Fifield Site

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Fifield Site
USA Indiana location map.svg
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Location in Indiana
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Location in United States
Locationon Damon Run Creek near Babcock, Indiana
Coordinates 41°34′20″N87°06′18″W / 41.57222°N 87.10500°W / 41.57222; -87.10500 Coordinates: 41°34′20″N87°06′18″W / 41.57222°N 87.10500°W / 41.57222; -87.10500
Area4 acres (1.6 ha)

The Fifield Site (Pr-55) is located on Damon Run Creek in Porter County, north-western Indiana. It is classified as a late prehistoric, single-component Upper Mississippian Fisher village.

Contents

History of archaeological investigations

Initial excavations were conducted by Robert Skinner in 1949. Follow-up excavations were undertaken by Robert Reichert from 1950 through 1959. Charles Faulkner examined collections from these excavations and performed an analysis which was published in 1972. [1]

Results of Faulkner’s Analysis

The excavations yielded features, Prehistoric artefacts, animal bone, and plant remains. [1]

Features

Approximately 45 features were encountered during excavations. Most were reported as basin-shaped, storage-refuse pits. There were 8 features showing firing in the bottom that were interpreted as roasting pits. [1]

Several post moulds were uncovered during the Reichert excavations. No house patterns were discerned but Reichert felt that the patterns of post molds indicated structures with rounded walls. [1]

Animal bone

Approximately 2,713 animal bones were recovered. The most common types of animal remains were deer, dog, elk, beaver, raccoon, bear, bison and turkey. [1] These bones were not modified into tools like the bone tools described in the Artifacts section below, and may be considered food remains.

Artifacts

Artifacts recovered from the site included: [1]

Reichert's excavations uncovered a cache of domestic implements fashioned from bone and antler, overlain by a layer of what appeared to be red ochre: [1]

These implements would have been used for domestic activities such as processing animal hide, sewing reed mats and making clothes. The cache may have had ceremonial significance because of the presence of red ochre, which was known in early Historic times to be used in a ceremonial context. [1]

Some of the most prominent and diagnostic non-pottery artifacts are summarized and/or illustrated here:

MaterialDescriptionImageQtyFunction / useComments / associations
Chipped stoneSmall triangular points (aka Madison points) Fifield projectile points.jpeg 104Hunting/fishing/warfareAlso known as “arrowheads”; are thought to be arrow-tips for bows-and-arrows. The usage of the bow-and-arrow seems to have greatly increased after c. A.D. 1000, probably as a result of increased conflict. [2] [3]
Chipped stoneBiface blades/knives Fifield biface knives.jpeg 16Domestic function / cutting applicationsTypical of Upper Mississippian sites, particularly Huber and Oneota (Orr focus)
Chipped stoneUniface humpback end scraper Fifield humpback scrapers.jpeg 22; all but 2 are bifacially flakedDomestic function / processing wood or hidesTypical of Upper Mississippian sites, particularly Huber and Oneota (Orr focus)
Chipped stoneDrills Fifield drills.jpeg 20 double-pointed; 5 expanding-hafting areaDomestic function / processing wood or hides2 types are present; double pointed (left) and expanded base (right), which are both common types in Upper Mississippian contexts
StoneArrowshaft straightener4Domestic function / straightening arrowshafts for bows-and-arrowsTypical at Upper Mississippian sites
AntlerAntler projectile points; socketed and tanged5; 4 barbed and 1 socketedHunting/fishing/warfareThe tanged or barbed type is characteristic of Fisher; the unbarbed type is more typical of Oneota
AntlerAntler harpoon Antler harpoon.jpeg 1FishingAlso recovered from the Fisher site
BoneDeer cannon bone beamer9Domestic function / hide-working toolCommonly found at Fisher and Langford sites
BoneBison scapula hoes Fifield bison scapula hoe.jpeg 3Domestic function / Agricultural-horticultural or general digging toolCommon at Fisher and Oneota sites; they may have been used to dig out the pit features present at Fifield.
BoneBird bone needles4Domestic function / sewing mats or clothingCommon at other Upper Mississippian sites.
AntlerAntler comb or hairpin1Personal Adornment and/or Ceremonial functionCommon at Fort Ancient Madisonville focus sites; may have been used for personal adornment and/or as part of a costume for a ceremony
AntlerAntler cylinders / game pieces10Entertainment functionThese have been found at Fisher, Huber, Langford and Oneota (especially Grand River focus and Lake Winnebago focus) and may have been used in a gambling game. Gambling was noted to be a popular pastime among the early Native American tribes.
StoneEqual-arm type pipe fragment Fifield pipe.jpeg 1Ceremonial-Recreational function / pipe smokingThis type of pipe has also been recovered at the Fisher and Anker sites.
CopperCopper pendant Fifield copper pendant.jpeg 1Personal adornment or Ceremonial functionMay be part of a larger, broken item that was fashioned into a new ornament
CopperCopper serpent Fifield copper serpent.jpeg 1Art piece or Religious functionSimilar copper serpent figurines have been found at other sites in the American Midwest region: several Oneota Orr focus sites in Iowa; [4] the Anker Site near Chicago, Illinois; [5] the Summer Island site in Michigan; [6] and the Madisonville site in Ohio. [7] The Orr focus sites, Madisonville and Summer Island all have early European trade goods associated, indicating these figurines were still being made at the time of European contact.
PotsherdSherd pendant Sherd pendant.jpeg 1Art piece or Religious functionThis sherd pendant with the “weeping eye” motif is also indicative of a late prehistoric to early Historic time placement. The weeping eye motif on shell mask gorgets has been observed at several Middle Mississippi sites; [1] at the Anker site near Chicago, Illinois; [5] and the Dumaw Creek site in Oceana County, Michigan. [8] It appears one of the Fifield residents copied this design on a potsherd and made a pendant out of it.
PotsherdSherd disc1UnknownThe circular sherd disc is a trait of late prehistoric Oneota culture. It has been found at the Zimmerman site in Illinois, in an early Historic context, indicating these objects were still being made at the time of European contact. [1] [9]

