the longer axis of
- the piece.
-
-CHUNKEY STONE: A polished stone disk that was used as a bowl in various
- types of games.
-
-CIVILIZATION: See note, page 26.
-
-CLASSIC: The term used in this paper to designate the phase to which the
- Hopewellian Civilization of the Woodland pattern belongs.
-
-CLOVIS POINT: A type of leaf-shaped spearhead with a longitudinal groove
- (channel or fluting) generally extending one fourth to one half the
- length of the piece from its base toward its tip.
-
-CLUB: An adaptation of a stick for a weapon or a tool for hurling
- (throwing stick) or battering (war club). The war club is often
- weighted with a stone head for greater effectiveness. It differs
- from the tomahawk in that it has no cutting edge.
-
-CONCHOIDAL FRACTURE: The property of flint and certain other stones when
- struck with a hammer of chipping away in flakes which leave concave
- or shell-like scars or hollows. By suitable control methods, tool
- and weapon heads of desired types can be produced.
-
-CONOIDAL or CONICAL BASE: The characteristic pointed base of Woodland
- pots.
-
-CRAB ORCHARD: A division of the Baumer subculture.
-
-CULTURE: Culture as used in this paper has one of two meanings, each
- readily understood in its context. In a general sense, it means the
- significant beliefs, customary activities and social prohibitions
- peculiar to man (together with the man-made tools, weapons and other
- material objects that he finds or has found necessary) that modify,
- limit or enhance in some manner, most of his discernible natural
- activities due to his physical animal inheritance and organization.
- Culture in a specific sense refers to the significant cultural
- features of the group or period under consideration, the way of
- life. See FEATURE, CULTURAL.
-
-CUMBERLAND: A subculture of the Middle (Mississippi) Phase that
- flourished in southern Illinois, western Kentucky and Tennessee,
- archaeologically known as Gordon-Fewkes or Tennessee-Cumberland.
-
-DAGGER: A long sharp-pointed blade of flint (or a copper pin) presumably
- hafted with a wooden handle, used as a hunting knife or in
- hand-to-hand fighting.
-
-DARTHEADS: Medium-sized weapon heads (2-1/2 to 4 inches long) presumably
- used to tip lances or javelins.
-
-DICKSON MOUND: A burial mound near Lewistown in Fulton County where some
- three hundred skeletons together with their grave offerings have
- been exposed to view. It is now a State Park and open to visitors.
-
-DIGGING STICK: A conveniently-shaped stick used by primitive peoples in
- collecting tubers and roots and small animals, digging storage pits,
- and for preparing the soil for planting. Antler was sometimes shaped
- and presumably employed in like manner.
-
-DIGGING TOOL: Any implement employed by primitive peoples in digging--a
- digging stick, a shell hoe, or a chipped flint hoe.
-
-DOMESTICATION: The breeding and rearing of plants and animals under
- man's control and for his needs.
-
-DRIFT (rarely drifter): A blunt tool of antler or bone presumably held
- in the hand and pressed against a flint to flake it, or one held
- against the flint piece and struck with a hammer for a like purpose.
-
-DUGOUT: A boat made by hollowing out a log with fire and tools and
- shaping its exterior suitably for water travel.
-
-ECONOMIC ASPECT: That division of primitive culture concerned primarily
- with securing and preparing food, shelter, clothing, and raw
- materials for tools, weapons and other material devices, and the
- technologies involved. This required considerable knowledge of
- natural resources, properties of materials, and lay of the land and
- permits freer direct creative intellectual effort than does any
- other aspect.
-
-ECONOMY: The chief means of securing food and other basic physical
- requirements of man, as a hunting-collecting economy.
-
-EFFIGY: Any artifact resembling in outline, in relief, or in the round
- some living organism or mythical being.
-
-EFFIGY MOUND: A mound of earth in low relief shaped in outline form to
- resemble an animal or some geometric or other conventionalized form.
- They are often found in groups together with conical and elongated
- or linear mounds in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa and Illinois.
-
-EFFIGY POT: A pottery vessel made in the form of an animal, human being,
- or a part of one, or having conventionalized bird or animal head and
- tail projecting from opposite sides of rim or mouth (generally of
- shallow bowls), occurring most commonly in the Middle (Mississippi)
- Phase.
-
-EXTENDED: As applied to burials, a skeleton lying at full length usually
- on its side or back.
-
-FAMILY, EXTENDED: A man, his wife or wives, their descendants in the
- male or female line as custom dictates, and their families who
- consider themselves as a distinct social unit usually with an
- acknowledged leader or headman. The extended family usually lives in
- a local settlement or a limited territory.
-
-FAMILY, SIMPLE: A man, his wife or wives and their unmarried children.
-
-FAMILY-TYPE SOCIAL CONTROL: The manner of maintaining peace, order, and
- obedience to elders and to custom in tribes and local groups in the
- Self-Domestication Stage secured by early and strict indoctrination
- of the young in the family and through public opinion (social
- approval and disapproval) rather than by force and political
- agencies.
-
-FEATHER CLOTH: Robes or blankets made by attaching overlapping feathers
- to the outer surface of a textile or netting to simulate a bird
- skin.
-
-FEATURE, CULTURAL: Any type of cultural organization (or institution)
- within a tribe or independent cultural unit such as marriage, the
- family division of labor, social control, political governing
- agency, Sacred Tradition ("mythology"), etc.
-
-FERTILITY RITES: The religious ceremonies performed in a primitive tribe
- for the purpose of insuring its welfare, the continuance of an
- abundant supply of food animals and other natural resources on which
- it depends, and possibly with expressions of gratitude for past
- benefits.
-
-FESTIVALS: The term applied to the religious ceremonies of plant-raising
- peoples that relate to planting and the harvesting of crops.
-
-FINAL PHASE: The decadent Woodland culture, archaeologically known as
- late Woodland, is characteristic of much of Illinois in the interval
- between the fall of Hopewellian and the rise of Mississippi.
-
-FLAKER (DRIFT): A flint-working tool either used alone with simple
- pressure or as a punch struck by a stone hammer (indirect
- percussion).
-
-FLAKING or CHIPPING: The method of working flint into tools and weapons
- by direct hammer blows, indirect percussion or by pressure with a
- flaker.
-
-FLEXED: As applied to burials, a skeleton (generally lying on its side)
- with knees drawn up to or near chest, arms close to side or with
- hand(s) near head.
-
-FLINT: In this paper, any stone that flakes with a conchoidal fracture
- that was so used by Amerindians to make chipped tools and weapons.
-
-FOLSOM POINT: A flint spearhead having the faces of the blade hollowed
- out by chipping (channeling or fluting) except for a narrow strip
- paralleling each edge including the tip (see Figure 3, page 11).
-
-FOOD-DRAFT ANIMALS: The large mammals (especially the ox) that were
- domesticated by man and besides providing him with a continuously
- available supply of meat, served as a beast of burden or to draw a
- wheeled vehicle, to drag the plough, and as a source of energy to
- turn the mill. Animals were not generally so used in North America.
-
-FOOD-STORERS: Those peoples who by virtue of native ingenuity and some
- special natural resource in their region were enabled to store up
- sufficient food supplies to last them for several months.
-
-FORMALIZED RELIGION: The forms of prayer, worship, devotion and ritual
- and the organization of priests, etc. by which plant-raising tribes
- carry on their assumed relationships with the world of the unknown
- agents of natural forces.
-
-GORGET: (pronounced gor'-jet) A large flat artifact, possibly at times
- an insigne, of stone, shell, copper or bone worn on the chest.
-
-GRAVE GOODS: The jewelry, insignia, weapons or implements of a dead
- tribesman together with offerings that may have been placed in his
- grave by friends or relatives, including vessels containing food and
- water. Also called beigaben, funeral offerings, grave furniture,
- etc.
-
-GRINDING: The process by which a stone, bone, shell or metal artifact
- was shaped by rubbing with sand and water or against a piece of
- sandstone (abrader).
-
-GRINDING STONE: A large flat or slightly hollowed stone on which seeds,
- berries, or nuts were crushed or ground by a smaller hand stone
- (muller or pestle).
-
-GUARDIAN SPIRIT: Among primitive peoples, a being from the invisible
- spirit world who appeared to a person in a dream and was believed to
- serve the dreamer thereafter as his personal protector.
-
-HAMLET: The name used in this paper for local settlements of Archaic and
- Initial Woodland sites. They probably had populations of less than
- one hundred persons.
-
-HAMMERSTONE: A stone hammer. Any native or modified cobblestone used as
- a hammer.
-
-HATCHET: A ground stone or copper celt head. Tomahawk or hafted hatchet.
-
-HOUSEHOLD: A man, his wife, and children, married and unmarried together
- with slaves and others, if any, who customarily in their culture
- live under one shelter or roof.
-
-INDIRECT PERCUSSION: The use of a punch with a hammer, especially in the
- chipping of stone.
-
-INITIAL PHASE: The earliest pottery-making cultures of Woodland in
- northern Illinois, archaeologically known as early Woodland.
-
-INITIATION RITES: Puberty rites. As used in this paper, the ceremonies
- by which a boy on "becoming of age" is admitted to adult membership
- in the tribe. Somewhat simpler rites are performed for girls also in
- some tribes.
-
-INSIGNE: (Plural _insignia_) Any artifact worn by primitive people as a
- symbol of rank or class, birth (in a particular family), office,
- priesthood, or of individual prowess.
-
-INSTITUTIONS: See Social Structure.
-
-JEWELRY: Any object other than insignia, paint, or clothing worn by
- primitive man as personal adornment.
-
-KINCAID COMMUNITY: The site of a Middle Phase village, mounds,
- fortifications and other cultural remains in Pope and Massac
- counties, Illinois, on the Ohio River a few miles above Paducah,
- Kentucky.
-
-LAKE BAIKAL: A large inland lake in the south of Siberia. Pottery from
- the surrounding region resembles generalized Woodland ware,
- especially that of the Initial Phase.
-
-LINEAGE: The social group (including dead persons) whose members are
- descended from some certain or mythical ancestor, either male or
- female as the custom prevails, and which considers itself a distinct
- social unit. (See also Extended Family.)
-
-LITHIC: A term employed in this paper as embracing cultures roughly
- equivalent to those of the Self-Domestication Stage, but without
- pottery.
-
-MANA: Superhuman power that primitive man believed to reside in certain
- inanimate objects, in certain persons at times and in spirits, that
- under suitable conditions could be transferred either wholly or in
- part to other objects or persons. Improperly handled it was a source
- of grave danger.
-
-MIDDLE PHASE: The archaeological term for the highest development of the
- Mississippi pattern in the United States. In Illinois it is
- represented by the Cahokia and Cumberland subcultures.
-
-MISSISSIPPI: The major archaeological pattern that succeeded the earlier
- Woodland in most of the United States east of the Rocky Mountains
- and High Plains and that was still in existence in some parts of
- this country as late as 1700 A.D. It is characterized by relatively
- intensive plant-raising, political government, walled villages,
- temples (or sacred groves) and a priesthood, semi- to permanent
- dwellings, pottery of varied shapes, with globular bodies and
- secondary features, the bow and arrow.
-
-MODOC ROCK SHELTER: An ancient settlement of Archaic peoples in Randolph
- County, Illinois, dating from 8000 to 2100 B.C. See Bibliography
- under Deuel, and Fowler and Winters.
-
-MOUND: Any rise or hill of earth and/or stone that resulted from some
- activity of man, such as refuse mound, shell mound, burial mound,
- temple mound, etc. See BURIAL, EFFIGY, TEMPLE.
-
-MOUND BUILDERS: A term having little significance, meaning any group
- that erected mounds. In American archaeology it sometimes refers
- specifically to Hopewellians, to Mississippians or to both.
-
-MYTHOLOGY: See SACRED TRADITION.
-
-OBSIDIAN: Volcanic glass, a material imported by Hopewellians possibly
- from Wyoming. Rare in Illinois.
-
-PALEO-INDIAN (See Clovis and Folsom): Hunters of big game who roamed
- over North America in glacial times.
-
-PATTERN: The largest archaeological unit in the McKern Classification
- System.
-
-PECKING: The process (other than chipping) by which a stone artifact was
- brought to general shape by breaking off small particles with a
- stone hammer.
-
-PEOPLE: The term "people" as used in this paper does not refer to a
- physical type but simply to cultural groups unless specifically
- stated to the contrary.
-
-PERIOD: Unless otherwise specifically stated, the word applies to a
- cultural level regardless of time and place.
-
-PHASE: The major division of the pattern as used in the McKern
- Classification System.
-
-PLANT-RAISING: The economy or cultural status of a cultural group who
- grew food (and fibre) plants but were without domesticated
- food-draft animals.
-
-POLITICAL ORGANIZATION: A formalized social means of controlling the
- members of a nation or tribe and compelling compliance with
- established customs or laws with defined customary or lawful
- penalties for violations together with the machinery for determining
- equity, rights, or damages in non-criminal disputes through
- governmental agencies such as officers (chiefs) and official bodies
- (councils) regularly selected for these purposes.
-
-POLISHING: A process by which the surface of a ground stone artifact was
- brought to a high degree of smoothness and gloss by rubbing with
- fine earth and water. It is readily distinguishable from polish due
- to wear in digging.
-
-PRIEST: Any person selected in a regular and customary manner for
- religious office who by virtue of installation into that office and
- acceptance of the duties is (believed to be) invested with the power
- to communicate and intercede with members of the spirit world, a god
- or gods or in certain instances to act for them on behalf of his
- group.
-
-PRIMITIVE PEOPLE: Refers to any people in the Self-Domestication Stage
- and to the simple plant-growers of the Farming Period.
-
-PROTOCULTURAL: A stage presumed to have existed prior to man's discovery
- of the principle of conchoidal fracturing of flint, when he used
- native sticks and stones as tools, and sometimes by haphazard
- breaking of these secured new forms more suitable for his purposes.
-
-PROTOMISS: An abbreviated form for Protomississippi, the earliest known
- subculture of the Middle (Mississippi) Phase in southwestern
- Illinois. Dillinger is the type site.
-
-RELIGION: The set of beliefs (Sacred Tradition), rules (tabus), and
- activities (including rituals) that govern the life of a society
- with regard to those superhuman forces with which the individual
- feels himself surrounded and which neither he nor his group by
- themselves can control. Religious practice includes prayers or
- requests for the continuance of well-being and life's necessities,
- thanksgiving for past blessings, and a belief in the necessity of
- right conduct of the individuals in their daily living. In all known
- primitive religions, a belief in some form exists of spirit beings
- and/or gods with superhuman powers. See FORMALIZED RELIGION.
-
-ROCK SHELTER: An overhanging rock ledge facing away from the prevailing
- wind that afforded protection to a primitive family from the
- elements and wild animals.
-
-ROUGH STONE: This term refers to stone used as it occurs in nature with
- virtually no artificial modification other than that resulting from
- use such as a common hammerstone, an unworked abrader, or a grinding
- stone. The stone may have a relatively smooth surface due to natural
- causes.
-
-SACRED TRADITION: The term used here to signify the embodiment of the
- significant (effective) beliefs and rules that governed the behavior
- and activities of a primitive tribe in matters relating to the
- unseen world of spirits (or gods) and unknown forces, which were
- handed down from generation to generation. It is usually included in
- the inept term "mythology" which may also contain tales and legends
- that serve for mere entertainment.
-
-SELF-DOMESTICATION STAGE: The earliest stage of true human culture which
- began presumably with the discovery of controlled flint chipping and
- the invention of flint tool types. During this stage, man is enabled
- to secure a fairly constant food supply by hunting and collecting,
- keeps his young under parental care and control for several years
- and learns to accommodate himself more or less peaceably to his
- family and to fellow tribesmen during brief periods of religious and
- social gatherings.
-
-SHAMAN: A person who by virtue of dreams or visions believes he can
- communicate with spirits, obtain from them superhuman powers for the
- benefit of his social group and tribe and who has demonstrated these
- abilities over a greater or longer time to the satisfaction of his
- fellows.
-
-SHELLS, MARINE: Shells from the ocean or Gulf of Mexico, raw materials
- secured by traders or through exchange for other goods. The most
- common marine shells found in Illinois cultures are the _Cassis
- madagascarensis_ (Hopewellian), the Busycon or Fulgar (Middle
- Mississippi and Hopewellian), _Marginella_ (Initial Woodland,
- Hopewellian and Middle Mississippi), _Oliva_ (Middle Mississippi),
- and _Olivella_ (Hopewellian).
-
-SOCIAL ASPECT: That division of primitive culture that is concerned
- preeminently with preserving and stabilizing fundamental customs,
- with the maintenance of peace and order within its primary social
- units, and to this end, in the organization, functioning and
- continuation of such units.
-
-SOCIAL CONTROL: Any general social means by which a social or political
- group preserves peace and order within itself and group protection
- against outsiders (see Family-type and Political Agency).
-
-SOCIAL STRUCTURE: The persisting system of significant relationships in
- a society that prevails without regard to the particular individuals
- involved.
-
-SPEARHEADS: Projectile points 3 to 6 or 6-1/2 inches long presumed to
- have been used to tip spears.
-
-SPEARTHROWER (ATLATL): A short stick by which increased leverage is
- obtained in hurling a spear. It gives greater range and an accuracy
- comparable to the bow at shorter distances.
-
-SPEARTHROWER WEIGHT: A weight secured to the spearthrower for
- controlling it and increasing the speed of the spear.
-
-SPEAR, THRUSTING: A long spear that is fitted with a long, narrow head
- generally without barbs or shoulders, that can be easily withdrawn
- from a wound. It is primarily for use in the hand, not for throwing.
-
-SPECIALIZATION (CRAFT): An occupation in which a man or household of a
- primitive community engages primarily to the considerable exclusion
- of the general economic pursuits or the remainder of his group. It
- should not be confused with the production of a highly skilled
- craftsman.
-
-SPECIALIZATION (OF TOOLS): Applies to numerous variations in the forms
- derived from a general artifact type presumably to accomplish better
- and more easily certain special requirements of construction or
- manufacture.
-
-STAGE (CULTURAL): One of the major periods into which cultures may be
- divided by virtue of its degree of development which depends
- primarily on the fundamental invention that ushered it in.
-
-SPIRITUAL ASPECT: That division of primitive culture concerned primarily
- with tribal values, religion, recreation and the arts.
-
-STATUS (CULTURAL): A subdivision of a stage. A substage.
-
-STONE: Unless otherwise noted any kind of stone generally used by
- primitive peoples for pecking, grinding and polishing into weapons,
- tools, etc., for example, granite, greenstone, gneiss, shale,
- limestone, basalt.
-
-STONE VAULT GRAVE: A type of burial mound consisting chiefly of flat
- stones enclosing a walled-up tomb chamber, the whole covered with
- earth. In Illinois known at present only from Adams County.
-
-STONE VAULT SUBCULTURE: A division of Final Woodland Phase that is
- characterized by stone vault graves.
-
-SUBCULTURE: Any archaeological grouping smaller than a phase.
-
-SUBSTAGE or STATUS: A subdivision of a _Stage_ that develops as the
- result of a significant invention, discovery of a special resource,
- or some other condition of the surroundings.
-
-TECHNOLOGY: The processes by which any artifact is produced.
-
-TEEPEE: A conical framework of poles covered with bark, skins, brush,
- mats, etc. used as a shelter or hut by primitive peoples.
-
-TEMPERING: Foreign material such as sand, crushed limestone, plant
- fibers, crushed shell, etc. mixed with the clay in pottery-making to
- render the vessel less likely to crack in firing.
-
-TEMPLE MOUND: A rectangular pyramid with a flat top on which a temple
- was built. Similar mounds were used for council and chief's houses
- among historic Mississippi peoples. Flat-topped pyramidal mounds are
- characteristic of the important Middle Mississippi sites in
- Illinois.
-
-THERMAL MAXIMUM: A time interval (roughly between 5000 and 2000 B.C.) in
- which the climate was warmer and drier than at present.
-
-TOMAHAWK: A hafted hatchet of stone or metal used in fighting.
-
-TOTEM: An animal, plant or inanimate object that is regarded as the
- symbol of a social or political group.
-
-TUMPLINE: A sling or pack strap that rests on the forehead, passes over
- the shoulders, and is used for carrying a load on the back.
-
-TURKEY-TAIL: A large spearhead, broadly oval in the middle and
- double-pointed with notches near one end.
-
-TYPE STATION(S): The site (or sites) that at present seem, to the
- author, to give the fullest view of life in a subculture, including
- as far as possible a village (or camp) and burial site.
-
-WAR (ARCHAIC): The blood feud. In the Archaic period, this was the
- method of interfamily or intergroup retaliation for murder or other
- serious injury to one family or local group by a member of another.
- It was carried on by alternate sneak raids between the local
- settlements involved, with the object of killing one or more members
- of the group attacked, (destroying property), and escaping without
- loss.
-
-WAR (PLANT-RAISERS): Hostilities between plant-raising tribes were
- pursued by sneak raids having for their objectives the surprise and
- attack of villages, the ambush of enemy parties, and the capture of
- prisoners. (Murder, black magic, and other crimes committed within
- the tribe were generally dealt with by socio-judicial custom).
-
-WATTLE AND DAUB: A framework of posts, interlaced with branches and
- twigs and plastered over with clay for house and fortification walls
- common in Middle Phase and probably in other periods.
-
-WIGWAM: As used here, a roughly hemispherical hut having a framework of
- poles set in the ground with their tops arched over and secured
- together, the whole covered over with leafy branches, skins, bark,
- mats or thatch.
-
-WINDBREAK: A vertical or inclined framework of poles covered with
- branches and leaves, skins, bark, etc. erected by primitive peoples
- as a shelter against wind, sun, and storm.
-
-WOODLAND: One of the major archaeological patterns of the eastern,
- southern and central United States, characterized by plant-raising
- (except possibly in its Initial Phase), by elongated globular clay
- pots (with cord-roughened exteriors, pointed bottoms, and incised
- line and punctate decoration), hamlets or small villages (except in
- the Classic Phase), with flint spearheads (but no arrowheads except
- in Final Phase).
-
-WRAP-AROUND-SKIRT: A rectangular piece of clothing made of skin, fur, or
- cloth worn by Hopewellian and Middle Mississippi women. It was
- wrapped around the body from the waist to the knees or below and was
- secured at the top by a belt or other means.
-
-YUMA POINTS: Chipped spearheads of various general shapes including
- leaf-shaped forms, without channeling.
-
-
-
-
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
-
-
- ADVANCED (WOODLAND) PHASE
-
- 1951 Cole, F. C. et al in _The Baumer Focus_, in KINCAID, A
- PREHISTORIC ILLINOIS METROPOLIS, pp. 184-210, University of
- Chicago, Chicago (Baumer Subculture).
- 1951 Maxwell, Moreau S. _The Woodland Cultures in Southern
- Illinois_, pp. 232-243. Beloit College, Beloit, Wisconsin
- (Baumer Subculture).
- 1951 _Ibid._, pp. 78-183 (Crab Orchard Subculture).
- Tennessee
- 1922 Harrington, M. R. _Cherokee and Earliest Remains on Upper
- Tennessee River_, INDIAN NOTES AND MONOGRAPHS, No. 24, New York
- (Round Grave People or Baumer Subculture).
- 1952 Kneberg, Madeline. _The Tennessee Area_ in Griffin, Ed.,
- ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE EASTERN UNITED STATES, p. 192 and Fig. 102.,
- University of Chicago, Chicago (Round Grave, Upper Valley or
- Baumer).
-
- ARCHAIC PHASE
-
- 1950 Deuel, Thorne. _Man's Venture in Culture_, STORY OF ILLINOIS
- SERIES, No. 6, pp. 5-12, Illinois State Museum, Springfield.
- 1957 Deuel, Thorne, _The Modoc Shelter_, REPORT OF INVESTIGATIONS,
- No. 7, Springfield, revised and reprinted from _Natural
- History_, October, 1957, pp. 400-405 (Simple and Medial).
- 1956 Fowler, Melvin L. and Winters, Howard. _Modoc Rock Shelter,
- Preliminary Report_, REPORT OF INVESTIGATIONS, No. 4, Illinois
- State Museum, Springfield. (Simple and Medial).
- 1957 Fowler, Melvin L. _Ferry Site, Hardin County, Illinois_,
- SCIENTIFIC PAPERS SERIES, Vol. VIII, No. 1, Illinois State
- Museum, Springfield. (Terminal Subculture).
- 1950 Titterington, P. F. _Some Non-Pottery Sites in the St. Louis
- Area_ in ILLINOIS STATE ARCHAEOLOGICAL JOURNAL, N.S. Vol. I,
- pp. 19-31 (Terminal Subculture).
- Tennessee
- 1947 Lewis, T. M. N. and Kneberg, Madeline. _The Archaic Horizon in
- Western Tennessee_, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville (Eva
- focus or subculture).
- United States generally
- 1957 Wormington, H. M. _Ancient Man in North America_, POPULAR
- SERIES, No. 4, 4th Edition, revised, Denver (Archaic and
- Paleo-Indian Assemblages).
-
- CLASSIC (HOPEWELLIAN) PHASE
-
- 1937 Cole, F. C. and Deuel, Thorne. _Rediscovering Illinois_, pp.
- 130-191. University of Chicago, Chicago.
- 1952 Deuel, Thorne, Ed. _Hopewellian Communities_, SCIENTIFIC PAPERS
- SERIES, Vol. V, Illinois State Museum, Springfield.
- 1957 Fowler, Melvin L. _Rutherford Mound, Hardin County, Illinois_,
- SCIENTIFIC PAPERS SERIES, Vol. VII, No. 1, Illinois State
- Museum, Springfield.
-
- MIDDLE (MISSISSIPPI) PHASE
-
- Cahokia Subculture
- 1937 Cole, F. C. and Deuel, Thorne. _Rediscovering Illinois_, pp.
- 75-94, 111-125, 127, University of Chicago, Chicago.
- 1928 Moorehead, W. K. _The Cahokia Mounds_, University of Illinois,
- BULLETIN, Vol. 26, No. 4, Urbana.
- 1939 Simpson, A. M. _The Kingston Village Site_, Peoria Academy of
- Science, Peoria. (Privately printed.)
- 1952 Smith, Hale G. _The Crable Site, Fulton County, Illinois_,
- ANTHROPOLOGY PAPERS No. 7, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
- 1938 Titterington, P. F. _The Cahokia Mound Group and Its Village
- Site Materials_, St. Louis. (Privately printed.)
- Cahokia Subculture (Wisconsin)
- 1933 Barrett, S. A. _Ancient Aztalan_, BULL. PUBLIC MUSEUM OF
- MILWAUKEE, Vol. 13.
- Cumberland Subculture
- 1951 Cole, F. C. et al. _Kincaid, A Prehistoric Illinois
- Metropolis_, pp. 29-164, 293-366, University of Chicago,
- Chicago.
- Cumberland Subculture (Tennessee)
- 1928 Myer, William, Ed. _Two Prehistoric Villages in Middle
- Tennessee_, 41st ANNUAL REPORT, BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY,
- pp. 485-614, Washington.
- Cumberland Subculture (Kentucky)
- 1929 Webb, William S. and Funkhouser, W. D. _The Williams Site in
- Christian County, Kentucky_, UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY REPORTS IN
- ANTHROPOLOGY AND ARCHAEOLOGY, Vol. I, No. 1, pp. 5-23 followed
- by 36 figs., Lexington.
-
- PALEO-INDIAN PHASE
-
- 1954 Kleine, Harold K. _A Remarkable Paleo-Indian Site in Alabama_
- in TEN YEARS OF THE TENNESSEE ARCHAEOLOGIST, Lewis and Kneberg,
- Ed., reprinted from TENNESSEE ARCHAEOLOGIST, 1954.
- 1951 Smail, William. _Some Early Projectile Points from the St.
- Louis Area_, in ILLINOIS STATE ARCHAEOLOGICAL JOURNAL, N. S.,
- Vol. II, No. 1, pp. 11-16.
- 1957 Wormington, H. M. _Ancient Man in North America_, POPULAR
- SERIES, No. 4, 4th Edition, revised, Denver.
-
- UPPER (MISSISSIPPI) PHASE
-
- 1927 Langford, George, Sr. _The Fisher Mound Group, Successive
- Aboriginal Occupations near the Mouth of the Illinois River_,
- in AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGIST, Vol. XXIX, No. 3, pp. 153-206,
- Menasha.
-
- FINAL WOODLAND
-
- Bluff Subculture
- 1935 Titterington, P. F. _Certain Bluff Mounds of Western Jersey
- County, Illinois_ in AMERICAN ANTIQUITY, Vol. I, No. 1, pp.
- 6-46.
- 1943 Titterington, P. F. _The Jersey County, Illinois, Bluff
- Culture_, in AMERICAN ANTIQUITY, Vol. IX, No. 2, pp. 240-245.
- Effigy Mound Subculture (Wisconsin)
- 1932 Barrett, S. A. and Skinner, Alanson. _Certain Mound and Village
- Sites of Shawano and Oconto Counties, Wisconsin_, BULL. PUBLIC
- MUSEUM OF MILWAUKEE, Vol. 10, No. 5, Milwaukee.
- 1928 McKern, W. C. _The Neal and McClaughry Mound Groups_, BULL.
- PUBLIC MUSEUM OF MILWAUKEE, Vol. 3, No. 3, Milwaukee.
- 1933 Nash, Philleo. _The Excavation of the Ross Mound Group I_,
- BULL. PUBLIC MUSEUM OF MILWAUKEE, Vol. 16, No. 1.
- 1956 Rowe, Chandler. _The Effigy Mound Culture of Wisconsin_,
- MILWAUKEE PUBLIC MUSEUM PUBLICATIONS IN ANTHROPOLOGY, No. 3.
- Lewis Subculture
- 1951 Cole, F. C. et al. _The Lewis Focus_ in KINCAID, A PREHISTORIC
- ILLINOIS METROPOLIS, pp. 165-183, University of Chicago,
- Chicago.
- Raymond Subculture
- 1952 Maxwell, Moreau S. _Archaeology of the Lower Ohio Valley_ in
- Griffin, Ed., COLE ANNIVERSARY VOLUME, ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE
- EASTERN UNITED STATES, pp. 186-187 and Fig. 100, University of
- Chicago, Chicago.
- 1951 Maxwell, Moreau S. _The Woodland Cultures in Southern
- Illinois_, pp. 78-172, 194-211, Beloit College, Beloit,
- Wisconsin.
- Stone Vault Subculture
- 1935 Thurber, O. D. _New Type of Burial Mound Near Quincy_ in
- TRANSACTIONS ILLINOIS STATE ACADEMY OF SCIENCE, Springfield,
- Vol. XXVIII, No. 2, pp. 67-68.
- 1910 Fowke, Gerard. _Antiquities of Central and Southeastern
- Missouri_, BULL. BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY, No. 37,
- Washington.
- Tampico Subculture
- 1937 Cole, F. C. and Deuel, Thorne. _Rediscovering Illinois_, pp.
- 191-198, University of Chicago, Chicago.
-
- ILLINI TRIBES
-
- 1934 Pease, Theodore Calvin and Werner, Raymond C. THE FRENCH
- FOUNDATIONS, 1680-1693 (_Memoirs of De Gannes_ by Sieur
- Deliette) pp. 302-395, Springfield, Illinois.
- 1958 Temple, Wayne C. _Historic Tribes, Part 2 of Indian Villages of
- the Illinois Country_ by Sara J. Tucker and Wayne Temple,
- SCIENTIFIC PAPERS SERIES, Vol. II, Illinois State Museum,
- Springfield.
-
- INITIAL (WOODLAND) PHASE
-
- 1937 Cole, F. C. and Deuel, Thorne. _Rediscovering Illinois_ (Red
- Ochre, pp. 57-69; Black Sand, pp. 69-75, 136-149; Morton, pp.
- 39-46, 126, 128-130; 102-104, 106-108), University of Chicago,
- Chicago.
-
-
-
-
- CULTURAL CHARACTERISTICS OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL UNITS
-
-
- ARCHAEOLOGICAL UNITS
-
-
- ARTIFACTS[20]
-
-
- RECONSTRUCTION OF ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL FEATURES
-
-
- RECONSTRUCTION OF RELIGIOUS, ARTISTIC, AND RECREATIONAL FEATURES
-
-
- PALEO-INDIAN PHASE 50,000(?)-8000 B.C.(?)
-
- Narrow leaf-shaped spearheads
- Folsom points
- Clovis points
- Stone hammer (?)
- Flint scrapers (?)
- Personal ornaments (?)
-
- Thrusting weapons
- Simple family (?)
- Lineage in male line (?)
- Big game hunting
- Roving habits following herd
- Temporary camps
- Energy sources for labor, travel and transportation wholly human
-
- Religion based on spirits, mana and on the chief game species hunted
- (?)
-
-
- ARCHAIC PHASE 8000-2500 B.C.
-
- Stone hammers, rough or pitted
- Broad barbed flint spearheads
- Flint dartheads
- Flint scrapers
- Flint awls
- Chipped choppers
- Spearthrower (atlatl) weights
- Grooved stone axes (ground)
- Ground stone celts
- Chipped flint digging tools (hoes)
- Small area settlement sites in the open
- Rock shelters
- Post holes in line
- Necklaces and pendants
- Plummets
- Copper tools
- Dog bones
- Bone-awls
- Whet- or abrading stones
- Bannerstones (with cylindrical hole)
- Flexed burials in Medial and Terminal subculture
-
- Projectile weapon
- Hunting of deer and small mammals and collecting edible plants, clams,
- etc.
- Technologies: flint-chipping, pecking, grinding and polishing of
- stone, grinding and polishing bone, boring bone and stone with
- flint drills and with tube, sand and water, making string
- (from hides and [?] plant-fibers), weaving (?), basket-making
- (?)
- Dog the only domesticated animal
- Marriage
- Family
- Extended family or lineage
- "Independent" local groups
- Windbreaks or flimsy shelters
- Family hunting territory
- Rotating hamlet
- Non-political tribe
- "Family-type" social control
- Puberty rites (Initiation ceremonies)
- Tribal elders and temporary headmen
- Insignia possibly as social acceptance of personal achievement, or as
- family crest
-
- Belief in friendly and ancestral spirits, in mana and in revelation by
- vision or dream
- Sacred tradition ("mythology")
- The shaman--intercessor with spirits and healer of sick--magic
- medicines
- Fertility ceremonies--to insure abundant game and to perpetuate sacred
- traditions
- Recreational activities and creative arts practiced chiefly in
- connection with religious ceremonies
- Funeral rites for all deceased tribal members
- Socially important persons on death given special care and preparation
- for burial, and possibly buried in a specially selected place
- Mourning period for dead
- Food and grave offerings left especially for important dead
-
-
- INITIAL (WOODLAND) PHASE 1500-500 B.C.
