Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-pftt2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-21T04:45:33.727Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Eastern Dispersal of Adena*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

William A. Ritchie
Affiliation:
New York State Museum and Science Service, Albany, N.Y.
Don W. Dragoo
Affiliation:
Carnegie Museum, Pittsburgh, Pa.

Abstract

In the upper Ohio Valley, Adena mounds and their burials are less complex than, but essentially similar to, those of the major Adena centers of Ohio and Kentucky. Chronologically, they belong in the middle and late Adena periods. Two Adena sites much farther east have been found on Chesapeake Bay; they are closer in trait inventories and in radiocarbon dates to upper Ohio Valley sites than to Adena sites farther west. A reappraisal of evidence from the Northeast, particularly the Middlesex focus of New York, strongly suggests the movement of Adena people as far as the St. Lawrence River, although the proportion of Adena traits diminishes as distance from the Ohio Valley increases. Still another Adena dispersal, probably contemporaneous with this one, has previously been postulated to account for the Copena complex of Tennessee and Alabama. The cause of these rapid and far-reaching movements was probably the arrival or growth of Hopewell people in Illinois and Indiana and soon after in Ohio.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 1959

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

Adaptation of paper given at the 23rd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology at Norman, Oklahoma, May 3,1958. Condensed from a larger account to be published elsewhere. Published by permission of the Assistant Commissioner, New York State Museum and Science Service, Journal Series No. 31.

We have both had the advantage of a firsthand examination of the Adena materials in the Museum of Anthropology at the University of Kentucky and in the Ohio State Museum, through the courtesy of William S. Webb and Charles E. Snow of the former institution, and Raymond S. Baby at the latter. We also wish to record our appreciation to T. Latimer Ford of the Archeological Society of Maryland for the opportunity of examining the large collection from the West River and Sandy Hill sites at the Maryland Academy of Sciences, and for the loan of photographs and Other data.

