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Tetrahedron baked-clay objects from an early woodland context at the Jaketown site,Mississippi
Authors:Edward R. Henry  Anthony L. Ortmann  Lee J. Arco  Tristram R. Kidder
Affiliation:1. Department of Anthropology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA;2. Geoarchaeology Laboratory, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA;3. Department of Geosciences, Murray State University, Murray, KY, USA;4. GAI Consultants, Inc., Homestead, PA, USA
Abstract:Excavations undertaken in 1951 at the Jaketown site revealed a dense deposit of fragmented and intact pyramid-shaped baked-clay objects (BCOs) at the base of Mound A. This deposit was associated with the site’s Early Woodland component. Recent fieldwork at Jaketown also encountered the same tetrahedron deposit and identified an additional and distinct pit feature filled with the objects. In this article, we present the results of analyses that examine the production, composition, chronology, and function of these enigmatic baked-clay artifacts. Following a hiatus associated with massive flooding in the Mississippi Valley ca. 3200–2850 cal B.P., Jaketown was re-occupied by people who shared ceramic affinities with groups to the south and to the east and, who like many contemporaries, used BCOs as a part of their cooking technology. The tetrahedron deposit represents one of the earliest dated Tchula contexts at ca. 2600 cal B.P., and was used over a short time for a social purpose that brought populations together for food consumption as a means of encouraging cooperation.
Keywords:Jaketown  Poverty Point  baked-clay objects  Tchefuncte  Tchula  Early Woodland period
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