The Holly Bluff style |
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Authors: | Vernon James Knight George E. Lankford Erin Phillips David H. Dye Vincas P. Steponaitis Mitchell R. Childress |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Anthropology, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, USA;2. Retired;3. Coastal Environments, Inc., Baton Rouge, LA, USA;4. Department of Earth Sciences, University of Memphis, Memphis, TN, USA;5. Department of Anthropology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA;6. Independent Scholar |
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Abstract: | We recognize a new style of Mississippian-period art in the North American Southeast, calling it Holly Bluff. It is a two-dimensional style of representational art that appears solely on containers: marine shell cups and ceramic vessels. Iconographically, the style focuses on the depiction of zoomorphic supernatural powers of the Beneath World. Seriating the known corpus of images allows us to characterize three successive style phases, Holly Bluff I, II, and III. Using limited data, we source the style to the northern portion of the lower Mississippi Valley. |
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Keywords: | Style iconography Mississippian shell cups multidimensional scaling |
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