References

Arnold, J. R. and Libby, W. F. 1950 Radiocarbon Dates. University of Chicago, Institute for Nuclear Studies, Chicago.Google Scholar
Bache, Charles and Satterthwaite, Linton Jr. 1930 The excavation of an Indian Mound at Beech Bottom, West Virginia. Museum Journal, Vol. 21, Nos. 3-4,. pp. 132–87. University Museum, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Carpenter, E. S. 1950 Five Sites of the Intermediate Period. American Antiquity, Vol. 15, No. 4, pp. 298314. Menasha.Google Scholar
Carpenter, E. S. 1951 Tumuli in Southwestern Pennsylvania. American Antiquity, Vol. 16, No. 4, pp. 329–46. Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Crane, H. R. 1956 University of Michigan Radiocarbon Dates I. Science, Vol. 124, No. 3224, pp. 664–72. Washington.Google Scholar
DeHaas, Wills n.d. The Mound Builders, Their Monumental and Art Remains. MS, Catalog No. 2430, Bureau of American Ethnology, Washington.Google Scholar
Diethorn, Ward 1956 A Methane Proportional Counter System for Natural Radiocarbon Measurements. U. S. Atomic Energy Commission Report, No. NYO— 6628. Washington.Google Scholar
Dragoo, D. W. 1956 Excavations at the Watson Site, 46HK34, Hancock County, West Virginia. Pennsylvania Archaeologist, Vol. 26, No. 2, pp. 5988. Milton.Google Scholar
Fetzer, E. W. and Mayer-Oakes, W. J. 1951 Excavation of an Adena Burial Mound at the Half-Moon Site. West Virginia Archeologist, No. 4, pp. 125. Moundsville.Google Scholar
Ford, T. L. 1958 Adena Traits in Maryland. Eastern States Archeological Federation, Bulletin No. 17, pp. 10-11. Trenton.Google Scholar
Frey, S. L. 1879 Were They Mound-Builders? The American Naturalist, Vol. 13, pp. 637–44. Philadelphia.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greenman, E. F. 1932 Excavation of the Coon Mound and an Analysis of the Adena Culture. Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Quarterly, Vol. 41, No. 3, pp. 366523. Columbus.Google Scholar
Griffin, J. B. 1958 The Chronological Position of the Hopewellian Culture in the Eastern United States. University of Michigan, Museum of Anthropology, Anthropological Papers, No. 12. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Hennen, R. V. 1909 West Virginia Geological Survey, County Reports and Maps. Marshall, Wetzel, and Tyler Counties. Morgantown.Google Scholar
Libby, W. F. 1954a Chicago Radiocarbon Dates, IV. Science, Vol. 119, No. 3083, pp. 135–40. Washington.Google Scholar
Libby, W. F. 1954b Chicago Radiocarbon Dates, V. Science, Vol. 120, No. 3123, pp. 733–42. Washington.Google Scholar
Mason, J. A. 1953 New Discoveries on the Choptank River, Delmarva Peninsula, and their Implications. Eastern States Archeological Federation, Bulletin No. 12, p. 6. Trenton.Google Scholar
Mayer-Oakes, W. J. 1955 Prehistory of the Upper Ohio Valley. Annals of the Carnegie Museum, Vol. 34. Pittsburgh.Google Scholar
Mayer-Oakes, W. J. 1958 Radiocarbon Dates from the Upper Ohio Valley. Eastern States Archeological Federation, Bulletin No. 17, p. 13. Trenton.Google Scholar
Mcmichael, E. V. 1956 An Analysis of McKees Rocks Mound, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania Archaeologist, Vol. 26, Nos. 3-4, pp. 129–51. Milton.Google Scholar
Moorehead, W. K. 1922 Archaeology of Maine. Phillips Academy, Andover.Google Scholar
Norona, Delf 1957 Moundsville's Mammoth Mound. West Virginia Archeologist, No. 9. Moundsville.Google Scholar
Perkins, G. H. 1874 On An Ancient Burial-Ground in Swanton, Vt. American Association for the Advancement of Science, Proceedings, No. 22, pp. 76–100. Salem.Google Scholar
Ritchie, W. A. 1932 The Algonkin Sequence in New York. American Anthropologist, Vol. 34, No. 3, pp. 406–14. Menasha.Google Scholar
Ritchie, W. A. 1936 A Prehistoric Fortified Village Site at Canandaigua, Ontario County, New York. Research Records of the Rochester Museum of Arts and Sciences, No. 3. Rochester.Google Scholar
Ritchie, W. A. 1937 Culture Influences from Ohio in New York Archaeology. American Antiquity, Vol. 2, No. 3, pp. 182–94. Menasha.Google Scholar
Ritchie, W. A. 1938 A Perspective of Northeastern Archaeology. American Antiquity, Vol. 4, No. 2, pp. 94–112. Menasha.Google Scholar
Ritchie, W. A. 1944 The Pre-Iroquoian Occupations of New York State. Rochester Museum of Arts and Sciences, Memoir 1. Rochester.Google Scholar
Ritchie, W. A. 1951a A Current Synthesis of New York Prehistory. American Antiquity, Vol. 17, No. 2, pp. 130–6. Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Ritchie, W. A. 1951b Radiocarbon Dates on Samples from New York State. In “Radiocarbon Dating,” assembled by Frederick Johnson. Memoirs of the Society for American Archaeology, No. 8, pp. 31–2. Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Ritchie, W. A. 1955 Recent Discoveries Suggesting an Early Woodland Burial Cult in the Northeast. New York State Museum and Science Service, Circular 40. Albany.Google Scholar
Schmitt, Karl 1952 Archeological Chronology of the Middle Atlantic States. In Archeology of Eastern United States, edited by Griffin, J. B., pp. 5970. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Solecki, R. S. 1953 Exploration of an Adena Mound at Natrium, West Virginia. Anthropological Papers, No. 40, Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 151, pp. 313–96. Washington.Google Scholar
Swauger, J. L. 1940 A Review of Mr. F. H. Gerrodette's Notes on the Excavation of the McKees Rocks Mound. Pennsylvania Archaeologist, Vol. 20, No. 1, pp. 810. Milton.Google Scholar
Terry, James 1881 Mound-Builders of the St. Lawrence Valley. Evening Post, September 6, 1881, New York.Google Scholar
Webb, W. S. 1939 An Archeological Survey of Wheeler Basin on the Tennessee River in Northern Alabama. Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 122. Washington.Google Scholar
Webb, W. S. and Snow, C. E. 1945 The Adena People. University of Kentucky Reports in Anthropology and Archaeology, Vol. 6, Lexington.Google Scholar
Webb, W. S. and Baby, R. S. 1957 The Adena People —No. 2. Ohio Historical Society, Columbus.Google Scholar
Weslager, C. A. 1942 Ossuaries on the Delmarva Peninsula and Exotic Influences in the Coastal Aspect of the Woodland Pattern. American Antiquity, Vol. 8, No. 2, pp. 142–51. Menasha.Google Scholar
Willoughby, C. C. 1935 Antiquities of the New England Indians. Peabody Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge.Google Scholar