-
- Elongated globular pots with pointed (conoidal) bases
- Copper ornaments
- Burial mounds and cemeteries
-
- Probably very similar to Archaic
- Copper breastplate or gorgets
- Socially important persons buried in mounds (?)
-
- Very similar to Archaic
- Dog graves in burial mounds
-
-
- ADVANCED (WOODLAND) PHASE 1000(?)-100(?) B.C.
-
- Numerous storage pits containing acorn and hickory nut remains
- Medium-sized settlement sites
- Post holes outlining a square area
- Post holes outlining a circular or oval area
- Flat-bottomed flaring-walled Woodland pots ("flower pots")
- Polished stone gorgets
- Burials in settlement sites
-
- Storage of acorns, nuts and seeds
- Larger population concentrations of perhaps a 100 or 150 persons
- Semi- to permanent log dwellings, logs upright
- Possibly insignia or badges of leadership or individual prowess
-
- Religion probably transitional between Archaic and plant-raising types
-
-
- CLASSIC (WOODLAND) PHASE [HOPEWELLIAN] 500 B.C.-500 A.D.
-
- Chipped limonite hoes
- Charred maize kernels and cobs (and in Ohio, beans and squash seeds)
- Cloth and feather cloth remains
- Basketry, matting and colored textile impressions
- Marine shell vessels
- Tortoise shell dishes
- River mussel shell spoons with "handles"
- Excellent polished black and painted pottery with occasional variation
- of form--shallow bowls, beakers, effigy and globular shapes
- A coarser duty Woodland ware with elongated bodies and pointed or
- flattened bases
- Large areas with village refuse and numerous mounds
- Post holes outlining an oval or circular area (rare)
- Pottery statuettes showing dress and ornaments worn
- Jewelry of copper, silver, meteoric iron, cut and polished shell
- beads, small marine shells, bears teeth sometimes set with
- copper, pearls or colorful stones, etc.
- Ear ornaments of copper, etc.
- Marine shells from south Atlantic and Gulf Coasts of United States
- Mica from North Carolina
- Obsidian from Wyoming (?)
- Copper from Lake Superior region
- Galena from northwestern Illinois
- Native pearls from river clams
- Gorgets of stone, shell and copper (breastplates)
- Pearls and ground shell beads distributed over the torso of skeleton
- Deer antlers near human skull in grave
- Cut maxillaries (more rarely mandibles) of bear or man on skeletons as
- if worn as pendants
- _Cassis madagascarensis_ shell vessels
- Copper hatchets and adzes etc.
- Platform type tobacco pipes
- Medium to large "dome-shaped" burial mounds enclosing
- Log (rarely stone) tomb chambers
- Bundle burials and ossuaries in mounds with central tomb (northern
- Illinois)
- Cemeteries near mounds (southern Illinois)
- Bodies buried generally in extended position rarely flexed and often
- accompanied by pots, weapons and artistic products
- "Pipes of Pan"
- Beautifully chipped broad spearheads of special subtypes
- Effigy dagger with sheath made from bears' teeth
-
- Planting-raising economy supplemented by hunting and collecting
- Crops: Maize, beans, squash, tobacco
- Weaving of cloth, basket- and mat-making
- Clothing: Wrap-around-skirt for women, breech cloth for men,
- supplemented by robes in cold weather, feather cloth robes in
- ceremonies. Mocassins for women and probably for men.
- Large villages (or clusters of villages) as well as small settlements
- The wigwam (for lower classes?)
- Possibly log cabin dwellings for highest social class, logs laid
- horizontal as in tomb chambers
- Rise of wealth, rich and extensive trade
- Dug-out boats (?)
- Two or three social classes seem to be indicated by burial customs
- Chiefs--a political form of government, with some of the clans,
- possibly bear, wolverine and bobcat, predominant in certain
- areas
- A tribe organized either politically or into clans with subsidiary
- districts or villages and political or clan chiefs.
- Chiefs may have worn deer antler headdresses.
- Chiefs probably wore feather headdresses, feather cloth robes, mantles
- embroidered with pearls shells and cut shell beads, and other
- insignia of office.
- Tomb chambers probably for chiefs with relatives and retainers slain
- to accompany them
- Chief person in tomb sometimes woman (May indicate matrilineal descent
- or simply ranking woman of highest caste)
- Maxillary (jaw) pendants worn maybe as trophies of war and hunt, or to
- indicate clan of a chief (?)
- Doubtless the pipe served (as it did later) as a safe conduct to
- visiting officials, travellers and traders, and a signature
- and seal to important agreements whether economic, political
- or intertribal
-
- Probably a formalized religion based on the chief food plant, maize
- Regularly appointed priests
- The priest probably wore feather robes and insignia of rank and
- position
- Religion probably included ceremonies connected with plant- or
- maize-raising
- Deities or gods with special powers related to food-raising, etc.
- The spring or planting festival
- The green corn or first fruits festival
- The harvest festival and perhaps minor festivals revolving about the
- deer
- High-ranking priests were probably of the highest caste and their
- bodies given special care on death, elaborate funeral
- ceremonies and burial in the tomb chambers of mounds, with
- tribal mourning
- Beautiful pipes either with or without long wooden items probably
- figured largely in the religious ceremonies
- Shamans probably still practiced the healing art (and black magic).
- They probably used herbals instead of mineral medicines
- High development of art in pottery, ceramic, copper and stone
- sculpture, in engraving on bone in personal adornment and
- technological expertness
-
-
- FINAL (WOODLAND) PHASE 200(?)-1000 A.D.
-
- Boatstones and bar "amulets"
- L-shaped pipe, long-stemmed
- Crude flint arrowheads
- Flexed and semi-flexed skeletons in mound graves and tomb chambers
- Except for above, much like Initial Phase
-
- Spear and spearthrower still the chief weapon, weights tied (?) to
- spearthrower
- Small hamlets
- Bow and arrow known but as yet ineffective as a practical weapon
- Otherwise very similar to Initial Phase
-
- Religion probably with shamans rather than priests and a mixture of
- Initial and Classic Phase religious beliefs and practices and
- superstitions
- Some considerable sanctity probably still attached to tobacco, tobacco
- smoke and the pipe
- Shamans undoubtedly still practiced the healing arts (as well as black
- magic) and possibly simple religious rites
-
-
- MIDDLE (MISSISSIPPI) PHASE 1000-1500 A.D.
-
- Hoes of chipped flint and numerous digging tools
- Charred maize kernels and cobs
- Large settlement areas with flat-topped pyramidal mounds, with cabin
- remains on summits, surrounded by palisade remains in low
- ridges of earth
- Post holes and/or trenches outlining rectangular house floors. Fired
- clay from wattle and daub structure, burned house with charred
- thatch, timbers, rafters, mats, etc.
- Fire pits or fireplaces within house
- Fine polished black and painted wares with globular and flattened
- globular bodies, in many shapes--water bottles, shallow bowls,
- beakers, ollas or jars and effigy forms
- An excellent, dull-gray service ware with similar varieties of shapes
- An excellent storage ware of medium to large size, chiefly globular in
- form
- Busycon, marginella, olivella shells from south Atlantic and Gulf
- Coasts
- Copper from Lake Superior region
- Busycon dippers and drinking cups
- L-shaped pipe ("equal armed" and and medium long-stemmed varieties)
- Massive effigy stone pipes
- Skeletons, in extended positions, (distributed) in single and multiple
- graves throughout mounds and in cemeteries
- Pottery Vessels, weapon heads, jewelry, and polished stone discoidals,
- etc. associated with skeletons
- Shell gorgets engraved with realistic and conventional designs
- Repoussee copper eagle gorgets or plaques
- Copper sheeted ornaments and jewelry of pottery, bone, shell, wood and
- leather
- Polished stone disks or "wheels"
- Ground and squared astragalus bone of deer and elk
-
- Intensive maize growing with other crops supplemented by hunting
- Repeating weapon (bow and arrows)
- Energy sources for labor and transportation still entirely human
- The finer pottery and burials in mounds and cemeteries may reflect
- class differences. The extension of the pottery shapes from
- the fine black ware to the less decorative service ware may
- indicate an improvement of lower class conditions over those
- in Hopewellian times
- Clothing much like Hopewellian in general styles
- Large villages, small cities and small villages
- Large centers or cities had temples and tribal officers' cabins on
- flat-topped mounds, and were protected by palisades and/or mud
- walls
- Dwellings semi- to permanent, with rectangular floors, vaulted or
- gabled roofs of thatch, walls consisting of vertical posts,
- wattle and daub construction, covered inside and out with
- mats, sometimes possibly bark-covered. Cabin remains numerous.
- Dug-out boats (?)
- Wealth considerable. Trade in fewer materials than in Hopewellian
- Two or three social classes present in population as in Hopewellian
- Probably a political government with tribal and war chiefs and village
- chiefs. Head tribal chief may have been chief priest also, or
- a member of his family may have filled later office. War chief
- probably also member of ruling caste (as among Natchez). Other
- war chiefs probably of other classes, rank based on their past
- deeds
- Tribal and war chief. In some villages, village chief possibly had
- dwellings on pyramid tops
- Headdresses, probably with feathers, and regalia, including
- feather-cloth robes were probably worn on tribal occasions of
- importance
- Calumet pipe doubtless served as safe conduct to travellers and
- visiting officials, as seal and signature to important
- agreements. Effigy stone pipes may have been Middle Phase
- calumet pipe since it had to be smoked with a stem
- War parties still of simple or no organization except leader and
- followers, object to take prisoners but not territory
-
- Religious ceremonial centers or cities existed to which outlying
- smaller village populations journeyed for religious festivals
- Priesthood with appropriate dress and regalia
- Temples or sacred groves for worship
- Religion with deities having special powers relating to maize-growing.
- Veneration or worship of ancestors
- Spring, first fruits, and harvest festivals
- Tobacco smoke, tobacco pipes used in ceremonies as incense offerings
- Athletic games form part of ceremonies
- Shamans still exist but chiefly for healing, etc. as among
- Hopewellians
- High-ranking officials and priests buried in graves in mounds. Usual
- preparation of body, burial, mourning periods, elaborated
- proportionately to the rank of the deceased.
- Art well developed
- Games of chance were probably known and played
-
-
- UPPER PHASE 1100(?)-1600 A.D.
-
- Note: These are fringe groups in relation to Middle and Lower phases,
- living in more wooded regions perhaps, where game was
- especially abundant and topography less favorable to
- plant-raising by a backward culture and where the social
- impetus for high cultural development was largely lacking
- Artifacts are a mixture of Woodland and Mississippi types
- Generally a single pottery ware with both elongated and globular pots
- is characteristic and there is little other specialization of
- form
-
- A hunting-collecting economy with plant-raising probably in
- garden-like plots
- Large and small villages
- A social development similar to but simpler than the Middle Phase,
- probably a combination of Woodland and Mississippi elements
-
- A religion based on plant-raising but probably with considerable
- emphasis on chief animals hunted.
- Sacred groves and shrines, possibly temples in some of larger villages
- No pyramidal mounds
- Dead buried in mounds and in cemeteries
-
-
- CONTACT PHASE (ILLINI) 1673-1833 A.D.
-
- Note: The artifacts of all tribes in the historic period probably
- became gradually much the same regardless of their prior
- cultural status due to deterioration of native technology and
- trading of furs for European tools, weapons, cloth, etc.
- Arrowheads of chipped flint, and native-made of European copper, brass
- or iron
- Numerous trade articles such as glass beads, gun parts, copper or
- brass kettles, bottles for wine, olives, etc. and other
- objects of European production
- Native stone molds and cast lead balls (for guns) and native chipped
- gun flints
- Rectangular L-shaped ("Siouan type") pipes of catlinite and other
- stone. Micmac pipes after 1700.
-
- Bow and arrows preferred in war because they could be discharged more
- rapidly than gun could be loaded and fired. Guns and
- ammunition often not available
- Little knowledge of proper care of guns, and no attempt to manufacture
- guns and powder, or iron knives, copper kettles, etc.
- Society largely disorganized, prestige of chiefs largely a matter of
- personal prowess and reputation with some regard for earlier
- methods of appointment and succession.
-
- Religion practiced by a fraction of tribe but falling into dispute
- without adequate substitute
- Probably appointment and succession of priests more or less regular
- and based on earlier customs.
-
-
-
-
- FOOTNOTES
-
-
-[5]All dates, even those determined by radiocarbon methods, should be
- taken as only roughly approximate.
-
-[6]These dates and those given hereafter refer to the earliest and
- latest sites known in Illinois for the cultures under consideration.
- Although supported by radiocarbon dating methods, they are only
- approximate. Undoubtedly also cultures in one area disappeared while
- they continued to flourish in another part of the state or in other
- states.
-
-[7]Generally speaking, each succeeding higher culture in the area made
- most of the tool and weapon types of their predecessors, adding
- certain improvements and sometimes new types. The Archaic people
- used flint scrapers, chipped flint choppers, and native cobblestone
- hammers as had the Paleo-Indians. The narrow-bladed spearheads were
- occasionally made but the fluting or channel is practically always
- lacking. Polished stone forms, possibly the spearthrower, were new
- inventions in Archaic times.
-
-[8]In the page that follows a tentative reconstruction of the less
- tangible customs of these people will be presented, based on a study
- of several tribes now or recently in the Archaic status. The Archaic
- culture as used in this paper refers to those tribes who lived
- mainly by hunting, supplemented to a degree by collecting native
- edible plant foods. They are distinguished here from other peoples
- of the Stone Age or non-farming stage--from Big Game Hunters on the
- one hand (none of whom exist today) and on the other, from Food
- Stores, who were able by one means or another to store food over one
- or more seasons and so establish more or less fixed homes. The
- peoples recently living in the Archaic status include the native
- tribes of Central and Coastal Australia, the Tasmanians, the Andaman
- Island tribes, the Terra del Fuegians, the African Bushmen and a
- number of others.
-
-[9]The Initial Woodland in Illinois is usually considered to consist of
- three cultural divisions or units, the Black Sand, the Red Ochre and
- the Morton. The only known Red Ochre sites are mounds which
- undoubtedly are the burial places of important personages of a
- cultural group whose campsites and artifact assemblages have not as
- yet been identified as such. The graves yield a number of artifact
- types that are identical with those found in Black Sand villages. It
- is possible the Red Ochre mounds belong to the Black Sand people and
- that the mounds and special burial customs may have been continued
- into or adopted by the Morton cultural group and served still later
- as a framework for the highly elaborated Hopewellian funeral
- practices.
-
-[10]The narrow-bladed leaf-shaped spearhead, well-chipped and without
- fluting, reminiscent of the general Yuma, Folsom and Clovis shape,
- are found in the Red Ochre subculture and are worthy of note. This
- type appears rarely in campsites but occurs in relatively large
- numbers in mounds. Profuse amounts of red ochre are found in graves
- as in Terminal Archaic (Titterington focus) in western Illinois.
- Copper ornaments may indicate Wisconsin (Old Copper Culture)
- influence.
-
-[11]The Poole village (Pike County) is dated 550 B.C. and the Wilson
- Mound (White County) about 89 B.C. The Poole village appears to have
- been occupied from 550 B.C. to 200 A.D.
-
-[12]Civilization, as used in this paper, signifies exhaustive
- exploitation of the natural resources and accompanying significant
- elaborations of the social and spiritual aspects (as exemplified by
- ceremonies, regalia, insignia, art and extensive architectural
- structures), accomplished by means of specialization of the existing
- tools and technologies, with or without fundamental inventive
- developments. Artisans of the Initial and Final Woodland cultures
- seem to have practiced all the crafts employed by Hopewellians but
- failed to produce the beautiful chipped spearheads, "pipes of pan",
- excellent sculpture in stone and pottery, etching in bone, the
- extensive earthworks and the mounds with timbered burial chambers.
- Perhaps some additional stimuli--the introduction of maize or the
- intensification of its cultivation, a satisfying new religion with
- stirring ceremonies together with intergroup competition--gave the
- spiritual impetus that produced the Hopewellian fluorescence.
-
-[13]Specialization was foreshadowed in the Red Ochre culture but the
- small total of grave offerings discovered to date fail to
- demonstrate any greater leisure than occurs at favorable times among
- any simple hunting people.
-
-[14]An early subculture termed Old Village preceding the generally known
- Middle Mississippi (Trappist or Bean Pot) period has been proposed
- on the strength of stratification at the Cahokia village near East
- St. Louis. Although this appears logically sound, the evidence has
- not been published and no pure Old Village site has yet been found
- and reported upon.
-
-[15]Except where noted as based directly on archaeological evidence, the
- broad cultural features suggested in the rest of this section, are
- inferred from similar customs found generally among tribes in the
- plant-raising status without food-draft animals. The results were
- derived by the writer from a study of anthropological reports of the
- following tribes or groups of tribes: Polynesians, Delawares,
- Natchez (and their neighbors) and the western Pueblo Indians. The
- Pueblos, in their social, political and religious customs and
- institutions have been for seven hundred years in a transitional
- status between the Archaic hunters (or possibly "food storers") and
- a "fully-developed" plant-raising stage.
-
-[16]The archaeological evidence for this section is chiefly from _The
- Fisher Mound Group_, etc. by George Langford in the AMERICAN
- ANTHROPOLOGY, Vol. XXIX, No. 3, pp. 153-205 (July-September, 1927).
-
-[17]These Indians called themselves Ilini (pronounced Il'-i-nee) or
- Illini signifying "man," in the plural Illiniwek, "the men." The
- French dropped the -iwek and substituted their own ending whence the
- name Illinois by which they were generally known thereafter. In this
- booklet Illini will be generally used to designate these tribes,
- their culture and language to avoid confusion with other tribes who,
- like the Sauk, Fox, Kickapoo, Potawatomi, and Miami, have occupied
- parts of the state and are sometimes called Illinois Indians.
-
-[18]Information given on historic tribes is from notes and manuscript
- assembled by Dr. Wayne C. Temple.
-
-[19]The term _calumet_, originally applied to the stem of the tobacco
- pipe, is now generally used to designate the pipe and stem. "It is
- fashioned from a red stone, polished like marble, and bored in such
- a manner that one end serves as a receptacle for the tobacco, while
- the other fits into the stem; this is a stick two feet long, as
- thick as an ordinary cane, and bored through the middle. It is
- ornamented with the heads and necks of various birds, whose plumage
- is very beautiful. To these they also add large feathers--red,
- green, and other colors--wherewith the whole is adorned. They have a
- great regard for it...." (R. G. Thwaites, ed., _The Jesuit
- Relations_, Vol. LIX, p. 131.) The war calumet differed from that of
- peace and was decorated with red feathers. See Fig. 34, A.
-
-[20]Artifact types having once appeared are likely to appear again in
- subsequent culture even though rare or even lacking in some
- intervening assemblages (e.g. necklaces of anculosa beads of
- similarly ground [snail] shells found from Medial Archaic through
- Middle Phase; grooved axes from Medial Archaic to Mississippi but
- rare or lacking in most subcultures and cultures except Archaic and
- Initial Woodland). On account of unwieldiness of complete
- accumulative lists only new artifact types when they first appear
- will be recorded here. Exceptions: 1) the name of an artifact
- entered as probably present (indicated by a following ?) will be
- repeated in the first subsequent culture in which definite evidence
- for it has been reported and 2) when an artifact once reported
- assumes a new form or presumably takes on a new significance (e.g.
- Archaic hoe becomes a tool of the plant-raisers in Classic and
- Middle Phases), it will appear again in the text.
-
-
-
-
- STORY OF ILLINOIS SERIES.
-
-
- No. 1. Story of Illinois: Indian and Pioneer, by V. S. Eifert.
- No. 2. Mammals of Illinois Today and Yesterday, by V. S. Eifert.
- No. 3. Exploring for Mushrooms, by V. S. Eifert.
- No. 4. Flowers that Bloom in the Spring, by V. S. Eifert.
- No. 5. Invitation to Birds, by V. S. Eifert.
- No. 6. Man's Venture in Culture, by Thorne Deuel.
- No. 7. The Past Speaks to You, by Ann Livesay.
- No. 8. Common Insects of Illinois, by A. Gilbert Wright.
- No. 9. American Indian ways of Life, by Thorne Deuel.
- No. 10. Amphibians of Illinois, by Paul W. Parmalee.
- No. 11. The Fossils of Illinois, by Carlton Condit.
-
- _Cost:_ 25c each; 20c each in lots of 25 or more
-
- _Address all enquiries to the_ Museum Director,
- Illinois State Museum, Springfield, Illinois
-
- (80513--6-58)
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber's Notes
-
-
---Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook
- is public-domain in the country of publication.
-
---Silently corrected a few palpable typos.
-
---In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
- _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of American Indian Ways of Life: An
-Interpretation of the Archaeology of Illinois and Adjoining Areas, by Thorne Deuel
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AMERICAN INDIAN WAYS OF LIFE ***
-
-***** This file should be named 56304-8.txt or 56304-8.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/6/3/0/56304/
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
- restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
- under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
- eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
diff --git a/old/56304-8.zip b/old/56304-8.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index c0af0b0..0000000
--- a/old/56304-8.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h.zip b/old/56304-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 2a324e2..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/56304-h.htm b/old/56304-h/56304-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index c188b80..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/56304-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3430 +0,0 @@
-<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
-<head>
-<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
-<meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
-<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0" />
-<title>American Indian Ways of Life, by Thorne Deuel: a Project Gutenberg eBook</title>
-<meta name="author" content="Thorne Deuel" />
-<meta name="pss.pubdate" content="1958" />
-<link rel="schema.DC" href="http://dublincore.org/documents/1998/09/dces/" />
-<meta name="DC.Title" content="American Indian Ways of Life" />
-<meta name="DC.Language" content="en" />
-<meta name="DC.Format" content="text/html" />
-<meta name="DC.Created" content="1958" />
-<meta name="DC.Creator" content="Thorne Deuel (****-****)" />
-<style type="text/css">
-large { font-size:125%; }
-sc { font-variant:small-caps; font-style: normal; }
-
-/* == GLOBAL MARKUP == */
-body, table.twocol tr td { margin-left:2em; margin-right:2em; } /* BODY */
-.box { border-style:double; margin-bottom:2em; max-width:30em; margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; margin-top:2em; }
-.box p { margin-right:1em; margin-left:1em; }
-.box dl { margin-right:1em; margin-left:1em; }
-h1, h2, h3, h5, h6, .titlepg p { text-align:center; clear:both; text-indent:0; } /* HEADINGS */
-h2 { margin-top:1.5em; margin-bottom:1em; font-family:sans-serif; font-size:120%; }
-h1 { margin-top:3em; font-size:150%; }
-div.box h1 { margin-top:1em; }
-h3 { margin-top:2.5em; font-family:sans-serif; }
-h4, h5 { font-size:100%; text-align:right; clear:right; }
-h6 { font-size:100%; }
-h6.var { font-size:80%; font-style:normal; }
-.titlepg { margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; border-style:double; clear:both; }
-span.chaptertitle { font-style:normal; display:block; text-align:center; font-size:150%; text-indent:0; }
-.tblttl { text-align:center; text-indent:0;}
-.tblsttl { text-align:center; font-variant:small-caps; text-indent:0; }
-
-pre sub.ms { width:4em; letter-spacing:1em; }
-table.fmla { text-align:center; margin-top:0em; margin-bottom:0em; margin-left:0em; margin-right:0em; }
-table.inline, table.symbol { display: inline-table; vertical-align: middle; }
-td.cola { text-align:left; vertical-align:100%; }
-td.colb { text-align:justify; }
-
-p, blockquote, div.p, div.bq { text-align:justify; } /* PARAGRAPHS */
-div.p, div.bq { margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; }
-blockquote, .bq { margin-left:1em; margin-right:0em; }
-.verse { font-size:100%; }
-p.indent {text-indent:2em; text-align:left; }
-p.tb, p.tbcenter, verse.tb, blockquote.tb { margin-top:2em; }
-
-span.pb, div.pb, dt.pb, p.pb /* PAGE BREAKS */
-{ text-align:right; float:right; margin-right:0em; clear:right; }
-div.pb { display:inline; }
-.pb, dt.pb, dl.toc dt.pb, dl.tocl dt.pb, dl.undent dt.pb, dl.index dt.pb { text-align:right; float:right; margin-left: 1.5em;
- margin-top:.5em; margin-bottom:.5em; display:inline; text-indent:0;
- font-size:80%; font-style:normal; font-weight:bold;
- color:gray; border:1px solid gray;padding:1px 3px; }
-div.index .pb { display:block; }
-.bq div.pb, .bq span.pb { font-size:90%; margin-right:2em; }
-
-div.img, body a img {text-align:center; margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:2em; clear:right; }
-
-sup, a.fn { font-size:75%; vertical-align:100%; line-height:50%; font-weight:normal; }
-h3 a.fn { font-size:65%; }
-sub { font-size:75%; }
-.center, .tbcenter { text-align:center; clear:both; text-indent:0; } /* TEXTUAL MARKUP */
-span.center { display:block; }
-table.center { clear:both; margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; }
-table.center tr td.l {text-align:left; margin-left:0em; }
-table.center tr td.j {text-align:justify; }
-table.center tr td.t {text-align:left; text-indent:1em; }
-table.center tr td.t2 {text-align:left; text-indent:2em; }
-table.center tr td.r {text-align:right; }
-table.center tr th {vertical-align:bottom; }
-table.center tr td {vertical-align:top; }
-table.inline, table.symbol { display: inline-table; vertical-align: middle; }
-
-p { clear:left; }
-.small, .lsmall { font-size:90%; }
-.smaller { font-size:80%; }
-.smallest { font-size:67%; }
-.larger { font-size:150%; }
-.large { font-size:125%; }
-.xlarge { font-size:200%; line-height:60%; }
-.xxlarge { font-size:200%; line-height:60%; }
-.gs { letter-spacing:1em; }
-.gs3 { letter-spacing:2em; }
-.gslarge { letter-spacing:.3em; font-size:110%; }
-.sc { font-variant:small-caps; font-style:normal; }
-.unbold { font-weight:normal; }
-.xo { position:relative; left:-.3em; }
-.over, over { text-decoration: overline; display:inline; }
-hr { width:20%; }
-hr.dwide { margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; width:90%; }
-.jl { text-align:left; }
-.jr { text-align:right; min-width:2em; display:inline-block; float:right; }
-.jr1 { text-align:right; margin-right:2em; }
-h1 .jr { margin-right:.5em; }
-.ind1 { text-align:left; margin-left:2em; }
-.u { text-decoration:underline; }
-.hst { margin-left:2em; }
-.rubric { color:red; }
-.cnwhite { color:white; background-color:black; min-width:2em; display:inline-block;
- text-align:center; font-weight:bold; font-family:sans-serif; }
-.cwhite { color:white; background-color:black; text-align:center; font-weight:bold;
- font-family:sans-serif; }
-ul li { text-align:justify; }
-.ss { font-family:sans-serif; font-weight:bold; }
-
-dd.t { text-align:left; margin-left: 5.5em; }
-dl.toc { clear:both; margin-top:1em; } /* CONTENTS (.TOC) */
-.toc dt.center { text-align:center; clear:both; margin-top:3em; margin-bottom:1em; text-indent:0;}
-.toc dt { text-align:right; clear:left; }
-.toc dd { text-align:right; clear:both; }
-.toc dd.ddt { text-align:right; clear:both; margin-left:4em; }
-.toc dd.ddt2 { text-align:right; clear:both; margin-left:5em; }
-.toc dd.ddt3 { text-align:right; clear:both; margin-left:6em; }
-.toc dd.ddt4 { text-align:right; clear:both; margin-left:7em; }
-.toc dd.ddt5 { text-align:right; clear:both; margin-left:8em; }
-.toc dd.note { text-align:justify; clear:both; margin-left:5em; text-indent:-1em; margin-right:3em; }
-.toc dt .xxxtest {width:17em; display:block; position:relative; left:4em; }
-.toc dt a,
-.toc dd a,
-.toc dt span.left,
-.toc dt span.lsmall,
-.toc dd span.left { text-align:left; clear:right; float:left; }
-.toc dt a span.cn { width:4em; text-align:right; margin-right:.7em; float:left; }
-.toc dt.sc { text-align:right; clear:both; }
-.toc dt.scl { text-align:left; clear:both; font-variant:small-caps; }
-.toc dt.sct { text-align:right; clear:both; font-variant:small-caps; margin-left:1em; }
-.toc dt.jl { text-align:left; clear:both; font-variant:normal; }
-.toc dt.scc { text-align:center; clear:both; font-variant:small-caps; text-indent:0; }
-.toc dt span.lj { text-align:left; display:block; float:left; }
-.toc dd.center { text-align:center; text-indent:0; }
-dd.tocsummary {text-align:justify; margin-right:2em; margin-left:2em; }
-dd.center sc {display:block; text-align:center; text-indent:0; }
-/* BOX CELL */
-td.top { border-top:1px solid; width:.5em; height:.8em; }
-td.bot { border-bottom:1px solid; width:.5em; height:.8em; }
-td.rb { border:1px solid; border-left:none; width:.5em; height:.8em; }
-td.lb { border:1px solid; border-right:none; width:.5em; height:.8em; }
-/* extended table */
-.extended td, .extended th { vertical-align:top; }
-
-/* INDEX (.INDEX) */
-dl.index { clear:both; }
-.index dt { margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left; }
-.index dd { margin-left:4em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left; }
-.index dd.t { margin-left:6em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left; }
-.index dt.center {text-align:center; text-indent:0; }
-
-.ab, .ab1, .ab2 {
-font-weight:bold; text-decoration:none;
-border-style:solid; border-color:gray; border-width:1px;
-margin-right:0px; margin-top:5px; display:inline-block; text-align:center; text-indent:0; }
-.ab { width:1em; }
-.ab2 { width:1.5em; }
-a.gloss { background-color:#f2f2f2; border-bottom-style:dotted; text-decoration:none; border-color:#c0c0c0; color:inherit; }
- /* FOOTNOTE BLOCKS */
-div.notes p { margin-left:1em; text-indent:-1em; text-align:justify; }
-
-dl.undent dd { margin-left:3em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:justify; }
-dl.undent dt { margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:justify; clear:both; }
-dl.undent dd.t { margin-left:4em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:justify; }
-dl.undent dd.t2 { margin-left:5em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:justify; }
-dl.undent dd.t3 { margin-left:6em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:justify; }
-dl.undent dd.t4 { margin-left:7em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:justify; }
-dl.undent dd.t5 { margin-left:8em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:justify; }
-dl.undent dd.t6 { margin-left:9em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:justify; }
-dl.undent dd.t7 { margin-left:10em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:justify; }
-dl.undent dd.t8 { margin-left:11em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:justify; }
-dl.undent dd.t9 { margin-left:12em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:justify; }
-dl.undent dd.t10 { margin-left:13em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:justify; }
-dl.undent dd.t11 { margin-left:14em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:justify; }
- /* POETRY LINE NUMBER */
-.lnum { text-align:right; float:right; margin-left:.5em; display:inline; }
-
-.hymn { text-align:left; } /* HYMN AND VERSE: HTML */
-.verse { text-align:left; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:0em; }
-.versetb { text-align:left; margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:0em; }
-.originc { text-align:center; text-indent:0; }
-.subttl { text-align:center; font-size:80%; text-indent:0; }
-.srcttl { text-align:center; font-size:80%; text-indent:0; font-weight:bold; }
-p.lc { text-indent:0; text-align:center; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; }
-p.t0, p.l { margin-left:4em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.lb { margin-left:4em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.tw, div.tw, .tw { margin-left:1em; text-indent:-1em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t, div.t, .t { margin-left:5em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t2, div.t2, .t2 { margin-left:6em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t3, div.t3, .t3 { margin-left:7em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t4, div.t4, .t4 { margin-left:8em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t5, div.t5, .t5 { margin-left:9em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t6, div.t6, .t6 { margin-left:10em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t7, div.t7, .t7 { margin-left:11em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t8, div.t8, .t8 { margin-left:12em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t9, div.t9, .t9 { margin-left:13em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t10, div.t10,.t10 { margin-left:14em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t11, div.t11,.t11 { margin-left:15em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t12, div.t12,.t12 { margin-left:16em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t13, div.t13,.t13 { margin-left:17em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t14, div.t14,.t14 { margin-left:18em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t15, div.t15,.t15 { margin-left:19em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.lr, div.lr, span.lr { display:block; margin-left:0em; margin-right:1em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:right; }
-dt.lr { width:100%; margin-left:0em; margin-right:0em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; margin-top:1em; text-align:right; }
-dl dt.lr a { text-align:left; clear:left; float:left; }
-p.revint { margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; }
-
-.fnblock { margin-top:2em; }
-.fndef, p.fn { text-align:justify; margin-top:1.5em; margin-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em; }
-.fndef p.fncont, .fndef dl { margin-left:0em; text-indent:0em; }
-.fnblock dl { margin-top:0; margin-left:4em; text-indent:-2em; }
-.fnblock dt { text-align:justify; }
-dl.catalog dd { font-style:italic; }
-dl.catalog dt { margin-top:1em; }
-.author { text-align:right; margin-top:0em; margin-bottom:0em; display:block; }
-
-dl.biblio dt { margin-top:.6em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:justify; clear:both; }
-dl.biblio dt div { display:block; float:left; margin-left:-6em; width:6em; clear:both; }
-dl.biblio dt.center { margin-left:0em; text-align:center; text-indent:0; }
-dl.biblio dd { margin-top:.3em; margin-left:3em; text-align:justify; font-size:90%; }
-p.biblio { margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; }
-.clear { clear:both; }
-p.book { margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; }
-p.review { margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; font-size:80%; }
-p.pcap { margin-left:2em; text-indent:0em; text-align:justify; margin-top:0; margin-right:2em; }
-p.pcapc { margin-left:0em; text-indent:0em; text-align:justify; }
-span.pn { display:inline-block; width:4.7em; text-align:left; margin-left:0; text-indent:0; }</style>
-</head>
-<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of American Indian Ways of Life: An
-Interpretation of the Archaeolog, by Thorne Deuel
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: American Indian Ways of Life: An Interpretation of the Archaeology of Illinois and Adjoining Areas
- Story of Illinois Series, #9
-
-Author: Thorne Deuel
-
-Release Date: January 4, 2018 [EBook #56304]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AMERICAN INDIAN WAYS OF LIFE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<div id="cover" class="img">
-<img id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="American Indian Ways of Life: An Interpretation of the Archaeology of Illinois and Adjoining Areas" width="500" height="758" />
-</div>
-<h3>BOARD OF
