Functional and Stylistic Considerations of Mixed Grog- and Shell-Tempered Late Mississippian Pottery from the Nashville Basin

Author:

Sorresso Domenique C.1ORCID,Duke C. Trevor1,Cobb Charles R.1ORCID,Lieb Brad R.2ORCID,Boudreaux Edmond A.3ORCID,Krus Anthony M.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA

2. Chickasaw Nation, Ada, Oklahoma, USA https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7534-1227

3. Department of Anthropology and Middle Eastern Cultures, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, Mississippi, USA

4. Department of Anthropology and Sociology, University of South Dakota, Vermillion, South Dakota, USA

Abstract

Abstract Mississippian period ceramic assemblages in the Nashville Basin region of Tennessee are traditionally viewed as being overwhelmingly shell tempered. Our petrographic analyses of 30 ceramic sherds from three Middle Cumberland sites have revealed, however, the presence of grog, or crushed potsherds, in shell-tempered pastes in over 40% of our specimens. In our study, serving vessels are often tempered with both shell and grog, with one bowl rim containing solely grog. Cooking vessels tend to be tempered with coarse shell and contain only incidental grog. Grog tempering alongside shell has been only occasionally noted elsewhere in the regional literature, but the lack of its widespread recognition may be due to the difficulty of identification without the assistance of a petrographic microscope. It is not clear whether the addition of small grog particles to a shell-tempered paste offers any immediate functional advantages. Other studies suggest that grog temper could improve the workability of the clay, may reduce thermal shock, and may enhance a vessel's resistance to mechanical stress. The strong correlation of fine grog and shell temper with bowls, however, may constitute a low-visibility horizon marker for an extensive swath of the Late Mississippian culture area.

Publisher

University of Illinois Press

Subject

Archeology,Archeology

Reference68 articles.

1. Beahm, Emily Lynne (2013) Mississippian Polities in the Middle Cumberland Region of Tennessee. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia, Athens.

2. The Early Contact Period in the Black Prairie of Northeast Mississippi;Boudreaux,2020

3. Pots as Tools;Braun,1983

4. The Civil Cooking Pot: Hominy and the Mississippian Standard Jar in the Black Warrior Valley, Alabama;Briggs;American Antiquity,2016

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