BIBLIOGRAPHY

ADVANCED (WOODLAND) PHASE
1951 Cole, F. C. et al in The Baumer Focus, in KINCAID, A PREHISTORIC ILLINOIS METROPOLIS, pp. 184-210, University of Chicago, Chicago (Baumer Subculture).
1951 Maxwell, Moreau S. The Woodland Cultures in Southern Illinois, pp. 232-243. Beloit College, Beloit, Wisconsin (Baumer Subculture).
1951 Ibid., pp. 78-183 (Crab Orchard Subculture).
Tennessee
1922 Harrington, M. R. Cherokee and Earliest Remains on Upper Tennessee River, INDIAN NOTES AND MONOGRAPHS, No. 24, New York (Round Grave People or Baumer Subculture).
1952 Kneberg, Madeline. The Tennessee Area in Griffin, Ed., ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE EASTERN UNITED STATES, p. 192 and Fig. 102., University of Chicago, Chicago (Round Grave, Upper Valley or Baumer).
ARCHAIC PHASE
1950 Deuel, Thorne. Man’s Venture in Culture, STORY OF ILLINOIS SERIES, No. 6, pp. 5-12, Illinois State Museum, Springfield.
1957 Deuel, Thorne, The Modoc Shelter, REPORT OF INVESTIGATIONS, No. 7, Springfield, revised and reprinted from Natural History, October, 1957, pp. 400-405 (Simple and Medial).
1956 Fowler, Melvin L. and Winters, Howard. Modoc Rock Shelter, Preliminary Report, REPORT OF INVESTIGATIONS, No. 4, Illinois State Museum, Springfield. (Simple and Medial).
1957 Fowler, Melvin L. Ferry Site, Hardin County, Illinois, SCIENTIFIC PAPERS SERIES, Vol. VIII, No. 1, Illinois State Museum, Springfield. (Terminal Subculture).
1950 Titterington, P. F. Some Non-Pottery Sites in the St. Louis Area in ILLINOIS STATE ARCHAEOLOGICAL JOURNAL, N.S. Vol. I, pp. 19-31 (Terminal Subculture).
Tennessee
1947 Lewis, T. M. N. and Kneberg, Madeline. The Archaic Horizon in Western Tennessee, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville (Eva focus or subculture).
United States generally
1957 Wormington, H. M. Ancient Man in North America, POPULAR SERIES, No. 4, 4th Edition, revised, Denver (Archaic and Paleo-Indian Assemblages).
CLASSIC (HOPEWELLIAN) PHASE
1937 Cole, F. C. and Deuel, Thorne. Rediscovering Illinois, pp. 130-191. University of Chicago, Chicago.
1952 Deuel, Thorne, Ed. Hopewellian Communities, SCIENTIFIC PAPERS SERIES, Vol. V, Illinois State Museum, Springfield.
1957 Fowler, Melvin L. Rutherford Mound, Hardin County, Illinois, SCIENTIFIC PAPERS SERIES, Vol. VII, No. 1, Illinois State Museum, Springfield.
MIDDLE (MISSISSIPPI) PHASE
Cahokia Subculture
1937 Cole, F. C. and Deuel, Thorne. Rediscovering Illinois, pp. 75-94, 111-125, 127, University of Chicago, Chicago.
1928 Moorehead, W. K. The Cahokia Mounds, University of Illinois, BULLETIN, Vol. 26, No. 4, Urbana.
1939 Simpson, A. M. The Kingston Village Site, Peoria Academy of Science, Peoria. (Privately printed.)
1952 Smith, Hale G. The Crable Site, Fulton County, Illinois, ANTHROPOLOGY PAPERS No. 7, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
1938 Titterington, P. F. The Cahokia Mound Group and Its Village Site Materials, St. Louis. (Privately printed.)
Cahokia Subculture (Wisconsin)
1933 Barrett, S. A. Ancient Aztalan, BULL. PUBLIC MUSEUM OF MILWAUKEE, Vol. 13.
Cumberland Subculture
1951 Cole, F. C. et al. Kincaid, A Prehistoric Illinois Metropolis, pp. 29-164, 293-366, University of Chicago, Chicago.
Cumberland Subculture (Tennessee)
1928 Myer, William, Ed. Two Prehistoric Villages in Middle Tennessee, 41st ANNUAL REPORT, BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY, pp. 485-614, Washington.
Cumberland Subculture (Kentucky)
1929 Webb, William S. and Funkhouser, W. D. The Williams Site in Christian County, Kentucky, UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY REPORTS IN ANTHROPOLOGY AND ARCHAEOLOGY, Vol. I, No. 1, pp. 5-23 followed by 36 figs., Lexington.
PALEO-INDIAN PHASE
1954 Kleine, Harold K. A Remarkable Paleo-Indian Site in Alabama in TEN YEARS OF THE TENNESSEE ARCHAEOLOGIST, Lewis and Kneberg, Ed., reprinted from TENNESSEE ARCHAEOLOGIST, 1954.