Fisher ware pottery

After 1000 AD, there was increased interaction and influence from the Mississippian cultures of the Mississippi River Valley. The local cultures in the Great Lakes region and surrounding areas influenced by the Mississippians are designated as Upper Mississippians by archaeologists. Some of the cultures designated as Upper Mississippian are the Oneota complex with its various foci. Fisher is closely related to Oneota and some archaeologists consider it to be a focus of Oneota. [2]

Fisher ware was first described at the Fisher Mound site in northeastern Illinois near the mouth of the Illinois River. [10] It has also been noted at the Anker [5] and Boumanville [11] sites near Chicago, Illinois, and the Griesmer site in Indiana. [1]

This pottery is characterized by shell tempering, predominantly cordmarked surfaces, trailed or incised decoration and straight, excurved or flaring rims. Notched lips and rim lugs are also common. [10] [5] [11] [1]

Three specific types of Fisher ware were identified at Fifield: [1]

Miniature vessels were also present at Fifield. These are common at other sites in the area and could be interpreted as “toy” pots or attempts by young children to practice making pottery. [1]

Several sherds of Langford Ware, an Upper Mississippian culture from northwestern Illinois, were also present. These sherds were grit-tempered, with either cordmarked or smoothed-over cordmarked surfaces, and are interpreted as trade ware. [1]

Significance

The Fifield site is a single-component Upper Mississippian Fisher site. The pottery styles, along with the presence of certain artifacts such as the copper serpent, sherd disk and weeping eye sherd pendant, indicate the site was occupied almost to the time of European contact. Based upon the type of plant remains and animal bones, and the presence of numerous storage pits, the excavators felt that the season of occupation was fall and winter, and that the site was a semi-permanent agricultural village. No evidence of maize was recovered, but there was no effort made by the excavators to systematically collect plant remains. [1]

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Faulkner, Charles H. (1972). "The Late Prehistoric Occupation of Northwestern Indiana: A Study of the Upper Mississippian cultures of the Kankakee Valley". Prehistory Research Series. Indianapolis, Indiana: Indiana Historical Society. V (1): 1–222.
  2. 1 2 Mason, Ronald J. (1981). Great Lakes Archaeology. New York, New York: Academic Press, Incl.
  3. Lepper, Bradley T. (2005). Ohio Archaeology (4th ed.). Wilmington, Ohio: Orange Frazer Press.
  4. Wedel, Mildred M. (1959). "Oneota Sites on the Upper Iowa River". Missouri Archaeologist. 21 (2–4): 1–181.
  5. 1 2 3 4 Bluhm, Elaine A. and Allen Liss (1961). "The Anker Site in Chicago Area Archaeology" (Bulletin No. 3). Urbana, Illinois: Illinois Archaeological Survey: 89–137.{{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. Brose, David S. (1970). The Archaeology of Summer Island: Changing Settlement Patterns in Northern Lake Michigan. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Museum of Anthropology, Anthropological Papers No. 41.
  7. Hooton, Earnest A. and Charles C. Willoughby (1920). "Indian Village Site and Cemetery near Madisonville, Ohio". Papers of the Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology. 8 (1).
  8. Quimby, George Irving (1966). "The Dumaw Creek Site: A Seventeenth Century Prehistoric Indian Village and Cemetery in Oceana County, Michigan". Fieldiana. 56 (1): 1–91.
  9. Brown, James A., ed. (1961). The Zimmerman Site: A Report on Excavations at the Grand Village of the Kaskaskia, LaSalle County, Illinois. Springfield, Illinois: Illinois State Museum, Report of Investigations, No. 9.
  10. 1 2 Langford, George (1927). "The Fisher Mound Group, Successive Aboriginal Occupations near the Mouth of the Illinois River". American Anthropologist. 29 (3): 153–206. doi: 10.1525/aa.1927.29.3.02a00260 .
  11. 1 2 Fenner, Gloria J. (1961). "The Boumanville Site, in Chicago Area Archaeology" (Bulletin No. 3). Urbana, Illinois: Illinois Archaeological Survey: 37–56.{{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

Further reading