New Evidence Pertaining to an Alleged Hopewell Mobiliary Clay Human Figurine

Author:

Everhart Timothy D.ORCID,Biehl Stephen M.

Abstract

Abstract Additional information has been identified concerning a fired-clay human figurine analyzed and reported by Bebber and colleagues (2018). Despite this figurine having been discovered within a box labeled “Hopewell Figurine—Hopeton Earthworks,” they argue against a Hopewellian affiliation based on Thermoluminescence (TL) dating, a comparative study, and the inability to firmly establish the specimen’s provenience. A rediscovered letter from Olaf Prufer offers a new site of origin and a more complete chain of custody, which is partially corroborated by photographs curated at the Ohio History Connection and a 1925 Boston Evening Transcript article. With this new information, we dispute Bebber and colleagues’ (2018) interpretation of the figurine’s acquisition, its alleged site of origin, and the conclusions of their comparative analysis. This case study does not support their call for more rigorous authentication of collector-acquired objects; rather, it documents the difficulty in reestablishing the provenience of objects once they have become disassociated.

Publisher

University of Illinois Press

Subject

Archeology,Archeology

Reference27 articles.

1. Bebber, Michelle R., Linda B. Spurlock, David M. Price, and Metin I. Eren (2018) Description and Thermoluminescence (Tl) Dating of an Alleged Hopewell Mobiliary Clay Human Figurine from Hopeton Earthworks, Ross County, Ohio. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 32:112–132.

2. Benn, David W., and Joe B. Thompson (2009) Archaic Periods in Eastern Iowa. In Archaic Societies: Diversity and Complexity across the Midcontinent, edited by Thomas E. Emerson, Dale L. McElrath, and Andrew C. Fortier, pp. 491–564. State University of New York Press, Albany.

3. Caldwell, Joseph R. (1958) Trend and Tradition in the Prehistory of the Eastern United States. Memoir No. 88. Society for American Archaeology, Menasha, Wisconsin.

4. Converse, Robert N. (1966) Ohio Stone Tools. Ohio Archaeologist 16:99–137.

5. Goodman, Ken (1973) A Hopewell Burial Trait. Ohio Archaeologist 23:24–25.

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