-<br />ILLINOIS STATE MUSEUM ADVISORS</h3>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="lc"><span class="sc">M. M. Leighton</span>, Ph. D., <i>Chairman</i></p>
-<p class="lc">Illinois Geological Survey, Urbana</p>
-<p class="t0"><span class="sc">Everett P. Coleman</span>, M. D.</p>
-<p class="t2">Coleman Clinic</p>
-<p class="t2">Canton</p>
-<p class="t0"><span class="sc">Percival Robertson</span>, Ph. D.</p>
-<p class="t2">The Principia College</p>
-<p class="t2">Elsah</p>
-<p class="t0"><span class="sc">N. W. McGee</span>, Ph. D.</p>
-<p class="t2">North Central College</p>
-<p class="t2">Naperville</p>
-<p class="t0"><span class="sc">Sol Tax</span>, Ph. D.</p>
-<p class="t2">University of Chicago</p>
-<p class="t2">Chicago</p>
-</div>
-<p class="center smaller">Copyright by
-<br />ILLINOIS STATE MUSEUM
-<br />1958</p>
-<div class="box">
-<p class="center">STATE OF ILLINOIS
-<br /><span class="sc">William G. Stratton</span>, <i>Governor</i></p>
-<p class="center smaller">DEPT. OF REGISTRATION &amp; EDUCATION&mdash;ILLINOIS STATE MUSEUM
-<br /><span class="sc">Vera M. Binks</span>, <i>Director</i> <span class="hst"><span class="sc">Thorne Deuel</span>, <i>Museum Director</i></span></p>
-<hr class="dwide" /><p class="lc">STORY OF ILLINOIS SERIES, No. 9</p><hr class="dwide" />
-<h1>AMERICAN INDIAN WAYS OF LIFE</h1>
-<p class="tbcenter">An Interpretation of the Archaeology of Illinois and Adjoining Areas</p>
-<p class="center">by
-<br /><span class="sc">Thorne Deuel</span></p>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p001.jpg" alt="Seal of the State of Illinois" width="300" height="305" />
-</div>
-<p class="center"><span class="sc">Springfield, Illinois</span>
-<br />1958</p>
-<p class="center smaller">[Printed by authority of the State of Illinois]</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_2">2</div>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p002.jpg" alt="" width="981" height="500" />
-<p class="pcap">Site of the ancient Middle Mississippi religious city on the Kincaid farm near Metropolis, Illinois, as it is today. Four mounds can be seen;
-the village area is in the foreground and the plaza at the right (south) of the largest mound with house on it.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_3">3</div>
-<h2 class="center">TABLE OF CONTENTS</h2>
-<dl class="toc">
-<dt><a href="#c1">Introduction</a> 5</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c2">Paleo-Indians</a> 9</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c3">Archaic Man</a> 12</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c4">Cultures and Cultural Change</a> 19</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c5">Initial Woodland</a> 20</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c6">Food Storers (Advanced Phase)</a> 23</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c7">The Hopewellian Civilization (Classic Phase)</a> 26</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c8">Final Woodland</a> 30</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c9">Middle Mississippi</a> 34</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c10">Upper Mississippi</a> 42</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c11">The Illini</a> 45</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c12">The Indians Leave Illinois</a> 54</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c13">Summary of Illinois Prehistory</a> 54</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c14">Glossary</a> 59</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c15">Bibliography</a> 67</dt>
-<dt><a href="#fig38">Diagram: Stream of Culture</a> 57</dt>
-<dt><a href="#Page_4">Table I: Stages and Archaeological Units</a> 4</dt>
-<dt><a href="#Page_8">Table II: Radiocarbon Dates</a> 8</dt>
-<dt><a href="#Page_70">Table III: Cultural Characteristics of Archaeological Units</a> 70</dt>
-</dl>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_4">4</div>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p003.jpg" alt="" width="1000" height="627" />
-<p class="pcap">TABLE I. STAGES AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL UNITS</p>
-</div>
-<dl class="undent"><dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Stage">STAGE</a></dt>
-<dd class="t"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Substage">SUBSTAGE</a></dd>
-<dd class="t3">ARCHAEOLOGICAL UNITS</dd>
-<dd class="t3"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Pattern">PATTERN</a></dd>
-<dd class="t5"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">PHASE</a></dd>
-<dd class="t7"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">SUBCULTURE</a></dd>
-<dd class="t9"><a class="gloss" href="#g_TypeStation">TYPE STATIONS</a></dd>
-<dt>IV. MACHINE AGE</dt>
-<dd class="t3">Lacking in the Americas</dd>
-<dt>III. FARMING</dt>
-<dd class="t">DOMESTIC PLANTS AND FOOD-DRAFT ANIMALS</dd>
-<dd class="t3">Lacking in the Americas</dd>
-<dd class="t"><a class="gloss" href="#g_PlantRaising">PLANT-RAISING</a></dd>
-<dd class="t3"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">MISSISSIPPI</a></dd>
-<dd class="t5">Historic Illini: 1673-1833</dd>
-<dd class="t7">[Illini Tribes]</dd>
-<dd class="t9">Brandt II (Ra<sup>v</sup>1)</dd>
-<dd class="t5">Upper: 1100 (?)-1600 A.D.</dd>
-<dd class="t7">Langford</dd>
-<dd class="t9">Fisher II and III</dd>
-<dd class="t5">Middle: 1000-1500 A.D.</dd>
-<dd class="t7"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Cumberland">Cumberland</a></dd>
-<dd class="t9">Kincaid Site</dd>
-<dd class="t7">Cahokia</dd>
-<dd class="t9"><a class="gloss" href="#g_DicksonMound">Dickson Mound</a> (F<sup>o</sup>34) and Fout&rsquo;s Village (F<sup>v</sup>664)</dd>
-<dd class="t7"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Protomiss">Protomiss</a></dd>
-<dd class="t9">Dillinger Village Site</dd>
-<dd class="t3"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">WOODLAND</a> (Hoe-culture)</dd>
-<dd class="t5">Final: 200 (?)-1000 A.D.</dd>
-<dd class="t7"><a class="gloss" href="#g_EffigyMound">Effigy Mound</a></dd>
-<dd class="t7">Tampico</dd>
-<dd class="t9">Maples Mills Site</dd>
-<dd class="t7"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">Stone</a> Vault</dd>
-<dd class="t9">Spencer <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mound">Mound</a> Group</dd>
-<dd class="t7">Jersey Bluff</dd>
-<dd class="t9">Otter Creek Sites</dd>
-<dd class="t7">Raymond</dd>
-<dd class="t9">Raymond Site</dd>
-<dd class="t7">Lewis</dd>
-<dd class="t9">Lewis (Pp<sup>v</sup>1A)</dd>
-<dd class="t5"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Classic">Classic</a>: 500 B.C-500 A.D.</dd>
-<dd class="t7">Hopewell (South)</dd>
-<dd class="t9">Hubele Village (Wh<sup>v</sup>30)<br />Wilson Mound (Wh<sup>o</sup>6)</dd>
-<dd class="t7">Hopewell (North)</dd>
-<dd class="t9">Clear Lake Village (T<sup>v</sup>1)<br />Liverpool Mound (F<sup>o</sup>77-II)</dd>
-<dt>II. <a class="gloss" href="#g_SelfDomestication">SELF-DOMESTICATION</a></dt>
-<dd class="t">FOOD-STORING</dd>
-<dd class="t3">WOODLAND (Ceramic)</dd>
-<dd class="t5">Advanced: 1000 (?)-100 (?) B.C.</dd>
-<dd class="t7"><a class="gloss" href="#g_CrabOrchard">Crab Orchard</a></dd>
-<dd class="t9">Sugar Camp Hill Village (Wm<sup>v</sup>1)</dd>
-<dd class="t7">Baumer</dd>
-<dd class="t9">Baumer <a class="gloss" href="#g_Hamlet">Hamlet</a> (Mx<sup>v</sup>30)</dd>
-<dd class="t">HUNTING-COLLECTING</dd>
-<dd class="t5">Initial: 2500-500 B.C.</dd>
-<dd class="t7">Morton</dd>
-<dd class="t9">F<sup>o</sup>14-II and F<sup>v</sup>35</dd>
-<dd class="t7">Red Ochre</dd>
-<dd class="t9">Hilltop Mound (F<sup>o</sup>11)</dd>
-<dd class="t7">Black Sand</dd>
-<dd class="t9">Liverpool Hamlet and Cemetery (F<sup>v</sup>88 and F<sup>o</sup>77-I)</dd>
-<dd class="t3"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Lithic">LITHIC</a></dd>
-<dd class="t5"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a>: 8000-2500 B.C.</dd>
-<dd class="t7">Terminal</dd>
-<dd class="t9">Ferry Site (Hn<sup>v</sup>251) and Godar Cemetery</dd>
-<dd class="t7">Medial</dd>
-<dd class="t9">Modoc II</dd>
-<dd class="t7">Simple</dd>
-<dd class="t9">Modoc I</dd>
-<dd class="t5"><a class="gloss" href="#g_PaleoIndian">Paleo-Indian</a>: 50,000 (?)-8,000 (?) B.C.</dd>
-<dd class="t7"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Folsom">Folsom</a></dd>
-<dd class="t9">Fluted points as isolated finds only.</dd>
-<dd class="t7"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Clovis">Clovis</a></dd>
-<dt>I. NATURAL MAN</dt>
-<dd class="t">PROTO-CULTURAL</dd>
-<dd class="t3">None found in America</dd></dl>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_5">5</div>
-<h2 id="c1">INTRODUCTION</h2>
-<p>This paper is primarily planned for the layman, the beginning student
-of prehistory and others interested in acquiring a general understanding
-of how primitive man lived during his successive occupations
-of Illinois and neighboring areas in the more important archaeological
-periods. Most of the archaeological data for the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Chief">chief</a> cultures or ways
-of life are given in references in the accompanying bibliography of technical
-publications selected as those from which (in the opinion of the
-writer) the information can be most easily gleaned.</p>
-<p>The reconstructions given of the cultural features, where not those
-ordinarily inferred from archaeological findings, are based on a study of
-the practices commonly found among <a class="gloss" href="#g_PrimitivePeople">primitive people</a> now, or until
-recently, living in the same <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stage">stage</a> or <a class="gloss" href="#g_Substage">substage</a>. These are tentative conclusions
-resulting from a study of fifty tribes in the <a class="gloss" href="#g_SelfDomestication">Self-Domestication</a>
-(pre-farming) stage and forty in the <a class="gloss" href="#g_PlantRaising">Plant-Raising</a> substage. Because
-primitive tribes which are under pressure from <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a> with
-advanced food-draft-animal agriculture or with machine industry or which are in
-a transitional condition between two adjacent stages are disorganized
-or drastically changing a formerly stabilized mode of life, great care has
-been exercised in drawing general conclusions from their cultural features.</p>
-<p>The reconstructions of the perishable objects shown in the drawings
-are generally in keeping with the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> in which they are exhibited
-but cannot be vouched for as to their detailed form. The handle
-of an adze, the shape of a cabin roof, the headdress of a tribal <a class="gloss" href="#g_Chief">chief</a>
-each served the purpose for which they were made and their exact form
-was and is of no more consequence in the culture than the fashions in
-women&rsquo;s hats or the fins on an automobile are in our own. The details
-in cultures serve to set them apart from each other; it is the basic and
-significant features and subfeatures that determine relationships and
-permit the most useful classification.</p>
-<p>The study mentioned above is still incomplete, but results so far
-obtained indicate:</p>
-<p class="revint">1. That man in the same <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stage">stage</a> (and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Substage">substage</a>) of cultural development
-<i>tends</i> to invent and employ the same broad social and spiritual features,
-regardless of surroundings.</p>
-<p class="revint">2. That where significant differences arise between substages of the
-same <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stage">stage</a>, they are (at least sometimes) linked with peculiarities
-of climate and/or natural resources which the <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a> have seized
-upon and exploited to the improvement of their economic situation.</p>
-<p class="revint">3. That many details within these broad types of economic, social and
-spiritual features appear to vary unpredictably within the range of
-available possibilities.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_6">6</div>
-<p>The <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stage">stage</a> and criterion for each were proposed in an earlier issue
-(No. 6) of this series, <i>Man&rsquo;s Venture In <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">Culture</a></i>, (Deuel 1950, pp. 5-12)
-as:</p>
-<p class="revint">1. <i>Natural Man</i> (<i><a class="gloss" href="#g_Protocultural">Protocultural</a></i>), when &ldquo;man&rdquo; presumably employed
-sticks and stones as implements and weapons.</p>
-<p class="revint">2. <i><a class="gloss" href="#g_SelfDomestication">Self-Domestication</a></i>, following the discovery of the principle of the
-conchoidal fracturing of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> and its control, and the invention of
-tool and weapon types.</p>
-<p class="revint">3. <i>Farming</i> or <i>Food-Raising</i>, due to the discovery that grains (grasses)
-and food-draft animals could be bred and raised in captivity.</p>
-<p class="revint">4. <i>Inanimate Power Machine</i> (<i>Machine Age</i>), after the discovery of the
-availability of water and wind as sources for energy and the adaptation
-of animal-driven machines to utilize them.</p>
-<p>Man in the wild or <a class="gloss" href="#g_Protocultural">Protocultural</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stage">stage</a> is thought not to have
-reached the Americas. The oxlike mammals were not domesticated in
-America for drawing ploughs and vehicles, turning grain mills or to
-serve as a continuous food supply source. Consequently, we are concerned
-in the following discussion only with peoples in the <a class="gloss" href="#g_SelfDomestication">Self-Domestication</a>
-stage and the <a class="gloss" href="#g_PlantRaising">Plant-Raising</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Substage">substage</a> of Farming.</p>
-<p>In ordinary language, the word &ldquo;<a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a>&rdquo; is used in a diversity of
-senses. In these pages it is used in one of two ways, the one employed
-being readily understood from the context. In a general sense, culture
-means the significant beliefs, customary activities and social prohibitions
-that are peculiar to man (together with the man-made tools, weapons
-and other material objects that he finds or has found necessary) that
-modify, limit or enhance in some manner, most of his discernible
-natural activities due to and arising from his physical animal inheritance
-and organization. Culture in a specific sense refers to the significant
-cultural features of a group or <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a> under consideration.</p>
-<p>For convenience, any cultural activity according to its dominant
-purpose may be spoken of as belonging to one of three aspects of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a>,
-(a) economic (technological and intellectual); (b) social (and
-political); and (c) spiritual (religious, artistic and recreational). To
-lesser degrees, most cultural activities have relationships with the two
-aspects other than the dominant.</p>
-<p>Certain prevalent archaeological designations have been changed
-to remove time implications (e.g. &ldquo;early&rdquo; and &ldquo;late&rdquo; <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> to
-<i>Initial</i> [beginning] and <i>Final</i> [end of an archaeological series]), or to
-shorten (e.g. &ldquo;Tennessee-Cumberland&rdquo; or &ldquo;Gordon-Fewkes&rdquo; to <i><a class="gloss" href="#g_Cumberland">Cumberland</a></i>).</p>
-<p>Technical terms have generally been avoided; but where it has
-seemed necessary to retain them or to use words in a special sense, they
-are explained in the text or can be found in the glossary. The terms
-<i><a class="gloss" href="#g_Pattern">pattern</a></i> and <i><a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">phase</a></i> are those generally employed in the McKern system
-of classification, for the larger groupings into which it is customary to
-<span class="pb" id="Page_7">7</span>
-place the &ldquo;cultures&rdquo; as determined from the typology of the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Artifacts">artifacts</a>,
-their association in the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Assemblage">assemblage</a> and pertinent data recovered at a
-site (or local community) with due regard to circumstances of time and
-location of other sites nearby and over a larger area. The largest unit is
-the <i>pattern</i> which is made up of a number of <i>phases</i>. Cultural divisions
-smaller than these units are spoken of here as <i>subcultures</i>.</p>
-<p>The approximate relationships of the archaeological units to the
-broader cultural stages and substages are given in Table I, <a href="#Page_4">page 4</a>. The
-succession and coexistence of the archaeological units is indicated in the
-diagram &ldquo;The Stream of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">Culture</a>&rdquo;, <a href="#Page_57">p. 57</a>. The summary of &ldquo;Characteristics
-of the Archaeological-Cultural Units&rdquo; occurs on pages <a href="#Page_70">70</a>-76.</p>
-<p>This is a story mainly of Illinois when occupied by American Indians
-but it would not give a reasonably true picture without showing
-the known extensions of some of the cultures into surrounding areas
-and the probable intrusions from outside the state.</p>
-<p>Of necessity in attempting a summary of the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaeology">archaeology</a> of Illinois
-and adjacent areas, the writer has had to lean heavily on the field work
-and reports of the many anthropologists who have contributed so much
-to the present understanding of the American Indian in the United
-States. To this invaluable source material and to these able scientists
-the indebtedness of the writer is acknowledged to be very great indeed.
-In the compass of a work of this type it is impossible to name them or
-give them credit for original or similar views, nor is it practicable to
-include in the bibliography all the publications used.</p>
-<p>Acknowledgment of assistance is made especially to Georg K.
-Neumann, Joseph R. Caldwell and Melvin L. Fowler, Milton D.
-Thompson, Ruth Kerr, Nora Deuel and Orvetta Robinson for reading
-and discussing the manuscript from various viewpoints, to Dr. James
-B. Griffin for helpful information on the dates of sites and of archaeological
-data, to Irvin Peithmann, Southern Illinois University, for photographs
-furnished, for information on sites he had discovered and
-the privilege of visiting them in his company, to George Langford for
-photographs and data regarding the Fisher site, to Charles Hodge for
-all photographs reproduced not otherwise credited, and to Jerry Connolly,
-Bettye Broyles, Barbara Parmalee and Jeanne McCarty for their
-excellent drawings. Without all this considerable and valuable aid the
-publication could not have been completed.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_8">8</div>
-<h3>TABLE II. RADIOCARBON DATES<a class="fn" id="fr_1" href="#fn_1">[1]</a></h3>
-<table class="center" summary="">
-<tr class="th"><th>CULTURAL UNIT </th><th>C14 DATE </th><th>SITE </th><th>STATE </th><th>COUNTY</th></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">MIDDLE <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">MISSISSIPPI</a> </td><td class="r">A.D. 1420&plusmn;200 </td><td class="l">Crable Village </td><td class="l">Illinois </td><td class="l">Fulton</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI </td><td class="r">1326&plusmn;250 </td><td class="l">Nodena Village </td><td class="l">Arkansas </td><td class="l">Arkansas</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI </td><td class="r">1156&plusmn;200 </td><td class="l">Cahokia </td><td class="l">Illinois </td><td class="l">Madison</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><a class="gloss" href="#g_EffigyMound">EFFIGY MOUND</a><a class="fn" id="fr_2" href="#fn_2">[2]</a> </td><td class="r">1041&plusmn;212 </td><td class="l"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Effigy">Effigy</a> Mounds National Park </td><td class="l">Iowa </td><td class="l">Allamakee</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">HOPEWELLIAN </td><td class="r">508&plusmn;60 </td><td class="l">Twenhafel (Weber) Md. </td><td class="l">Illinois </td><td class="l">Jackson</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">HOPEWELLIAN </td><td class="r">432&plusmn;200 </td><td class="l">Rutherford <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mound">Mound</a> </td><td class="l">Illinois </td><td class="l">Hardin</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">HOPEWELLIAN </td><td class="r">256&plusmn;200 </td><td class="l">Knight Mound </td><td class="l">Illinois </td><td class="l">Calhoun</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">HOPEWELLIAN </td><td class="r">214&plusmn;250 </td><td class="l">Baehr Mound </td><td class="l">Illinois </td><td class="l">Brown</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">HOPEWELLIAN<a class="fn" href="#fn_2">[2]</a> </td><td class="r">B.C. 48&plusmn;160 </td><td class="l">Hopewellian Group Mound #25 </td><td class="l">Ohio </td><td class="l">Ross</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">HOPEWELLIAN<a class="fn" id="fr_3" href="#fn_3">[3]</a> </td><td class="r">57&plusmn;108 </td><td class="l">Wilson Mound </td><td class="l">Illinois </td><td class="l">White</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">HOPEWELLIAN </td><td class="r">315&plusmn;164 </td><td class="l">Havana Mound </td><td class="l">Illinois </td><td class="l">Mason</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">ADENA </td><td class="r">423&plusmn;150 </td><td class="l">Toepfner Mound #I </td><td class="l">Ohio </td><td class="l">Franklin</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">ADENA </td><td class="r">697&plusmn;170 </td><td class="l">Dover Mound </td><td class="l">Kentucky </td><td class="l">Mason</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">ARCHAIC</a> </td><td class="r">704&plusmn;80 </td><td class="l">Poverty Point </td><td class="l">Louisiana (N.E.) </td><td class="l">W. Carroll Parish</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">ADENA </td><td class="r">826&plusmn;410 </td><td class="l">Toepfner Mound #II </td><td class="l">Ohio </td><td class="l">Franklin</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">ARCHAIC </td><td class="r">904&plusmn;90 </td><td class="l">Poverty Point </td><td class="l">Louisiana (N.E.) </td><td class="l">W. Carroll Parish</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">ARCHAIC </td><td class="r">1624&plusmn;300 </td><td class="l">Kays Landing </td><td class="l">Tennessee </td><td class="l">Humphrey</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">ARCHAIC<a class="fn" href="#fn_2">[2]</a> </td><td class="r">2170&plusmn;215 </td><td class="l">Indian Knoll </td><td class="l">Kentucky </td><td class="l">Ohio</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">ARCHAIC<a class="fn" href="#fn_2">[2]</a> </td><td class="r">2360&plusmn;270 </td><td class="l">Annis Mound </td><td class="l">Kentucky </td><td class="l">Butler</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">ARCHAIC </td><td class="r">2765&plusmn;300 </td><td class="l"><a class="gloss" href="#g_ModocRockShelter">Modoc Rock Shelter</a> </td><td class="l">Illinois </td><td class="l">Randolph</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">ARCHAIC </td><td class="r">2812&plusmn;250 </td><td class="l">Perry Site </td><td class="l">Alabama (N.W.) </td><td class="l">Lauderdale</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">ARCHAIC </td><td class="r">2950&plusmn;250 </td><td class="l">Annis Shell Mound </td><td class="l">Kentucky </td><td class="l">Butler</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">ARCHAIC </td><td class="r">3325&plusmn;300 </td><td class="l">Modoc Rock Shelter </td><td class="l">Illinois </td><td class="l">Randolph</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">ARCHAIC </td><td class="r">3352&plusmn;300 </td><td class="l">Indian Knoll </td><td class="l">Kentucky </td><td class="l">Ohio</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">ARCHAIC </td><td class="r">3646&plusmn;400 </td><td class="l">Oconto Old Copper Site </td><td class="l">Wisconsin (E.) </td><td class="l">Oconto</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">ARCHAIC<a class="fn" href="#fn_2">[2]</a> </td><td class="r">3657&plusmn;164 </td><td class="l">Modoc Rock Shelter </td><td class="l">Illinois </td><td class="l">Randolph</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">ARCHAIC </td><td class="r">5194&plusmn;500 </td><td class="l">Eva Site </td><td class="l">Tennessee </td><td class="l">Benton</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">ARCHAIC </td><td class="r">5556&plusmn;400 </td><td class="l">Oconto Old Copper Site </td><td class="l">Wisconsin (E.) </td><td class="l">Oconto</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">ARCHAIC </td><td class="r">5945&plusmn;500 </td><td class="l">Graham Cave </td><td class="l">Missouri </td><td class="l">Montgomery</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">ARCHAIC </td><td class="r">6204&plusmn;300 </td><td class="l">Russell Cave </td><td class="l">Alabama </td><td class="l">Jackson</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">ARCHAIC<a class="fn" href="#fn_2">[2]</a> </td><td class="r">6219&plusmn;388 </td><td class="l">Modoc Rock Shelter </td><td class="l">Illinois </td><td class="l">Randolph</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">ARCHAIC </td><td class="r">7310&plusmn;352 </td><td class="l">Graham Cave </td><td class="l">Missouri </td><td class="l">Montgomery</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">ARCHAIC </td><td class="r">7922&plusmn;392 </td><td class="l">Modoc Rock Shelter </td><td class="l">Illinois </td><td class="l">Randolph</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">PALEO-INDIAN (<a class="gloss" href="#g_Folsom">Folsom</a>)<a class="fn" href="#fn_2">[2]</a> </td><td class="r">7934&plusmn;350 </td><td class="l">Lubbock Site </td><td class="l">Texas (N.W.) </td><td class="l">Lubbock</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">PALEO-INDIAN (Sandia) </td><td class="r">18,000 </td><td class="l">Sandia Cave </td><td class="l">New Mexico (Center) </td><td class="l">Bernalillo</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">PALEO-INDIAN (?) </td><td class="r">22,000 </td><td class="l">Tule Spring Site </td><td class="l">Nevada (S.E.) </td><td class="l">Clark</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">PALEO-INDIAN (<a class="gloss" href="#g_Clovis">Clovis</a>?)<a class="fn" id="fr_4" href="#fn_4">[4]</a> </td><td class="r">35,000 </td><td class="l">Lewisville Site </td><td class="l">Texas </td><td class="l">Denton</td></tr>
-</table>
-<div class="fnblock"><div class="fndef"><a class="fn" id="fn_1" href="#fr_1">[1]</a>These dates are selected as giving a significant picture of sequence and contemporaneity of cultures. Dates based on shell specimens are excluded on account of their general unreliability. Adena sites are not included after 400 B.C. These are burial mounds and with their inferred customs may be present in two or more cultural units rather than constitute a feature characteristic of one.
-</div><div class="fndef"><a class="fn" id="fn_2" href="#fr_2">[2]</a>An average of at least two dates for this <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a>.
-</div><div class="fndef"><a class="fn" id="fn_3" href="#fr_3">[3]</a>Average of three out of four dates. Libby&rsquo;s second date disregarded as widely out of line.
-</div><div class="fndef"><a class="fn" id="fn_4" href="#fr_4">[4]</a>Two samples gave identical results. Cultural identification as Clovis based on single spearhead is doubtful.
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_9">9</div>
-<h2 id="c2">PALEO-INDIANS, BIG GAME HUNTERS, DISCOVER A NEW WORLD (50,000? to 8,000? B.C.)<a class="fn" id="fr_5" href="#fn_5">[5]</a></h2>
-<p>Man probably discovered America as early as 50,000 years ago and
-gradually occupied the two continents in the succeeding millenia. The
-first discoverers of the New World were of Mongolian racial stock as are
-the American Indians. They crossed from Siberia to Alaska over an
-existing land bridge, over ice, or possibly by wading or by boat over the
-shallow sea in the wake of mammoth, mastodon or musk ox herds on
-whose flesh they lived. Following in the path of the huge animals, they
-made their way possibly up the Yukon from its mouth to the divide,
-thence down into the Mackenzie Basin, and along a great river where
-now exist a chain of lakes and so into the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> Valley.</p>
-<p>The migrants trailing each herd doubtless traveled in their several
-ways in <a class="gloss" href="#g_Family">family</a> groups, uniting from time to time to trap and kill one
-of the great shaggy beasts. When the animals stopped, the families
-bedded down nearby in the most sheltered spots available taking care
-not to lose touch with the herd. These were wanderers, not explorers,
-nor were they seeking new homes; they were hunters that traveled
-where the herd led.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig1">
-<img src="images/p005a.jpg" alt="" width="793" height="600" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 1. <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> drill, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> hammer, and flint scraper as used in Archaic
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a> and their modern steel counterparts. (B.B.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_10">10</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig2">
-<img src="images/p006.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="599" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 2. Paleo-Indians attack a mired-down mammoth. (B.G.P.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_11">11</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig3">
-<img src="images/p006a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="431" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 3. Paleo-Indian <a class="gloss" href="#g_Spearheads">spearheads</a> from the William Small collection. A, B, and C
-are <a class="gloss" href="#g_Clovis">Clovis</a> points; D, a <a class="gloss" href="#g_Folsom">Folsom</a> point. All are from Illinois.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Their belongings, by our standards, were pitifully few, their way of
-life laborious, full of hardship and danger, but their needs were simple
-and their means of meeting them doubtless seemed ample to these
-hardy hunters. The <a class="gloss" href="#g_Chief">chief</a> weapon was a thrusting spear with a chipped
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> head and a long shaft to keep the hunter as far from harm&rsquo;s way as
-possible when attacking the dangerous animal. The narrow width of the
-spearpoint made it easy to withdraw from a wound and attack again.
-Our evidence that the Paleo-Indians (as the Big Game Hunters are
-commonly called) lived in Illinois are these same <a class="gloss" href="#g_Spearheads">spearheads</a> (<a class="gloss" href="#g_Clovis">Clovis</a>
-and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Folsom">Folsom</a> types), usually grooved or fluted lengthwise of the blade,
-which are scattered over much of the Illinois prairie as isolated finds.
-No campsites of this <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a> have yet been discovered in Illinois, as they
-have been in Pennsylvania, Alabama and several southwestern states.
-We can only surmise that in Illinois the hunters also had <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> hammers
-and chipped flint scrapers as they had elsewhere.</p>
-<p>Having arrived in the great central valley between the Rocky Mountains
-and the eastern ranges, the herds probably moved slowly from one
-browsing ground to another in the open corridor between glaciers. It
-may have taken them many years to reach what is now the United
-States. Eventually the herds wandered back and forth across the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a>
-Valley, and some favorable spots came to be used as camping
-grounds again and again by the same or different families. Such places
-would appeal immediately to the campers because of their protection
-from rain and the piercing glacial winds, the presence of a plentiful
-supply of wood and water. The possibility of our gaining a better
-knowledge of Paleo-Indian life in Illinois rests on the discovery of such
-a site, difficult now to recognize because it may no longer provide wood,
-water, or shelter of any sort.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_12">12</div>
-<p>There are in southern Illinois a number of simple linear <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> piles
-known locally as &ldquo;stone forts,&rdquo; all in the same type of land structure.
-Each forms an obstruction five to fifteen feet in height across a narrow
-neck or ridge leading to the plateau top of a near-vertical-sided &ldquo;promontory&rdquo;
-projecting out into a stream valley, making an excellent
-corral, with no fence necessary except across the entrance. They may
-have been used in late Paleo-Indian times and on into the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a>
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a> for impounding large game and/or driving them over the cliff.</p>
-<h2 id="c3"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">ARCHAIC</a> MAN, FIRST SETTLER IN ILLINOIS (8000 to 2500 B.C.)<a class="fn" id="fr_6" href="#fn_6">[6]</a></h2>
-<p>We have reason to believe that the Big Game Hunters wandered
-over Illinois and the adjoining states during the last advance of the
-glaciers. Around 12,000 B.C. the climate in the Midwest became
-milder, the glaciers &ldquo;retreated,&rdquo; and the mighty torrents&mdash;the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a>,
-the Ohio and the Illinois that had torn irresistibly down their
-valleys&mdash;shrank into smaller, less turbulent rivers that occupied but a
-fraction of their former beds. The great shaggy mammoths, musk oxen,
-the ground sloths and the giant beavers moved westward toward the
-mountains or to the north.</p>
-<p>Some of the Big Game Hunters with their families may have followed
-the retreating glacier and the herds; others stayed behind in
-country to which they had grown attached. With the great herds gone,
-the human families remaining in Illinois had to hunt the game animals
-that now frequented the area&mdash;deer, elk (wapiti), bear and smaller mammals.
-The large hunting party was no longer practicable. The game
-roamed over the country singly or by twos or threes and had to be
-stalked by one or two hunters. Families were compelled to live widely
-separated one from another in order to secure ample food throughout
-the year. Thus developed a new way of life which we call the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a>
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">phase</a> or <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a>.</p>
-<p>The hunter, as time passed, learned the secret habits of the deer,
-bear and raccoon and the more sluggish fishes. His wife and daughters
-learned the haunts and ways of the smaller animals, the rodents, turtles
-and lizards, discovered where edible greens, wild tubers, nuts and fruits
-grew and where mussels and snails abounded in creeks and rivers. With
-increasing knowledge <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> man made better and fuller use of his
-changed and changing surroundings, food became more plentifully
-available, life easier and less hazardous though still very difficult from
-our standpoint.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_13">13</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig4">
-<img src="images/p007.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="279" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 4. Hafted primitive <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> adze and grooved <a class="gloss" href="#g_Ax">ax</a>, with modern steel-bitted ax
-in the background. (B.B.)</p>
-</div>
-<p>With new needs and some leisure from the labor of providing
-food, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> man invented specialized devices, new methods of making
-tools and weapons, the more skillful among them shaping the objects
-carefully into symmetrical forms pleasing to the eye of others and
-strangely satisfying to the maker.<a class="fn" id="fr_7" href="#fn_7">[7]</a> He pecked a hollow in both sides of
-his cobblestone hammer so he could grip it securely and use it more
-skillfully. He pecked and ground diorite and granite into adzes, hatchets
-(celts), and axes with a groove for hafting. These were a decided
-improvement over flaked choppers. He ground and polished banded
-and highly-colored shale (&ldquo;slate&rdquo;) into prismatic and cylindrical spearthrower
-weights and bored them with a tube, sand and water. His own
-person he decked out with necklaces and oval pendants (made by boring
-a hole in smooth flat waterworn pebbles) and with bone ornaments
-cut to shape, ground, engraved and polished. These he and his wife
-wore as had their forefathers but not the skin robes of glacial times.</p>
-<p>As life grew easier, the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Family">family</a> or local group increased in size.
