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Understanding the Occupational History of the Monongahela Johnston Village Site through Total Artifact Design

The period after A.D. 1100 in western Pennsylvania was a dynamic period in history occupied by diverse populations with rapidly changing social interactions. The Johnston site located in Indiana County represents one of the most important village sites during this period. Through a combination of ceramic analyses and radiocarbon dating previous hypotheses posited about this site are investigated. Archaeologists have relied on final twist direction of cordage impressions on shell-tempered and cord-marked ceramics to argue for population amalgamation between social groups from northwestern and southwestern Pennsylvania. In addition, ceramics recovered from the site have been used to define the date range for occupation at the site and for the Johnston phase of the late Middle Monongahela period. By combining radiocarbon dating and ceramic analyses these previous hypotheses are investigated. Specifically the usefulness of using cordage twist as a sole attribute to define social groups at the intrasite level is challenged. / Dr. Sarah Neusius
Dr. Beverly Chiarulli
Dr. Phillip Neusius

  1. http://hdl.handle.net/2069/444
Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:IUP_Thesis/oai:dspace.lib.iup.edu:2069/444
Date03 August 2011
CreatorsMitchell, Seth Thomas
Source SetsIndiana University of Pennsylvania Thesis
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Format27539057 bytes, application/pdf

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