Jonas Short Mound under excavation. The man on the right is standing at about the original ground surface. Most of the mound seems to have been built in a single construction episode. TARL archives.
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Perforated elk teeth (preserved by proximity to copper artifacts) and quartz crystals from Jonas Short. Five of the crystals were shaped and perforated or grooved to serve as pendants. TARL archives.
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These large dart points and knives from the Jonas Short Mound were obviously made by a master knapper and used as ritual items. The flake scars (chipping marks) on the extraordinary yellow point have been completely obliterated by polishing, underscoring its symbolic value. TARL archives.
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Large dart points knives as they were found within the Jonas Short Mound. TARL archives.
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The approximate limits of the Woodland culture areas defined within the main Caddo Homeland and some of the better known Woodland sites dating between about 500 B.C. and A.D. 800. Graphic by Dee Ann Story.
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Test excavations underway in 1963 at the Late Woodland Pace site on the Louisiana side of Sabine River just above Toledo Bend Reservoir. TARL archives.
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The hallmark of Fourche Maline culture is a well-developed ceramic tradition known for its plain and minimally decorated flat-bottomed vessels shaped like flower pots. |
Late Woodland pottery vessels from the Fanny Snipes site on the Sulphur River near Texarkana. The jar on the left resembles French-Fork Incised, a Coles Creek type, but was probably made locally. On the right is a typical "flowerpot" Williams Plain flat-bottomed jar, one of the hallmarks of Fourche Maline culture. TARL archives.
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Typical Fourche Maline Williams Plain jar from the Crenshaw site, Miller County, Arkansas. Photo by Frank Schambach.
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The hallmark of Mossy Grove culture, its sandy paste ceramic tradition, was probably introduced or inspired by the Tchefuncte culture in the lower Mississippi Valley. |
Flared-rim Williams Plain jar from Fourche Maline contexts at the Crenshaw site, Miller County, Arkansas. Photo by Frank Schambach.
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The Mill Creek culture encompasses the period from about 200 B.C. to A.D. 800 and is contemporaneous with Fourche Maline and Mossy Grove, but different from either. |
Double-bitted stone axes are often found in Fourche Maline sites. These examples are from Red River County, Texas. TARL archives.
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Only a few of the burials at Coral Snake Mound were definitely accompanied by grave goods, but small numbers of exotic artifacts were placed into the mound as caches or discrete clusters. Some artifact caches and other isolated artifacts may actually represent burials in which the bones did not survive. Regardless, these artifacts clearly represent purposeful deposits of offerings honoring the dead. Among the unusual artifacts are rolled copper beads, copper gorgets, perforated raccoon teeth, two Marksville pottery vessels, two boatstones (ground and polished artifacts shaped like a boat), and a unique quartz figurine. The captions of the accompanying photographs provide further details. Three radiocarbon dates and the associated Marksville pottery vessels indicate that Coral Snake Mound was in use during Middle Woodland times in the early centuries A.D. Some effort was made to locate contemporary habitation areas that might have been associated with the mound/cemetery, but none were found. Scattered artifacts found in and near the mound such as pottery sherds, flint flakes, and broken dart points, probably represent occupational debris, but the mound site itself appears to be mainly a cemetery. The precise cultural affiliation of Coral Snake is debated. While it could represent an as-yet poorly known local Woodland group, Arkansas archeologist Frank Schambach argues that Coral Snake Mound is part of Fourche Maline culture. Another somewhat similar site is the Jonas Short Mound located on the Angelina River under what is today Sam Rayburn Reservoir, some 40 miles (70 kilometers) west of Coral Snake. The Jonas Short Mound was 29 meters (94 feet) in diameter and 2.4 meters high (almost 8 feet) and was built over the cremated remains of at least two individuals placed into a shallow pit. Charcoal and scorched earth suggest that the cremation took place within the pit, followed soon by the building of the mound, probably in two stages. The cremated remains were accompanied by two copper bracelets. Five artifact caches were found in the mound fill that may have accompanied burials (if so, the bones decayed completely) or may be offerings honoring the cremated individuals. Among the unusual artifacts in these caches are boatstones, perforated