-Sons brought their wives to the family dwelling place and built windbreaks
-near those of their parents. With food abundant the little
-settlement became a small cluster of households or a <a class="gloss" href="#g_Hamlet">hamlet</a> consisting
-possibly of sixty to seventy persons.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_14">14</div>
-<h3>If <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> Man Was Like Present-Day Archaic Tribes<a class="fn" id="fr_8" href="#fn_8">[8]</a></h3>
-<div class="img" id="fig5">
-<img src="images/p008.jpg" alt="" width="1000" height="725" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 5. <a class="gloss" href="#g_RockShelter">Rock shelter</a> near Cobden. Such shelters were used by <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> and succeeding
-peoples. (Photograph by Irvin Peithmann)</p>
-</div>
-<p>If <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> man in Illinois lived as do present-day Archaic peoples,
-the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Family">family</a> or local group, though they restricted themselves during most
-of the year to their hunting grounds which they guarded jealously from
-trespassers, did not camp continuously in one spot. At appropriate seasons
-of the year they rotated from one <a class="gloss" href="#g_Hamlet">hamlet</a> site to another to take
-advantage of the food resources of that locality. In winter perhaps they
-moved to a <a class="gloss" href="#g_RockShelter">rock shelter</a>, like that of Modoc in Randolph County, Illinois,
-near the wooded valleys of streams emptying into the river where
-deer and elk sought protection from the rigors of winter; in spring to
-upland lakes for duck and other waterfowl; and in autumn to wooded
-<span class="pb" id="Page_15">15</span>
-parklands to harvest acorns, hickory nuts, and berries. The spot chosen
-for each hamlet location was generally one that had been so used at that
-same season from time out of mind by the family and its forebears.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig6">
-<img src="images/p008a.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="409" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 6. Primitive woman carrying a load with the
-aid of a <a class="gloss" href="#g_Tumpline">tumpline</a>. (J.C.)</p>
-</div>
-<p>It is probable, as among most primitive peoples, that men did
-only work thought
-suitable to men, and
-women that appropriate
-for women. Men
-made the weapons
-and tools they used,
-did the hunting and
-fishing, and the fighting
-(when quarrels developed
-into feuds or
-wars between local
-groups of the same
-tribe). The rest of the labor fell to the women&mdash;caring for the children,
-collecting edible plants, clams and small animals, preparing the food,
-and carrying burdens. All work was done by hand; loads were carried
-on the back. It is possible that boats, perhaps of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Dugout">dugout</a> type, were used
-as among present-day <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> peoples living on waterways. There was
-no other <a class="gloss" href="#g_Specialization">specialization</a> and each &ldquo;<a class="gloss" href="#g_Household">household</a>&rdquo; provided for the needs
-of all its members to the best of its ability. No food was grown and no
-domestic animal except the dog was known.</p>
-<p>Once or twice a year when food was easily and bountifully available,
-local groups from nearby hunting territories met together for
-religious rites. These local groups spoke the same dialect, had the same
-way of life, and considered themselves a unit or tribe. They had no
-political form of government but were kept in order through habits
-formed by early training and by extension of the kinship system to
-the whole tribe. Thus the tribal elders were considered fathers and
-mothers, and to them were due obedience and respect, just as children
-they had been taught to regard their own blood fathers, uncles, and
-other older relatives. The elders knew the tribal customs; and to be
-accepted as a tribal member, boys must respect, learn and conform to
-these customs.</p>
-<p>The object of these annual gatherings was to teach the young
-the tribal customs and to perform solemn ceremonies, the purpose of
-which was to insure the security and well-being of the tribe, a continuing
-abundance of the favorite foods, and to express gratitude and
-thanksgiving to unseen Spirits who watched over the game animals
-(and possibly the edible plants) for the blessings received during the
-past year. These gatherings and cooperative undertakings served, on
-the one hand, as a welcome change from the usual daily grind and
-afforded opportunities for the young to get acquainted and choose
-mates and, on the other, to unify the language and customs of the
-constituent local groups, to enhance the influence of the tribal elders
-and keep fresh in the minds of all the history of the tribe, the importance
-of its activities, and its <a class="gloss" href="#g_SacredTradition">sacred tradition</a>, all essential to the
-way of life of dynamic <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> peoples of recent times.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_16">16</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig7">
-<img src="images/p009.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="645" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 7. <a class="gloss" href="#g_FertilityRites">Fertility rites</a> were probably performed by <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> peoples to
-ensure the abundance of game animals for the next year. (J.C.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_17">17</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig8">
-<img src="images/p009a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="586" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 8. <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> weapons: A, Hidden Valley type spearhead; B, prismatic atlatl
-weight of polished red shale; C, throwing a spear with an atlatl; D, socketed antler
-spearhead; E, short thrusting spear or javelin. A, B, and D are from Modoc Shelter
-in Randolph County, Illinois.</p>
-</div>
-<p>In the later (Medial) <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a> at Modoc, the dead were
-buried in the floor of the <a class="gloss" href="#g_RockShelter">rock shelter</a>. Burial probably indicates
-a belief in life after death. Care in preparing the body for burial,
-in the funeral rites and burying, and in the customary mourning thereafter
-was highly important so the dead man could go promptly to the
-spirit world in peace and not remain in the neighborhood to disturb
-his kinsmen. Immediately after the burial, it is probable that the little
-settlement removed to a distant location as is customary with peoples
-in this <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stage">stage</a> of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a>.</p>
-<p>The rites for important dead in the Terminal <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a> probably began
-with the conventional mourning of relatives, with painting the
-body with red ochre and grease and adorning it with the dead man&rsquo;s
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Jewelry">jewelry</a>, followed at the appropriate time by the conveyance of the body
-to the grave side, where the corpse was deposited in a pit together with
-personal <a class="gloss" href="#g_Insigne">insigne</a> and weapons. The grooved <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> axe, large <a class="gloss" href="#g_Spearheads">spearheads</a>,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_18">18</span>
-daggers, bannerstones, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Spearthrower">spearthrower</a> with weight and more rarely copper
-articles were placed alongside or on the corpse. In some instances large
-stones were laid upon the grave probably for one or more of the following
-reasons: (a) to mark the grave of an important tribesman; (b) to
-keep the body from being disturbed by animals; and (c) to hold the
-dead man&rsquo;s ghost until he departed for the spirit world.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig9">
-<img src="images/p010.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="656" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 9. Grooved <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> axes are frequently found in <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> graves but were not
-buried with the dead after this <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a>. (J.C.)</p>
-</div>
-<p>It is very probable that, on occasions of social and religious
-import, Modoc man and other
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> tribes in Illinois bedecked
-themselves in their best paint
-and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Jewelry">jewelry</a>. Possibly the colorful
-and intriguing bannerstones,
-which were undoubtedly developed
-from the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Spearthrower">spearthrower</a>
-weight, were carried or worn by
-the local group headmen who
-had won that right because they
-were skillful hunters, courageous
-fighters, or learned in the tribal
-customs and beliefs and thus
-recognized by the tribe as leaders
-for the time being.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig10">
-<img src="images/p010a.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="384" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 10. Anculosa shell necklace with flat
-pendant of water-worn <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> from the
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a>. Anculosa necklaces were
-worn by many Illinois peoples probably
-up to the European contact period.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_19">19</div>
-<h2 id="c4">CULTURES AND CULTURAL CHANGE</h2>
-<p>Man can live virtually anywhere on the earth&rsquo;s surface where he
-can obtain food, water and fuel, and do so without any fundamental
-change in his physical structure. This is largely because he is easily
-able to modify his customary ways of filling his basic needs under new
-or changing conditions of his surroundings. For primitive man to &ldquo;live
-better&rdquo; required an increasing knowledge of the resources in his locality
-and ingenuity in devising effective means and contrivances for exploiting
-them.</p>
-<p>Because of this ability, the Paleo-Indian wanderers (Big Game
-Hunters) in Illinois around 12,000 to 10,000 B.C., when confronted
-with rising temperatures and other regional changes, could choose
-whether they would follow the mammoth and musk ox herds and
-familiar subglacial conditions elsewhere or adopt new and strange
-methods of securing food and other requirements.</p>
-<p>As Big Game Hunters they probably lived as a number of families
-attached to a herd and relatively independent of each other except at
-hunting times. They had no homes, only temporary camps, and were
-bound to a moving herd, not to any particular region. The <a class="gloss" href="#g_PaleoIndian">Paleo-Indian</a>
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> consisted of methods of trapping and slaying the great beasts
-and of filling other simple physical needs; a simple code of social behavior
-which enabled men and wives to live together with their children
-and, for brief periods, in gatherings of the families in relative peace and
-contentment; with religious beliefs and rites suitable to their cultural
-level that they believed assured them of a continuance of their satisfactory
-existence.</p>
-<p>When the climate changed, those families that chose to remain in
-Illinois had to develop, perhaps slowly and painfully, a new way of life.
-The habits and haunts of deer, elk, bear and raccoon had to be learned.
-Other methods of hunting and of making tools and devices to fit new
-conditions were invented as a result of the new fund of knowledge
-assembled. Each <a class="gloss" href="#g_Family">family</a> eventually acquired a more or less definite
-piece of land or hunting territory in which it selected certain favorable
-places to build the temporary <a class="gloss" href="#g_Hamlet">hamlet</a> at suitable seasons. As the man
-and his family became better adapted to the land and its resources, he
-hunted more successfully, and the family or local group grew larger
-in number.</p>
-<p>Probably a number of neighboring families, when food was especially
-abundant, gathered together for social and religious purposes as
-peoples living today in the same <a class="gloss" href="#g_Status">status</a> still do. Religious beliefs and
-other customs had all this time doubtless been shifting gradually in
-meeting the needs and dangers of changing conditions to a new way of
-life we call the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a>.</p>
-<p>Every way of life is built on an older, often simpler, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> from
-which it has changed more or less rapidly. Due to important inventions,
-the group may modify its <a class="gloss" href="#g_Economy">economy</a> (ways of securing and processing
-<span class="pb" id="Page_20">20</span>
-food, etc.) and produce a substantially improved manner of living
-which, from archaeological evidence alone, may be difficult to recognize
-as a development from its earlier <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">phase</a>.</p>
-<p>On occasion, <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a> from another region may invade an area, drive
-out the inhabitants and bring in a differing way of life. Usually this
-merely extends, to a desirable region less effectively exploited by others,
-the range of a vigorous cultural group whose territory has become too
-densely populated.</p>
-<p>Sometimes newcomers essay to live peaceably with the natives and
-a new cultural blend is developed. If fundamental changes are made in
-the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Economy">economy</a> by internal development or by imitating another <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a>,
-social and religious customs are very likely to change too, though usually
-at a slower pace.</p>
-<p>As time went on, the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> way of life slowly changed and finally
-disappeared, but probably not so suddenly as might at first appear; for
-many Archaic customs, tools, and weapons continued to be made and
-used in the &ldquo;new&rdquo; <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> by the descendants of rugged earlier <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a>
-or were adopted by newcomers to the region. Other changes were
-added through new inventions and incoming people from other regions
-producing a new culture now generally known as <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a>.</p>
-<h2 id="c5">THE INITIAL <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">WOODLAND</a> CULTURES<a class="fn" id="fr_9" href="#fn_9">[9]</a> (2500-500 B.C.)</h2>
-<p>After 5000 B.C. the temperatures continued to rise producing a
-climatic interval known as the <a class="gloss" href="#g_ThermalMaximum">Thermal Maximum</a> when it was warmer
-and drier than at the present time. After reaching its high point, the
-temperature gradually declined and probably ended in southern Illinois
-about 2100 B.C. or later in a climate much like that of today.</p>
-<p>By projecting the rate of deposit from the eight- to the eleven-foot
-level of the <a class="gloss" href="#g_ModocRockShelter">Modoc Rock Shelter</a> up to the five-foot level where the
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> remains appear to end, we secure a date for its upper limit of
-about 2100 B.C. (Deuel 1957, p. 2). The remains between the five- and
-eight-foot depths are scantier and less varied than in the earlier (lower)
-layers and may indicate a cultural group in a losing struggle to maintain
-itself under changing conditions.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_21">21</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig11">
-<img src="images/p011.jpg" alt="" width="660" height="1001" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 11. Potsherds from the <a class="gloss" href="#g_LakeBaikal">Lake Baikal</a> in southern Siberia resemble those of
-Initial and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Classic">Classic</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> (Hopewellian) in Illinois. The letters with subscripts
-refer to Siberian pottery. A-E, reduced to &frac12; actual size; F-H, reduced to &sup1;/&#8321;&#8326;
-actual size. (Siberian pottery from Richthofen in ANTHROPOS, 1932: 128, 129,
-130; Illinois pottery from Illinois State Museum collections.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_22">22</div>
-<p>In northern Illinois, similar climatic conditions were developing.
-There, possibly as early as 2500 B.C., a new <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a>, the Initial (early)
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a>, was coming into existence. At any rate, groups living there
-some time prior to 1000 B.C. made pottery, placed their dead in cemeteries
-and in low burial mounds in a <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flexed">flexed</a> or &ldquo;doubled-up&rdquo; position,
-occasionally with food, personal ornaments and other funeral offerings.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig12">
-<img src="images/p012.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="152" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 12. A <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Dagger">dagger</a> or hunting knife from &ldquo;Red Ochre <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a>&rdquo; of Initial <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a>. (B.B.)</p>
-</div>
-<p>The pottery of one <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> group (Morton) in the Illinois valley
-resembled, in shape, surface treatment, design and area decorated, pots
-made in the <a class="gloss" href="#g_LakeBaikal">Lake Baikal</a> region in Asia some 7000 miles distant. The
-appearance of such striking similarities has long been a puzzle to anthropologists.
-In the first place the detailed likenesses suggest both were
-made by one and the same <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a>. It seems fairly obvious that the
-several resemblances did not travel from tribe to tribe from Asia to
-central North America. The preservation of a pottery tradition during
-a migration of 7000 miles, probably lasting for several generations,
-seems equally incredible. Perhaps the most plausible explanation is
-that two widely separated divisions of a people originating in central
-Asia with the same cultural background and similar surroundings arrived
-independently at a remarkably similar but very simple pottery type.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig13">
-<img src="images/p012a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="367" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 13. A copper <a class="gloss" href="#g_Gorget">gorget</a>, A, (possibly patterned after the double-bitted ax-shaped
-bannerstone) and shell gorgets, B and C, from &ldquo;Red Ochre <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a>&rdquo;
-of Initial <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a>. All from <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mound">Mound</a> 11, Fulton County, Illinois.</p>
-</div>
-<p>These late migrants probably found groups like the Black Sand
-(and Red Ochre) peoples in Illinois who were just emerging from the
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">phase</a> into Initial <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a>. The settlements of all early
-<span class="pb" id="Page_23">23</span>
-Woodland peoples were small in extent and poor in cultural remains.
-The population of these hamlets probably seldom exceeded fifty. No
-traces of house structures have yet been discerned. Temporary huts,
-probably built of small poles and brush, may have been conical or
-hemispherical in shape. The <a class="gloss" href="#g_Artifacts">artifacts</a> or cultural objects, except for a
-small amount of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Jewelry">jewelry</a> (shell and copper beads and pendants) and
-the few offerings placed in graves, show little evidence of any urge
-to fine workmanship or much feeling for beauty of line or form. Life
-was probably too hard and the effort in securing food and other requirements
-too exacting to leave much leisure for artistic workmanship
-in durable materials.<a class="fn" id="fr_10" href="#fn_10">[10]</a></p>
-<h2 id="c6">THE <a class="gloss" href="#g_FoodStorers">FOOD STORERS</a> (BAUMER AND <a class="gloss" href="#g_CrabOrchard">CRAB ORCHARD</a> CULTURES) (1000?-100 B.C.?)</h2>
-<p>It has been seen that in southern Illinois the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> way of life
-may have persisted until 2100 B.C. or perhaps even later. Across the
-state on the Ohio River a <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a> succeeded the earlier
-Archaic residents. Their <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> is known as Baumer and their nearest
-cultural relatives lived south of the Ohio in Kentucky (Round Grave or
-Upper Valley People). The Baumer <a class="gloss" href="#g_Artifacts">artifacts</a> do not resemble those
-of the Archaic <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a> very closely, giving one the impression that the
-Baumer people developed their way of life elsewhere and moved into
-Illinois, possibly while Archaic groups were still in the region.</p>
-<p>The Baumer <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> differs in several ways from the northern
-Initial <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a>; actually it appears to be more advanced although it
-has been termed early Woodland by some archaeologists. In the first
-place, the area of settlement was more extensive which seems to indicate
-a larger population than do early northern Woodland campsites. Their
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Artifacts">artifacts</a> are numerous and varied, suggesting they were well adapted
-to their surroundings. Flat forms of polished <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> (resembling in outline
-certain <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> bannerstones from which they may have derived)
-served presumably as breast ornaments or gorgets (as similar pieces did
-in the Hopewellian <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a>). Tear-shaped stone objects (plummets)
-were made as they had been in Medial and Terminal Archaic. House
-structures were semi-permanent, large, square, made of poles or logs
-set in holes in the ground. Huts with circular floors seem to have been
-in use also. Most important of the cultural habits noted were numerous
-pits apparently for the storage of food. In these the remains of acorns
-<span class="pb" id="Page_24">24</span>
-and hickory nuts were found. These <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a>, like the acorn gatherers of
-California and the Eskimo, knew how to preserve food over long periods.
-Acorns were probably abundant enough for a Baumer <a class="gloss" href="#g_Family">family</a> to
-lay up several months&rsquo; supply in a short time. This permitted them to
-live in larger settlements and gave them sufficient leisure to build rather
-substantial houses and shape symmetrical ornaments from stone. These
-facts seem to substantiate the hypothesis that they were a sedentary
-people by virtue of their knowledge of how to store food.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig14">
-<img src="images/p013.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="503" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 14. Housewife storing roasted acorns in a pit near door of her square log
-cabin dwelling. Characteristic clay vessel (&ldquo;flower-pot&rdquo; type) with &ldquo;mat-impressed
-exterior.&rdquo; Baumer <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a>. (J.C.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig15">
-<img src="images/p013a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="371" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 15. A, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> pestle; B, reel-shaped stone <a class="gloss" href="#g_Gorget">gorget</a>; C, &ldquo;spud-shaped&rdquo; stone
-gorget or pendant; D, grooved plummet. From the Baumer <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a> and site.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_25">25</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig16">
-<img src="images/p013b.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="401" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 16. Pots from the <a class="gloss" href="#g_CrabOrchard">Crab Orchard</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a> of Baumer <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a> recovered from
-the Sugar Camp Hill Site by Moreau Maxwell for Southern Illinois University.
-Vessel in center is roughly 16&Prime; tall. (Photographs furnished through courtesy of
-Dr. James B. Griffin, Univ. of Michigan.)</p>
-</div>
-<p>The size of the Baumer settlement, the semi-permanent houses, the
-presence of chipped spades, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> pestles and pottery might lead one
-to think that these <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a> were plant-growers rather than simple food storers.
-Comparing them with the acorn-gathering tribes of California,
-who were storers and not food growers, it is seen that these, too, had
-permanent settlements with well over one hundred inhabitants, rather
-substantial houses, stone pestles, and some tribes, at least, had pottery
-vessels. The Californians doubtless had digging tools since the rooms
-of some houses were dug four feet down into the soil.</p>
-<p>Traces of Hopewellian influence, possibly indicating inter-marriage
-with Hopewellians, have been noted at the Sugar Camp Hill site (date
-undetermined) in Jackson County, which is presumably later than
-Baumer. However, the Baumerians like the native Californians were
-conservative, for four centuries intervened between the oldest Hopewellian
-village in the north and the earliest known station of that <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a>
-in southern Illinois.<a class="fn" id="fr_11" href="#fn_11">[11]</a></p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_26">26</div>
-<h2 id="c7">THE HOPEWELLIAN <a class="gloss" href="#g_Civilization">CIVILIZATION</a><a class="fn" id="fr_12" href="#fn_12">[12]</a> (500 B.C.-500 A.D.)</h2>
-<p>Toward the end of the Initial <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a> maize or corn, as
-we call it today, was introduced into northern Illinois, presumably from
-Mexico and Middle America through the agency of intervening tribes.
-In an apparently short time, its production seems to have been greatly
-intensified and exploited. Other food crops and tobacco may have
-accompanied maize.</p>
-<p>About the same time, a <a class="gloss" href="#g_FormalizedReligion">formalized religion</a> arose, probably concerned
-with the worship of deities who personified natural forces like
-the sun, rain and thunder, which were important to a plant-growing
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a>. From the evidence of burial places, there seem to have been
-two or possibly three social classes. Doubtless the first comprised the
-families who introduced and grew the new food plants and who were
-inspired to invent the complex <a class="gloss" href="#g_Religion">religion</a>. The burial of the dead, especially
-those socially important and of the highest class, was accompanied
-by elaborate and colorful ceremonies closely bound to the religion. This
-seems to be a continuation in grander form of the earlier Red Ochre
-funeral and burial. It is unfortunate that we do not have tangible evidence
-of their other religious and political ceremonies which may have
-been even more impressive and significant. The official dress and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Insigne">insignia</a>
-of the officials, which we can barely glimpse in the rich and
-varied remains in the tombs, signify a political system of social control
-and an established priesthood for the spiritual guidance of the community.
-Shamans or medicine men probably had only the duty of
-treating disease. Reverence for and possibly worship of ancestors is
-suggested by the impressive tomb chambers and mounds and the care
-obviously bestowed on certain of their socially prominent dead.</p>
-<p>Social and political prestige, religious pomp and ceremonial, all
-seem to have combined to stimulate a demand for rare materials, beautiful
-jewels and impressive regalia. This initiated the search for pearls
-at home, the development of skillful and artistic workmanship in <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a>,
-bone, shell, copper and mica, travel abroad and trade in materials
-obtainable only in distant regions.</p>
-<p>Aside from those technologies connected with the growing of plant foods,
-probably few new crafts appeared in the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a>; rather those
-<span class="pb" id="Page_27">27</span>
-already, existing in the Initial <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> were raised to a high degree
-of excellence. <a class="gloss" href="#g_Art">Art</a> in several forms flourished&mdash;carving in the round
-and in relief, the making of fine symmetrical polished, decorated and
-painted pottery commonly called typical Hopewellian, hammered copper
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Jewelry">jewelry</a>, the setting of pearls and highly-colored native stones as
-eyes in sculptured animals and in bear-tooth pendants and ear ornaments,
-etching of delicate designs, naturalistic and conventional, on
-bone and the modeling and firing of exquisite statuettes in clay. We
-admire and wonder at the excellence of execution in the best of their
-small sculpture because they are skillfully fashioned and finished and
-because they so accurately portray the characteristics and habits of
-animals with which we are familiar. The artist had the crudest of tools
-to aid him&mdash;<a class="gloss" href="#g_RoughStone">rough stone</a> hammers and an anvil for <a class="gloss" href="#g_Pecking">pecking</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> to
-the general form; sandstone files or abraders; clay and water to polish
-pieces; <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> and tubular drills for boring; and flint knives to cut and
-engrave pottery and bone&mdash;in spite of which the best craftsmen well
-knew how to bring out the beauty of the piece.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig17">
-<img src="images/p014.jpg" alt="" width="444" height="800" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 17. Artist&rsquo;s idea of a Hopewellian
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Chief">chief</a> or high <a class="gloss" href="#g_Priest">priest</a> in full
-ceremonial regalia. (J.C.) Evidence
-for dress (except for <a class="gloss" href="#g_Calumet">calumet</a>) has
-been found in Illinois.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_28">28</div>
-<p>For the first time in <a class="gloss" href="#g_Amerindian">Amerindian</a> history in Illinois we become
-aware of an accumulation of wealth, a surplus of handmade goods over
-and above those needed for survival; many of these were neither well-suited
-nor intended for immediate physical needs, but rather were
-aimed at social display or spiritual enhancement. Wealth reflects a
-relatively constant and abundant supply of food and other necessities
-and the resulting accompaniment of considerable leisure time for a
-sizable portion of the community. It may also mark the beginning of
-craft <a class="gloss" href="#g_Specialization">specialization</a>.<a class="fn" id="fr_13" href="#fn_13">[13]</a></p>
-<p>It is hardly necessary to add that, if such a profusion of grave offerings
-as indicated by Hopewellian tombs&mdash;<a class="gloss" href="#g_FeatherCloth">feather cloth</a> robes, pearl
-necklaces, copper hatchets, and beautifully fashioned <a class="gloss" href="#g_Art">art</a> objects&mdash;were
-left with the dead, that the high political and religious officers were
-correspondingly bedecked in gorgeous apparel for civil and religious
-ceremonies.</p>
-<p>Nor should sight be lost of the fact that these creations and materials,
-so commonplace and inexpensive today, were to the Hopewellians
-as valuable and highly desirable as gold, silk, and precious stones
-are to us in Western <a class="gloss" href="#g_Civilization">civilization</a>. For a better perspective these tomb
-offerings should be compared with objects usually found in camp and
-grave sites of the Initial and Final <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> peoples.</p>
-<p>Traders may have gone to distant regions to select and barter for
-raw materials, to the Lake Superior region for copper, to Ohio for pipestone,
-to the south Atlantic and Gulf Coasts for the small Marginella
-and Oliva <a class="gloss" href="#g_Shells">shells</a>, for the larger Cassis and Busycon shells, and to the
-Yellowstone or Mexico for <a class="gloss" href="#g_Obsidian">obsidian</a> (of which little is found in Illinois
-graves). Trade, to some degree, removes the limitations imposed by the
-immediate surroundings. Pearls were secured in quantity from the
-clams of the native streams. Bone, antler, tortoise and clam shell, bears&rsquo;
-teeth, bear, wildcat and wolverine jaws from their hunting and collecting
-pursuits were utilized more fully than ever before. Even human
-jaws, possibly of enemies, were cut, polished and bored for use as pendants.</p>
-<p>Though the Hopewellians may not have been the pacifists they are
-sometimes painted, there must have been long periods of peaceful
-relationships with distant and nearer neighbors with whom they
-traded or through whose territories their traders had to pass. Whether
-or not a condition of peace was maintained within the borders of their
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> area by the force of arms is an interesting question that cannot
-now be answered.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_29">29</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig18">
-<img src="images/p015.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="831" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 18. The Hopewellian <a class="gloss" href="#g_Assemblage">assemblage</a> of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Artifacts">artifacts</a> that collectively identify the
-Hopewellian (<a class="gloss" href="#g_Classic">Classic</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a>) <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a> and, except for shell spoon, turtle shell
-dish, and some bead types, distinguish it from the other Woodland assemblages.
-A, drinking cup of marine shell (<i>Cassis madagascarensis</i>); B, C, D, Hopewellian
-pottery (restored); E, mussel shell spoon with &ldquo;handle&rdquo;; F, turtle shell dish;
-G, sheet mica (mirror?); H, antler headdress; I, J, platform pipes with <a class="gloss" href="#g_Effigy">effigy</a> mammal bowls,
-polished <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> (Otter and bear&rsquo;s head, eyes set with copper
-pellets); K, platform pipe (plain bowl), curved base, polished stone; L, copper
-earspools or ornaments, pair; M, imitation bear tooth, copper; N, (Below) N&#8321;,
-Bear jaw, cut in half, ground and drilled to be worn as a double pendant;
-(Above) N&#8322;, Fragment of a human jaw that has been similarly treated; O,
-copper <a class="gloss" href="#g_Hatchet">hatchet</a> that carries imprint of textile on its surface; P, copper adze;
-Q, R, Hopewellian <a class="gloss" href="#g_Spearheads">spearheads</a>; S, massive bead of copper; T, bracelet of copper
-beads; U, necklace of pearls; V, necklace of copper beads; W, necklace of
-graduated ground shell beads from columella (central column) of marine shell.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_30">30</div>
-<p>In southern Illinois the advance of Hopewellian <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> was slower.
-The infiltration of new pottery styles noted at <a class="gloss" href="#g_CrabOrchard">Crab Orchard</a> very possibly
-represents intermarriage with Hopewellian women. Possibly
-through ties of relationship and the acceptance of the new food plants,
-the old Baumer way of life was submerged by the Hopewellian customs
-though here and there former habits still are recognizable. Some customs
-of Baumer and Crab Orchard were adopted by the northern Hopewellians&mdash;the
-reel-shaped <a class="gloss" href="#g_Gorget">gorget</a>, the plummet and the chipped <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a>
-hoe.</p>
-<p>In the north of Illinois, Hopewellian lasted until 250 A.D. (Poole
-site) and in the west and south to about 450 or 500 A.D. Though the
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> died out in Illinois by 500 A.D., it still flourished in <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a>
-(Bynum site) around 800 A.D. and at Marksville, Louisiana, as late as
-850 A.D.</p>
-<p>As was stated earlier, emerging cultures grow out of earlier ones.
-Although it may not yet be generally recognized, the Hopewellian
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Civilization">civilization</a> probably exerted tremendous influence on the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a>
-cultures and on tribes that followed them in the great central valley of
-the United States and beyond, down to historic times. It must be
-borne in mind that in spite of their splendid achievements, the Hopewellians
-had no domestic animals but the dog, no herds for meat and
-great wealth, no draft animals to drag the plough and turn the mill. All
-labor was &ldquo;by hand,&rdquo; all transport on the back or in a boat driven by
-human power.</p>
-<h2 id="c8">THE DARK AGE IN ILLINOIS&mdash;FINAL <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">WOODLAND</a> (200 to 900 A.D.)</h2>
-<p>The Hopewellian <a class="gloss" href="#g_Civilization">civilization</a> apparently disappeared as suddenly
-as it seems to have arisen. This impression is probably due to the fact
-that the <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a> continued to live in the old villages long after the
-characteristic colorful Hopewell customs were no longer practiced.
-Actually the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> may have declined for a century or more before it
-finally broke down completely. Many of the simpler folk traditions
-probably persisted in the area for some centuries afterward.</p>
-<p>Possibly long continued abuses of power and privilege by religious
-and political officials, especially those from the highest social caste,
-weakened the confidence of the lower classes in their leaders and the
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a>. Newcomers from Iowa, Missouri and Kentucky may have
-further disorganized certain settlements and separated areas of the
-larger community from each other. Generally, however, the writer
-gets the impression that the decay began within the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Civilization">civilization</a> although
-its final downfall may have been accelerated by external pressures.</p>
-<p>With failing confidence and a rising uneasiness, trade would naturally
-decrease and the incentive to fine workmanship decline. The
-larger cultural community split apart into a number of small tribes,
-who were isolationists and individualists. All the separate little tribal
-units were <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> culturally with some small evidence of their
-Hopewellian heritage, but each differed in certain respects from its
-<span class="pb" id="Page_31">31</span>
-neighbors. Villages dwindled to the mere hamlets, widely separated one
-from another. The elaborate ceremonial dress, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Insigne">insignia</a>, and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Jewelry">jewelry</a>,
-and the artistic creations (at least in durable materials) became a part
-of the past; the <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a> found themselves reduced to the rude cultural
-level of their early Woodland ancestors. Huts were flimsy and left no
-discernible remains. Tools, weapons, and ornaments were, in general,
-carelessly made and poorly finished. Although tobacco was smoked and
-small patches of maize and beans may have been grown, the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Chief">chief</a>
-economic dependence undoubtedly was on hunting, fishing and collecting.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig19">
-<img src="images/p016.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="564" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 19. Group of mounds exhibiting bird, mammal, linear and conical mounds as
-they occur characteristically in <a class="gloss" href="#g_EffigyMound">Effigy Mound</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a> of Final <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a>. (B.B.)</p>
-</div>
-<p>The religious beliefs, too, were probably simplified and mixed with
-magic and superstition, surviving relics of the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Religion">religion</a> of the past age.
-In a word, the social and religious customs of the little tribes were
-broadly similar but in minor details differed from each other much as
-do their artifactual remains.</p>
-<p>A study of the Final <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> and other phases of Illinois history
-reveals certain relationships among some distinguishable differences of
-detail:</p>
-<p>1. The almost complete lack of evidence of Hopewellian <a class="gloss" href="#g_Art">art</a>, trade
-and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Religion">religion</a> in the late <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a> gives little apparent indication
-that the <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a> were the direct descendants and heirs of that <a class="gloss" href="#g_Civilization">civilization</a>.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_32">32</span>
-On the other hand, the general resemblance of Final Woodland assemblages
-to those of the <a class="gloss" href="#g_InitialPhase">Initial phase</a> seems marked. Let us examine
-further.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig20">
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 20. Graves near Quincy, Illinois, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">Stone</a> Vault <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a>. (Photographs through courtesy of
-O. D. Thurber.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p017.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="565" />
-<p class="pcap"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">Stone</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mound">mound</a> after earth was removed.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p017a.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="569" />
-<p class="pcap">Four excavated &ldquo;vaults&rdquo;, the third of which
-shows a &ldquo;corridor&rdquo; entrance with <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> steps.</p>
-</div>
-<p>The tobacco pipe of the late <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">phase</a> with the stem projecting beyond
-the bowl is found in most aspects. Likewise, the vertically elongated
-pot is common but not the only form. Burials are often in mounds,
-frequently in a central chamber or grave, with skeletons in the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flexed">flexed</a>
-and/or <a class="gloss" href="#g_Extended">extended</a> positions, occasionally accompanied by grave offerings.
-All these are broadly reminiscent of Hopewellian customs and, in the
-writer&rsquo;s opinion, indicate a continuing thread of tradition from Initial <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> through
-Hopewellian into the <a class="gloss" href="#g_FinalPhase">Final phase</a>.</p>
-<p>2. The relationship to the Middle <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> seems more evident
-and has been attributed by some authors to the &ldquo;impact&rdquo; of a high
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> on that of cruder or &ldquo;under-developed&rdquo; neighbors. What are
-the grounds for these conclusions?</p>
-<p>New pottery forms were being attempted, the flattened globular
-pot, the shallow bowl (occasionally found in Hopewellian sites), the
-cup or beaker and the plate. In southern counties, a new method of
-making pits is indicated by a tendency of sherds, even grit-tempered
-ones, to split or laminate (see Maxwell, <i><a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> Cultures of Southern
-Illinois</i>, Beloit, 1951, p. 204). Secondary features previously lacking
-begin to appear as &ldquo;raised points&rdquo; or knobs on rims, some roughly resembling
-animal heads with ears and a snout. Triangular <a class="gloss" href="#g_Arrowheads">arrowheads</a>
-and others reflecting larger spearhead types are all made from curved,
-not flat flakes as the Mississippian points are. The <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> discoidal that
-seems to be the game piece of the historically known chunkey game,
-which was possibly initiated in late Hopewellian times (see Fowler, <i>The
-Rutherford <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mound">Mound</a></i>, Springfield, 1957, pp. 31-33) occurs in the Bluff
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a> and probably in the Tampico also.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_33">33</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig21">
-<img src="images/p017b.jpg" alt="" width="469" height="500" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 21. Canton ware pot (Tampico
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a>) from Clear Lake village
-site in Tazewell County. Designs are
-formed with cord impressions. (From
-Schoenbeck collection in Illinois State
-Museum. Max. diam. at shoulder 18&Prime;.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig22">
-<img src="images/p017c.jpg" alt="" width="358" height="600" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 22. &ldquo;Handled&rdquo;
-pipe in form of raven
-with head projecting
-from rim, from Jersey
-Bluff <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a>.
