ARCHAEOLOGY OF
NORTH AMERICA - - Anthropology 262
Fall 2001 Goodnow
105 MWF 1:15-2:05
Prof. John
Whittaker
Goodnow 207 Extension 3447
Office Hours: MWF
8:30-10:00.
A semester cannot
do justice to all of North America, so this course will focus on several major
regions and themes. Coverage will emphasize three general aspects: 1) Basic culture history ‑‑
what happened in ancient America, prehistoric ways of life; 2) Some knowledge
of American archaeology today ‑‑ methods, goals, theoretical
stances; 3) Particular topics of current or abiding interest throughout the
American continent ‑‑ reconstruction of social systems, trade and
exchange and contacts between prehistoric cultures, the development and spread
of agriculture and its results, the rise and decline of complex organizations,
reconstruction of past environments and the relationships between people and
nature, the destruction of native American cultures after European
colonization, pseudoscientific and political uses of archaeology.
TEXT BOOKS
Fagan, Brian M.
2000 Ancient North America: The
Archaeology of a Continent, 3rd edition. Thames and Hudson, New York.
Chatters, James C.
2001 Ancient
Encounters: Kennewick Man and the First Americans. Simon and Schuster, New
York.
King, Kathleen
1983 Cricket Sings: A Novel of Pre‑Columbian
Cahokia. Ohio University Press, Athens.
Young, Biloine W.,
and Melvin Fowler
2000 Cahokia: The Great American
Metropolis. University of Illinois Press, Urbana and Chicago.
Lekson, Stephen H.
1999 The Chaco Meridian: Centers of
Political Power in the Ancient Southwest. Altamira Press, Walnut Creek, CA.
Magnusson, Magnus
and H. Palsson, trans.
1965 The Vinland Sagas: The Norse Discovery of America. Penguin Books, Baltimore.
OTHER READINGS
Articles
assigned will be on reserve in the library and in the Student Project Room,
Goodnow 304, and in the Classics reading room in ARH. You are encouraged to
Xerox articles from the packets to read at your convenience and to bring to
class. Read ahead for intelligent discussion.
COURSE REQUIREMENTS
2 Exams‑‑25% each
Final exam‑‑25%
Research Paper‑‑25% About 15 pages on any approved topic.
Participation in
class discussions and activities will be considered in grading There will be one part‑day
weekend field class processing wild food plants, and the opportunity to visit
Cahokia Mounds and participate in
an atlatl contest.
SYLLABUS AND
READINGS – Anthro 262
F 8/31 Introduction. Archaeology and
Material Culture: Atlatls.
WEEKEND: (Optional)
Atlatl practice.
M 9/3 American Archaeology.
READ:
-- Fagan pp 16-66, begin Chatters pp 1-118.
W 9/5 PaleoIndian Origins (Routes, Monte
Verde, Pre-Clovis?)
READ:
-- Fagan 68-90, Chatters 119-end.
F 9/7 Clovis First?
Martin’s Model (Real Men and Megafauna).
READ:
--
Martin, Paul 1973 The Discovery of
America. Science 179:969-974.
-- Frison, George C. 1989 Experimental
Use of Clovis Weaponry and Tools on African Elephants. American Antiquity
54(4): 766-783.
(Leave for Cahokia
after classes)
SATURDAY/SUNDAY
Cahokia Atlatl Competition
M 9/10 Late PaleoIndian Cultures
READ:
-- Fagan 91-108
--Wheat
, Joe Ben 1967 A Paleo‑Indian Bison Kill. In New World Archaeology:
Readings from Scientific American. E.B.Zubrow et al. eds. pp.213‑221.
San Francisco: WH Freeman and Co.
(Scientific American January 1967).
W 9/12 Finish PaleoIndians
F 9/14 NO Class – (JW at Fort Osage)
M 9/17 Hunter-Gatherer Ways of Life –
Transformation from the Pleistocene
READ:
-- Fagan Chapters 16 and
17
TUESDAY –
MANDATORY – Evening lecture, Kelly Kindscher on Prairie Plants
W 9/19 Archaeobotany lecture by Mary Adair
Optional:
Lunch before class with Adair (get bag lunch if you are on board)
Optional:
Afternoon field trip to CERA, introduction to prairie plant resources with
Kelly Kindscher and Mary Adair. Van leaves Darby parking lot at 3:15.
Optional:
4:15 presentation, Erica Renaud, Prairie Herbal Remedies. 8:00 Evening panel
presentation by Adair, Kindscher, Renaud.
F 9/21 The Archaic in N and E US ‑‑
"primary forest efficiency"
READ:
--
Winters, H. D. 1968 Value Systems and Trade Cycles of the
Late Archaic in the Midwest. In New
Perspectives in Archaeology S.R. and L.Binford eds, pp. 175-221.
Chicago:Aldine.
-- Doucette, Dianna L. 2001
Decoding the Gender Bias: Inferences of Atlatls in Female Mortuary Contexts. In Gender and the
Archaeology of Death, B. Arnold and N. L. Wicker eds., pp. 159-177.