elk teeth, a copper reel-shaped gorget, large chipped stone knives (bifaces), an extraordinary polished dart point, and 11 quartz crystals, five of which were shaped and perforated or grooved to serve as pendants. The date of Jonas Short Mound is uncertain, but it probably also dates to the Middle Woodland period as well and may be a bit earlier than Coral Snake judging by the reel-shaped copper gorget. Similar artifacts are known from early Marksville burial mounds and in burial mounds of the Adena culture of the Ohio River valley far to the northeast. The presence of plain sandy paste pottery and the absence of Marksville pottery or bone- or grog-tempered pottery suggests that Jonas Short was created by a different culture than that of Coral Snake (or possibly by the same culture in earlier days). It falls within the area where the Mossy Grove culture existed, as discussed in Part 2. Schambach thinks Jonas Short is also part of the Fourche Maline tradition. Other Middle Woodland sites with burial mounds occur in the vicinity of the Great Bend of the Red River in northwest Louisiana and southwest Arkansas. In fact, there are probably as many Middle Woodland mound sites in the eastern part of the Caddo Homeland as there are in the LMV, although few are well known. The Bellevue Mound and related sites in northwest Louisiana were thought by earlier researchers to represent a phase of the Marksville culture. Such LMV-centric views are no longer widely held today, as archeologists in the region see much evidence of local developments that parallel those of the lower Mississippi Valley. Arkansas archeologist Frank Schambach sees these sites as early expressions of Fourche Maline culture (see Part 2). In Arkansas, Shane's Mound and Red Hill Mound are examples of burial mounds with similar grave offerings to those found at Coral Snake including a Marksville stamped bowl containing copper beads (Red Hill). Both mounds are associated with nearby habitation areas (middens) and both are attributed to Fourche Maline. Interestingly, both the Bellevue Mound and the Cicero Young Mound (in Arkansas) were built over the remains of structures, a practice which is common at Caddo sites. These may be early examples of mounds that mark civic and ritual centers. This is hard to demonstrate because what little work has been done at most of these sites has focused only on the mounds themselves. The succeeding Late Woodland era in the lower Mississippi valley is divided into two periods, Baytown (about A.D. 500 to 750) and Coles Creek (about A.D. 750 to 1000), and is a time of great change. Compared to Marksville, there are more sites, much more ceramic variability, more densely concentrated populations, and fewer graves with exotic offerings. Three new developments during the Late Woodland in the LMV are particularly important: the gradual adoption and increasing importance of agriculture, the replacement of the atlatl and dart with the bow and arrow around A.D. 700, and the construction of planned villages and civic/ritual centers ("mound centers") with flat-topped structural "platform" mounds arranged around an open plaza. These complex and interlinked changes coincide with (and are no doubt related to) comparable developments in many parts of the Midwest and Southeast including the Caddo Homeland. We would argue that by about A.D. 800, developments in the LMV no longer overshadow and anticipate those in the Caddo area. Said differently, Caddo culture emerges as a distinct pattern during the Late Woodland period. Part 2: Woodland Cultures in and near the Caddo HomelandThe above map shows the approximate location of some of the major archeological cultures dating to the Woodland period between about 500 B.C. and A.D. 700. As we have seen, there was a succession of Woodland cultures within the LMV spanning this 1200-year era. Unfortunately, the chronology of Woodland developments in the Caddo area is poorly known except by general comparison to the LMV sequence. Somewhat clearer is the geographical distribution of some of the major Woodland cultural patterns in and near the Caddo Homeland as shown in the accompanying map. Before discussing the three Woodland cultures whose boundaries partially overlap with the area that would soon become the main Caddo Homeland, brief mention will be made of three related patterns, two comparatively well known and the other newly proposed and a matter of debate. The influence of Middle to Late Woodland cultures of the LMV seems to have extended well up the Red River into the southeastern part of what would become the Caddo Homeland. Based on data from excavations at the Fredericks, Black Lake Bayou, and Lemoine sites (among others) in the vicinity of Natchitoches, Louisiana, archeologist Pete Gregory has defined the Fredericks phase (about A.D. 400-700) and succeeding Lemoine phase (A.D. 700-900). Sites of both phases are dominated by what appear to be locally made LMV pottery types. By A.D. 1000, Early Caddo sites dominate the area, but it is not clear whether this represents the movement of people or the spread of the Caddo cultural tradition