-After Titterington.
-Reduced about &frac12;.</p>
-</div>
-<p>All these bespeak Middle Mississippian tendencies. A common
-conclusion, as mentioned previously, is that these features were borrowed
-from non-Woodland groups. The writer, however, gets the impression
-from his studies that the Middle <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">phase</a> developed
-through the interplay of invention and adoption of improvements,
-modification and re-invention, between the Final <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> subcultures
-in Illinois and adjacent territory. This does not mean that
-Illinois communities alone were responsible for the emergence of this
-phase but rather that they played an important dynamic role in its
-development. The Cahokia <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a> of western and central Illinois
-probably constituted the native local tribe or nation.</p>
-<h3>Final <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaeology">Archaeology</a></h3>
-<p>Archaeologically these peoples are in the Final <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">phase</a>
-of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a>. The <a class="gloss" href="#g_FinalPhase">Final Phase</a> yields tobacco pipes and crude <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Arrowheads">arrowheads</a>,
-its <a class="gloss" href="#g_Chief">chief</a> artifactual differences with the Initial phase. The clay
-of their pottery was generally mixed with grit or sand to prevent firing
-cracks in the vessel walls. The customary vertically-elongated pot with
-a conical or pointed bottom was accompanied by new forms&mdash;the
-globular or flattened globular with &ldquo;round&rdquo; (spherical) bases, the
-&ldquo;coconut shell&rdquo; cup or larger vessel, and shallow bowls. The flattened
-globular pots and the bowls were occasionally decorated with two or
-<span class="pb" id="Page_34">34</span>
-four knobs or with &ldquo;raised points&rdquo; on the rim, sometimes giving a
-squarish appearance to the mouth. In some instances these decorative
-projections were crudely modeled ears and snout which give the effect
-of animals&rsquo; heads facing out and foreshadowing the Middle <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a>
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Effigy">effigy</a> shallow bowls. An important invention, the bow and arrow,
-appears in Illinois for the first time in this <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a>. Judging by the
-crudity of the chipped flint arrowheads, these <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a> were poor archers
-and preferred the spear and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Spearthrower">spearthrower</a> in hunting and fighting. Pipes,
-like most <a class="gloss" href="#g_Artifacts">artifacts</a> except weapon heads, are rare. The &ldquo;elbow&rdquo; or
-L-shaped pipe is generally representative of the culture.</p>
-<p>The six recognized Final <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> subcultures with their diagnostic
-(though not very significant) traits are (1) <a class="gloss" href="#g_EffigyMound">Effigy Mound</a> named
-for its distinguishing characteristic; (2) Tampico with pottery decorated
-with designs formed by cord-impressions, in northern Illinois; (3) <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">Stone</a>
-Vault with stone mounds containing walled tomb chambers; (4) Jersey
-Bluff with its unique &ldquo;handled&rdquo; tobacco pipes, in the west; (5) Raymond,
-best characterized by the generalized Woodland nature of its
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Artifacts">artifacts</a>; and (6) Lewis with incised spiral designs on pottery, in
-southern Illinois.</p>
-<h2 id="c9">A SECOND PLANT-RAISING <a class="gloss" href="#g_Civilization">CIVILIZATION</a>&mdash;THE MIDDLE MISSISSIPPIANS (1000-1500 A.D.)</h2>
-<p>The Middle <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> seems to have arisen, as previously
-suggested, in the area where several important highways of aboriginal
-travel converged&mdash;the region surrounding the Ohio and Mississippi
-rivers from the mouth of the Wabash to the mouth of the Illinois.
-Whether or not its development was stimulated by the contracts of
-Muskhogeans and Algonkians or whether it was due to interplay between
-the cultures of the Final <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> petty tribes is unknown.</p>
-<p>Two slightly differing subcultures of the <a class="gloss" href="#g_MiddlePhase">Middle phase</a> appeared in
-the state. One, known archaeologically as the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Cumberland">Cumberland</a> (Tennessee-Cumberland),
-may have embraced at one time all the southern Illinois
-counties between the mouths of the Kaskaskia and the Wabash. [The
-Angel Site near Evansville, Indiana, may belong to the Cumberland
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a>.] The other subculture, which may be termed Cahokia,
-flourished in counties bordering on the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> from Union County
-to Wisconsin. As the two periods show few significant cultural differences,
-they will, except as noted hereafter, be treated as a single
-unit.</p>
-<p>The bow and arrow invented in the Final <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">phase</a>, was
-developed early in the Middle <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a> into an effective
-weapon although spear and perhaps <a class="gloss" href="#g_Spearthrower">spearthrower</a> continued in use.
-The chunkey game was probably played as a part of a religious ceremony
-though it may quite possibly have served as a popular pastime as well.</p>
-<p>Pottery was slow at first to change from its more obvious <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a>
-characteristics but new shapes foreshadowing most of those of the fully
-<span class="pb" id="Page_35">35</span>
-developed (Old Village) cultural <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">phase</a> practically replaced the conical-based
-elongated pot early in the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a>. Cord-roughening and grit-tempering
-disappeared in the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Classic">classic</a> Cahokia period, and a fine polished
-blackware and a painted pottery were added to the smooth utilitarian
-ware. An excellent &ldquo;dull gray&rdquo; ware with smooth gray to brown surfaces
-was of more common occurrence. It appears to differ from the fine
-ware only in its partially oxidized surfaces probably due to poorly controlled
-firing methods.<a class="fn" id="fr_14" href="#fn_14">[14]</a></p>
-<div class="img" id="fig23">
-<img src="images/p018.jpg" alt="" width="784" height="400" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 23. The chunkey game in foreground. Man hunting with bow and arrow in
-background. Middle <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a>. (J.C.)</p>
-</div>
-<p>There were probably two or more social classes among the <a class="gloss" href="#g_MiddlePhase">Middle phase</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a> as
-there were among Hopewellians, Natchez and Polynesians.<a class="fn" id="fr_15" href="#fn_15">[15]</a>
-The fine polished black and painted wares may have been
-<span class="pb" id="Page_36">36</span>
-marks of distinction between the highest and lower classes since it is
-much less common. In Hopewellian times, it is probable that both
-the fine ware and the specialized forms (which were usually of the
-highest quality) were reserved for the highest caste. In the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a>
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a>, the shallow bowl, the cup or beaker, and the plate of dull gray
-ware seem to have been wide-spread in the village and may indicate
-a general improvement of living conditions among the lower social classes since Hopewellian times.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig24">
-<img src="images/p019.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="438" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 24. Pottery shapes, Middle <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a>. A, &ldquo;bean pot&rdquo;; B, angular-shouldered
-pot or olla; C, common pot or olla; D, shallow bowl; E, water bottle;
-F, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Effigy">effigy</a> bowl; G, plate.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Advances in the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Economy">economy</a> were obviously present in the fully developed
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_MiddlePhase">Middle phase</a>. The Union County <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> &ldquo;mines&rdquo; and workshops
-were intensively worked. Trade with the Lake Superior, lower
-Atlantic and Gulf Coast regions was resumed. <a class="gloss" href="#g_Chief">Chief</a> imports of raw
-materials were copper and marine <a class="gloss" href="#g_Shells">shells</a>, Busycon, Marginella, Oliva
-and Olivella. <a class="gloss" href="#g_Art">Art</a>, while possibly as highly developed as Hopewellian,
-resulted in a far smaller number of art objects in fewer durable media.
-Intaglio rock carvings (chiefly in southern Illinois) of geometric designs,
-human hands, ceremonial paraphernalia, animal outlines, and, in a few
-instances, painted hollowed-out animal silhouettes can probably be
-ascribed to this <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a> on the basis of the symbols employed. Dwellings
-or cabins were relatively substantial structures and the extent of village
-remains indicate a large general population as compared to earlier times
-in the state. Trade and art suggest leisure and wealth or surplus available
-for exchange or to support officials and others in non-food productive
-<span class="pb" id="Page_37">37</span>
-pursuits. This prosperity was possibly due to newly discovered
-methods of intensive cultivation of maize and possibly to a greater
-diversity of crops than ever before.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig25">
-<img src="images/p019a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="266" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 25. Carved <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> pipe (fragmentary) from Kingston Lake Site (Cahokia
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a>, Middle <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a>). Owned by Donald Wray. Right-hand figure
-shows the pipe reconstructed.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Territorially the tribe probably consisted of a number of villages
-and the surrounding country. Each tribe may have had a <a class="gloss" href="#g_Chief">chief</a> village
-or capital that was also a religious center with tribal (public) buildings
-and a temple. Archaeological and historical evidence shows that these
-buildings, presumably temples and the dwellings of tribal chiefs and
-the high priests, were erected on the flat tops of rectangular earthen
-mounds or pyramids, which were grouped around a plaza of ceremonial
-square. Here the tribe gathered for religious and political ceremonies
-and for important funerals. Intertribal negotiations and chunkey games
-were probably also staged on or near the plaza.</p>
-<p>Pipes, either of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> or pottery, were generally of the &ldquo;equal-armed&rdquo;
-type (where stem length is about equal to bowl height). In
-numerous instances, a short projection resembling the stem in shape
-but shorter, extends beyond the bowl away from the smoker. Massive
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Effigy">effigy</a> pipes of stone were widespread but not numerous. Some were
-excellently carved. From their construction, it is obvious that they were
-made to be smoked through a reed or hollow wooden stem called in
-later times the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Calumet">calumet</a>. These together probably constituted a form
-of ceremonial pipe that served as a safe conduct between tribes, as a
-bond and signature at peace- and treaty-making ceremonies, and to
-present tobacco smoke as incense to the gods in religious rituals.</p>
-<p>Priests and possibly tribal chiefs were interred in the flat tops of
-mounds (e.g. the Powell <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mound">Mound</a>) near temple or cabin. Generally,
-however, the dead were buried in cemeteries. In some instances, bodies
-were laid on the surface above a &ldquo;full&rdquo; cemetery and covered with earth
-brought from outside. Continuing this practice eventually produced
-a mound (e.g. <a class="gloss" href="#g_DicksonMound">Dickson Mound</a> near Lewistown). Possibly the burial mounds at
-Cahokia were reserved for the socially prominent while the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_38">38</span>
-lower classes were interred in the cemeteries nearby. The dead, especially
-important personages were attired in their finest apparel, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Insigne">insignia</a>
-and personal ornaments. Beside them in the grave were placed their
-weapons, favorite chunkey stones, food and water in pottery vessels
-with shell spoons or a dipper.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig26">
-<img src="images/p020.jpg" alt="" width="700" height="715" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 26. Interior view of <a class="gloss" href="#g_DicksonMound">Dickson Mound</a> (in Dickson Mounds State Park near
-Lewistown, Illinois), showing pottery and other <a class="gloss" href="#g_Artifacts">artifacts</a> as originally placed with
-the dead. Cahokia <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a>, Middle <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">phase</a>.</p>
-</div>
-<p><a class="gloss" href="#g_Chief">Chief</a> villages were large religious centers often protected by an
-encircling palisade or clay wall reinforced with vertical posts or logs.
-Remains of defensive walls can still be readily traced by a trained eye
-at the Kincaid (Massac County) and Lynn (Union County) villages.
-Exploration of the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Aztalan">Aztalan</a> village (Wisconsin) yielded remains of
-a reinforced clay wall surmounted at regular intervals with towers
-of like construction. The Cahokia village seems to have been without
-fortifications.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_39">39</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig27">
-<img src="images/p020a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="570" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 27. Reconstruction of Kincaid Village (<a class="gloss" href="#g_Cumberland">Cumberland</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a>, Middle <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a>)
-near Metropolis, Illinois. (Diorama by Arthur Sieving.)</p>
-</div>
-<p>Smaller villages occasionally had one or two small flat-topped
-mounds which doubtless served as bases for the cabins of the Village
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Chief">Chief</a> and possibly <a class="gloss" href="#g_War">War</a> Chief. Other <a class="gloss" href="#g_MiddlePhase">Middle phase</a> villages had no
-mounds or fortifications.</p>
-<p>Cabins were of three or more types. In Illinois, two kinds had
-rectangular floor outlines and may have developed from the earlier
-Baumer square dwelling and the Lewis house. One of these types prevalent
-at Kincaid, as determined from charred remains, had a thatched
-gable roof supported on four corner posts with their lower ends sunk in
-the ground. Walls were made of clay daubed on a latticework of cane
-(with foliage) interlacing vertical wall posts, the interior covered with
-split cane mats. The rafters, corner and wall posts, and wall plates were
-of poles or small logs lashed together and held in place by braided
-ropes. Floors do not appear to have been depressed below surrounding
-ground level. A larger more substantial structure, presumably a temple,
-on a Kincaid <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mound">mound</a> (Mx<sup>o</sup>9) had thick walls of clay mixed with grass,
-but otherwise resembled the dwelling just described. The clay floor and
-wall surfaces were smooth. Fire basins of puddled clay within the building
-may have been the remains of altars.</p>
-<p>Cabins in Fulton County (Fout&rsquo;s Village) and at Cahokia were
-rectangular in floor plan but wall posts were probably bent over to be
-joined with corresponding opposite members to form an arched or
-vaulted roof, the precursor perhaps of the &ldquo;barrel-shaped&rdquo; Illini cabins
-<span class="pb" id="Page_40">40</span>
-reported by French explorers. Floors were sunk somewhat below the
-ground level. Remains of cabins with circular floors occur also at
-Cahokia and in Fulton County.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig28">
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 28. Petroglyphs from southern Illinois sites probably made by Middle Mississippian
-peoples. All figures are hollowed out or <i>intaglio</i>. (Photographs by Irvin Peithmann.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p021.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="535" />
-<p class="pcap">Back wall of <a class="gloss" href="#g_RockShelter">rock shelter</a> near Gorham, Illinois.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p021a.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="355" />
-<p class="pcap">Figure of buffalo calf
-painted yellow over entire depressed area. The outlines were chalked in for the
-purpose of photographing.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Walls and wall posts of the Fulton County cabins appear in some
-instances to be formed of bundles of small branches or cane set in
-trenches possibly a foot deep. There is no evidence of the <a class="gloss" href="#g_WattleAndDaub">wattle-and-daub</a>
-structure. Walls may have been covered with mats, or with rectangles
-of bark. Roofs were probably thatched.</p>
-<p>Possibly the Cahokia <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a> peoples constituted a single tribe,
-a small nation, or a confederation of tribes. At its most powerful <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a>,
-the Cahokia settlement was perhaps the capital and religious center.
-The region south of a line joining the mouths of the Kaskaskia and
-Wabash rivers at one time probably belonged to another tribe or subtribe
-whose <a class="gloss" href="#g_Chief">chief</a> village was the <a class="gloss" href="#g_KincaidCommunity">Kincaid community</a> in Pope and Massac
-counties and who, linguistically and culturally, were closely related
-to peoples in Tennessee and Kentucky and at the Angel site in Indiana.</p>
-<p>Archaeologically speaking, the Middle <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> contrasts sharply
-with the Hopewellian <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a>. Certain <a class="gloss" href="#g_Artifacts">artifacts</a> are readily distinguishable
-and easily identified with the craftsman&rsquo;s cultures. Actually the
-Mississippians differ from the Hopewellians chiefly in having substantial
-cabins, athletic games and the bow and arrow.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_41">41</div>
-<p>Remains of Hopewellian dwellings are rare, but the three or four
-found up to now are characterized by round or oval floor plans outlined
-with post holes of three to four inches in diameter. These seem to indicate
-hemispherical wigwams. No further evidence of wall or roof
-structure has been recovered. The rarity of these dwellings certainly
-suggests a less permanent dwelling than the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> cabin. However,
-it will be remembered that some peoples <a class="gloss" href="#g_Pattern">pattern</a> their tombs
-upon their dwellings. The upper caste Hopewellians built rectangular
-burial chambers which were walled up with logs laid one on another
-and roofed over with half-logs or bark. Similar log house surface structures
-would seldom leave discernible remains on decay. It is possible,
-though by no means certain, that the Hopewellians of highest caste, and
-perhaps of the other castes, built log cabins for dwellings.</p>
-<p>The evidence for playing of athletic games in Hopewellian is very
-late and scanty. The only tangible indication are the rings, &ldquo;pulleys&rdquo;
-and a <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> discoidal found with a skeleton in the Rutherford <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mound">Mound</a>.
-(See M. L. Fowler, <i>The Rutherford Mound</i>, Scientific Papers Series,
-Vol. VII, No. 1, Springfield, Ill. 1957, pp. 31-33). The rings of pottery
-and of cannel coal (or jet) seem too fragile for actual playing pieces and
-may rather be trophies or prizes, replicas of similar pieces made of wood.
-Such wooden pieces may have been used in games throughout middle and late Hopewellian times.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig29">
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 29. (Photographs by Irvin Peithmann.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p021b.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="525" />
-<p class="pcap">View of a stream-side <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> mine and workshop (in field alongside)
-near Cobden, Illinois.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p021c.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="531" />
-<p class="pcap">Close-up showing spherical or &ldquo;ball-flint&rdquo; nodules
-from stream banks similar to those worked up by Middle Mississippians and others
-in adjacent workshop.</p>
-</div>
-<p>The bow and arrow, at least, seems to be a decided improvement
-over the spear. It constituted a repeating weapon. Ammunition could
-be carried in the belt or on the back in a quiver without unduly hampering
-the bowman. On the other hand, it was useless in hand-to-hand
-fighting and a spear or <a class="gloss" href="#g_Dagger">dagger</a> was needed to supplement it. Moreover,
-the spear with a thrower was a more accurate weapon than the bow, unless
-the arrows were carefully made and balanced. The bow never
-<span class="pb" id="Page_42">42</span>
-seems to have wholly replaced the spear which continued to be a
-favorite weapon down into the European contact <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a>.</p>
-<p>The improvements that distinguish the Mississippians above the
-Hopewellians may be more apparent than real in the first two instances
-and, in the third, may represent a significant rather than a fundamental
-advance. Looking at the two periods from the broader cultural viewpoint,
-they appear to have many cultural features in common. The
-Middle Mississippians probably added new food and fibre plants to
-those of earlier periods, and perhaps increased production by improved,
-more intensive methods of cultivation. Their staple crops like those of
-the Hopewellians were corn, beans and tobacco.</p>
-<p>The technologies or methods of making the necessary tools in the
-two cultures varied but little. <a class="gloss" href="#g_Art">Art</a> was revived or rather re-developed in
-the Mississippian <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a> but fewer media are employed. In artistic
-skill, imagination and productiveness perhaps the Hopewellians had
-an edge on the later <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a>.</p>
-<p>Trade and travel, though resumed to distant sections of the continent,
-does not appear so widespread or general as in the Hopewellian
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a>. A <a class="gloss" href="#g_FormalizedReligion">formalized religion</a> with colorful ceremonies seems to have
-revitalized the life of the <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a> but possibly no more effectively than
-in the earlier period.</p>
-<p>There was no significant improvement in labor, power or transportation;
-all were still accomplished wholly by human effort without
-the aid of draft animals. Traveling by boat was known and probably
-used by both cultures.</p>
-<p>Comparing the two peoples with other plant growers having no
-domestic food-draft animals, it seems apparent that each had an effective
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_PoliticalOrganization">political organization</a>, a formalized vital <a class="gloss" href="#g_Religion">religion</a> with true priests
-(not &ldquo;self-appointed&rdquo; shamans) and a system of moral values and
-tenets that &ldquo;church&rdquo; and &ldquo;state&rdquo; were organized to maintain. All in all,
-from the broader cultural standpoint, they were amazingly alike.</p>
-<h2 id="c10">UNDER-DEVELOPED NEIGHBORS&mdash;THE UPPER MISSISSIPPIANS (1100?-1600 A.D.)</h2>
-<p>Less advanced <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> tribes with customs showing some admixture
-of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> cultural elements living contemporaneously in
-Missouri, Iowa, Wisconsin, Indiana and Ohio, encircled the <a class="gloss" href="#g_MiddlePhase">Middle phase</a> peoples
-on the east, north and west. Known generally now as
-the Upper <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">phase</a> peoples their sole representative in Illinois was the
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a> of the Langford <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a>, who dwelt around the southern end
-of Lake Michigan as well as in adjacent parts of Indiana and Michigan.
-The <a class="gloss" href="#g_TypeStation">type station</a> is the Fisher Village and Mounds near Joliet which
-were ably investigated by Mr. George Langford, Sr. some years ago.<a class="fn" id="fr_16" href="#fn_16">[16]</a></p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_43">43</div>
-<p>They built no flat-topped pyramids and left little, if any, evidence
-of their religious practices. Their <a class="gloss" href="#g_Art">art</a>, as exhibited by pottery, personal
-ornaments or weapons was not of a high order. There is no evidence
-that they played the chunkey game. Some copper hatchets and ornaments
-were in use, but these appear to be of Middle <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> workmanship
-and may have been trade articles.</p>
-<p>On the positive side, they buried their dead in dome-shaped
-earthen mounds, usually in the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Extended">extended</a> position, frequently with
-food (in clay pots with shell spoons), weapons (arrows and tomahawks
-or hafted celts), personal ornaments and various utilitarian implements.
-Dwellings had subsurface circular floors and were doubtless dome-shaped
-(hemispherical). The bow and arrow were in common use with
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Arrowheads">arrowheads</a> primarily of slender simple triangular shape, very rarely with
-side notches. Implements, weapons and ornaments were chiefly of
-chipped <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a>, ground or polished <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a>, river clam <a class="gloss" href="#g_Shells">shells</a>, bone and
-animal teeth. Copper was rarely employed.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig30">
-<img src="images/p022.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="238" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 30. Characteristic pottery from the Langford <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a>, Upper <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">phase</a>,
-(Fisher Site near Channahon, Illinois). (Photograph by George Langford,
-Chicago Natural History Museum.)</p>
-</div>
-<p>Pots were generally of the globular or flattened globular shape
-(olla or jar), tempered with grit (early) and shell (later), and decorated
-with geometric designs in broad lines and dots, drawn (&ldquo;trailed&rdquo;)
-or impressed on the shoulder region with a blunt tool (such as an
-antler tine). Lips of vessels were usually pressure-notched and surfaces
-cord-roughened. Loop handles on the jars were common.</p>
-<p>Numerous examples of flat <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> tablets associated with a number
-of short solid antler cylinders lead one to suspect that a game of chance
-of some sort was played and that gambling was probably indulged in.</p>
-<p>Other than pottery and personal adornment, the only <a class="gloss" href="#g_Art">art</a> practiced
-was the cutting of mussel shell into handled spoons and outlines of fish
-and other objects. Apparently there was no urge for fine workmanship.</p>
-<p>It is highly probable that these Upper Mississippians were plant growers who
-hunted to secure their meat. The extent of village remains
-and the evidence of semi-permanent dwellings point to this type of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Economy">economy</a> even
-though no grain or seeds of any kind were found in
-<span class="pb" id="Page_44">44</span>
-the site. Shell hoes of the common type were used. The dog was the
-only domesticated animal.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig31">
-<img src="images/p023.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="252" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 31. <a class="gloss" href="#g_Effigy">Effigy</a> fish and a decorated spoon (fragmentary) made of mussel <a class="gloss" href="#g_Shells">shells</a>.
-Langford <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a>, Upper <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">phase</a> (Fisher site). (Photograph by George
-Langford, Chicago Natural History Museum.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig32">
-<img src="images/p023a.jpg" alt="" width="765" height="600" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 32. <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">Stone</a> tablet and gaming pieces from the Langford subcultural <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a>,
-Upper <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">phase</a> (Fisher site). (Photograph by George Langford, Chicago
-Natural History Museum.)</p>
-</div>
-<p>Apparently most of their needs were supplied by their own efforts
-and from local sources. There is no evidence of any trade, except possibly
-of a very limited kind with near neighbors to the west.</p>
-<p>The evidence for the residence around the southern lake shores is
-based chiefly on the occurrence of the Fisher pottery type. This area
-after 1760 was occupied by the Miami tribe who may possibly have
-been the builders of the Fisher Mounds.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_45">45</div>
-<h2 id="c11">THE ILLINOIS OR ILLINI<a class="fn" id="fr_17" href="#fn_17">[17]</a> (1550?-1833 A.D.)</h2>
-<p>The Illinois or Illini Indians are, so far as is now known, the next
-group to occupy the state following the Middle Mississippians. At the
-time of Marquette and Jolliet&rsquo;s voyage in 1673, six tribes comprised
-the Illinois Confederacy, Kaskaskia, Cahokia, Michigamea, Peoria,
-Moingwena, and Tamaroa<a class="fn" id="fr_18" href="#fn_18">[18]</a>. The tribes spoke the same or mutually
-intelligible dialects of the Algonkian language.</p>
-<p>Some time before 1650, possibly a century or more, the Illinois
-Confederacy seems to have been a powerful nation but in the latter
-half of the 17th century this was a tradition rather than fact. The
-Confederacy appears to have engaged in no united action after 1650.</p>
-<p>The Illini at that time were in the plant-raising <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stage">stage</a> of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a>
-and possessed only the dog as a domesticated animal. Like many other
-plant-raisers, the families deserted the village for the hunt after the
-corn was hilled and again after the harvest.</p>
-<h3>Dress</h3>
-<p>Men went naked in summer except for mocassins. At times a
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_BreechCloth">breech cloth</a> was worn; in winter buffalo skin robes were added and
-belts, leg bands and leggings on occasion.</p>
-<p>Women when working apparently wore only a girdle (<a class="gloss" href="#g_BreechCloth">breech cloth</a>),
-at other times a wrap-around skirt of skin with a belt passing
-over one shoulder and under the opposite arm. The skirt dates back
-to Hopewellian times and was used during the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a> in
-Indiana and probably in Illinois. The bosom was covered with a deerskin
-wrap. Hair was worn long and fastened behind the head.</p>
-<h3><a class="gloss" href="#g_Economy">Economy</a></h3>
-<p>Labor was divided between the men and the women (and children).
-Men did the hunting, fighting and made the weapons. The women
-(and children) did the other work&mdash;the housework, planting and harvesting
-the crops, dressing deer and buffalo skins, making twine from <a class="gloss" href="#g_Bast">bast</a>,
-weaving cloth and, on the hunt, carrying the house parts and setting
-up the camp.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_46">46</div>
-<p>Buffalo meat was preserved by drying and smoking it over a fire in
-the hunting camp. Vegetable foods, corn, beans and squash were dried
-or parched and buried in containers or in lined pits in the ground and
-covered over. Watermelons, muskmelons (?), gourds and tobacco were
-also grown. Wild strawberries, paw paws, pecans, lotus roots, wild
-tubers, grapes and plums formed part of their diet.</p>
-<p>The winter buffalo hunt usually took place a long way from the
-village. The hunting units each consisted of several families under a
-rigid police system and regulation to prevent the herd from being
-stampeded by an over-eager <a class="gloss" href="#g_Family">family</a> before all were amply provided with
-meat. Violations of hunting regulations were punished by destruction
-of the offender&rsquo;s property to which no resistance was ever attempted.
-The group surrounded the herd, at times encircling it with fires made at
-intervals near which the hunters stood and killed the stampeding animals.
-At times as many as 120 buffalo were killed in a day. The women
-cut out the tongues, skinned the animals, and, peeling off the sides of
-meat, dried and smoked them on wooden grates over a slow fire. The
-smoked sides were carried back to the village on the back, or when
-practicable in <a class="gloss" href="#g_Dugout">dugout</a> boats. Carcasses and bones were left on the
-hunting grounds. Other animals were stalked by one or two hunters.
-Dog meat was considered a great delicacy.</p>
-<p>Fish were caught in nets, by hook and line, speared or shot with
-bow and arrow. They were dried for preservation. Maple trees were
-tapped late in the winter, the sap caught in bark containers and made
-into a maple drink or reduced by boiling to syrup and sugar. Corn was
-ground into meal and baked into bread, or prepared as hominy.</p>
-<p>Vessels and utensils were made of wood or clay, ladles from a
-section of the buffalo skull. Fire was produced by the hand drill in
-the usual manner.</p>
-<p>The cabin type seems to have varied at different periods or in
-different tribes. In early times, cabins had rectangular floors and vaulted
-(barrel-shaped) roofs. They were roofed and floored with &ldquo;double-mats&rdquo;
-of flat rushes and were impervious to wind or rain. Occasionally
-they were erected on low mounds (two feet high) to keep the floors
-dry. Large cabins of the vaulted type had four fires, with one or two
-families at a fire.</p>
-<p>Bark-covered hemispherical huts or wigwams may have been used
-on hunting trips. They were apparently common in some villages in
-1723.</p>
-<p>Overland travel was on foot. On streams the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Dugout">dugout</a> boat was
-propelled by pole and possibly by paddle. Large boats were 40 to 50
-feet long, capable of carrying 40 to 50 men. While dugouts were admirably
-suited for travel and trade between the Illini tribes along the
-Illinois and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> rivers, they were, on account of their weight and
-unwieldiness in portaging, generally useless in raids against enemies.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_47">47</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig33">
-<img src="images/p024.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="587" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 33. Native Illini <a class="gloss" href="#g_Artifacts">artifacts</a>. A, Indian-made gun <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a>; B, C, D, chipped flint
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Arrowheads">arrowheads</a>; E, flint scraper; F, grooved abrader of sandstone; G, expanded base
-drill (grip only, point broken off); H, I, polished <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> pendants. From Illini
-village site near mouth of Kaskaskia River, Randolph County.</p>
-</div>
-<h3>Marriage Customs and the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Family">Family</a></h3>
-<p>An Illini man, desiring to get married, sent presents to the girl&rsquo;s
-parents. If the suitor was acceptable, the parents kept the gift and
-took the bride to the man&rsquo;s hut the following evening. Apparently there
-was no wedding ceremony.</p>
-<p>Women had somewhat lower social <a class="gloss" href="#g_Status">status</a> than their husbands.
-Wives did not eat with their husbands. A man was permitted two or
-more wives and often married two sisters. Children were well-treated.
-Infants were bound to a cradle board that the mother carried around.
-The cradle was pointed at the lower end and was stuck in the ground
-when the woman wanted to rest. Divorce was accomplished by a simple
-agreement to separate.</p>
-<h3><a class="gloss" href="#g_PoliticalOrganization">Political Organization</a></h3>
-<p>The explorers and writers to whom we are indebted for our knowledge
-of Illini social and religious organization were, unfortunately, casual
-and untrained observers who, on the whole, held the Indian and his
-customs in contempt. Important activities were often dismissed with
-meaningless generalizations, or omitted entirely, as if generally known.
-Consequently great gaps are left in the information that has come down
-to us.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_48">48</div>
-<p>From the various accounts, the impression is given that the Illini
-tribes (and possibly before the 17th century, the Confederacy) had a
-political government (rather than <i><a class="gloss" href="#g_FamilyTypeSocialControl">family social control</a></i>) with formally
-appointed officers or civil chiefs. The Confederacy had one or more
-coats-of-arms (&ldquo;totems&rdquo;) that may have been recognized abroad as
-symbolic of the Illini (as was customary among the Natchez and other
-southeastern Indians). It had a Grand <a class="gloss" href="#g_Chief">Chief</a>, chosen in some manner
-not now known, from one of the constituent tribes. At one <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a>
-&ldquo;Prince Tamaroa&rdquo; of the Tamaroas held the post, later Chief Ducoigne
-of the Kaskaskias. Whether or not the Confederacy acted as a nation
-after 1600 is doubtful. Each tribe had its own head chief and coat-of-arms,
-and the French appear to have treated directly with the tribal
-heads in matters of importance. Judging from other Indian Confederations,
-the individual tribe had probably retained its full powers, and
-concerted action by the Confederacy was possible only by unanimous
-consent.</p>
-<p>Like most peoples in the simple plant-raising <a class="gloss" href="#g_Status">status</a>, the tribe dealt
-as a state with other similar units in intertribal affairs. These included
-alliances and treaties of peace. Ambassadors or tribal representatives
-were sent from Illini tribes to their neighbors. On such occasions,
-the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Calumet">calumet</a> was carried and served as a safe conduct.<a class="fn" id="fr_19" href="#fn_19">[19]</a> Tribal representatives
-met approaching strangers (and presumably the ambassadors
-of another tribe), raising the highly adorned calumet (and pipe) toward
-the sun as they advanced. Smoking the calumet&mdash;by the contracting
-tribal agents at the conclusion of an agreement&mdash;corresponded to our
-signatures and seals at the end of a written treaty.</p>
-<p>Each village probably had a <a class="gloss" href="#g_Chief">chief</a>, whose power (it was sometimes
-reported) was little. However, the chiefs wore, as badges of office, red
-scarfs woven of bear and buffalo hair. Their faces were painted red.
-The village men (or possibly the important men) met before the
-village chief&rsquo;s cabin or in a large hut built especially for gatherings to
-deliberate on political or religious matters. The entire village often
-seems to have been in audience.</p>
-<p>If there were social classes among the Illini, no mention is made
-of it in early reports. Men acquired prestige mainly through skillful
-hunting or success in fighting. The leader in a raid had to recompense
-the families of any followers killed in the fighting.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_49">49</div>
-<p>With so little description of the village and tribal assemblies and
-the chiefs in deliberation and judgment, it is difficult to determine the
-exact <a class="gloss" href="#g_Status">status</a> of <a class="gloss" href="#g_PoliticalOrganization">political organization</a> of the tribe and its officers. It
-may well be that the powers of the chiefs immediately after European
-contact were small, and that in order to deal with the agency of a
-European state, the Illini found it necessary (as did the Delaware
-tribes) to grant greater authority and responsibility to their political leaders.
-It is probably also true that the chiefs would, under pressure
-from the whites, be reluctant to take responsibility for an unpopular
-concession and would declare that only the tribal council or <a class="gloss" href="#g_Assemblage">assemblage</a>
-could confirm the agreement under consideration. In any case, the
-Illini were on the threshold of true political control if they had not
-actually adopted it.</p>
-<h3>Raids</h3>
-<p>The tribe in historic times seems to have been the war-making
-group. Raiding parties tried to sneak undetected into enemy country
-and conceal themselves. From their hiding place, they fell suddenly
-on small unsuspecting enemy bodies, scalping men, killing women and
-children, and slipping away again with a few prisoners if practicable.
