Bladelets and Middle Woodland Situations in Southern Ohio

Author:

Miller G. Logan

Abstract

Abstract Chipped-stone bladelets are common at Middle Woodland sites throughout Ohio and many other areas of the midcontinent, reflecting both broad patterns and local diversity characteristic of situations as explored in this special issue. In previous studies, bladelets were often viewed through dichotomous categories such as sacred and secular. In this article, I attempt to break down these artificial oppositions imposed by archaeologists and refocus the interpretation of these artifacts using notions of situations and assemblages. I argue that doing so provides new insights into the use of bladelets at sites throughout southern Ohio and beyond. The related concepts of citations and capacities help illustrate the connections between bladelets and other material elements of Middle Woodland institutions. Examination of bladelet use illustrates how situations lead to shared conditions of action while individuals engage in multiple outcomes during manifestations of Middle Woodland ceremonies.

Publisher

University of Illinois Press

Subject

Archeology,Archeology

Reference45 articles.

1. Blosser, Jack (1996) The 1984 Excavations at 12D29S: A Middle Woodland Village in Southeastern Indiana. In A View from the Core: A Synthesis of Ohio Hopewell Archaeology, edited by Paul Pacheco, pp. 54–68. Ohio Archaeological Council, Columbus.

2. Braun, David P. (1986) Midwestern Hopewellian Exchange and Supralocal Interaction. In Peer Polity Interaction and Socio-political Change, edited by Colin Renfrew and John F. Cherry, pp. 117–126. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

3. Burks, Jarrod (2004) Identifying Household Cluster and Refuse Disposal Patterns at the Strait Site: A Third Century A.D. Nucleated Settlement in the Middle Ohio River Valley. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Ohio State University, Columbus.

4. Byers, A. Martin (2004) The Ohio Hopewell Episode: Paradigm Lost and Paradigm Gained. University of Akron Press, Akron, Ohio.

5. Case, D. Troy, and Christopher Carr (2008) Documenting the Ohio Hopewell Mortuary Record: The Bioarchaeological Data Base. In The Scioto Hopewell and Their Neighbors, edited by D. Troy Case and Christopher Carr, pp. 335–342. Springer, New York.

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