into the Natchitoches area. The Late Woodland Plum Bayou culture existed in the alluvial lowlands along the lower Arkansas and White rivers and the adjacent Mississippi Valley in eastern Arkansas between A.D. 700-1000. The best-known Plum Bayou site is Toltec Mounds, a major civic/ritual mound center containing 18 earthen mounds enclosed by a C-shaped pattern of earthen berms and ditches. Ten of the mounds at Toltec are arranged around a rectangular plaza centered on the largest mound, which is about 15 meters (50 feet) high. Plum Bayou culture developed out of Baytown and is considered by many to be the northern part of the LMV Late Woodland pattern. Interaction with Fourche Maline and early Caddo peoples to the west and southwest is indicated by similarities in pottery and by imported lithic (stone) materials from the Ouachita Mountains in southwest Arkansas. Schambach proposed the name "Mulberry River" to characterize the Woodland culture that inhabited the valleys of the middle Arkansas River and its tributaries to the north of the Ouachita Mountains in eastern Oklahoma and northwestern Arkansas. Mulberry River culture is said to be ancestral to the Arkansas Basin ("Northern Caddoan") culture that developed in the same area after A.D. 900 and created the spectacular Spiro site. While some Oklahoma archeologists apparently consider the area part of the Fourche Maline Woodland culture, Schambach sees Mulberry River as being distinct from Fourche Maline. He points to differences in artifacts, settlement patterns, and adaptation that set the two cultures apart. The most compelling line of evidence comes from a study of dental patterns that suggests the peoples living in the Arkansas Valley were genetically distinct from those living in the main Caddo Homeland from Woodland times forward. Be this as it may, Oklahoma archeologist Don Wyckoff sees no archeological basis for considering local Woodland sites to be anything other than Fourche Maline. As discussed below, the name and the original definition of Fourche Maline culture is based on work done along tributaries of the Arkansas River in eastern Oklahoma. Published statements by various Oklahoma archeologists including Jerry Galm, Robert Bell, and Wyckoff state that Fourche Maline sites are only found in the valleys of the northern Ouachita Mountains, while the Arkansas Valley, proper, was unoccupied until after A.D. 700. Suffice it to say that the Mulberry River culture concept is still in its infancy and may not survive. Proposed archeological concepts are often like that—some stick and some sink. Happily, here we are far more concerned with the Woodland cultures of the main Caddo Homeland south of the Arkansas River Valley. Fourche Maline CultureThe most distinctive Woodland cultural pattern in the main Caddo Homeland is the long-lived Fourche Maline (pronounced foosh-ma-lean) culture tradition. It is named after a creek in the Wister Valley of southeastern Oklahoma where the "type" sites (those first used to define the pattern) were excavated by WPA teams in the late 1930s. These sites had distinctive thick, dark middens called "black mounds" that contained a mix of Archaic, Woodland, and Northern Caddoan artifacts as well as burials. Beginning in the 1970s, the Fourche Maline concept has been expanded and redefined by Frank Schambach to characterize the Woodland cultures in southeastern Oklahoma, southwestern Arkansas and adjacent areas of Louisiana and Texas. Beginning dates are uncertain, but the earliest Fourche Maline sites probably date to Early Woodland times, before 500 B.C., while the latest date to A.D. 800 (or later), a span of at least 13 centuries. Schambach has divided the Fourche Maline time span into seven numbered periods that correspond to the LMV sequence. He has also defined six Fourche Maline phases covering different subareas and spans of time. Because the dating for these phases (and the periods, too) is based mainly on cross-dating with LMV ceramics, other archeologists, such as Story and Perttula, regard them as highly conjectural. Outside the Wister Valley, the best archeological evidence of Fourche Maline culture comes from the Red River and Ouachita River drainages in southwestern Arkansas where some 700 related sites have been recorded. Southwestern Arkansas and adjacent areas of Oklahoma, Louisiana, and Texas appear to have been the core area of Fourche Maline culture where some of the oldest, largest, and most intensively occupied sites are found. Fourche Maline sites are known for their thick, black middens resulting from habitation and trash accumulation over lengthy periods of time. It is assumed that villages once stood in these places, although little direct evidence of dwellings have been found, probably because Fourche Maline houses were not very substantial. While most sites are relatively small, larger villages covering 2 hectares (about 5 acres) also occur. The hallmark of Fourche Maline culture is a well-developed ceramic tradition known for its plain and minimally decorated flat-bottomed vessels. The most common form is a jar shaped like a flower pot. Fourche