-Back in the village, captive warriors were bound to a frame of green
-wood, suspended over a slow fire, and tortured until death released
-them. Warriors hung the scalps taken upon their cabins as evidence of
-their prowess. The Illini claimed not to have tortured or burned captives
-until their men had been taken and so treated by Iroquois raiding
-parties. On the <a class="gloss" href="#g_War">war</a> path warriors carried bundles containing objects
-sacred to their guardian spirits and invoked them frequently to obtain
-victory.</p>
-<p>Bows and arrows in quivers, hatchets or tomahawks, clubs, and
-&ldquo;arrowproof&rdquo; shields consisting of several layers of buffalo hide were
-carried on raids. The bow and arrow was considered superior to the gun
-because it could &ldquo;fire&rdquo; more rapidly.</p>
-<h3>Trade</h3>
-<p>Earlier in the European <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a>, the Illini furnished Canadians with
-skins of beaver, raccoon, deer, bear and buffalo, but in 1776 the French
-(in Illinois) compelled them &ldquo;to devote themselves to producing oil,
-tallow and meat which they traded with them.&rdquo; (Deliette Memoir.
-See Pease in Bibliography under ILLINI.) The Indians traded for
-porcupine quills with more northern neighbors. After the European
-came, Illini trade was probably overwhelmingly with the whites, exchanging
-native products of the forest for coveted guns, iron knives,
-hatchets, brass kettles, cloth, glass beads and alcoholic liquors.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_50">50</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig34">
-<img src="images/p025.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="385" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 34. A, B, common forms of Illini pipes (restored) of red Minnesota pipestone,
-Illinois State Museum collections: A, &ldquo;Siouan&rdquo;; B, Micmac; C, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> effigy-head
-type, (A. J. Throop collection). All from village near mouth of Kaskaskia
-River, Randolph County. (B.B.)</p>
-</div>
-<h3><a class="gloss" href="#g_Religion">Religion</a></h3>
-<p>The <a class="gloss" href="#g_Religion">religion</a> of the early historic Illini was apparently a complex
-one. The sun was evidently a powerful deity from whom the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Calumet">calumet</a>
-pipe had perhaps been supposedly received. A special calumet, apparently
-sacred to the sun, was revered as a palladium (like the Hebraic
-Ark of the Covenant) on which rested the safety of the nation. A
-special official had responsibility for its safe keeping. The smoke of the
-pipe was offered to the sun whenever the Illini prayed for rain, fine
-weather, or some other aid. Whether the Grand Manitou (Great
-Spirit), whom the French thought was the Supreme God of the Illini,
-was identical with the sun is not known though it seems probable.</p>
-<p>In addition to the above gods, the Illini believed in numerous
-spirits and in reincarnation. A young man sought to secure a spirit as
-his superhuman helper or guardian for life. He fasted and prayed to
-the spirit to come to him in a vision. If successful (as he usually was),
-the spirit appeared to him in a dream and gave him instructions for a
-ritual by which he kept in contact with his protector. The objects
-needed for the ritual he collected on awakening and preserved them
-thereafter in a roll of painted matting. When calling upon his spirit
-protector, the bundle was opened and the rite performed, chiefly prayers
-and smoke offerings from a pipe blown toward the bundle.</p>
-<p>It seems probable that there were true priests who were appointed
-by regular procedure and who received their power by virtue of their
-installation into office. The priests, we are told, painted themselves all
-over with clay on which designs were drawn. Their faces were painted
-with red, white, blue, yellow, green and black colors. The &ldquo;high <a class="gloss" href="#g_Priest">priest</a>&rdquo;
-wore a bonnet or crown of feathers and a pair of horns, possibly young
-deer or buffalo.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_51">51</div>
-<p>Medicine men also seem to have existed, persons who sought power
-from spirits to use in behalf of others for private gain or a livelihood.
-Possibly they were interested on the side in black magic or witchcraft,
-an anti-social activity.</p>
-<p>Dancing, probably singing, and supplication, together with the
-inevitable smoke offerings from a ceremonial pipe doubtless formed a
-large part of public worship for which the whole community assembled.
-Details of the Illini ceremonies and their meanings are not known.</p>
-<p>The French priests severely denounced native religious customs
-and &ldquo;juggleries&rdquo; of the Illini. The Peoria chiefs and priests resented this
-and resisted Christian attempts to convert the tribe (1693).</p>
-<p>Funeral and burial customs seem to have been generally similar to
-those of other plant-raising peoples. All dead were treated with respect,
-decked in their best apparel, painted in preparation for burial. A dance
-was performed in honor of the deceased. A skin stretched over a large
-pot formed a drum which was beaten with a single stick as accompaniment
-for the dance. The participants were rewarded with presents at
-the conclusion of the dance. The gifts to be distributed were displayed
-in full view of the dancers and the duration of the dance was determined
-by their relative richness. An important personage was given
-special consideration and the whole community probably attended the
-funeral. Corn and a pot to boil it in were placed beside the dead.
-Friends standing around the grave threw into it bracelets, pendants and
-&ldquo;pieces of earthenware&rdquo; (pots?). The graves of chiefs were marked by
-a painted wooden post taller than the markers for ordinary <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a>.
-Illini chiefs and persons of distinction as a signal honor were placed in
-tree-tops in a coffin made of bark. The tribe danced and sang for
-twenty-four hours during the funeral of a distinguished man.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig35">
-<img src="images/p025a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="219" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 35. Illini arrowshaft &ldquo;wrench&rdquo; or straightener of bison (?) rib engraved with
-figure of bison and cross-hatched triangles from Illinois village near mouth of Kaskaskia
-River, Randolph County.</p>
-</div>
-<h3><a class="gloss" href="#g_Art">Art</a></h3>
-<p>Men tattooed their &ldquo;whole bodies.&rdquo; They painted themselves in
-solid colors and with designs in red, black, yellow, blue, and other
-colors. The body was adorned with native <a class="gloss" href="#g_Jewelry">jewelry</a>, the nose and ears
-<span class="pb" id="Page_52">52</span>
-were pierced for ornaments, and feathers of many colors were worn
-attached to the scalp lock. Moccasins were decorated with porcupine
-quill embroidery. Men clipped or shaved most of the head, leaving
-the scalp lock and four other tufts of long hair, two on each side, one
-in front of and behind each ear. After European trade goods were
-available, glass beads and cloth were obtainable in considerable quantities
-and largely replaced native dress materials and ornaments.</p>
-<p>The Illini played lacrosse, an athletic game. The straw-and-bean
-game was a game of chance in which the players each took a number
-of straws from a bundle. The straws in each hand were discarded by
-sixes, the number left determining the winner of the round. Beans
-were used as counters. The Illini made wagers as to the outcome, even
-putting up their sisters as stakes in the game.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig36">
-<img src="images/p026.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="315" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 36. Shapes of Illini pots (Middle <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> ware) reconstructed from sherds
-found in association with other native and European objects on the Illini village site
-near mouth of Kaskaskia River, Randolph County. (B.B.)</p>
-</div>
-<h3><a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaeology">Archaeology</a> of the Illini</h3>
-<p>Two village sites of the Illini have been investigated by the Illinois
-State Museum, one near Utica, LaSalle County (jointly with the University
-of Chicago) and one in Randolph County near the mouth of the
-Kaskaskia River. This last site was occupied for over a century by
-descendants of the Kaskaskias and other Illini tribes. Except for a
-small area where <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Artifacts">artifacts</a> are found, it is a &ldquo;pure&rdquo; site.</p>
-<p>The Illini tools, weapons and ornaments of native make were the
-usual chipped <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> triangular <a class="gloss" href="#g_Arrowheads">arrowheads</a>, simple flint drills and scrapers,
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_RoughStone">rough stone</a> hammers and abrading stones, small ground <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> pendants,
-polished stone &ldquo;Micmac&rdquo; or &ldquo;keel-based&rdquo; pipe bowls (many of
-catlinite), the long-stemmed L-shaped catlinite pipes (sometimes called
-&ldquo;Siouan&rdquo;), and cut and engraved bone ornaments. An arrowshaft
-straightener carries an etching of a buffalo cow. Pottery is rare, but
-the pieces found in association with European trade goods are characteristically
-Middle Mississippian.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_53">53</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig37">
-<img src="images/p026a.jpg" alt="" width="641" height="500" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 37. European trade goods and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Artifacts">artifacts</a> made from European materials. All
-from Illini village near mouth of Kaskaskia River, Randolph County. A, conical
-arrowhead of sheet copper; B, chipped glass arrowhead; C, brass arrowhead; D,
-hammer of flintlock gun; E, iron blade of clasp knife; F, an iron scissor-blade;
-G, part of a jew&rsquo;s-harp.</p>
-</div>
-<p>The Illini made <a class="gloss" href="#g_Artifacts">artifacts</a> from fragments of European materials,
-iron spear- and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Arrowheads">arrowheads</a>, brass and chipped glass arrowheads, brass
-pendants, and beads of broken porcelain.</p>
-<p>European trade materials far exceed in number the native products.
-Usually they are fragmentary (except for colored glass beads of many
-kinds): parts of copper and brass kettles, iron handles, gun hammers
-and other parts, lead balls and the molds for making them, molds for
-casting crosses and ornaments, iron spoons, kitchen and clasp knife
-blades of iron, &ldquo;Dutch&rdquo; white pottery pipes, scissors, jew&rsquo;s-harps, bottles
-for wine and olive oil, brass buttons and finger rings.</p>
-<p>The Illini seem to have cast lead into musket balls and chipped gun
-flints into shape but beyond that made no attempt to learn machine-age
-technologies. For firearms, gunpowder, iron knives and hatchets
-they were wholly dependent on the white invaders, a great disadvantage
-in event of hostilities and one that eventually cost them ownership of
-their ancient homelands.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_54">54</div>
-<h2 id="c12">THE INDIANS LEAVE ILLINOIS</h2>
-<p>For historic tribes of the state other than the Illini little is known
-of their <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaeology">archaeology</a>. Culturally it is almost a certainty that all were,
-soon after contact, largely disorganized due to partial economic dependence,
-European diseases and the alcohol trade, to diminishing
-game, loss of other resources, and to military pressures from white
-governments and contiguous Indian groups.</p>
-<p>Only the broad outlines of the movements of the historic tribes
-that lived, hunted, or made forays in Illinois need to be noted here.
-The Iroquois, Winnebago and Chickasaw made no attempts to permanently
-occupy Illinois territory as a result of their raids.</p>
-<p>The Illini came under French influence after 1673 and leaned
-heavily on their military support. At times the Illini warriors fought
-bravely alongside the French, but generally they had little stomach for
-fighting even in their own defense. They shifted their settlements frequently
-after the Iroquois attack of 1680 and later under repeated pressure
-by the Sauk, Fox, Kickapoo and Potawatomi, who invaded and
-occupied the northern part of Illini territory.</p>
-<p>Due to their dwindling courage and lack of incentive, more perhaps
-than to their losses in enemy raids, the Illini tribes decreased
-rapidly in numbers and importance. When they were removed to the
-west of the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> in 1832, the population of the once great Illini
-Confederacy totalled little more than one hundred persons.</p>
-<p>Even before this, the Miami had been pushed out of Illinois due
-to inroads of the Kickapoo and Potawatomi. The Shawnee, too, probably
-abandoned their permanent settlements in southern Illinois early
-in the contact <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a> though these lower counties may have still been
-considered their territory. Other groups did not settle or hunt there
-and the Shawnee did establish some villages there (e.g. Shawneetown)
-briefly in the eighteenth century. Bands of Shawnee continued to hunt
-in this region until 1828 or later.</p>
-<p>The Sauk, Fox, Kickapoo and Potawatomi did not long enjoy the
-territory they had wrested from the Illini and Miami. Immediately after
-the Black Hawk <a class="gloss" href="#g_War">War</a> in 1832, steps were taken to move all Indians from
-the state. By the Treaty of Chicago, the Indians gave up all their lands
-in Illinois, and in 1837 the last bands (Potawatomi) crossed to the western
-bank of the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a>. No land is reserved today in this state for
-Indians. Its former resident tribes now live in reservations in Iowa,
-Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska and in the state of Coahuila in Mexico.</p>
-<h2 id="c13">SUMMARY OF ILLINOIS PREHISTORY</h2>
-<p>The <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaeology">archaeology</a> of Illinois in its present position seems to indicate
-that the state did not at any time form a distinct single <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> or <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a>
-but that it was rather the meeting place of many, due possibly
-to the rivers that enclose, lead to and intersect its territory. It was at
-<span class="pb" id="Page_55">55</span>
-one and the same time a part of one or more widespread patterns or
-phases and a patchwork of subcultures that <a class="gloss" href="#g_Extended">extended</a> into neighboring
-states. There was a tendency for the cultures of the northern four-fifths
-of the state (roughly north of a line joining East St. Louis with Evansville,
-Indiana) to be more like the adjacent regions, while those of the
-remaining counties were more closely related to those of Kentucky,
-Tennessee, southern Indiana and Missouri and rather readily distinguishable
-from those of their northern neighbors.</p>
-<p>There are few instances when it appears probable that a part of the
-state was invaded by a <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a> of a distinctly differing <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a>. The
-Paleo-Indian Big Game Hunters presumably found in Illinois virgin
-country without previous human occupants. The Baumerians probably
-entered Illinois from south of the Ohio and expelled or absorbed the
-conservative Terminal Archaics. Possibly Mortonians intruded into the
-Black Sand-Red Ocre culture of Illinois from the northwest. Less
-plausibly, the <a class="gloss" href="#g_StoneVaultGrave">Stone Vault Grave</a> people may have pushed their way
-into Adams County from the Gasconade River region of Missouri.</p>
-<p>The emphasis in this paper has been placed perhaps on the change
-of cultures. To keep one from getting an erroneous impression of
-cultural stability, it should be said that, in the writer&rsquo;s opinion, a <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a>
-and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a> contained in greater or smaller areas change gradually
-through a process of invention here and there and through interchanges
-of improvements back and forth over a long time. When the change
-is sufficient to be noted as a &ldquo;new&rdquo; culture, the various cultural elements
-or features are apt to be widely distributed over much the same area.
-Thus, Baumer seems to have existed for a time alongside Terminal
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> but finally spread through the southern counties; Hopewellian
-may have persisted in Calhoun County for a century or more after its
-collapse to the north and east; and the <a class="gloss" href="#g_FinalPhase">Final phase</a> may have lingered
-on in remote portions of the state until Cahokia was past the height of
-its glory. In general, perhaps it could be said that the southern fifth
-and the remaining four-fifths of the state were out of step with each
-other most of the time.</p>
-<p>As previously noted, some of the Paleo-Indian families, upon the
-retreat of the last glacier, settled in Illinois as they did in the neighboring
-states, adapted themselves to the changed surroundings, and in so
-doing developed the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> or way of life. This <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">phase</a> developed
-through a series of subcultures though not necessarily identical sequences
-in all the states or even within Illinois. In southern Illinois,
-Terminal Archaic seems to have persisted until about 2000 B.C. while
-in the north, it apparently had developed into Initial (early) <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a>
-a few centuries earlier. The Baumer <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a>, probably arising from
-the Archaic of Tennessee, appears to have been carried by its bearers
-into southeastern Illinois along the Tennessee and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Cumberland">Cumberland</a> rivers.
-Although widespread in the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> Valley, the Archaic population
-was thinly scattered.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_56">56</div>
-<p>In northern Illinois and in Wisconsin the Black Sand-Red Ochre
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> seems to have developed from the native Terminal <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> (and
-Old Copper) possibly around 2500 B.C. The Morton (Central Basin)
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a> appear to have had their cultural roots outside the state and to
-have combined with the native groups (Black Sand-Red Ochre) they
-found in the northern counties. Average populational distribution was
-still low with the small settlements perhaps somewhat more numerous
-though no more populous than during Archaic times. The early <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a>
-peoples differed from their predecessors mainly in being pottery-makers.
-In southern Illinois only they practiced storage of acorns and
-hickory nuts extensively.</p>
-<p>About 500 B.C. in northern Illinois the Morton <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a> more or
-less contemporaneously with similarly advanced peoples in Iowa, Wisconsin,
-Indiana, Michigan and Ohio, passed into the Hopewellian
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Civilization">civilization</a> which was erected on the cultivation of maize, beans,
-squash and tobacco, and the technologies of the earlier <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a>
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a>. In southern Illinois Baumer developed into the <a class="gloss" href="#g_CrabOrchard">Crab Orchard</a>
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> whose people traded with the more northern Hopewellians,
-intermarried with them and finally adopted the Hopewellian way of life
-about 100 B.C.</p>
-<p>A century or two later, Hopewellian in the north of Illinois began
-to deteriorate and eventually broke up into a number of small subcultures,
-obviously closely related but still distinguishable archaeologically.
-The same disintegration of Hopewellian took place in southern
-Illinois a few centuries later, and by 400 or 450 B.C. Hopewellian had
-disappeared from all Illinois except possibly in Calhoun County in the
-west, while south of the Ohio River it still continued to spread and
-flourish in <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> and Louisiana for some centuries.</p>
-<p>In Illinois a <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a> of decadence set in for the next few centuries
-(possibly 250 to 1000 A.D.). The larger settlements or settlement
-clusters dwindled to mere hamlets, whose remains are scarcely distinguishable
-from the early <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Artifacts">artifacts</a> except that the tobacco
-pipe is present. Though they must still have retained a tradition of
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_PlantRaising">plant-raising</a>, they seem to have avoided it and reverted to a pure
-hunting-collecting <a class="gloss" href="#g_Economy">economy</a>. Even in southern Illinois the storage of
-food seems to have played an insignificant role. Nevertheless throughout
-this cultural recession, certain trends occur in all the six Final Woodland subcultures which
-foreshadow later developments in the
-Middle (<a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a>) <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">Phase</a>.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_57">57</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig38">
-<img src="images/p027.jpg" alt="" width="449" height="1000" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 38. The Stream of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">Culture</a>.
-The archaeological cultures within Illinois are included within
-the two heavy lines, openings in which indicate cultural extensions
-beyond or intrusions into the state. Vertical positions indicate
-sequences in a general way.
-(Drawing by Jeanne McCarty.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_58">58</div>
-<p>About 1000 A.D. or possibly a little earlier, the Final <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a>
-developed into an early Protomississippi (<a class="gloss" href="#g_Protomiss">Protomiss</a>) and, at last,
-(possibly 1000 to 1100 A.D.) into the full-blown <a class="gloss" href="#g_MiddlePhase">Middle Phase</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Civilization">civilization</a>.
-The Cahokia <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a> appears to be primarily, though not exclusively,
-Illinoisian while the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Cumberland">Cumberland</a> development in the southeast
-of the state was shared more generously with adjacent Indiana,
-Kentucky and Tennessee. Judging by the distribution of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> box
-(cist) graves, the Cumberland subculture seems to have expanded
-westward at the expense of the Cahokia peoples to envelope most of
-the southern counties from Monroe to White. (Another interpretation
-might be that the grave type of their eastern Cumberland neighbors
-was adopted by the Cahokians.) The Crable Village, possibly a late
-Cahokian settlement, yields <a class="gloss" href="#g_Artifacts">artifacts</a> suggesting cultural influences
-brought in from Iowa, Missouri and possibly Arkansas. It is probable
-that the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> came to an end in Illinois by 1500 or 1550. This fact
-coupled with the pottery evidence makes it highly probable (though
-possibly not conclusive) that the disorganized Illini Confederacy embraced
-the tribes whose members were the descendants of the <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a>
-of the great Middle Phase civilization in Illinois.</p>
-<p>More or less contemporaneous with the <a class="gloss" href="#g_MiddlePhase">Middle Phase</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> were
-the so-called Upper <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">Phase</a> peoples of Missouri, Iowa, Wisconsin,
-Michigan and Indiana. These were represented in Illinois by the Fisher
-peoples of the Langford <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a> known chiefly from sites along the
-Illinois, Kankakee and Des Plaines rivers in northeastern Illinois and
-(chiefly on a pottery basis) in northwestern Indiana and southern
-Michigan.</p>
-<p>Beset by enemies on the east, south, north and northwest, with
-their traditions of former greatness fading, the demoralized Illini tribes
-welcomed the protection of French soldiers. Their own resourcefulness,
-courage, pride, and confidence in themselves and their <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> continued
-to deteriorate, their numbers to diminish under the softening
-influence of alcohol and the persistent assaults of the ruder more
-aggressive Winnebago, Sauk, Fox, Potawatomi and Kickapoo tribes
-invading Illinois from the north until they were reduced by 1833 to
-a mere handful of a hundred odd men, women and children. The demands
-on the part of citizens of the United States for Illinois lands
-was brought to a head by the scare of the Black Hawk <a class="gloss" href="#g_War">War</a>, and the
-Illini, their traditional Indian friends and enemies, were transferred to
-new territory west of the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a>. Thus ended the aboriginal occupation
-of Illinois that had endured for at least 10,000 years.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_59">59</div>
-<h2 id="c14">GLOSSARY</h2>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_AdvancedPhase">ADVANCED PHASE</span>: The earliest pottery-making cultures of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> in southern
-Illinois. The peoples seem to have been storers of acorns and hickory
-nuts. It is sometimes called early Woodland.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Amerindian">AMERINDIAN</span>: The American Indian of Mongolian racial stock so named to distinguish
-him from the Asiatic Indian who is of the white or Caucasian race.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Anthropology">ANTHROPOLOGY</span>: The study of man and his cultural activities.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Archaeology">ARCHAEOLOGY</span>: The division of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Anthropology">anthropology</a> that studies peoples of the past
-through the remains of their works that are found in the ground.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Archaic">ARCHAIC</span> (<a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">SUBCULTURE</a>): An archaeological subdivision of the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Lithic">Lithic</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Pattern">Pattern</a>
-characterized by broad-bladed barbed <a class="gloss" href="#g_Spearheads">spearheads</a>, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Spearthrower">spearthrower</a> weights
-and &ldquo;bannerstones,&rdquo; small camps, and a hunting-collecting <a class="gloss" href="#g_Economy">economy</a> (without
-plant-raising or food-storage).</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Arrowheads">ARROWHEADS</span>: Projectile points less than three inches long presumed to have
-been used to tip arrows.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Art">ART</span>: A form of human endeavor in which the individual or artist, with more or
-less skill, tries to produce an object or activity of such a nature that it is
-esthetically satisfying in some sense both to himself and to his group generally.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Artifacts">ARTIFACTS</span>: Any object made by man, or a natural object modified by man, in
-order to satisfy a cultural need. (Only the names and uses of artifacts that
-are not self-explanatory appear in the glossary).</p>
-<p class="revint">ATLATL: See <a class="gloss" href="#g_Spearthrower">SPEARTHROWER</a>.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Assemblage">ASSEMBLAGE</span>: In this paper assemblage refers to the selected significant artifact
-types of an archaeological unit. In a more general sense, it signifies the aggregate
-of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Artifacts">artifacts</a> found at a particular site, or in a deposit belonging to a
-single <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> at the site.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Ax">AX</span>: Refers in this paper to the grooved ground <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> head resembling the modern
-steel ax in general form and presumably used for chopping in a somewhat
-similar manner.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Aztalan">AZTALAN</span>: The site of a <a class="gloss" href="#g_MiddlePhase">Middle Phase</a> fortified village with mounds in Jefferson
-County, Wisconsin, in the Cahokia <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">Subculture</a>. It was investigated by the
-Milwaukee Public Museum. See S. A. Barrett in Bibliography.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Barb">BARB</span>: A projection or shoulder near the base of the blade of a spear, dart or arrowhead
-that serves to retain it in a wound and to stimulate bleeding. One
-of a number of &ldquo;backward&rdquo; projections on a harpoon that serves a similar purpose.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Bast">BAST</span>: The inner bark (phloem) of a tree.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_BreechCloth">BREECH CLOTH</span> or CLOUT: An article of clothing consisting of a narrow
-band or fold of cloth or skin that passes around the waist and between the
-legs.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_BurialMound">BURIAL MOUND</span>: Any man-made hill or knoll erected primarily to enclose the
-dead.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Cache">CACHE</span>: A deposit of a large number of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Artifacts">artifacts</a> in a grave or, in general, a number
-of artifacts found together in the earth.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Calumet">CALUMET</span>: See note, <a href="#Page_48">page 48</a>.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Celt">CELT</span>: An ungrooved <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> or copper <a class="gloss" href="#g_Hatchet">hatchet</a> head.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Chief">CHIEF</span>: An official selected and formally installed in office by some social process
-who exercises civil authority by virtue of office.</p>
-<p class="revint">CHIPPING: See <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flaking">Flaking</a>.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Chopper">CHOPPER</span>: Generally any tool used for chopping, hewing, or hacking. Specifically,
-a chipped <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> tool roughly <a class="gloss" href="#g_Hatchet">hatchet</a> shaped. Some hand choppers have the
-edge of the blade paralleling the longer axis of the piece.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_60">60</div>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_ChunkeyStone">CHUNKEY STONE</span>: A polished <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> disk that was used as a bowl in various types
-of games.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Civilization">CIVILIZATION</span>: See note, <a href="#Page_26">page 26</a>.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Classic">CLASSIC</span>: The term used in this paper to designate the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">phase</a> to which the Hopewellian
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Civilization">Civilization</a> of the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Pattern">pattern</a> belongs.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Clovis">CLOVIS</span> POINT: A type of leaf-shaped spearhead with a longitudinal groove
-(channel or fluting) generally extending one fourth to one half the length
-of the piece from its base toward its tip.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Club">CLUB</span>: An adaptation of a stick for a weapon or a tool for hurling (throwing
-stick) or battering (<a class="gloss" href="#g_War">war</a> club). The war <a class="gloss" href="#g_Club">club</a> is often weighted with a <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> head for
-greater effectiveness. It differs from the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Tomahawk">tomahawk</a> in that it has no
-cutting edge.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_ConchoidalFracture">CONCHOIDAL FRACTURE</span>: The property of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> and certain other stones
-when struck with a hammer of chipping away in flakes which leave concave
-or shell-like scars or hollows. By suitable control methods, tool and weapon
-heads of desired types can be produced.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Conoidal">CONOIDAL</span> or <span id="g_Conical">CONICAL</span> BASE: The characteristic pointed base of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> pots.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_CrabOrchard">CRAB ORCHARD</span>: A division of the Baumer <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a>.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Culture">CULTURE</span>: Culture as used in this paper has one of two meanings, each readily
-understood in its context. In a general sense, it means the significant beliefs,
-customary activities and social prohibitions peculiar to man (together with the
-man-made tools, weapons and other material objects that he finds or has found
-necessary) that modify, limit or enhance in some manner, most of his discernible
-natural activities due to his physical animal inheritance and organization.
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">Culture</a> in a specific sense refers to the significant cultural features of
-the group or <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a> under consideration, the way of life. See <a class="gloss" href="#g_FeatureCultural">FEATURE, CULTURAL</a>.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Cumberland">CUMBERLAND</span>: A <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a> of the Middle (<a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a>) <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">Phase</a> that flourished
-in southern Illinois, western Kentucky and Tennessee, archaeologically known
-as Gordon-Fewkes or Tennessee-Cumberland.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Dagger">DAGGER</span>: A long sharp-pointed blade of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> (or a copper pin) presumably
-hafted with a wooden handle, used as a hunting knife or in hand-to-hand
-fighting.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Dartheads">DARTHEADS</span>: Medium-sized weapon heads (2&frac12; to 4 inches long) presumably
-used to tip lances or javelins.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_DicksonMound">DICKSON MOUND</span>: A <a class="gloss" href="#g_BurialMound">burial mound</a> near Lewistown in Fulton County where
-some three hundred skeletons together with their grave offerings have been exposed
-to view. It is now a State Park and open to visitors.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_DiggingStick">DIGGING STICK</span>: A conveniently-shaped stick used by primitive peoples in collecting
-tubers and roots and small animals, digging storage pits, and for preparing
-the soil for planting. Antler was sometimes shaped and presumably
-employed in like manner.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_DiggingTool">DIGGING TOOL</span>: Any implement employed by primitive peoples in digging&mdash;a
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_DiggingStick">digging stick</a>, a shell hoe, or a chipped <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> hoe.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Domestication">DOMESTICATION</span>: The breeding and rearing of plants and animals under man&rsquo;s
-control and for his needs.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Drift">DRIFT</span> (rarely drifter): A blunt tool of antler or bone presumably held in the
-hand and pressed against a <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> to flake it, or one held against the flint piece
-and struck with a hammer for a like purpose.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Dugout">DUGOUT</span>: A boat made by hollowing out a log with fire and tools and shaping
-its exterior suitably for water travel.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_61">61</div>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_EconomicAspect">ECONOMIC ASPECT</span>: That division of primitive <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> concerned primarily
-with securing and preparing food, shelter, clothing, and raw materials for
-tools, weapons and other material devices, and the technologies involved. This
-required considerable knowledge of natural resources, properties of materials,
-and lay of the land and permits freer direct creative intellectual effort than
-does any other aspect.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Economy">ECONOMY</span>: The chief means of securing food and other basic physical requirements
-of man, as a hunting-collecting economy.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Effigy">EFFIGY</span>: Any artifact resembling in outline, in relief, or in the round some living
-organism or mythical being.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_EffigyMound">EFFIGY MOUND</span>: A <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mound">mound</a> of earth in low relief shaped in outline form to
-resemble an animal or some geometric or other conventionalized form. They
-are often found in groups together with conical and elongated or linear mounds
-in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa and Illinois.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_EffigyPot">EFFIGY POT</span>: A pottery vessel made in the form of an animal, human being, or
-a part of one, or having conventionalized bird or animal head and tail projecting
-from opposite sides of rim or mouth (generally of shallow bowls), occurring
-most commonly in the Middle (<a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a>) <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">Phase</a>.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Extended">EXTENDED</span>: As applied to burials, a skeleton lying at full length usually on its
-side or back.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Family">FAMILY</span>, EXTENDED: A man, his wife or wives, their descendants in the male
-or female line as custom dictates, and their families who consider themselves
-as a distinct social unit usually with an acknowledged leader or headman. The
-extended family usually lives in a local settlement or a limited territory.</p>
-<p class="revint">FAMILY, SIMPLE: A man, his wife or wives and their unmarried children.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_FamilyTypeSocialControl">FAMILY-TYPE SOCIAL CONTROL</span>: The manner of maintaining peace, order,
-and obedience to elders and to custom in tribes and local groups in the <a class="gloss" href="#g_SelfDomestication">Self-Domestication</a>
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Stage">Stage</a> secured by early and strict indoctrination of the young in
-the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Family">family</a> and through public opinion (social approval and disapproval) rather
-than by force and political agencies.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_FeatherCloth">FEATHER CLOTH</span>: Robes or blankets made by attaching overlapping feathers to
-the outer surface of a textile or netting to simulate a bird skin.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_FeatureCultural">FEATURE, CULTURAL</span>: Any type of cultural organization (or institution) within
-a tribe or independent cultural unit such as marriage, the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Family">family</a> division of
-labor, <a class="gloss" href="#g_SocialControl">social control</a>, political governing agency, <a class="gloss" href="#g_SacredTradition">Sacred Tradition</a> (&ldquo;<a class="gloss" href="#g_Mythology">mythology</a>&rdquo;),
-etc.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_FertilityRites">FERTILITY RITES</span>: The religious ceremonies performed in a primitive tribe for
-the purpose of insuring its welfare, the continuance of an abundant supply of
-food animals and other natural resources on which it depends, and possibly
-with expressions of gratitude for past benefits.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Festivals">FESTIVALS</span>: The term applied to the religious ceremonies of plant-raising peoples
-that relate to planting and the harvesting of crops.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_FinalPhase">FINAL PHASE</span>: The decadent <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a>, archaeologically known as late
-Woodland, is characteristic of much of Illinois in the interval between the fall
-of Hopewellian and the rise of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a>.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Flaker">FLAKER</span> (<a class="gloss" href="#g_Drift">DRIFT</a>): A flint-working tool either used alone with simple pressure or
-as a punch struck by a <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> hammer (<a class="gloss" href="#g_IndirectPercussion">indirect percussion</a>).</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Flaking">FLAKING</span> or <span id="g_Chipping">CHIPPING</span>: The method of working <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> into tools and weapons
-by direct hammer blows, <a class="gloss" href="#g_IndirectPercussion">indirect percussion</a> or by pressure with a <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flaker">flaker</a>.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Flexed">FLEXED</span>: As applied to burials, a skeleton (generally lying on its side) with knees
-drawn up to or near chest, arms close to side or with hand(s) near head.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Flint">FLINT</span>: In this paper, any <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> that flakes with a <a class="gloss" href="#g_ConchoidalFracture">conchoidal fracture</a> that was
-so used by Amerindians to make chipped tools and weapons.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_62">62</div>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Folsom">FOLSOM</span> POINT: A <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> spearhead having the faces of the blade hollowed out
-by chipping (channeling or fluting) except for a narrow strip paralleling
-each edge including the tip (see <a href="#fig3">Figure 3</a>, <a href="#Page_11">page 11</a>).</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_FoodDraftAnimals">FOOD-DRAFT ANIMALS</span>: The large mammals (especially the ox) that were
-domesticated by man and besides providing him with a continuously available
-supply of meat, served as a beast of burden or to draw a wheeled vehicle, to
-drag the plough, and as a source of energy to turn the mill. Animals were
-not generally so used in North America.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_FoodStorers">FOOD-STORERS</span>: Those peoples who by virtue of native ingenuity and some
-special natural resource in their region were enabled to store up sufficient food supplies to
-last them for several months.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_FormalizedReligion">FORMALIZED RELIGION</span>: The forms of prayer, worship, devotion and ritual
-and the organization of priests, etc. by which plant-raising tribes carry on their
-assumed relationships with the world of the unknown agents of natural forces.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Gorget">GORGET</span>: (pronounced gor&acute;-jet) A large flat artifact, possibly at times an <a class="gloss" href="#g_Insigne">insigne</a>,
-of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a>, shell, copper or bone worn on the chest.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_GraveGoods">GRAVE GOODS</span>: The <a class="gloss" href="#g_Jewelry">jewelry</a>, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Insigne">insignia</a>, weapons or implements of a dead tribesman
-together with offerings that may have been placed in his grave by friends
-or relatives, including vessels containing food and water. Also called beigaben,
-funeral offerings, grave furniture, etc.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Grinding">GRINDING</span>: The process by which a <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a>, bone, shell or metal artifact was
-shaped by rubbing with sand and water or against a piece of sandstone
-(abrader).</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_GrindingStone">GRINDING STONE</span>: A large flat or slightly hollowed <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> on which seeds,
-berries, or nuts were crushed or ground by a smaller hand stone (muller or
-pestle).</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_GuardianSpirit">GUARDIAN SPIRIT</span>: Among primitive peoples, a being from the invisible spirit
-world who appeared to a person in a dream and was believed to serve the
-dreamer thereafter as his personal protector.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Hamlet">HAMLET</span>: The name used in this paper for local settlements of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> and Initial <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> sites.
