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Revision of Hopewellian trading patterns in Midwestern North America based on mineralogical sourcing

January 1, 1998

Traditional exchange models purport that all Hopewell-style platform pipes of flint clay were quarried and crafted in southern Ohio by Native Americans from a local kaolinitic flint clay, and that those found in the Havana Hopewell region of western Illinois were transported from southern Ohio along an Ohio River trade network. However, the results of this study show that berthierine-rich flint clay from northwestern Illinois was the only source for pipestone artifacts of the Havana Hopewell region. We base this on (1) X-ray diffraction analysis of quickly made smears, (2) spatiotemporal distribution of artifacts in the Sterling-Rock Falls, Illinois area, and (3) petrographic, X-ray fluorescence, Mo??ssbauer, and SEM/EDX analyses. This understanding of the source of this material made it possible to visually identify the source of large numbers of curated artifacts as having been made of material from the Sterling-Rock Falls area. This discovery has implications for understanding cultural and material exchange among Hopewellian societies. Also, it is the first report of berthierine flint clay and of flint clay that formed before the evolution of terrestrial plants. ?? 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Publication Year 1998
Title Revision of Hopewellian trading patterns in Midwestern North America based on mineralogical sourcing
Authors R.E. Hughes, T.E. Berres, D.M. Moore, K.B. Farnsworth
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Geoarchaeology - An International Journal
Index ID 70020029
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse