Title: What Do I already know about Prehistoric Cultures
1Welcome to the The American Archaic
University of Minnesota Duluth
Tim Roufs
2Text Mexico(5th ed) Page 9
Mexico (5th ed.). Michael D. Coe and Rex
Koontz. NYThames and Hudson, 2002, p. 9.
3Text Mexico, page 9
www.d.umn.edu/cla/faculty/troufs/anth3618/mastages
_handout.html
4Mexico, Ch. 3, The Archaic Period
www.d.umn.edu/cla/faculty/troufs/anth3618/mastages
_handout.html
5The Maya, Ch. 2, The Earliest Maya
www.d.umn.edu/cla/faculty/troufs/anth3618/mastages
_handout.html
6http//www.d.umn.edu/cla/faculty/troufs/anth3618/m
a_timeline.htmllithic
7Ancient Middle AmericaArchaicTim Roufs
- Archaic
- Period of Incipient Agriculture
- Early Gathering Cultures
8http//weber.ucsd.edu/dkjordan/arch/mexchron.html
Archaic
9Six Important Points for the Archaic Stage
After Willey and Phillips, Method and Theory in
American Archaeology. Chicago University of
Chicago Press, 1970.
10Archaic Stage
1. Archaic
includes numerous historical cultures whose
origins and connections have not been, or cannot
be traced . . .
11Archaic Stage
. . . in Mexico, however, there appear to be
connections with early cultures in the Southwest
U.S.A. and in Texas
12http//www.odci.gov/cia/publications/factbook/refe
rence_maps/north_america.html
13http//www4.hmc.edu8001/humanities/basin/tribes.g
if
14Archaic Stage
2. Natural Context
there is a continuation of hunting and gathering
cultures into environmental conditions
approximating those of the present
15Archaic Stage
3. There is a dependence on smaller and perhaps
more varied game than in the Lithic stage . . .
and, in many places, an increase in gathering
16Archaic Stage
4. Stone implements and utensils used in the
preparation of wild vegetable foods first appear
in this stage . . .
Many of these were shaped by use rather than
design . . .
17(No Transcript)
18Tehuacán,Puebla
19(No Transcript)
20Archaic Stage
. . . although in many Archaic stage cultures,
techniques of stone-grinding and stone-polishing
were known
21Archaic Stage
5. Domesticated plants are found in some Archaic
contexts . . . including maize
22Tehuacán,Puebla
Richard S. Mac Neish, Scientific American, 1964.
23 100
seriation
Richard S. Mac Neish, Scientific American, 1964.
24Archaic Stage
. . . but the presence of these food plants is
not evidence for agriculture in the full sense of
that term
25Archaic Stage
. . . as near as the archaeologist is able to
tell, the Archaic cultures in question had only
slight economic dependence upon early domesticates
26Archaic Stage
. . . where domestic plants seem to occur, for
some reason societies seem to have been composed
of smaller populations than the other Archaic
cultures
27Archaic Stage
6. Finally, it is difficult to set meaningful
date limits to the Archaic stage . . .
7000 1800 / 1600 B.C. ? 5000 1800 / 1600
B.C. ?
28http//www.d.umn.edu/cla/faculty/troufs/anth3618/m
a_timeline.htmllithic
29Archaic Stage
. . . at the earlier end of the range there is
obvious overlap between Archaic cultures and
those whose technical inventory and environmental
context is of a Lithic Stage type
30http//www.d.umn.edu/cla/faculty/troufs/anth3618/m
a_timeline.htmllithic
31Tehuacán,Puebla
32Archaic Stage
. . . thus, some Archaic cultures seem to
antedate 7000 B.C. (which is the very
approximate and arbitraryupper limit for the
Lithic Stage)
33Archaic Stage
- at the Conquest (A.D. 1520) many cultures still
existed at the Archaic stage - this does not, however, impute to them
backwardness
34Archaic Stage
Discussion
35Archaic Stage
after 7000 B.C. several changes mark a shift to a
way of life similar to the Desert Culture in
western North America
36http//www.d.umn.edu/cla/faculty/troufs/anth3618/m
a_timeline.htmllithic
37http//www4.hmc.edu8001/humanities/basin/tribes.g
if
38Archaic Stage
several essential economic and social changes
marked the shift to a Desert Culture way of
life . . .
