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Poverty Point Objects Reconsidered
Authors:Christopher T Hays  Richard A Weinstein  James B Stoltman
Institution:1. University of Wisconsin-Washington County, 400 University Drive, West Bend, WI, USAchristopher.hays@uwc.edu;3. Coastal Environments Inc., 1260 Main Street, Baton Rouge, LA, USA;4. Department of Anthropology, University of Wisconsin, 5240 W. H. Sewell Social Science Building, 1180 Observatory Drive, Madison, WI, USA
Abstract:In this paper we examine the enigmatic but plentiful hand-molded, baked-clay objects known as Poverty Point Objects (PPOs) from a number of different facets. Although the vast majority of these Terminal Archaic artifacts are found in the Lower Mississippi Valley, they also are found at sites as far north as Clarksville, Indiana, and as far east as the Atlantic Coast of Florida. Although most archaeologists generally assume PPOs were used primarily for roasting food, we consider a variety of other possible functions, including their use in boiling water and as symbolic tokens linking the far-flung Poverty Point culture area. We demonstrate that even though a few other archaeological cultures in the world used round clay balls for cooking, the Poverty Point culture was unique in the care, variety, and standardized forms of its baked-clay objects. We discuss the various PPO types and their possible functions in nine distinct regions in the southeastern United States and, based on our thin-section analyses of 66 samples, we demonstrate that PPOs circulated among different sites in these regions.
Keywords:Southeastern United States  Poverty Point  Exchange  Poverty Point Object (PPO)  Petrographic thin sections
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