-They probably had populations of less than one hundred persons.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Hammerstone">HAMMERSTONE</span>: A <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> hammer. Any native or modified cobblestone used as
-a hammer.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Hatchet">HATCHET</span>: A ground <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> or copper <a class="gloss" href="#g_Celt">celt</a> head. <a class="gloss" href="#g_Tomahawk">Tomahawk</a> or hafted hatchet.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Household">HOUSEHOLD</span>: A man, his wife, and children, married and unmarried together
-with slaves and others, if any, who customarily in their <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> live under one
-shelter or roof.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_IndirectPercussion">INDIRECT PERCUSSION</span>: The use of a punch with a hammer, especially in the
-chipping of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a>.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_InitialPhase">INITIAL PHASE</span>: The earliest pottery-making cultures of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> in northern
-Illinois, archaeologically known as early Woodland.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_InitiationRites">INITIATION RITES</span>: Puberty rites. As used in this paper, the ceremonies by
-which a boy on &ldquo;becoming of age&rdquo; is admitted to adult membership in the
-tribe. Somewhat simpler rites are performed for girls also in some tribes.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Insigne">INSIGNE</span>: (Plural <i>insignia</i>) Any artifact worn by <a class="gloss" href="#g_PrimitivePeople">primitive people</a> as a symbol
-of rank or class, birth (in a particular <a class="gloss" href="#g_Family">family</a>), office, priesthood, or of individual
-prowess.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Institutions">INSTITUTIONS</span>: See <a class="gloss" href="#g_SocialStructure">Social Structure</a>.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Jewelry">JEWELRY</span>: Any object other than <a class="gloss" href="#g_Insigne">insignia</a>, paint, or clothing worn by primitive man as personal adornment.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_KincaidCommunity">KINCAID COMMUNITY</span>: The site of a <a class="gloss" href="#g_MiddlePhase">Middle Phase</a> village, mounds, fortifications
-and other cultural remains in Pope and Massac counties, Illinois, on the
-Ohio River a few miles above Paducah, Kentucky.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_63">63</div>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_LakeBaikal">LAKE BAIKAL</span>: A large inland lake in the south of Siberia. Pottery from the
-surrounding region resembles generalized <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> ware, especially that of
-the <a class="gloss" href="#g_InitialPhase">Initial Phase</a>.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Lineage">LINEAGE</span>: The social group (including dead persons) whose members are descended
-from some certain or mythical ancestor, either male or female as the
-custom prevails, and which considers itself a distinct social unit.
-(See also <a class="gloss" href="#g_Family">Extended Family</a>.)</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Lithic">LITHIC</span>: A term employed in this paper as embracing cultures roughly equivalent
-to those of the Self-Domestication <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stage">Stage</a>, but without pottery.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Mana">MANA</span>: Superhuman power that primitive man believed to reside in certain inanimate
-objects, in certain persons at times and in spirits, that under suitable
-conditions could be transferred either wholly or in part to other objects or
-persons. Improperly handled it was a source of grave danger.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_MiddlePhase">MIDDLE PHASE</span>: The archaeological term for the highest development of the
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Pattern">pattern</a> in the United States. In Illinois it is represented by the
-Cahokia and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Cumberland">Cumberland</a> subcultures.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Mississippi">MISSISSIPPI</span>: The major archaeological <a class="gloss" href="#g_Pattern">pattern</a> that succeeded the earlier <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> in most
-of the United States east of the Rocky Mountains and High
-Plains and that was still in existence in some parts of this country as late as
-1700 A.D. It is characterized by relatively intensive <a class="gloss" href="#g_PlantRaising">plant-raising</a>, political government,
-walled villages, temples (or sacred groves) and a priesthood, semi- to
-permanent dwellings, pottery of varied shapes, with globular bodies and secondary features,
-the bow and arrow.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_ModocRockShelter">MODOC ROCK SHELTER</span>: An ancient settlement of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> peoples in Randolph
-County, Illinois, dating from 8000 to 2100 B.C. See Bibliography under
-Deuel, and Fowler and Winters.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Mound">MOUND</span>: Any rise or hill of earth and/or <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> that resulted from some activity
-of man, such as refuse mound, shell mound, burial mound, temple mound, etc.
-See <a class="gloss" href="#g_BurialMound">BURIAL</a>, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Effigy">EFFIGY</a>, <a class="gloss" href="#g_TempleMound">TEMPLE</a>.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_MoundBuilders">MOUND BUILDERS</span>: A term having little significance, meaning any group that
-erected mounds. In American <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaeology">archaeology</a> it sometimes refers specifically to
-Hopewellians, to Mississippians or to both.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Mythology">MYTHOLOGY</span>: See <a class="gloss" href="#g_SacredTradition">SACRED TRADITION</a>.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Obsidian">OBSIDIAN</span>: Volcanic glass, a material imported by Hopewellians possibly from
-Wyoming. Rare in Illinois.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_PaleoIndian">PALEO-INDIAN</span> (See <a class="gloss" href="#g_Clovis">Clovis</a> and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Folsom">Folsom</a>): Hunters of big game who roamed
-over North America in glacial times.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Pattern">PATTERN</span>: The largest archaeological unit in the McKern Classification System.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Pecking">PECKING</span>: The process (other than chipping) by which a <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> artifact was
-brought to general shape by breaking off small particles with a stone hammer.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_People">PEOPLE</span>: The term &ldquo;people&rdquo; as used in this paper does not refer to a physical
-type but simply to cultural groups unless specifically stated to the contrary.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Period">PERIOD</span>: Unless otherwise specifically stated, the word applies to a cultural level
-regardless of time and place.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Phase">PHASE</span>: The major division of the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Pattern">pattern</a> as used in the McKern Classification
-System.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_PlantRaising">PLANT-RAISING</span>: The <a class="gloss" href="#g_Economy">economy</a> or cultural <a class="gloss" href="#g_Status">status</a> of a cultural group who grew
-food (and fibre) plants but were without domesticated food-draft animals.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_PoliticalOrganization">POLITICAL ORGANIZATION</span>: A formalized social means of controlling the
-members of a nation or tribe and compelling compliance with established customs
-or laws with defined customary or lawful penalties for violations together
-with the machinery for determining equity, rights, or damages in non-criminal
-disputes through governmental agencies such as officers (chiefs) and official
-bodies (councils) regularly selected for these purposes.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_64">64</div>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Polishing">POLISHING</span>: A process by which the surface of a ground <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> artifact was
-brought to a high degree of smoothness and gloss by rubbing with fine earth
-and water. It is readily distinguishable from polish due to wear in digging.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Priest">PRIEST</span>: Any person selected in a regular and customary manner for religious office
-who by virtue of installation into that office and acceptance of the duties is
-(believed to be) invested with the power to communicate and intercede with
-members of the spirit world, a god or gods or in certain instances to act for
-them on behalf of his group.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_PrimitivePeople">PRIMITIVE PEOPLE</span>: Refers to any <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a> in the <a class="gloss" href="#g_SelfDomestication">Self-Domestication</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stage">Stage</a> and
-to the simple plant-growers of the Farming <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">Period</a>.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Protocultural">PROTOCULTURAL</span>: A <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stage">stage</a> presumed to have existed prior to man&rsquo;s discovery
-of the principle of conchoidal fracturing of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a>, when he used native sticks
-and stones as tools, and sometimes by haphazard breaking of these secured new
-forms more suitable for his purposes.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Protomiss">PROTOMISS</span>: An abbreviated form for Protomississippi, the earliest known <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a>
-of the Middle (<a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a>) <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">Phase</a> in southwestern Illinois. Dillinger
-is the type site.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Religion">RELIGION</span>: The set of beliefs (<a class="gloss" href="#g_SacredTradition">Sacred Tradition</a>), rules (tabus), and activities
-(including rituals) that govern the life of a society with regard to those
-superhuman forces with which the individual feels himself surrounded and
-which neither he nor his group by themselves can control. Religious practice
-includes prayers or requests for the continuance of well-being and life&rsquo;s
-necessities, thanksgiving for past blessings, and a belief in the necessity of
-right conduct of the individuals in their daily living. In all known primitive
-religions, a belief in some form exists of spirit beings and/or gods with superhuman
-powers. See <a class="gloss" href="#g_FormalizedReligion">FORMALIZED RELIGION</a>.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_RockShelter">ROCK SHELTER</span>: An overhanging rock ledge facing away from the prevailing
-wind that afforded protection to a primitive <a class="gloss" href="#g_Family">family</a> from the elements and wild
-animals.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_RoughStone">ROUGH STONE</span>: This term refers to <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> used as it occurs in nature with virtually
-no artificial modification other than that resulting from use such as a
-common <a class="gloss" href="#g_Hammerstone">hammerstone</a>, an unworked abrader, or a <a class="gloss" href="#g_GrindingStone">grinding stone</a>. The stone
-may have a relatively smooth surface due to natural causes.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_SacredTradition">SACRED TRADITION</span>: The term used here to signify the embodiment of the
-significant (effective) beliefs and rules that governed the behavior and activities
-of a primitive tribe in matters relating to the unseen world of spirits (or gods)
-and unknown forces, which were handed down from generation to generation.
-It is usually included in the inept term &ldquo;<a class="gloss" href="#g_Mythology">mythology</a>&rdquo; which may also contain
-tales and legends that serve for mere entertainment.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_SelfDomestication">SELF-DOMESTICATION</span> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stage">STAGE</a>: The earliest stage of true human <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a>
-which began presumably with the discovery of controlled <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> chipping and
-the invention of flint tool types. During this stage, man is enabled to secure
-a fairly constant food supply by hunting and collecting, keeps his young under
-parental care and control for several years and learns to accommodate himself
-more or less peaceably to his <a class="gloss" href="#g_Family">family</a> and to fellow tribesmen during brief periods
-of religious and social gatherings.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Shaman">SHAMAN</span>: A person who by virtue of dreams or visions believes he can communicate
-with spirits, obtain from them superhuman powers for the benefit
-of his social group and tribe and who has demonstrated these abilities over a
-greater or longer time to the satisfaction of his fellows.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Shells">SHELLS</span>, MARINE: Shells from the ocean or Gulf of Mexico, raw materials
-secured by traders or through exchange for other goods. The most common
-marine shells found in Illinois cultures are the <i>Cassis madagascarensis</i> (Hopewellian),
-the Busycon or Fulgar (Middle <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> and Hopewellian),
-<i>Marginella</i> (Initial <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a>, Hopewellian and Middle Mississippi), <i>Oliva</i>
-(Middle Mississippi), and <i>Olivella</i> (Hopewellian).</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_65">65</div>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_SocialAspect">SOCIAL ASPECT</span>: That division of primitive <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> that is concerned preeminently
-with preserving and stabilizing fundamental customs, with the maintenance
-of peace and order within its primary social units, and to this end, in
-the organization, functioning and continuation of such units.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_SocialControl">SOCIAL CONTROL</span>: Any general social means by which a social or political
-group preserves peace and order within itself and group protection against
-outsiders (see <a class="gloss" href="#g_FamilyTypeSocialControl">Family-type</a> and <a class="gloss" href="#g_PoliticalOrganization">Political Agency</a>).</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_SocialStructure">SOCIAL STRUCTURE</span>: The persisting system of significant relationships in a
-society that prevails without regard to the particular individuals involved.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Spearheads">SPEARHEADS</span>: Projectile points 3 to 6 or 6&frac12; inches long presumed to have been
-used to tip spears.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Spearthrower">SPEARTHROWER</span> (<span id="g_Atlatl">ATLATL</span>): A short stick by which increased leverage is
-obtained in hurling a spear. It gives greater range and an accuracy comparable
-to the bow at shorter distances.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_SpearthrowerWeight">SPEARTHROWER WEIGHT</span>: A weight secured to the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Spearthrower">spearthrower</a> for controlling
-it and increasing the speed of the spear.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_SpearThrusting">SPEAR, THRUSTING</span>: A long spear that is fitted with a long, narrow head
-generally without barbs or shoulders, that can be easily withdrawn from a
-wound. It is primarily for use in the hand, not for throwing.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Specialization">SPECIALIZATION</span> (<span id="g_Craft">CRAFT</span>): An occupation in which a man or <a class="gloss" href="#g_Household">household</a> of
-a primitive community engages primarily to the considerable exclusion of the
-general economic pursuits or the remainder of his group. It should not be
-confused with the production of a highly skilled craftsman.</p>
-<p class="revint">SPECIALIZATION (OF TOOLS): Applies to numerous variations in the forms
-derived from a general artifact type presumably to accomplish better and more
-easily certain special requirements of construction or manufacture.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Stage">STAGE</span> (CULTURAL): One of the major periods into which cultures may be
-divided by virtue of its degree of development which depends primarily on the
-fundamental invention that ushered it in.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_SpiritualAspect">SPIRITUAL ASPECT</span>: That division of primitive <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> concerned primarily with
-tribal values, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Religion">religion</a>, recreation and the arts.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Status">STATUS</span> (CULTURAL): A subdivision of a <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stage">stage</a>. A <a class="gloss" href="#g_Substage">substage</a>.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Stone">STONE</span>: Unless otherwise noted any kind of stone generally used by primitive
-peoples for <a class="gloss" href="#g_Pecking">pecking</a>, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Grinding">grinding</a> and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Polishing">polishing</a> into weapons, tools, etc., for example,
-granite, greenstone, gneiss, shale, limestone, basalt.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_StoneVaultGrave">STONE VAULT GRAVE</span>: A type of <a class="gloss" href="#g_BurialMound">burial mound</a> consisting chiefly of flat stones
-enclosing a walled-up tomb chamber, the whole covered with earth. In Illinois
-known at present only from Adams County.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_StoneVaultSubculture">STONE VAULT SUBCULTURE</span>: A division of Final <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">Phase</a> that is
-characterized by <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> vault graves.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Subculture">SUBCULTURE</span>: Any archaeological grouping smaller than a <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">phase</a>.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Substage">SUBSTAGE</span> or <a class="gloss" href="#g_Status">STATUS</a>: A subdivision of a <i><a class="gloss" href="#g_Stage">Stage</a></i> that develops as the result of
-a significant invention, discovery of a special resource, or some other condition
-of the surroundings.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Technology">TECHNOLOGY</span>: The processes by which any artifact is produced.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Teepee">TEEPEE</span>: A conical framework of poles covered with bark, skins, brush, mats, etc.
-used as a shelter or hut by primitive peoples.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Tempering">TEMPERING</span>: Foreign material such as sand, crushed limestone, plant fibers,
-crushed shell, etc. mixed with the clay in pottery-making to render the vessel
-less likely to crack in firing.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_66">66</div>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_TempleMound">TEMPLE MOUND</span>: A rectangular pyramid with a flat top on which a temple was
-built. Similar mounds were used for council and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Chief">chief</a>&rsquo;s houses among
-historic <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> peoples. Flat-topped pyramidal mounds are characteristic
-of the important Middle Mississippi sites in Illinois.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_ThermalMaximum">THERMAL MAXIMUM</span>: A time interval (roughly between 5000 and 2000 B.C.)
-in which the climate was warmer and drier than at present.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Tomahawk">TOMAHAWK</span>: A hafted <a class="gloss" href="#g_Hatchet">hatchet</a> of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> or metal used in fighting.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Totem">TOTEM</span>: An animal, plant or inanimate object that is regarded as the symbol of
-a social or political group.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Tumpline">TUMPLINE</span>: A sling or pack strap that rests on the forehead, passes over the
-shoulders, and is used for carrying a load on the back.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_TurkeyTail">TURKEY-TAIL</span>: A large spearhead, broadly oval in the middle and double-pointed
-with notches near one end.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_TypeStation">TYPE STATION</span>(S): The site (or sites) that at present seem, to the author, to
-give the fullest view of life in a <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a>, including as far as possible a village
-(or camp) and burial site.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_War">WAR</span> (<a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">ARCHAIC</a>): The blood feud. In the Archaic <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a>, this was the method
-of interfamily or intergroup retaliation for murder or other serious injury to
-one <a class="gloss" href="#g_Family">family</a> or local group by a member of another. It was carried on by alternate
-sneak raids between the local settlements involved, with the object of
-killing one or more members of the group attacked, (destroying property), and
-escaping without loss.</p>
-<p class="revint">WAR (PLANT-RAISERS): Hostilities between plant-raising tribes were pursued
-by sneak raids having for their objectives the surprise and attack of villages,
-the ambush of enemy parties, and the capture of prisoners. (Murder, black
-magic, and other crimes committed within the tribe were generally dealt with
-by socio-judicial custom).</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_WattleAndDaub">WATTLE AND DAUB</span>: A framework of posts, interlaced with branches and
-twigs and plastered over with clay for house and fortification walls common
-in <a class="gloss" href="#g_MiddlePhase">Middle Phase</a> and probably in other periods.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Wigwam">WIGWAM</span>: As used here, a roughly hemispherical hut having a framework of
-poles set in the ground with their tops arched over and secured together, the
-whole covered over with leafy branches, skins, bark, mats or thatch.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Windbreak">WINDBREAK</span>: A vertical or inclined framework of poles covered with branches
-and leaves, skins, bark, etc. erected by primitive peoples as a shelter against
-wind, sun, and storm.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_Woodland">WOODLAND</span>: One of the major archaeological patterns of the eastern, southern
-and central United States, characterized by plant-raising (except possibly in its
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_InitialPhase">Initial Phase</a>), by elongated globular clay pots (with cord-roughened exteriors,
-pointed bottoms, and incised line and punctate decoration), hamlets or small
-villages (except in the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Classic">Classic</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">Phase</a>), with <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Spearheads">spearheads</a> (but no <a class="gloss" href="#g_Arrowheads">arrowheads</a>
-except in <a class="gloss" href="#g_FinalPhase">Final Phase</a>).</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_WrapAroundSkirt">WRAP-AROUND-SKIRT</span>: A rectangular piece of clothing made of skin, fur, or
-cloth worn by Hopewellian and Middle <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> women. It was wrapped
-around the body from the waist to the knees or below and was secured at the
-top by a belt or other means.</p>
-<p class="revint"><span id="g_YumaPoints">YUMA POINTS</span>: Chipped <a class="gloss" href="#g_Spearheads">spearheads</a> of various general shapes including leaf-shaped
-forms, without channeling.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_67">67</div>
-<h2 id="c15">BIBLIOGRAPHY</h2>
-<table class="center" summary="">
-<tr class="th"><th colspan="2"><span class="ss">ADVANCED (<a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">WOODLAND</a>) <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">PHASE</a></span></th></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1951 </td><td class="l">Cole, F. C. et al in <i>The Baumer Focus</i>, in KINCAID, A PREHISTORIC ILLINOIS METROPOLIS, pp. 184-210, University of Chicago, Chicago (Baumer <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">Subculture</a>).</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1951 </td><td class="l">Maxwell, Moreau S. <i>The Woodland Cultures in Southern Illinois</i>, pp. 232-243. Beloit College, Beloit, Wisconsin (Baumer Subculture).</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1951 </td><td class="l"><i>Ibid.</i>, pp. 78-183 (<a class="gloss" href="#g_CrabOrchard">Crab Orchard</a> Subculture).</td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="l">Tennessee</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1922 </td><td class="l">Harrington, M. R. <i>Cherokee and Earliest Remains on Upper Tennessee River</i>, INDIAN NOTES AND MONOGRAPHS, No. 24, New York (Round Grave <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">People</a> or Baumer Subculture).</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1952 </td><td class="l">Kneberg, Madeline. <i>The Tennessee Area</i> in Griffin, Ed., <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaeology">ARCHAEOLOGY</a> OF THE EASTERN UNITED STATES, p. 192 and Fig. 102., University of Chicago, Chicago (Round Grave, Upper Valley or Baumer).</td></tr>
-<tr class="th"><th colspan="2"><span class="ss"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">ARCHAIC</a> PHASE</span></th></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1950 </td><td class="l">Deuel, Thorne. <i>Man&rsquo;s Venture in <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">Culture</a></i>, STORY OF ILLINOIS SERIES, No. 6, pp. 5-12, Illinois State Museum, Springfield.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1957 </td><td class="l">Deuel, Thorne, <i>The Modoc Shelter</i>, REPORT OF INVESTIGATIONS, No. 7, Springfield, revised and reprinted from <i>Natural History</i>, October, 1957, pp. 400-405 (Simple and Medial).</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1956 </td><td class="l">Fowler, Melvin L. and Winters, Howard. <i><a class="gloss" href="#g_ModocRockShelter">Modoc Rock Shelter</a>, Preliminary Report</i>, REPORT OF INVESTIGATIONS, No. 4, Illinois State Museum, Springfield. (Simple and Medial).</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1957 </td><td class="l">Fowler, Melvin L. <i>Ferry Site, Hardin County, Illinois</i>, SCIENTIFIC PAPERS SERIES, Vol. VIII, No. 1, Illinois State Museum, Springfield. (Terminal Subculture).</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1950 </td><td class="l">Titterington, P. F. <i>Some Non-Pottery Sites in the St. Louis Area</i> in ILLINOIS STATE ARCHAEOLOGICAL JOURNAL, N.S. Vol. I, pp. 19-31 (Terminal Subculture).</td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="l">Tennessee</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1947 </td><td class="l">Lewis, T. M. N. and Kneberg, Madeline. <i>The Archaic Horizon in Western Tennessee</i>, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville (Eva focus or subculture).</td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="l">United States generally</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1957 </td><td class="l">Wormington, H. M. <i>Ancient Man in North America</i>, POPULAR SERIES, No. 4, 4th Edition, revised, Denver (Archaic and <a class="gloss" href="#g_PaleoIndian">Paleo-Indian</a> Assemblages).</td></tr>
-<tr class="th"><th colspan="2"><span class="ss"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Classic">CLASSIC</a> (HOPEWELLIAN) PHASE</span></th></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1937 </td><td class="l">Cole, F. C. and Deuel, Thorne. <i>Rediscovering Illinois</i>, pp. 130-191. University of Chicago, Chicago.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1952 </td><td class="l">Deuel, Thorne, Ed. <i>Hopewellian Communities</i>, SCIENTIFIC PAPERS SERIES, Vol. V, Illinois State Museum, Springfield.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1957 </td><td class="l">Fowler, Melvin L. <i>Rutherford <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mound">Mound</a>, Hardin County, Illinois</i>, SCIENTIFIC PAPERS SERIES, Vol. VII, No. 1, Illinois State Museum, Springfield.</td></tr>
-<tr class="pbtr"><td colspan="2">
-<span class="pb" id="Page_68">68</span>
-</td></tr>
-<tr class="th"><th colspan="2"><span class="ss">MIDDLE (<a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">MISSISSIPPI</a>) PHASE</span></th></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="l">Cahokia Subculture</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1937 </td><td class="l">Cole, F. C. and Deuel, Thorne. <i>Rediscovering Illinois</i>, pp. 75-94, 111-125, 127, University of Chicago, Chicago.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1928 </td><td class="l">Moorehead, W. K. <i>The Cahokia Mounds</i>, University of Illinois, BULLETIN, Vol. 26, No. 4, Urbana.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1939 </td><td class="l">Simpson, A. M. <i>The Kingston Village Site</i>, Peoria Academy of Science, Peoria. (Privately printed.)</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1952 </td><td class="l">Smith, Hale G. <i>The Crable Site, Fulton County, Illinois</i>, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Anthropology">ANTHROPOLOGY</a> PAPERS No. 7, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1938 </td><td class="l">Titterington, P. F. <i>The Cahokia Mound Group and Its Village Site Materials</i>, St. Louis. (Privately printed.)</td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="l">Cahokia Subculture (Wisconsin)</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1933 </td><td class="l">Barrett, S. A. <i>Ancient <a class="gloss" href="#g_Aztalan">Aztalan</a></i>, BULL. PUBLIC MUSEUM OF MILWAUKEE, Vol. 13.</td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="l"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Cumberland">Cumberland</a> Subculture</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1951 </td><td class="l">Cole, F. C. et al. <i>Kincaid, A Prehistoric Illinois Metropolis</i>, pp. 29-164, 293-366, University of Chicago, Chicago.</td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="l">Cumberland Subculture (Tennessee)</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1928 </td><td class="l">Myer, William, Ed. <i>Two Prehistoric Villages in Middle Tennessee</i>, 41st ANNUAL REPORT, BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY, pp. 485-614, Washington.</td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="l">Cumberland Subculture (Kentucky)</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1929 </td><td class="l">Webb, William S. and Funkhouser, W. D. <i>The Williams Site in Christian County, Kentucky</i>, UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY REPORTS IN ANTHROPOLOGY AND ARCHAEOLOGY, Vol. I, No. 1, pp. 5-23 followed by 36 figs., Lexington.</td></tr>
-<tr class="th"><th colspan="2"><span class="ss">PALEO-INDIAN PHASE</span></th></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1954 </td><td class="l">Kleine, Harold K. <i>A Remarkable Paleo-Indian Site in Alabama</i> in TEN YEARS OF THE TENNESSEE ARCHAEOLOGIST, Lewis and Kneberg, Ed., reprinted from TENNESSEE ARCHAEOLOGIST, 1954.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1951 </td><td class="l">Smail, William. <i>Some Early Projectile Points from the St. Louis Area</i>, in ILLINOIS STATE ARCHAEOLOGICAL JOURNAL, N. S., Vol. II, No. 1, pp. 11-16.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1957 </td><td class="l">Wormington, H. M. <i>Ancient Man in North America</i>, POPULAR SERIES, No. 4, 4th Edition, revised, Denver.</td></tr>
-<tr class="th"><th colspan="2"><span class="ss">UPPER (MISSISSIPPI) PHASE</span></th></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1927 </td><td class="l">Langford, George, Sr. <i>The Fisher Mound Group, Successive Aboriginal Occupations near the Mouth of the Illinois River</i>, in AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGIST, Vol. XXIX, No. 3, pp. 153-206, Menasha.</td></tr>
-<tr class="pbtr"><td colspan="2">
-<span class="pb" id="Page_69">69</span>
-</td></tr>
-<tr class="th"><th colspan="2"><span class="ss">FINAL WOODLAND</span></th></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="l">Bluff Subculture</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1935 </td><td class="l">Titterington, P. F. <i>Certain Bluff Mounds of Western Jersey County, Illinois</i> in AMERICAN ANTIQUITY, Vol. I, No. 1, pp. 6-46.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1943 </td><td class="l">Titterington, P. F. <i>The Jersey County, Illinois, Bluff Culture</i>, in AMERICAN ANTIQUITY, Vol. IX, No. 2, pp. 240-245.</td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="l"><a class="gloss" href="#g_EffigyMound">Effigy Mound</a> Subculture (Wisconsin)</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1932 </td><td class="l">Barrett, S. A. and Skinner, Alanson. <i>Certain Mound and Village Sites of Shawano and Oconto Counties, Wisconsin</i>, BULL. PUBLIC MUSEUM OF MILWAUKEE, Vol. 10, No. 5, Milwaukee.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1928 </td><td class="l">McKern, W. C. <i>The Neal and McClaughry Mound Groups</i>, BULL. PUBLIC MUSEUM OF MILWAUKEE, Vol. 3, No. 3, Milwaukee.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1933 </td><td class="l">Nash, Philleo. <i>The Excavation of the Ross Mound Group I</i>, BULL. PUBLIC MUSEUM OF MILWAUKEE, Vol. 16, No. 1.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1956 </td><td class="l">Rowe, Chandler. <i>The Effigy Mound Culture of Wisconsin</i>, MILWAUKEE PUBLIC MUSEUM PUBLICATIONS IN ANTHROPOLOGY, No. 3.</td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="l">Lewis Subculture</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1951 </td><td class="l">Cole, F. C. et al. <i>The Lewis Focus</i> in KINCAID, A PREHISTORIC ILLINOIS METROPOLIS, pp. 165-183, University of Chicago, Chicago.</td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="l">Raymond Subculture</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1952 </td><td class="l">Maxwell, Moreau S. <i>Archaeology of the Lower Ohio Valley</i> in Griffin, Ed., COLE ANNIVERSARY VOLUME, ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE EASTERN UNITED STATES, pp. 186-187 and Fig. 100, University of Chicago, Chicago.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1951 </td><td class="l">Maxwell, Moreau S. <i>The Woodland Cultures in Southern Illinois</i>, pp. 78-172, 194-211, Beloit College, Beloit, Wisconsin.</td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="l"><a class="gloss" href="#g_StoneVaultSubculture">Stone Vault Subculture</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1935 </td><td class="l">Thurber, O. D. <i>New Type of <a class="gloss" href="#g_BurialMound">Burial Mound</a> Near Quincy</i> in TRANSACTIONS ILLINOIS STATE ACADEMY OF SCIENCE, Springfield, Vol. XXVIII, No. 2, pp. 67-68.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1910 </td><td class="l">Fowke, Gerard. <i>Antiquities of Central and Southeastern Missouri</i>, BULL. BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY, No. 37, Washington.</td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="l">Tampico Subculture</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1937 </td><td class="l">Cole, F. C. and Deuel, Thorne. <i>Rediscovering Illinois</i>, pp. 191-198, University of Chicago, Chicago.</td></tr>
-<tr class="th"><th colspan="2"><span class="ss">ILLINI TRIBES</span></th></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1934 </td><td class="l">Pease, Theodore Calvin and Werner, Raymond C. THE FRENCH FOUNDATIONS, 1680-1693 (<i>Memoirs of De Gannes</i> by Sieur Deliette) pp. 302-395, Springfield, Illinois.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1958 </td><td class="l">Temple, Wayne C. <i>Historic Tribes, Part 2 of Indian Villages of the Illinois Country</i> by Sara J. Tucker and Wayne Temple, SCIENTIFIC PAPERS SERIES, Vol. II, Illinois State Museum, Springfield.</td></tr>
-<tr class="th"><th colspan="2"><span class="ss">INITIAL (WOODLAND) PHASE</span></th></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1937 </td><td class="l">Cole, F. C. and Deuel, Thorne. <i>Rediscovering Illinois</i> (Red Ochre, pp. 57-69; Black Sand, pp. 69-75, 136-149; Morton, pp. 39-46, 126, 128-130; 102-104, 106-108), University of Chicago, Chicago.</td></tr>
-</table>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_70">70</div>
-<h2 id="c16">CULTURAL CHARACTERISTICS OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL UNITS</h2>
-<table class="extended">
-<tr><th colspan="3">ARCHAEOLOGICAL UNITS</th></tr>
-<tr><th><a class="gloss" href="#g_Artifacts">ARTIFACTS</a><a class="fn" id="fr_20" href="#fn_20">[20]</a></th>
-<th>RECONSTRUCTION OF ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL FEATURES</th>
-<th>RECONSTRUCTION OF RELIGIOUS, ARTISTIC, AND RECREATIONAL FEATURES</th></tr>
-<tr><th colspan="3">PALEO-INDIAN <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">PHASE</a> 50,000(?)-8000 B.C.(?)</th></tr>
-<tr><td><dl class="undent"><dt>Narrow leaf-shaped <a class="gloss" href="#g_Spearheads">spearheads</a></dt>
-<dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Folsom">Folsom</a> points</dt>
-<dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Clovis">Clovis</a> points</dt>
-<dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">Stone</a> hammer (?)</dt>
-<dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">Flint</a> scrapers (?)</dt>
-<dt>Personal ornaments (?)</dt></dl></td>
-<td><dl class="undent"><dt>Thrusting weapons</dt>
-<dt>Simple <a class="gloss" href="#g_Family">family</a> (?)</dt>
-<dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Lineage">Lineage</a> in male line (?)</dt>
-<dt>Big game hunting</dt>
-<dt>Roving habits following herd</dt>
-<dt>Temporary camps</dt>
-<dt>Energy sources for labor, travel and transportation wholly human</dt></dl></td>
-<td><dl class="undent"><dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Religion">Religion</a> based on spirits, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mana">mana</a> and on the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Chief">chief</a> game species hunted (?)</dt></dl></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><th colspan="3"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">ARCHAIC</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">PHASE</a> 8000-2500 B.C.</th></tr>
-<tr><td><dl class="undent"><dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">Stone</a> hammers, rough or pitted</dt>
-<dt>Broad barbed <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Spearheads">spearheads</a></dt>
-<dt>Flint <a class="gloss" href="#g_Dartheads">dartheads</a></dt>
-<dt>Flint scrapers</dt>
-<dt>Flint awls</dt>
-<dt>Chipped choppers</dt>
-<dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Spearthrower">Spearthrower</a> (atlatl) weights</dt>
-<dt>Grooved stone axes (ground)</dt>
-<dt>Ground stone celts</dt>
-<dt>Chipped flint digging tools (hoes)</dt>
-<dt>Small area settlement sites in the open</dt>
-<dt>Rock shelters</dt>
-<dt>Post holes in line</dt>
-<dt>Necklaces and pendants</dt>
-<dt>Plummets</dt>
-<dt>Copper tools</dt>
-<dt>Dog bones</dt>
-<dt>Bone-awls</dt>
-<dt>Whet- or abrading stones</dt>
-<dt>Bannerstones (with cylindrical hole)</dt>
-<dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Flexed">Flexed</a> burials in Medial and Terminal <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a></dt></dl></td>
-<td><dl class="undent"><dt>Projectile weapon</dt>
-<dt>Hunting of deer and small mammals and collecting edible plants, clams, etc.</dt>
-<dt>Technologies: flint-chipping, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Pecking">pecking</a>, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Grinding">grinding</a> and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Polishing">polishing</a> of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a>, grinding and polishing bone, boring bone and stone with <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> drills and with tube, sand and water, making string (from hides and [?] plant-fibers), weaving (?), basket-making (?)</dt>
-<dt>Dog the only domesticated animal</dt>
-<dt>Marriage</dt>
-<dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Family">Family</a></dt>
-<dt>Extended family or <a class="gloss" href="#g_Lineage">lineage</a></dt>
-<dt>&ldquo;Independent&rdquo; local groups</dt>
-<dt>Windbreaks or flimsy shelters</dt>
-<dt>Family hunting territory</dt>
-<dt>Rotating <a class="gloss" href="#g_Hamlet">hamlet</a></dt>
-<dt>Non-political tribe</dt>
-<dt>&ldquo;<a class="gloss" href="#g_FamilyTypeSocialControl">Family-type</a>&rdquo; <a class="gloss" href="#g_SocialControl">social control</a></dt>
-<dt>Puberty rites (Initiation ceremonies)</dt>
-<dt>Tribal elders and temporary headmen</dt>
-<dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Insigne">Insignia</a> possibly as social acceptance of personal achievement, or as family crest</dt></dl></td>
-<td><dl class="undent"><dt>Belief in friendly and ancestral spirits, in <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mana">mana</a> and in revelation by vision or dream</dt>
-<dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_SacredTradition">Sacred tradition</a> (&ldquo;<a class="gloss" href="#g_Mythology">mythology</a>&rdquo;)</dt>
-<dt>The <a class="gloss" href="#g_Shaman">shaman</a>&mdash;intercessor with spirits and healer of sick&mdash;magic medicines</dt>
-<dt>Fertility ceremonies&mdash;to insure abundant game and to perpetuate sacred traditions</dt>
-<dt>Recreational activities and creative arts practiced chiefly in connection with religious ceremonies</dt>
-<dt>Funeral rites for all deceased tribal members</dt>
-<dt>Socially important persons on death given special care and preparation for burial, and possibly buried in a specially selected place</dt>
-<dt>Mourning <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a> for dead</dt>
-<dt>Food and grave offerings left especially for important dead</dt></dl></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><th colspan="3">INITIAL (<a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">WOODLAND</a>) <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">PHASE</a> 1500-500 B.C.</th></tr>
-<tr><td><dl class="undent"><dt>Elongated globular pots with pointed (<a class="gloss" href="#g_Conoidal">conoidal</a>) bases</dt>