Maline ceramics typically have thick walls and are tempered with a variety of materials including grog, bone, grit, and sand. The most common type is Williams Plain followed by Cooper Boneware and Ouachita Plain. Excavations of Fourche Maline middens often yield thousands of pottery sherds. Trade pieces of Marksville and Coles Creek pottery are known, but more common are locally made imitations of LMV pottery. Other characteristic artifact types include Gary dart points and, after about A.D. 500, expanding stem arrow points, as well as boatstones, double-bitted "axes" (possibly gardening hoes), clay platform pipes, and seed grinding and nutting stones. The economy of Fourche Maline peoples is still something of a mystery. They obviously continued the Archaic hunting and gathering tradition and lived in part off of deer, turkey, and hickory nuts as well as many other wild plants and animals. The mysterious part is the extent to which they were gardeners. It seems likely that, through time, Fourche Maline peoples began growing various native crops including the starchy and oily plants that were domesticated first in the American Midwest as well as squash and bottle gourds. While little direct evidence of gardening so far has been recovered from Fourche Maline sites, this is probably due mainly to the recovery techniques used by archaeologists. (Small charred seeds are only preserved in favorable conditions and can only be recovered by using a specialized soil processing method called flotation.) Indirect evidence of horticulture includes the presence of double-bitted "axes" (possible garden-hoe blades), the dense refuse accumulations (black middens) at many Fourche Maline sites, and the increasing evidence that neighboring Woodland groups living east, north, and west of the area were part-time gardeners. Fourche Maline burial practices are generally similar to Woodland patterns in the Midwest (Adena-Hopewell). In the Red River valley of southwestern Arkansas, the earliest burial mounds (ca. 200-100 B.C.) were built on bluff tops away from habitation areas. These small domed mounds were built over crematoria (places where cremations took place), a common Early and Middle Woodland pattern in the Eastern Woodlands. Some cremated remains and grave offerings are found within the mounds, but cremation cemeteries such as the Johnny Ford site suggest that bodies were burned in one place and interred in another. Somewhat later mounds such as Shane's mound covered central pits containing cremated remains but also have small offering deposits (caches) of exotic Hopewell-related artifacts similar to those found at Jonas Short Mound, 150 miles to the southwest. (While Schambach considers Jonas Short to be a Fourche Maline site, Story considers the pottery found there to be that of Mossy Grove culture.) Between A.D. 100-300, burial mounds such as those at Red Hill and McKinney in the Red River valley were no longer built over crematoria. Instead they have secondary deposits of cremations (McKinney) that are associated with exotic Hopewell-related artifacts, and Marksville Stamped bowls. Although neither of these mounds is well known, Schambach believes they are similar to Coral Snake Mound, which he also considers to be a Fourche Maline site. The latest Fourche Maline burial mounds are Mounds C and D at the Crenshaw site and are thought to date to A.D. 600-700. These mounds were built in stages and have deposits of skulls and mandibles with pottery vessels and other offerings that were placed on the surfaces of the mound stages and then covered by thin clay caps. Schambach argues that Fourche Maline culture represents the mother culture from which the Caddo cultural tradition develops and sees Fourche Maline peoples as the direct ancestors of later Caddo peoples. There is much evidence to support this view. The most obvious is the fact that the core area of Fourche Maline closely coincides with the core area of the Caddo Homeland coupled with the absence of a gap in time between the two cultural traditions. There are seemingly abrupt changes in behavior including new burial patterns, ceramic styles, increased mound building, increasing use of mounds as building platforms, ritual destruction and capping of public buildings, and the introduction of maize agriculture. Nonetheless, these appear to represent local social and economic developments rather than the movement of a new people into the area. While these changes may seem abrupt, the cultural transformation from Fourche Maline to Early Caddo probably transpired over several hundred years (ca. A.D. 700-900) and it may well be more complicated than implied by the mother culture idea. There are two other Woodland cultures in east Texas that probably contributed to the development of the Caddo cultural tradition, Mossy Grove and Mill Creek. Mossy Grove CultureThe Woodland period archeological pattern in southeast Texas along the upper Gulf coast and inland into the southern part of the Piney Woods looks quite different from Fourche Maline. Many of the differences obviously relate to the contrasting environments. Southeast Texas