Altamira Press, Walnut Creek, CA.
M 9/24 The Archaic
in SW and W US ‑‑ Desert Culture, setting the stage. Split-twig figurines.
Read:
--
Fagan Ancient North America
Chapters 12, 13
--
Heizer, Robert F. 1970 The Anthropology of Prehistoric Great
Basin Human
Coprolites.
In Science in Archaeology, 3rd edition. D.Brothwell and E.Higgs eds. pp.
244‑250. New York: Praeger Publishers.
--
Madsen, David 1989 A Grasshopper in Every Pot. Natural
History 7( ):22‑24.
Emslie,
Steven D., Robert C. Euler, and Jim I. Mead 1987 A Desert
Shrine in Grand Canyon, Arizona, and the Role of Split-twig Figurines. National
Geographic Research 3(4):511-516.
W 9/26 "Digger Indians" vs Computer
Jocks ‑‑ archaeology in the Great Basin.
Read:
--
Steward, Julian H. 1955 The Great
Basin Shoshonean Indians: An Example of a Family Level of Sociocultural
Integration. Chapter 6, pp 101-121 in Theory of Culture Change.
--
Thomas, David H. 1973 An Empirical Test for Steward's Model
of Great Basin
Settlement
Patterns. American Antiquity
38(2):155‑176.
--
Bettinger, Robert L. 1977
Aboriginal Human Ecology in Owens Valley: Prehistoric
Change
in the Great Basin. American
Antiquity 42(1):3‑17.
NOTE:
Do
not be intimidated by the statistics in Thomas and Bettinger. Everything is
also explained in words. Read to see how the tests were set up, and the
resulting pictures of Great Basin life.
F 9/28 Acorn Porridge ‑‑ gatherers
in the mountains, hills, and coasts.
Yosemite example.
Read:
--
Fagan, Chapters 10, 11
--
Gifford, E.W. 1951 Californian Balanophagy. In The
California
Indians. R.F.Heizer and
M.A.Whipple eds.pp.237‑242.
Berkeley: University of California
Press.
-- Heizer,
R. and A. Elsasser 1980
The Natural World of the California Indians. Berkeley, Univ.
of California Press. Read pp. 91-101, in Chapter 4.
SATURDAY –
Field day – we will process wild plant foods – acorns or amaranth,
and experiment with some prehistoric technologies
M 10/1 Discuss field day, Archaic in general
W 10/3 Totem Poles,
Potlatches, and Dried Fish ‑‑ the Northwest
Coast "baroque Archaic".
Read:
-- Ames, Kenneth
1992 Household Archaeology of a
Northwest Coast Plank House. Journal of Field Archaeology 19(3):275-290.
--
Daugherty, Richard 1988 Problems
and Responsibilities in the Excavation of Wet Sites [Ozette Site], in Wet
Site Archaeology, B. Purdy ed., pp. 15-29.
F 10/5 Bone Knives, Skin Boats, and Snow
Houses ‑‑ Eskimos
and
others ‑‑ archaic lifeways in the cold.
Read:
--
Fagan Ancient North America Chapters 8, 9
--
Hansen, J.P.H., J.Meldgaard, and J.Nordqvist. 1985 The
Mummies of Qilakitsoq. National
Geographic 167(2): 190‑207.
M 10/8 Film
W 10/10 Arctic
– discuss film and readings
F 10/12 FIRST EXAM
M 10/15 Hunters and
farmers of the Plains
Read:
--
Fagan Ancient North America Chapter 6, 7
--
Bozell, John 1995 Culture, Environment, and Bison Populations
on the Late Prehistoric and Early Historic Central Plains. Plains
Anthropologist 40(152): 145-163.
-- Banks,
K.M. and J.S. Snortland 1995
Every Picture Tells a Story: Historic Images, Tipi Camps, and Archaeology.
Plains Anthropologist 40(152):125-144.
W 10/17 The Southwest: Beginnings, environment,
pit house dwellers,
Introduction of agriculture, diversification of cultures.
Read:
--
Fagan Ancient North America Chapter 13, 14, 15
F 10/19 The Anasazi: Cliff dwellers and
marginal farmers.
Read:
-- Dean, Jeffry S.
1970 Aspects of Tsegi Phase Social
Organization. In
Reconstructing
Prehistoric Pueblo Societies. W.A.Longacre ed. pp. 140‑174.
Albuquerque: Univ.of New Mexico Press.
--
Lekson, Chaco Meridian, pp 1-67.
FALL BREAK BREAK BREAK
M 10/29: Analogy
and inference ‑‑ interpreting social systems in the Southwest.
Read:
-- Anderson, Kieth M. 1969 Ethnographic
Analogy and Archaeological Interpretation.
Science 163:133‑138.
-- Hill, James 1972 A
Prehistoric Community in Eastern Arizona. In Contemporary Archaeology.
M.P.Leone ed.pp:320‑332. Carbondale: Southern Illinois U. Press.
-- Longacre, William A.
1968 Some Aspects of
Prehistoric Society in East Central Arizona. In New Perspectives in Archeology. S.R.Binford and L.R.Binford
eds.pp.89‑102. Chicago:
Aldine.