39Archaic Stage
the Desert Culture way of life includes the
migratory hunting and gathering cultures which
continue into environmental conditions
approximating those of the present time
40Archaic Stage
- dependence is on smaller and more varied fauna in
place of the large animals . . . - there is also an apparent increase in gathering
41Archaic Stage
- sites begin to yield large numbers of stone
implements and utensils that are probably
connected with the preparation of wild vegetable
foods - but these are usually shaped by use rather than
by design, and are not therefore in the same
category of ground and polished stone
42Tehuacán,Puebla
43Archaic Stage
- these specialized techniques of gathering and
preparing wild foods suggest a time in which
early experimentation in plant domestication
could take place - especially in areas where collected plants
consisted mainly of hard-shelled seeded forms
44Archaic Stage
as a result, some of the first indications of
New World agriculture are found in the Archaic
Stage
45Tehuacán,Puebla
46Archaic Stage
- but the mere presence of agriculture
- is not of primary significance from a
- more abstract developmental point of
- view
- even though agriculture is of enormous importance
prehistorically in terms of the growth of
particular American patterns of culture
47Archaic Stage
- agriculture became important only when . . .
- it can be seen as dominant in the
- economy and . . .
- it is integrated socially to produce stable
settlement patterns - (which become the basis of the Preclassic Stage)
48Archaic Stage
- the high quality of chipped stone tools produced
by many of the Lithic cultures are not maintained
by most of the Archaic peoples - older forms, however, persist -- especially in
the chopper and scraper categories
49Archaic Stage
- articles of bone, tooth, horn, and ivory were
present in the Lithic, but they were not abundant - they do, however, assume a major importance in
assemblages of the Archaic - for the first time they vie with stone as
materials for many implements and ornaments - points, knives, scrapers, tubes, beads, and
pendants
50http//www.texasbeyondhistory.net/harrell/artifact
s.html
51http//www.texasbeyondhistory.net/harrell/artifact
s.html
52Archaic Stage
- articles of bone, tooth, horn, and ivory . . .
- in general were used for objects which had no
counterpart in stone - awls, perforators, and needles
- indicative of basketry and skin working
53Archaic Stage
- new tools . . .
- the drill, makes its appearance
- the increased variety of forms is matched by an
increase in the variety of materials used
54http//www.texasbeyondhistory.net/harrell/artifact
s.html
55Archaic Stage
articles of bone, tooth, horn, and ivory are
sometimes nown as the osteodontokeratic culture
56Glossary
osteodontokeratic
- osteo "bone"
- donto "tooth"
- keratic "horn"
57Glossary
osteodontokeratic
- osteo "bone"
- donto "tooth"
- keratic "horn"
58A spatulate tool with beveled edges, made from a
bison or deer rib.The Harrell Site, Texas
http//www.texasbeyondhistory.net/harrell/artifact
s.html
59Flint knapping tools made of antler and bone.
