Modeling Kansas City Hopewell Developments and Regional Social Interactions: A Multisite Ceramic Analysis and New AMS Radiocarbon Ages

IF 0.4 Q1 Arts and Humanities
S. Keehner, Mary J. Adair
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

ABSTRACT In the 1950s, the Kansas City Hopewell (KCH) was modeled as a phenomenon originating from a migration of people or diffusion of ideas from Middle Woodland Hopewell communities in Illinois, a model that greatly influenced subsequent research. Two lines of evidence were instrumental in the formation of this model: ceramics and chronology. This study presents the results of 24 newly obtained accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) dates associated with a typological analysis of ceramics from three KCH sites, plus Early Woodland sherds from several regional sites. The results indicate that the KCH developed in part from local Early Woodland populations (ca. 500–1 BC) and was chronologically equivalent to Havana Hopewell in Illinois (ca. 100 BC–AD 400). Early and Middle Woodland ceramics also share affinities with types in regions to the north, south, and east of Kansas City, indicating that KCH origins and interactions were more multiregional and complex than the traditional model suggests.
模拟堪萨斯城霍普韦尔发展和区域社会互动:多地点陶瓷分析和新的AMS放射性碳年龄
在20世纪50年代,堪萨斯城霍普韦尔(KCH)被建模为起源于伊利诺伊州中部林地霍普韦尔社区的人口迁移或思想传播的现象,这一模型极大地影响了随后的研究。有两种证据有助于形成这种模式:陶瓷和年代。本研究展示了24个新获得的加速器质谱(AMS)数据的结果,这些数据与来自三个KCH遗址的陶瓷类型学分析有关,加上来自几个地区遗址的早期林地碎片。结果表明,KCH部分从当地早期林地人群(约公元前500-1年)发展而来,在时间上与伊利诺伊州的哈瓦那霍普韦尔(约公元前100年-公元400年)相当。早期和中期林地陶瓷也与堪萨斯城北部、南部和东部地区的类型有相似之处,这表明KCH的起源和相互作用比传统模型所表明的更加多区域和复杂。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
1.50
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