has greater rainfall, higher humidity, a longer growing season, more swamps, less oak-hickory forest, and, of course, the estuaries, bays, and barrier islands along the Gulf Coast. These environmental differences resulted in dissimilar economic patterns, access to raw materials (scarcity of stone, for instance), shelter needs, and so on. The area is also less conducive to farming. Farther inland toward what would become the southern boundary of the Caddo Homeland, away from the relatively narrow river valleys, there are deep sandy soils that are not very fertile and dry out quickly during droughts. From early historic records we know that much of Southeast Texas, particularly along the coast and major bay systems (and adjacent inland areas), was occupied by non-Caddoan speakers such as the Bidai, Atakapa, and Akokisas peoples. The archeological record suggests that the historically known patterns began developing thousands of years ago, certainly by Woodland times. In the early 1990s, Dee Ann Story called attention to the archeological similarities across much of Southeast Texas, especially the shared sandy paste pottery tradition, and termed this pattern the Mossy Grove cultural tradition. While the Mossy Grove tradition can be traced into historic times, our interest here is on the Woodland or "Early Ceramic" period, beginning by at least 200 B.C. and probably earlier. Unfortunately for our present purpose, the archeological sequence of the coastal Mossy Grove culture is much better known than that present within the southern part of the area we recognize as the Caddo homeland. The hallmark of Mossy Grove culture, its sandy paste ceramic tradition, was probably introduced or inspired by the Tchefuncte culture in the LMV as is evident from finds of Tchefuncte-like pottery at both coastal and Inland Mossy Grove sites. In contrast to the thick-walled, flat-bottomed plainwares of Fourche Maline, Mossy Grove peoples created relatively thin-walled, round- or conical-bottomed vessels. The double-bitted axes and polished stone artifacts found in Fourche Maline sites are absent. Mossy Grove projectile points include small Gary and Kent dart points and, after about A.D. 500-600, expanding stem arrow points of the Friley and Scallorn types. These artifacts and various knives (bifaces) and heavier chopping tools are made of poor quality local materials, often petrified wood. Another local raw material for making chipped stone tools is Manning glass, a fused volcanic material that outcrops in a narrow east-west band near the southern limit of the Caddo Homeland just north of Huntsville, Texas. In the northern Mossy Grove area, along the upper Angelina and Neches River valleys, Woodland sites are very common and account for 25-50 percentage of the known sites. The increase in sites compared to the Archaic period is also coupled with a shift in settlement location from upland areas and higher ridge tops to the low sandy ridges ("interfluves") overlooking the confluences of small drainages. Archeologist Jim Corbin has speculated that this shift may be tied to the beginnings of gardening, although so far there is no direct evidence of early domesticated plants. The sandy, acidic sediments of the area make for poor preservation of organic materials. Mill Creek CultureIn East Texas to the west and south of the Red River and its tributary, the Sulphur River, Woodland archeological sites seem to differ significantly from the Fourche Maline pattern. For one thing there are far fewer Woodland sites and those that are present are smaller and do not seem to have the characteristically thick, black middens with abundant Williams Plain pottery. The relatively small amounts of pottery that the East Texas sites have is more varied; it is typically thinner than Williams Plain and more often decorated with incised lines, punctations, and other designs. Archeologist Tim Perttula has argued that these and other differences suggest that a distinct cultural pattern existed in the western frontier of the Eastern Woodlands in the Pineywoods of East Texas and the Post Oak Savanna. The Mill Creek culture encompasses the period from about 200 B.C. to A.D. 800 and is contemporaneous with Fourche Maline and Mossy Grove, but different from either. Sites of this culture are known mainly in the Big Cypress Creek and Sabine River basins in East Texas, but apparently continue eastward into northwest Louisiana. Because relatively few Mill Creek sites have been recognized and investigated by archeologists, the concept must be regarded as quite tentative. (Like Mulberry River culture, Mill Creek culture is an idea that may or may not become widely accepted.) Perttula hypothesizes that Mill Creek groups moved around more (i.e., were less sedentary) than Fourche Maline groups, based on the presence of only relatively small sites and small middens. The fact that ceramics are not abundant at Mill Creek sites compared to Fourche Maline or Mossy Grove sites, may represents regional differences in food processing. Mill Creek peoples appear to have relied on traditional cooking and storage techniques such as pit-oven