1 post tagged “united states”
The Archaic period has been a working concept within
archaeology, and even other social sciences, for well over half a century.
Long thought of as the stage between the initial peopling of the Americas
(sometime in the late Pleistocene) and that of large-scale societies
(a few hundred to a thousand years ago), the Archaic has long been a
period of simplistic understanding and characterization. One of the
most influential characterizations of this period was developed by archaeologists
Gordon Willey and Philip Phillips in their now classic Method
and Theory in American Archaeology (Classics Southeast Archaeology).
Defined “as the stage of migratory hunting and gathering cultures
continuing into environmental conditions approximately those of the
present” (Willey and Phillips 1958:107), it is only recently that
this characterization has been challenged by new archaeological evidence.
In a recent issue of the SAA Archaeological Review, Kenneth E. Sassaman
introduces several papers that discuss new archaeological evidence that
is shifting our understanding of the period, particularly for the Southeast
of North America. Key points of these papers, as articulated by Sassaman
include:
1) Although the concept of a pan-continental Archaic period in North America has fallen into disfavor, there still exists a tendancy among American archaeologists to gloss the enormous diversity of things Archaic within the broader tropes of “hunter-gatherer” and “primitive” that have shaped anthropological inquiry since the late nineteenth century.
Read the other Archaic Period archaeological southeastern key points here.