The Harrell Site, Texas
http//www.texasbeyondhistory.net/harrell/artifact
s.html
60Glossary
osteodontokeratic
- osteo "bone"
- donto "tooth"
- keratic "horn"
61http//www2.sfu.ca/archaeology/museum/ask/a6.htm
62Glossary
osteodontokeratic
- osteo "bone"
- donto "tooth"
- keratic "horn"
63http//www.arts.uwaterloo.ca/ANTHRO/rwpark/ArcticA
rchStuff/TLArts.html
64Archaic Stage
- a large number of tools indicate that fishing was
important to Archaic peoples - including fishhooks and harpoons
65Unfinished bone fishhook. The Harrell Site, Texas
http//www.texasbeyondhistory.net/harrell/artifact
s.html
66Archaic Stage
- shells make their first appearance as a used
material - mostly for articles of personal adornment
- especially in beads and pendants
67An array of beads and ornaments made of
different materials, including an Olivella shell
bead. The Harrell Site, Texas
http//www.texasbeyondhistory.net/harrell/artifact
s.html
68A large mussel shell with heavy edge wear and
polish likely was used as a tool, possibly a
hoe. The Harrell Site, Texas
http//www.texasbeyondhistory.net/harrell/artifact
s.html
69Archaic Stage
- burials first appear on this
- level
- flexed burial in round graves
- partial cremation
- and the use of red ocher in burial rites
- have a wide distribution on this levels
70http//www.eaststeubenville.com/people.html
71Archaic Stage
- burials first appear on this level
- this does not mean that the people of the Lithic
had no formalized modes of disposing of their
dead . . - but simply that it is only in the Archaic and
later stages that we can say what they were
72Archaic Stage
- habitations change from nomadic to semi-nomadic
- people made greater use of caves and rock
shelters
73Tehuacán
74http//www.mexicodesconocido.com.mx/english/zonas_
arqueologicas_y_museos/oriente/detalle.cfm?idsec4
6idsub0idpag1774
75Archaic Stage
- habitations change from nomadic to semi-nomadic
- accumulations of refuse from (probably) brief and
intermittent occupations suggest a degree of
stability and continuity that may - or may not be accurate
76Archaic Stage
- habitations change from nomadic to semi-nomadic
- houses of sufficient durability to leave
permanent traces in the ground are generally
lacking - generally there are no storage pits
- but Cuello has both
77Cuello
78Cuello, Belize
79Archaic Stage
- settlements are characteristically small in
extent - but frequently they were used for considerable
time - i.e., at least some Archaics are living
differently than the earlier nomadic hunting
peoples of the Lithic
80Archaic Stage
- of doubtful status as artifacts but
characteristic of Archaic sites in the Americas
are masses of fire-cracked stones - used in pit roasting and stone boiling
81http//www.texasbeyondhistory.net/pecos/archeology
.html
82Archaic Stage
hunting techniques and tools were adapted to
exploit the smaller fauna that replaced the big
game animals
- thus projectile points were eventually made
smaller and broader
83Tehuacán,Puebla
84Archaic Stage
people lived in extended family groups who were
engaged in cyclical wandering in search of food
- probably numbered no more than 25 30
- but they were not truly nomadic
85Archaic Stage
they needed few material possessions
- but remains of basketry and milling stones appear
86http//www.desertusa.com/ind1/ind_new/ind2.html
87Tehuacán,Puebla
88Archaic Sites include
- Nogales phase Tamaulipas
- La Perra phase Tamaulipas
- Diablo phase Tamaulipas
- Ocampo phase Tamaulipas
89Tamaulipas
90http//www.d.umn.edu/cla/faculty/troufs/anth3618/m
a_timeline.htmllithic
91Archaic Sites include
92Tepexpán
93Tepexpán
94Minnesota man (Pelican Rapids, MN)
ca. 10,000 or ??? B.C.
Tepexpán man
http//www.odci.gov/cia/publications/factbook/refe
rence_maps/north_america.html
95Minnesota Man
www.co.otter-tail.mn.us/history/countyhistory_mnwo
man.php
96Archaic Sites include
Tehuacán Valley Coxcatlán Cave
97Tehuacán
98(No Transcript)
99Tehuacán
100http//www.d.umn.edu/cla/faculty/troufs/anth3618/m
a_timeline.htmllithic
101Archaic Sites include
Cuello
102Cuello
http//www.ancientmexico.com/
103Cuello
104Maya Trade Routes
105http//www.d.umn.edu/cla/faculty/troufs/anth3618/m
a_timeline.htmllithic
106Archaic Sites include
Santiaguillo
107Archaic Sites include
Yanhuitlán
108Yanhuitlán
109http//www.d.umn.edu/cla/faculty/troufs/anth3618/m
a_timeline.htmllithic
110Archaic Sites include
- Santa Marta Rock Shelter (Chiapas)
- important for agriculture
111Sta. Marta Rock Shelter
112http//www.d.umn.edu/cla/faculty/troufs/anth3618/m
a_timeline.htmllithic
113What happens next?
114(No Transcript)
115And after that?
116Time line of New World Civilizations.
Understanding Physical Anthropology and
Archaeology, 8th ed., p. 479.
117End of The Archaic Continue on to The Preclassic