W 10/31 The Anasazi
Zenith -- Chaco Canyon
Read:
--Finish
Lekson, The Chaco Meridian
F 11/2 Southwest: External relationships and
questions of complexity
READ:
--
McGuire, R. 1980 The Mesoamerican Connection in the
Southwest.
Kiva 46(1‑2):3‑36.
M 11/5 Southwest: Current hot topic: warfare.
Read:
-- War
and Peace in the Southwest (Articles by Lekson, LeBlanc, Turner, Walker) Discovering
Archaeology 1(3):38-54 May/June 1999
W 11/7 SECOND EXAM
F 11/9 Myth of the Moundbuilders, and the
great Davenport controversy
READ:
--
Fagan Chapters 18, 19
--
BEGIN reading King, Cricket Sings and Young and Fowler, Cahokia
M 11/12 Rise of
Woodland Cultures: Midlands and Southeast
READ:
-- Smith, Bruce D. 1995
The Origins of Agriculture in the Americas. Evolutionary Anthropology
3(5):174-184.
W 11/14: Traders,
Missionaries, Chiefs – The Hopewell Interaction Sphere
READ:
--
Fagan Chapter 20
--
Tainter, Joseph 1980 Behavior and
Status in a Middle Woodland Mortuary
Population
from the Illinois Valley. American Antiquity 45(2):308‑312.
F 11/16 Cahokia
– Excavating and Understanding
READ:
--
Young and Fowler Cahokia (to at least p. 164)
M 11/19 Cities,
Colonies, and Death Cults: Life in the Mississippian
READ:
-- Finish Young and Fowler Cahokia
W 11/21 Royal Suns
and Stinkards: Mississippian Social Order
READ:
--
Finish King, Cricket Sings for discussion
-- Dickson, D.Bruce 1981
The Yanomamo of the Mississippi Valley: Some Reflections on Larson (1972),
Gibson (1974), and Mississippian Period Warfare in the Southeastern United
States. American Antiquity 46(4):909‑916.
-- Milner, George R., Eve Anderson, and Virginia G. Smith 1991 Warfare
in Late Prehistoric West-Central Illinois. American Antiquity 56(4):
581-603.
THANKSGIVING
– NO CLASSES FRIDAY
M 11/26 So what do we have in Iowa?
READ:
-- Benn, D.W., E.A. Bettis, and R.C. Mallam1993 Cultural Transformations in the Keller
and Bluff Top Mounds. Plains Anthropologist (Memoir 27) 38(145):53-73.
W 11/28 The Last of
the Mohicans ‑‑ archaeology in the Northeast.
Read:
--
Fagan Ancient North America Chapter 21
--
Tuck, James A. 1971 The Iroquois Confederacy. In New
World Archaeology:
Readings
From Scientific American. E.Zubrow, ed. Pp. 190‑200. (Scientific
American, February 1971)
F 11/30 Vikings in the New World ‑‑
the good, the dubious, and the absurd.
Read:
-- Magnusson, Magnus and Hermann Palsson 1965 The Vinland Sagas: The Norse Discovery of America. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books Ltd.
<read intro and at least one of sagas>
-- Ingstad, Anne Stine 1982
The Norse Settlement of L'Anse aux Meadows, Newfoundland. In Vikings
in the West. Eleonore Guralnick editor, pp 31-37. Chicago: Archaeological
Institute of America.
M 12/3 Delirious
Archaeology ‑‑ Barry Fell and other crackpots.
Read:
--
Fell, Barry 1976 America B.C.
New York: Simon and Schuster. Pages 261-276.
--
Gorner, P. 1980 Plants as Evidence
for Pre‑Columbian Contacts. Early
Man 2(1):19‑22.
W 12/5 Souls,
Slaves, and Rebellion ‑‑ Spanish colonization in the Southwest and
California.
Read:
--
Fagan Ancient North America Chapter 22
F 12/7 Thanksgiving
for Guns ‑‑ European trade and conquest in the east and northwest.
Read:
--
Hume, Ivor Noel 1979 First Look at
a Lost Virginia Settlement. National
Geographic
155(6):735‑767.
--
1982 New Clues from an Old
Mystery. National Geographic161(1):53‑77.
M 12/10 Historic
sites archaeology in America.
Read:
-- Otto, John S.1980 Race
and Class on Antebellum Plantations.
In Archaeological Perspectives on Ethnicity in America: Afro-American
and Asian American Culture History R. Schuyler ed, pp. 3-13. Farmingdale:
Baywood.
-- Crist, Thomas A.J.
1995 Bone Chemistry
Analysis and Documentary Archaeology: Dietary Patterns of Enslaved African
Americans in South Carolina. In Bodies of Evidence, A. Graner ed., pp.
197-219. New York: John Wiley and Sons Inc.
W 12/12 Current Directions in American
Archaeology
PAPER
DUE
F 12/14 Last Class, final discussions and
summaries
Final As Scheduled:
9:00 Tuesday Dec 18