识别哈瓦那中部林地居住地点的铜工具组合:对原材料来源、组合内容和工具制造的观察

IF 0.4 Q1 Arts and Humanities Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology Pub Date : 2022-10-01 DOI:10.5406/23274271.47.3.02
T. Emerson, K. Farnsworth
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在霍普维尔时代,没有任何一种材料像铜一样在中大陆广泛传播或使用。俄亥俄州Scioto Hopewell土堆中的大量铜制品沉积物,通常被视为地位和仪式背景,为这一时期铜利用的后续解释增添了色彩。随后的研究记录了霍普维尔太平间中铜在整个大陆的分布,同时重点关注了铜作为五大湖西部遥远进口的重要性。在20世纪80年代和90年代进行伊利诺伊州居住区铜使用研究之前,太平间铜主导了哈瓦那传统与霍普维尔关系的讨论。然而,对业余收藏的检查和对哈瓦那82个居住点的金属探测调查发现了一系列铜工具和废料,表明存在广泛的铜加工行业。很明显,哈瓦那传统地区的人们参与了实用铜工具和装饰品的积极生产,这表明该行业是以当地的漂移铜矿为基础的。这让人想起了早期的铜工具生产区域模式,同时强调了少数铜太平间内含物的奇异特征,如耳轴、头板和胸板、潘管道等,从而表明了两种截然不同的铜估价体系。
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Recognizing Copper Tool Assemblages at Middle Woodland Havana Habitation Sites: Observations on Raw Material Sources, Assemblage Content, and Tool Fabrication
During the Hopewell era, no material was so widely spread or employed across the midcontinent as copper. Large deposits of copper artifacts in the Ohio Scioto Hopewell mounds, in what are usually deemed as status and ritual contexts, have colored subsequent interpretations of copper utilization during this period. Subsequent research documented copper's distribution across the midcontinent in Hopewell mortuary practices, while focusing on its significance as a distant import from the western Great Lakes. Until regional Illinois habitation copper-use studies were undertaken, in the 1980s and 1990s, mortuary copper dominated discussions of Havana Tradition Hopewell connections. However, examinations of avocational collections and metal-detecting surveys of 82 Havana habitation sites have yielded an array of copper tools and scrap revealing the presence of an extensive copper-working industry. It has become clear that regional Havana Tradition people were involved in the active production of utilitarian copper tools and ornaments, suggesting that the industry was based on local drift copper deposits. This harkens back to earlier regional patterns of copper tool production, while emphasizing the exotic character of the few copper mortuary inclusions—such as ear spools, headplates and breastplates, panpipes, and so forth—thus suggesting two very different systems of copper valuation.
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The Other Large Bifaces: Late Mississippian Woodworking Tools from Southwestern Indiana The Hodges Site (12MG564) and the Emergence of the Oliver Phase in the White River Valley, Indiana Recognizing Copper Tool Assemblages at Middle Woodland Havana Habitation Sites: Observations on Raw Material Sources, Assemblage Content, and Tool Fabrication Maritime Least Cost Path Analysis: Archaic Travel Routes in the Upper Great Lakes The Precontact Archaeology of the Michigan State University Campus and the Campus Archaeology Program (CAP)
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