cooking and storage pits rather than on ceramic technology. Mill Creek peoples still practiced the hunting and gathering lifestyle of their Archaic predecessors and relied heavily on nuts and deer. No structures, burials, or burial mounds have yet been identified at Mill Creek sites. Stone tools include small Gary and Kent dart points eventually being replaced by expanding-stem arrow points about A.D. 600-700. Ground stone tools, particularly manos and pitted nutting stones are common. Double-bitted "axes" are uncommon as are other potential gardening tools. Most stone tools are made of local quartzite, sandstone, siltstone and petrified wood. The best known Mill Creek site is the Herman Bellew site, which overlooks Mill Creek, a tributary of the Sabine River in northern Rusk County. The Woodland ceramics from the site include sandy paste, grog-tempered, and bone-tempered sherds, a relatively high percentage of which are decorated (6 percentage compared to less than 3 percentage for most Fourche Maline sites). Despite relatively extensive excavation, only 225 sherds were recovered at Herman Bellew. In comparison, many Fourche Maline sites have yielded thousands of sherds.
According to Perttula and archeologist Linda W. Ellis, Mill Creek pottery differs from the typically thick, grog-tempered Williams Plain. Instead, there is a mix of sandy paste wares, bone-tempered wares, and thinner grog-tempered wares, primarily plain. Mill Creek groups may have adopted ceramic ideas and technologies from the two neighboring Woodland cultures with whom they were interacting. From the Fourche Maline tradition came grog- and bone-tempered pottery with mainly flat-based bowls and jars combined with the Mossy Grove tradition of non-tempered sandy paste wares with round-based vessels. Alternatively, the apparent borrowing from adjacent cultures may simply be changes through time in manufacturing technique and vessel shape that represents the evolution of ceramic use for different purposes by Mill Creek peoples. Another important difference between Fourche Maline and Mill Creek is the presence in the latter of rock hearths and storage pits. Small rock hearths (probable earth ovens) and larger concentrations of fire-cracked cooking stones were found in Woodland contexts at Herman Bellew, suggesting that the Archaic pattern of using hot rocks to cook plant foods (especially roots) was still prevalent. Another example of a continued Archaic pattern is a large storage pit dating to about A.D. 100-200. Woodland Summary:What can we say about the cultures that came just before the Caddo? While a great deal remains to be learned before we can trace the early ancestors of the Caddo people, some of the larger patterns seem clear. Woodland peoples were living throughout Caddo Homeland for over a thousand years before A.D.800-900, the period when the Caddo cultural tradition is first recognized by archeologists. During the 1300 years between 500 B.C. and A.D. 800, Woodland peoples in the region:
- • expanded their numbers and populated the area more densely
- • became increasingly sedentary and established semi-permanent settlements, including villages
- • adopted ceramic technology for cooking and storage
- • began a distinctive ceramic tradition with elaborate forms and incised designs
- • began to cultivate squash/gourds and starchy and oily seed plants
- • adopted the bow and arrow and stopped using the atlatl and dart as the principal weapon
- • acquired exotic items from distant sources (Hopewell/Marksville network)
- • treated their dead in increasingly elaborate ways
- • established burial mounds and the first platform mounds at ritual centers
- • developed hereditary political and religious leadership
These developments and changes were not simultaneous, and they did not take place all across the region. We still do not understand either the exact sequences of development, or the processes of change. In a sense most of these Woodland elements were different parts of the same general process: the transformation from small egalitarian groups of mobile hunters and gatherers to larger, ranked societies who depended on agriculture. The Fourche Maline culture of the Red River valley was almost certainly the main "mother" culture out of which the Caddo cultural tradition evolved. But that does not mean that all of the ancestral Caddo groups were part of the Fourche Maline tradition. Ancestral Caddo peoples may have been responsible for the Mill Creek culture to the south and west of the Fourche Maline. Mossy Grove culture, on the other hand, probably represents the ancestors of non-Caddo peoples, but they were clearly interacting with Mill Creek and Fourche Maline peoples. Said differently, Woodland groups across the Caddo Homeland developed localized ways of doing things that had their origins long before A.D. 800. The smaller groups that lived on the western and southern fringes were probably perceived as being akin to "country hicks" (or perhaps even enemies) by the larger, more mainstream groups that lived in the Caddo "heartland"—the Red River Valley at and below the Great Bend.