-<dt>Copper ornaments</dt>
-<dt>Burial mounds and cemeteries</dt></dl></td>
-<td><dl class="undent"><dt>Probably very similar to <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a></dt>
-<dt>Copper breastplate or gorgets</dt>
-<dt>Socially important persons buried in mounds (?)</dt></dl></td>
-<td><dl class="undent"><dt>Very similar to <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a></dt>
-<dt>Dog graves in burial mounds</dt></dl></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><th colspan="3">ADVANCED (<a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">WOODLAND</a>) <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">PHASE</a> 1000(?)-100(?) B.C.</th></tr>
-<tr><td><dl class="undent"><dt>Numerous storage pits containing acorn and hickory nut remains</dt>
-<dt>Medium-sized settlement sites</dt>
-<dt>Post holes outlining a square area</dt>
-<dt>Post holes outlining a circular or oval area</dt>
-<dt>Flat-bottomed flaring-walled <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> pots (&ldquo;flower pots&rdquo;)</dt>
-<dt>Polished <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> gorgets</dt>
-<dt>Burials in settlement sites</dt></dl></td>
-<td><dl class="undent"><dt>Storage of acorns, nuts and seeds</dt>
-<dt>Larger population concentrations of perhaps a 100 or 150 persons</dt>
-<dt>Semi- to permanent log dwellings, logs upright</dt>
-<dt>Possibly <a class="gloss" href="#g_Insigne">insignia</a> or badges of leadership or individual prowess</dt></dl></td>
-<td><dl class="undent"><dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Religion">Religion</a> probably transitional between <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> and <a class="gloss" href="#g_PlantRaising">plant-raising</a> types</dt></dl></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><th colspan="3"><a class="gloss" href="#g_Classic">CLASSIC</a> (<a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">WOODLAND</a>) <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">PHASE</a> [HOPEWELLIAN] 500 B.C.-500 A.D.</th></tr>
-<tr><td><dl class="undent"><dt>Chipped limonite hoes</dt>
-<dt>Charred maize kernels and cobs (and in Ohio, beans and squash seeds)</dt>
-<dt>Cloth and <a class="gloss" href="#g_FeatherCloth">feather cloth</a> remains</dt>
-<dt>Basketry, matting and colored textile impressions</dt>
-<dt>Marine shell vessels</dt>
-<dt>Tortoise shell dishes</dt>
-<dt>River mussel shell spoons with &ldquo;handles&rdquo;</dt>
-<dt>Excellent polished black and painted pottery with occasional variation of form&mdash;shallow bowls, beakers, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Effigy">effigy</a> and globular shapes</dt>
-<dt>A coarser duty <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> ware with elongated bodies and pointed or flattened bases</dt>
-<dt>Large areas with village refuse and numerous mounds</dt>
-<dt>Post holes outlining an oval or circular area (rare)</dt>
-<dt>Pottery statuettes showing dress and ornaments worn</dt>
-<dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Jewelry">Jewelry</a> of copper, silver, meteoric iron, cut and polished shell beads, small marine <a class="gloss" href="#g_Shells">shells</a>, bears teeth sometimes set with copper, pearls or colorful stones, etc.</dt>
-<dt>Ear ornaments of copper, etc.</dt>
-<dt>Marine shells from south Atlantic and Gulf Coasts of United States</dt>
-<dt>Mica from North Carolina</dt>
-<dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Obsidian">Obsidian</a> from Wyoming (?)</dt>
-<dt>Copper from Lake Superior region</dt>
-<dt>Galena from northwestern Illinois</dt>
-<dt>Native pearls from river clams</dt>
-<dt>Gorgets of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a>, shell and copper (breastplates)</dt>
-<dt>Pearls and ground shell beads distributed over the torso of skeleton</dt>
-<dt>Deer antlers near human skull in grave</dt>
-<dt>Cut maxillaries (more rarely mandibles) of bear or man on skeletons as if worn as pendants</dt>
-<dt><i>Cassis madagascarensis</i> shell vessels</dt>
-<dt>Copper hatchets and adzes etc.</dt>
-<dt>Platform type tobacco pipes</dt>
-<dt>Medium to large &ldquo;dome-shaped&rdquo; burial mounds enclosing</dt>
-<dt>Log (rarely stone) tomb chambers</dt>
-<dt>Bundle burials and ossuaries in mounds with central tomb (northern Illinois)</dt>
-<dt>Cemeteries near mounds (southern Illinois)</dt>
-<dt>Bodies buried generally in <a class="gloss" href="#g_Extended">extended</a> position rarely <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flexed">flexed</a> and often accompanied by pots, weapons and artistic products</dt>
-<dt>&ldquo;Pipes of Pan&rdquo;</dt>
-<dt>Beautifully chipped broad <a class="gloss" href="#g_Spearheads">spearheads</a> of special subtypes</dt>
-<dt>Effigy <a class="gloss" href="#g_Dagger">dagger</a> with sheath made from bears&rsquo; teeth</dt></dl></td>
-<td><dl class="undent"><dt>Planting-raising <a class="gloss" href="#g_Economy">economy</a> supplemented by hunting and collecting</dt>
-<dt>Crops: Maize, beans, squash, tobacco</dt>
-<dt>Weaving of cloth, basket- and mat-making</dt>
-<dt>Clothing: Wrap-around-skirt for women, <a class="gloss" href="#g_BreechCloth">breech cloth</a> for men, supplemented by robes in cold weather, <a class="gloss" href="#g_FeatherCloth">feather cloth</a> robes in ceremonies. Mocassins for women and probably for men.</dt>
-<dt>Large villages (or clusters of villages) as well as small settlements</dt>
-<dt>The <a class="gloss" href="#g_Wigwam">wigwam</a> (for lower classes?)</dt>
-<dt>Possibly log cabin dwellings for highest social class, logs laid horizontal as in tomb chambers</dt>
-<dt>Rise of wealth, rich and extensive trade</dt>
-<dt>Dug-out boats (?)</dt>
-<dt>Two or three social classes seem to be indicated by burial customs</dt>
-<dt>Chiefs&mdash;a political form of government, with some of the clans, possibly bear, wolverine and bobcat, predominant in certain areas</dt>
-<dt>A tribe organized either politically or into clans with subsidiary districts or villages and political or clan chiefs.</dt>
-<dt>Chiefs may have worn deer antler headdresses.</dt>
-<dt>Chiefs probably wore feather headdresses, feather cloth robes, mantles embroidered with pearls <a class="gloss" href="#g_Shells">shells</a> and cut shell beads, and other <a class="gloss" href="#g_Insigne">insignia</a> of office.</dt>
-<dt>Tomb chambers probably for chiefs with relatives and retainers slain to accompany them</dt>
-<dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Chief">Chief</a> person in tomb sometimes woman (May indicate matrilineal descent or simply ranking woman of highest caste)</dt>
-<dt>Maxillary (jaw) pendants worn maybe as trophies of <a class="gloss" href="#g_War">war</a> and hunt, or to indicate clan of a chief (?)</dt>
-<dt>Doubtless the pipe served (as it did later) as a safe conduct to visiting officials, travellers and traders, and a signature and seal to important agreements whether economic, political or intertribal</dt></dl></td>
-<td><dl class="undent"><dt>Probably a <a class="gloss" href="#g_FormalizedReligion">formalized religion</a> based on the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Chief">chief</a> food plant, maize</dt>
-<dt>Regularly appointed priests</dt>
-<dt>The <a class="gloss" href="#g_Priest">priest</a> probably wore feather robes and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Insigne">insignia</a> of rank and position</dt>
-<dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Religion">Religion</a> probably included ceremonies connected with plant- or maize-raising</dt>
-<dt>Deities or gods with special powers related to food-raising, etc.</dt>
-<dt>The spring or planting festival</dt>
-<dt>The green corn or first fruits festival</dt>
-<dt>The harvest festival and perhaps minor <a class="gloss" href="#g_Festivals">festivals</a> revolving about the deer</dt>
-<dt>High-ranking priests were probably of the highest caste and their bodies given special care on death, elaborate funeral ceremonies and burial in the tomb chambers of mounds, with tribal mourning</dt>
-<dt>Beautiful pipes either with or without long wooden items probably figured largely in the religious ceremonies</dt>
-<dt>Shamans probably still practiced the healing <a class="gloss" href="#g_Art">art</a> (and black magic). They probably used herbals instead of mineral medicines</dt>
-<dt>High development of art in pottery, ceramic, copper and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> sculpture, in engraving on bone in personal adornment and technological expertness</dt></dl></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><th colspan="3">FINAL (<a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">WOODLAND</a>) <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">PHASE</a> 200(?)-1000 A.D.</th></tr>
-<tr><td><dl class="undent"><dt>Boatstones and bar &ldquo;amulets&rdquo;</dt>
-<dt>L-shaped pipe, long-stemmed</dt>
-<dt>Crude <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Arrowheads">arrowheads</a></dt>
-<dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Flexed">Flexed</a> and semi-flexed skeletons in <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mound">mound</a> graves and tomb chambers</dt>
-<dt>Except for above, much like <a class="gloss" href="#g_InitialPhase">Initial Phase</a></dt></dl></td>
-<td><dl class="undent"><dt>Spear and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Spearthrower">spearthrower</a> still the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Chief">chief</a> weapon, weights tied (?) to spearthrower</dt>
-<dt>Small hamlets</dt>
-<dt>Bow and arrow known but as yet ineffective as a practical weapon</dt>
-<dt>Otherwise very similar to <a class="gloss" href="#g_InitialPhase">Initial Phase</a></dt></dl></td>
-<td><dl class="undent"><dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Religion">Religion</a> probably with shamans rather than priests and a mixture of Initial and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Classic">Classic</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">Phase</a> religious beliefs and practices and superstitions</dt>
-<dt>Some considerable sanctity probably still attached to tobacco, tobacco smoke and the pipe</dt>
-<dt>Shamans undoubtedly still practiced the healing arts (as well as black magic) and possibly simple religious rites</dt></dl></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><th colspan="3">MIDDLE (<a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">MISSISSIPPI</a>) <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">PHASE</a> 1000-1500 A.D.</th></tr>
-<tr><td><dl class="undent"><dt>Hoes of chipped <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> and numerous digging tools</dt>
-<dt>Charred maize kernels and cobs</dt>
-<dt>Large settlement areas with flat-topped pyramidal mounds, with cabin remains on summits, surrounded by palisade remains in low ridges of earth</dt>
-<dt>Post holes and/or trenches outlining rectangular house floors. Fired clay from <a class="gloss" href="#g_WattleAndDaub">wattle and daub</a> structure, burned house with charred thatch, timbers, rafters, mats, etc.</dt>
-<dt>Fire pits or fireplaces within house</dt>
-<dt>Fine polished black and painted wares with globular and flattened globular bodies, in many shapes&mdash;water bottles, shallow bowls, beakers, ollas or jars and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Effigy">effigy</a> forms</dt>
-<dt>An excellent, dull-gray service ware with similar varieties of shapes</dt>
-<dt>An excellent storage ware of medium to large size, chiefly globular in form</dt>
-<dt>Busycon, marginella, olivella <a class="gloss" href="#g_Shells">shells</a> from south Atlantic and Gulf Coasts</dt>
-<dt>Copper from Lake Superior region</dt>
-<dt>Busycon dippers and drinking cups</dt>
-<dt>L-shaped pipe (&ldquo;equal armed&rdquo; and and medium long-stemmed varieties)</dt>
-<dt>Massive effigy <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> pipes</dt>
-<dt>Skeletons, in <a class="gloss" href="#g_Extended">extended</a> positions, (distributed) in single and multiple graves throughout mounds and in cemeteries</dt>
-<dt>Pottery Vessels, weapon heads, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Jewelry">jewelry</a>, and polished stone discoidals, etc. associated with skeletons</dt>
-<dt>Shell gorgets engraved with realistic and conventional designs</dt>
-<dt>Repoussee copper eagle gorgets or plaques</dt>
-<dt>Copper sheeted ornaments and jewelry of pottery, bone, shell, wood and leather</dt>
-<dt>Polished stone disks or &ldquo;wheels&rdquo;</dt>
-<dt>Ground and squared astragalus bone of deer and elk</dt></dl></td>
-<td><dl class="undent"><dt>Intensive maize growing with other crops supplemented by hunting</dt>
-<dt>Repeating weapon (bow and arrows)</dt>
-<dt>Energy sources for labor and transportation still entirely human</dt>
-<dt>The finer pottery and burials in mounds and cemeteries may reflect class differences. The extension of the pottery shapes from the fine black ware to the less decorative service ware may indicate an improvement of lower class conditions over those in Hopewellian times</dt>
-<dt>Clothing much like Hopewellian in general styles</dt>
-<dt>Large villages, small cities and small villages</dt>
-<dt>Large centers or cities had temples and tribal officers&rsquo; cabins on flat-topped mounds, and were protected by palisades and/or mud walls</dt>
-<dt>Dwellings semi- to permanent, with rectangular floors, vaulted or gabled roofs of thatch, walls consisting of vertical posts, <a class="gloss" href="#g_WattleAndDaub">wattle and daub</a> construction, covered inside and out with mats, sometimes possibly bark-covered. Cabin remains numerous.</dt>
-<dt>Dug-out boats (?)</dt>
-<dt>Wealth considerable. Trade in fewer materials than in Hopewellian</dt>
-<dt>Two or three social classes present in population as in Hopewellian</dt>
-<dt>Probably a political government with tribal and <a class="gloss" href="#g_War">war</a> chiefs and village chiefs. Head tribal <a class="gloss" href="#g_Chief">chief</a> may have been chief <a class="gloss" href="#g_Priest">priest</a> also, or a member of his <a class="gloss" href="#g_Family">family</a> may have filled later office. War chief probably also member of ruling caste (as among Natchez). Other war chiefs probably of other classes, rank based on their past deeds</dt>
-<dt>Tribal and war chief. In some villages, village chief possibly had dwellings on pyramid tops</dt>
-<dt>Headdresses, probably with feathers, and regalia, including feather-cloth robes were probably worn on tribal occasions of importance</dt>
-<dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Calumet">Calumet</a> pipe doubtless served as safe conduct to travellers and visiting officials, as seal and signature to important agreements. <a class="gloss" href="#g_Effigy">Effigy</a> <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> pipes may have been <a class="gloss" href="#g_MiddlePhase">Middle Phase</a> calumet pipe since it had to be smoked with a stem</dt>
-<dt>War parties still of simple or no organization except leader and followers, object to take prisoners but not territory</dt></dl></td>
-<td><dl class="undent"><dt>Religious ceremonial centers or cities existed to which outlying smaller village populations journeyed for religious <a class="gloss" href="#g_Festivals">festivals</a></dt>
-<dt>Priesthood with appropriate dress and regalia</dt>
-<dt>Temples or sacred groves for worship</dt>
-<dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Religion">Religion</a> with deities having special powers relating to maize-growing. Veneration or worship of ancestors</dt>
-<dt>Spring, first fruits, and harvest festivals</dt>
-<dt>Tobacco smoke, tobacco pipes used in ceremonies as incense offerings</dt>
-<dt>Athletic games form part of ceremonies</dt>
-<dt>Shamans still exist but chiefly for healing, etc. as among Hopewellians</dt>
-<dt>High-ranking officials and priests buried in graves in mounds. Usual preparation of body, burial, mourning periods, elaborated proportionately to the rank of the deceased.</dt>
-<dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Art">Art</a> well developed</dt>
-<dt>Games of chance were probably known and played</dt></dl></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><th colspan="3">UPPER <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">PHASE</a> 1100(?)-1600 A.D.</th></tr>
-<tr><td><dl class="undent"><dt>Note: These are fringe groups in relation to Middle and Lower phases, living in more wooded regions perhaps, where game was especially abundant and topography less favorable to plant-raising by a backward <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> and where the social impetus for high cultural development was largely lacking</dt>
-<dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Artifacts">Artifacts</a> are a mixture of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> types</dt>
-<dt>Generally a single pottery ware with both elongated and globular pots is characteristic and there is little other <a class="gloss" href="#g_Specialization">specialization</a> of form</dt></dl></td>
-<td><dl class="undent"><dt>A hunting-collecting <a class="gloss" href="#g_Economy">economy</a> with <a class="gloss" href="#g_PlantRaising">plant-raising</a> probably in garden-like plots</dt>
-<dt>Large and small villages</dt>
-<dt>A social development similar to but simpler than the Middle <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">Phase</a>, probably a combination of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> elements</dt></dl></td>
-<td><dl class="undent"><dt>A <a class="gloss" href="#g_Religion">religion</a> based on <a class="gloss" href="#g_PlantRaising">plant-raising</a> but probably with considerable emphasis on <a class="gloss" href="#g_Chief">chief</a> animals hunted.</dt>
-<dt>Sacred groves and shrines, possibly temples in some of larger villages</dt>
-<dt>No pyramidal mounds</dt>
-<dt>Dead buried in mounds and in cemeteries</dt></dl></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><th colspan="3">CONTACT <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">PHASE</a> (ILLINI) 1673-1833 A.D.</th></tr>
-<tr><td><dl class="undent"><dt>Note: The <a class="gloss" href="#g_Artifacts">artifacts</a> of all tribes in the historic <a class="gloss" href="#g_Period">period</a> probably became gradually much the same regardless of their prior cultural <a class="gloss" href="#g_Status">status</a> due to deterioration of native <a class="gloss" href="#g_Technology">technology</a> and trading of furs for European tools, weapons, cloth, etc.</dt>
-<dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Arrowheads">Arrowheads</a> of chipped <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a>, and native-made of European copper, brass or iron</dt>
-<dt>Numerous trade articles such as glass beads, gun parts, copper or brass kettles, bottles for wine, olives, etc. and other objects of European production</dt>
-<dt>Native <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> molds and cast lead balls (for guns) and native chipped gun flints</dt>
-<dt>Rectangular L-shaped (&ldquo;Siouan type&rdquo;) pipes of catlinite and other stone. Micmac pipes after 1700.</dt></dl></td>
-<td><dl class="undent"><dt>Bow and arrows preferred in <a class="gloss" href="#g_War">war</a> because they could be discharged more rapidly than gun could be loaded and fired. Guns and ammunition often not available</dt>
-<dt>Little knowledge of proper care of guns, and no attempt to manufacture guns and powder, or iron knives, copper kettles, etc.</dt>
-<dt>Society largely disorganized, prestige of chiefs largely a matter of personal prowess and reputation with some regard for earlier methods of appointment and succession.</dt></dl></td>
-<td><dl class="undent"><dt><a class="gloss" href="#g_Religion">Religion</a> practiced by a fraction of tribe but falling into dispute without adequate substitute</dt>
-<dt>Probably appointment and succession of priests more or less regular and based on earlier customs.</dt></dl></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_77">77</div>
-<h2 id="c17">FOOTNOTES</h2>
-<div class="fnblock"><div class="fndef"><a class="fn" id="fn_5" href="#fr_5">[5]</a>All dates, even those determined by radiocarbon methods, should be taken as only roughly approximate.
-</div><div class="fndef"><a class="fn" id="fn_6" href="#fr_6">[6]</a>These dates and those given hereafter refer to the earliest and latest sites known in Illinois for the cultures under consideration. Although supported by radiocarbon dating methods, they are only approximate. Undoubtedly also cultures in one area disappeared while they continued to flourish in another part of the state or in other states.
-</div><div class="fndef"><a class="fn" id="fn_7" href="#fr_7">[7]</a>Generally speaking, each succeeding higher <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> in the area made most of
-the tool and weapon types of their predecessors, adding certain improvements and
-sometimes new types. The Archaic <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a> used <a class="gloss" href="#g_Flint">flint</a> scrapers, chipped flint choppers,
-and native cobblestone hammers as had the Paleo-Indians. The narrow-bladed
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Spearheads">spearheads</a> were occasionally made but the fluting or channel is practically always
-lacking. Polished <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> forms, possibly the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Spearthrower">spearthrower</a>, were new inventions in
-Archaic times.
-</div><div class="fndef"><a class="fn" id="fn_8" href="#fr_8">[8]</a>In the page that follows a tentative reconstruction of the less tangible customs of these <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a> will be presented, based on a study of several tribes now or recently in the Archaic <a class="gloss" href="#g_Status">status</a>. The Archaic <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> as used in this paper refers to those tribes who lived mainly by hunting, supplemented to a degree by collecting native edible plant foods. They are distinguished here from other peoples of the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">Stone</a> Age or non-farming <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stage">stage</a>&mdash;from Big Game Hunters on the one hand (none of whom exist today) and on the other, from Food Stores, who were able by one means or another to store food over one or more seasons and so establish more or less fixed homes. The peoples recently living in the Archaic status include the native tribes of Central and Coastal Australia, the Tasmanians, the Andaman Island tribes, the Terra del Fuegians, the African Bushmen and a number of others.
-</div><div class="fndef"><a class="fn" id="fn_9" href="#fr_9">[9]</a>The Initial Woodland in Illinois is usually considered to consist of three cultural divisions or units, the Black Sand, the Red Ochre and the Morton. The only known Red Ochre sites are mounds which undoubtedly are the burial places of important personages of a cultural group whose campsites and artifact assemblages have not as yet been identified as such. The graves yield a number of artifact types that are identical with those found in Black Sand villages. It is possible the Red Ochre mounds belong to the Black Sand <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a> and that the mounds and special burial customs may have been continued into or adopted by the Morton cultural group and served still later as a framework for the highly elaborated Hopewellian funeral practices.
-</div><div class="fndef"><a class="fn" id="fn_10" href="#fr_10">[10]</a>The narrow-bladed leaf-shaped spearhead, well-chipped and without fluting,
-reminiscent of the general Yuma, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Folsom">Folsom</a> and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Clovis">Clovis</a> shape, are found in the Red
-Ochre <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a> and are worthy of note. This type appears rarely in campsites
-but occurs in relatively large numbers in mounds. Profuse amounts of red ochre
-are found in graves as in Terminal Archaic (Titterington focus) in western Illinois.
-Copper ornaments may indicate Wisconsin (Old Copper <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">Culture</a>) influence.
-</div><div class="fndef"><a class="fn" id="fn_11" href="#fr_11">[11]</a>The Poole village (Pike County) is dated 550 B.C. and the Wilson <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mound">Mound</a>
-(White County) about 89 B.C. The Poole village appears to have been occupied
-from 550 B.C. to 200 A.D.
-</div><div class="fndef"><a class="fn" id="fn_12" href="#fr_12">[12]</a>Civilization, as used in this paper, signifies exhaustive exploitation of the natural resources and accompanying significant elaborations of the social and spiritual aspects (as exemplified by ceremonies, regalia, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Insigne">insignia</a>, <a class="gloss" href="#g_Art">art</a> and extensive architectural structures), accomplished by means of <a class="gloss" href="#g_Specialization">specialization</a> of the existing tools and technologies, with or without fundamental inventive developments. Artisans of the Initial and Final <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a> cultures seem to have practiced all the crafts employed by Hopewellians but failed to produce the beautiful chipped <a class="gloss" href="#g_Spearheads">spearheads</a>, &ldquo;pipes of pan&rdquo;, excellent sculpture in <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a> and pottery, etching in bone, the extensive earthworks and the mounds with timbered burial chambers. Perhaps some additional stimuli&mdash;the introduction of maize or the intensification of its cultivation, a satisfying new <a class="gloss" href="#g_Religion">religion</a> with stirring ceremonies together with intergroup competition&mdash;gave the spiritual impetus that produced the Hopewellian fluorescence.
-</div><div class="fndef"><a class="fn" id="fn_13" href="#fr_13">[13]</a>Specialization was foreshadowed in the Red Ochre <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> but the small
-total of grave offerings discovered to date fail to demonstrate any greater leisure
-than occurs at favorable times among any simple hunting <a class="gloss" href="#g_People">people</a>.
-</div><div class="fndef"><a class="fn" id="fn_14" href="#fr_14">[14]</a>An early <a class="gloss" href="#g_Subculture">subculture</a> termed Old Village preceding the generally known
-Middle <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> (Trappist or Bean Pot) period has been proposed on the
-strength of stratification at the Cahokia village near East St. Louis. Although this
-appears logically sound, the evidence has not been published and no pure Old
-Village site has yet been found and reported upon.
-</div><div class="fndef"><a class="fn" id="fn_15" href="#fr_15">[15]</a>Except where noted as based directly on archaeological evidence, the broad
-cultural features suggested in the rest of this section, are inferred from similar
-customs found generally among tribes in the plant-raising <a class="gloss" href="#g_Status">status</a> without food-draft
-animals. The results were derived by the writer from a study of anthropological
-reports of the following tribes or groups of tribes: Polynesians, Delawares, Natchez
-(and their neighbors) and the western Pueblo Indians. The Pueblos, in their social,
-political and religious customs and <a class="gloss" href="#g_Institutions">institutions</a> have been for seven hundred years
-in a transitional status between the <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> hunters (or possibly &ldquo;<a class="gloss" href="#g_FoodStorers">food storers</a>&rdquo;)
-and a &ldquo;fully-developed&rdquo; plant-raising <a class="gloss" href="#g_Stage">stage</a>.
-</div><div class="fndef"><a class="fn" id="fn_16" href="#fr_16">[16]</a>The archaeological evidence for this section is chiefly from <i>The Fisher <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mound">Mound</a>
-Group</i>, etc. by George Langford in the AMERICAN <a class="gloss" href="#g_Anthropology">ANTHROPOLOGY</a>, Vol.
-XXIX, No. 3, pp. 153-205 (July-September, 1927).
-</div><div class="fndef"><a class="fn" id="fn_17" href="#fr_17">[17]</a>These Indians called themselves Ilini (pronounced Il&acute;-i-nee) or Illini signifying &ldquo;man,&rdquo; in the plural Illiniwek, &ldquo;the men.&rdquo; The French dropped the -iwek and substituted their own ending whence the name Illinois by which they were generally known thereafter. In this booklet Illini will be generally used to designate these tribes, their <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> and language to avoid confusion with other tribes who, like the Sauk, Fox, Kickapoo, Potawatomi, and Miami, have occupied parts of the state and are sometimes called Illinois Indians.
-</div><div class="fndef"><a class="fn" id="fn_18" href="#fr_18">[18]</a>Information given on historic tribes is from notes and manuscript assembled
-by Dr. Wayne C. Temple.
-</div><div class="fndef"><a class="fn" id="fn_19" href="#fr_19">[19]</a>The term <i>calumet</i>, originally applied to the stem of the tobacco pipe, is
-now generally used to designate the pipe and stem. &ldquo;It is fashioned from a red
-<a class="gloss" href="#g_Stone">stone</a>, polished like marble, and bored in such a manner that one end serves as
-a receptacle for the tobacco, while the other fits into the stem; this is a stick two
-feet long, as thick as an ordinary cane, and bored through the middle. It is
-ornamented with the heads and necks of various birds, whose plumage is very
-beautiful. To these they also add large feathers&mdash;red, green, and other colors&mdash;wherewith
-the whole is adorned. They have a great regard for it....&rdquo; (R. G.
-Thwaites, ed., <i>The Jesuit Relations</i>, Vol. LIX, p. 131.) The <a class="gloss" href="#g_War">war</a> calumet differed
-from that of peace and was decorated with red feathers. See <a href="#fig34">Fig. 34</a>, A.
-</div><div class="fndef"><a class="fn" id="fn_20" href="#fr_20">[20]</a>Artifact types having once appeared are likely to appear again in subsequent <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">culture</a> even though rare or even lacking in some intervening
-assemblages (e.g. necklaces of anculosa beads of similarly ground [snail] <a class="gloss" href="#g_Shells">shells</a> found from Medial <a class="gloss" href="#g_Archaic">Archaic</a> through Middle <a class="gloss" href="#g_Phase">Phase</a>; grooved axes from
-Medial Archaic to <a class="gloss" href="#g_Mississippi">Mississippi</a> but rare or lacking in most subcultures and cultures except Archaic and
-Initial <a class="gloss" href="#g_Woodland">Woodland</a>). On account of unwieldiness of complete accumulative lists only new artifact types when they first appear will
-be recorded here. Exceptions: 1) the name of an artifact entered as probably present (indicated by a following ?) will be repeated
-in the first subsequent culture in which definite evidence for it has been reported and 2) when an artifact once reported
-assumes a new form or presumably takes on a new significance (e.g. Archaic hoe becomes a tool of the plant-raisers in <a class="gloss" href="#g_Classic">Classic</a> and
-Middle Phases), it will appear again in the text.
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_79">79</div>
-<h2 id="c18">STORY OF ILLINOIS SERIES.</h2>
-<dl class="undent"><dt>No. 1. Story of Illinois: Indian and Pioneer, by V. S. Eifert.</dt>
-<dt>No. 2. Mammals of Illinois Today and Yesterday, by V. S. Eifert.</dt>
-<dt>No. 3. Exploring for Mushrooms, by V. S. Eifert.</dt>
-<dt>No. 4. Flowers that Bloom in the Spring, by V. S. Eifert.</dt>
-<dt>No. 5. Invitation to Birds, by V. S. Eifert.</dt>
-<dt>No. 6. Man&rsquo;s Venture in <a class="gloss" href="#g_Culture">Culture</a>, by Thorne Deuel.</dt>
-<dt>No. 7. The Past Speaks to You, by Ann Livesay.</dt>
-<dt>No. 8. Common Insects of Illinois, by A. Gilbert Wright.</dt>
-<dt>No. 9. American Indian ways of Life, by Thorne Deuel.</dt>
-<dt>No. 10. Amphibians of Illinois, by Paul W. Parmalee.</dt>
-<dt>No. 11. The Fossils of Illinois, by Carlton Condit.</dt></dl>
-<p class="center"><i>Cost:</i> 25c each; 20c each in lots of 25 or more</p>
-<p class="center"><i>Address all enquiries to the</i> <span class="sc">Museum Director</span>,
-<br /><span class="sc">Illinois State Museum</span>, Springfield, Illinois</p>
-<p class="center">(80513&mdash;6-58)</p>
-<h2>Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes</h2>
-<ul>
-<li>Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.</li>
-<li>Silently corrected a few palpable typos.</li>
-<li>In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by _underscores_.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of American Indian Ways of Life: An
-Interpretation of the Archaeolog, by Thorne Deuel
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AMERICAN INDIAN WAYS OF LIFE ***
-
-***** This file should be named 56304-h.htm or 56304-h.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/6/3/0/56304/
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
- restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
- under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
- eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-</body>
-</html>
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index e299890..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p001.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p001.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index ca63f49..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p001.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p002.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p002.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index a54584c..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p002.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p003.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p003.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 8425a0f..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p003.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p005a.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p005a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 1f1bed2..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p005a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p006.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p006.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 7ae701b..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p006.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p006a.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p006a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 39995a1..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p006a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p007.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p007.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 83e6ecc..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p007.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p008.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p008.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index d5d11a4..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p008.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p008a.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p008a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 54ab4d4..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p008a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p009.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p009.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 96ec3c5..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p009.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p009a.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p009a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index ed8c08e..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p009a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p010.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p010.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index ebdf073..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p010.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p010a.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p010a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 2cd3758..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p010a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p011.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p011.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 6236527..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p011.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p012.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p012.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 222384b..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p012.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p012a.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p012a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index a5f9cc4..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p012a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p013.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p013.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 33eec42..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p013.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p013a.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p013a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index af8e702..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p013a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p013b.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p013b.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index d8502b3..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p013b.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p014.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p014.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 2b8bc6c..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p014.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p015.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p015.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 2ea115c..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p015.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p016.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p016.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index c321b38..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p016.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p017.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p017.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 650b13b..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p017.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p017a.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p017a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 8fff043..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p017a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p017b.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p017b.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index e47b53c..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p017b.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p017c.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p017c.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 808a909..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p017c.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p018.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p018.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index d31f4a2..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p018.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p019.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p019.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index b2146db..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p019.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p019a.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p019a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 7826d5d..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p019a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p020.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p020.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 9ecfb0e..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p020.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p020a.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p020a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 58d9175..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p020a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p021.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p021.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 0d73d73..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p021.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p021a.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p021a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 6da5875..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p021a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p021b.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p021b.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index cf028fd..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p021b.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p021c.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p021c.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index a6cf3f0..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p021c.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p022.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p022.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 0aeadba..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p022.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p023.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p023.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 6b1de60..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p023.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p023a.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p023a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index fc45768..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p023a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p024.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p024.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index d504b65..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p024.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p025.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p025.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 5ec5f2d..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p025.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p025a.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p025a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 2cd7b22..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p025a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p026.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p026.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index e21df0d..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p026.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p026a.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p026a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index edb02f7..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p026a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/56304-h/images/p027.jpg b/old/56304-h/images/p027.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 3a0da5b..0000000
--- a/old/56304-h/images/p027.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