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Reel-shaped copper gorget and copper bracelets from Jonas Short. Similar reel-shaped artifacts are known from early Marksville burial mounds and in burial mounds of the Adena culture of the Ohio River valley far to the northeast. TARL archives.
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Map showing area excavated at the Jonas Short Mound. TARL archives.
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These boatstones from Jonas Short Mound are made from syenite and probably come from outcrops near Little Rock, Arkansas. The smooth river pebbles in the one on the right are still in the original find position within the boatstone. These probably served as rattles held within because the boatstone was tightly affixed to its atlatl. This lends additional support to the notion that atlatls with exotic boatstones were strictly ritual objects—what hunter would want his presence announced by a loud rattle? TARL archives.
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Apparent artifact caches found within Jonas Short Mound may have once been associated with cremated burials. If so, the evidence was not preserved. The syenite boatstone is obviously a ritual artifact, but the smaller bits look like ordinary debris. TARL archives.
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Coles Creek-like pottery from the Pace site on the Louisiana side of Sabine River just above Toledo Bend Reservoir. TARL archives.
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Buried Fourche Maline midden exposed in excavation wall at the Crenshaw site. Although the dark stain of this midden is clearly visible, some Fourche Maline middens are so dark they are described as being black. Courtesy Frank Schambach.
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Polished stone celts and grooved axe from Fanny Snipes site. The celts probably date to Late Woodland or Early Caddo times, while the grooved axe is probably a much older Archaic artifact. The Snipes site, like many sites in the Caddo Homeland, has a mixture of artifacts dating to different periods. TARL archives.
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French Fork Incised jar from a Fourche Maline context at the Crenshaw site, Miller County, Arkansas. Although this is a Coles Creek style commonly found in the lower Mississippi Valley, it was probably made locally by Fourche Maline potters. Photo by Frank Schambach.
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Unique four-chambered Fourche Maline pottery vessel from the Crenshaw site, Miller County, Arkansas. Dozens of unique pots have been found at this site that are unlike any known elsewhere. The inventiveness of the Crenshaw Fourche Maline potters anticipates that of early Caddo potters. Photo by Frank Schambach.
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Bottom view of unique four-chambered Fourche Maline pottery vessel from the Crenshaw site, Miller County, Arkansas. Photo by Frank Schambach.
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Cone-shaped sandy paste vessel from a Mossy Grove site in Polk County, Texas. Whole Mossy Grove pots are rare. TARL archives.
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Nutting stones and grinding slabs such as these are found in Woodland as well as Late Archaic sites in the Caddo Homeland. TARL archives.
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Manning Fused Glass, a volcanic material that outcrops in a narrow east-west band near the southern limit of the Caddo Homeland just north of Huntsville, Texas. This material was used by local Caddo peoples to make stone tools. It is, however, characteristically fractured, as this piece is. It is also usually found in small nodules. This example is the largest known nodule of Manning Fused Glass, measuring about a meter across (39"). Photo by Ken Brown.
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