1951 Smail, William. Some Early Projectile Points from the St. Louis Area, in ILLINOIS STATE ARCHAEOLOGICAL JOURNAL, N. S., Vol. II, No. 1, pp. 11-16.
1957 Wormington, H. M. Ancient Man in North America, POPULAR SERIES, No. 4, 4th Edition, revised, Denver.
UPPER (MISSISSIPPI) PHASE
1927 Langford, George, Sr. The Fisher Mound Group, Successive Aboriginal Occupations near the Mouth of the Illinois River, in AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGIST, Vol. XXIX, No. 3, pp. 153-206, Menasha.
FINAL WOODLAND
Bluff Subculture
1935 Titterington, P. F. Certain Bluff Mounds of Western Jersey County, Illinois in AMERICAN ANTIQUITY, Vol. I, No. 1, pp. 6-46.
1943 Titterington, P. F. The Jersey County, Illinois, Bluff Culture, in AMERICAN ANTIQUITY, Vol. IX, No. 2, pp. 240-245.
Effigy Mound Subculture (Wisconsin)
1932 Barrett, S. A. and Skinner, Alanson. Certain Mound and Village Sites of Shawano and Oconto Counties, Wisconsin, BULL. PUBLIC MUSEUM OF MILWAUKEE, Vol. 10, No. 5, Milwaukee.
1928 McKern, W. C. The Neal and McClaughry Mound Groups, BULL. PUBLIC MUSEUM OF MILWAUKEE, Vol. 3, No. 3, Milwaukee.
1933 Nash, Philleo. The Excavation of the Ross Mound Group I, BULL. PUBLIC MUSEUM OF MILWAUKEE, Vol. 16, No. 1.
1956 Rowe, Chandler. The Effigy Mound Culture of Wisconsin, MILWAUKEE PUBLIC MUSEUM PUBLICATIONS IN ANTHROPOLOGY, No. 3.
Lewis Subculture
1951 Cole, F. C. et al. The Lewis Focus in KINCAID, A PREHISTORIC ILLINOIS METROPOLIS, pp. 165-183, University of Chicago, Chicago.
Raymond Subculture
1952 Maxwell, Moreau S. Archaeology of the Lower Ohio Valley in Griffin, Ed., COLE ANNIVERSARY VOLUME, ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE EASTERN UNITED STATES, pp. 186-187 and Fig. 100, University of Chicago, Chicago.
1951 Maxwell, Moreau S. The Woodland Cultures in Southern Illinois, pp. 78-172, 194-211, Beloit College, Beloit, Wisconsin.
Stone Vault Subculture
1935 Thurber, O. D. New Type of Burial Mound Near Quincy in TRANSACTIONS ILLINOIS STATE ACADEMY OF SCIENCE, Springfield, Vol. XXVIII, No. 2, pp. 67-68.
1910 Fowke, Gerard. Antiquities of Central and Southeastern Missouri, BULL. BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY, No. 37, Washington.
Tampico Subculture
1937 Cole, F. C. and Deuel, Thorne. Rediscovering Illinois, pp. 191-198, University of Chicago, Chicago.
ILLINI TRIBES
1934 Pease, Theodore Calvin and Werner, Raymond C. THE FRENCH FOUNDATIONS, 1680-1693 (Memoirs of De Gannes by Sieur Deliette) pp. 302-395, Springfield, Illinois.
1958 Temple, Wayne C. Historic Tribes, Part 2 of Indian Villages of the Illinois Country by Sara J. Tucker and Wayne Temple, SCIENTIFIC PAPERS SERIES, Vol. II, Illinois State Museum, Springfield.
INITIAL (WOODLAND) PHASE
1937 Cole, F. C. and Deuel, Thorne. Rediscovering Illinois (Red Ochre, pp. 57-69; Black Sand, pp. 69-75, 136-149; Morton, pp. 39-46, 126, 128-130; 102-104, 106-108), University of Chicago, Chicago.

CULTURAL CHARACTERISTICS OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL UNITS

ARCHAEOLOGICAL UNITS
ARTIFACTS[20] RECONSTRUCTION OF ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL FEATURES RECONSTRUCTION OF RELIGIOUS, ARTISTIC, AND RECREATIONAL FEATURES
PALEO-INDIAN PHASE 50,000(?)-8000 B.C.(?)
Narrow leaf-shaped spearheads
Folsom points
Clovis points
Stone hammer (?)
Flint scrapers (?)
Personal ornaments (?)
Thrusting weapons
Simple family (?)
Lineage in male line (?)
Big game hunting
Roving habits following herd
Temporary camps
Energy sources for labor, travel and transportation wholly human
Religion based on spirits, mana and on the chief game species hunted (?)
ARCHAIC PHASE 8000-2500 B.C.
Stone hammers, rough or pitted
Broad barbed flint spearheads
Flint dartheads
Flint scrapers
Flint awls
Chipped choppers
Spearthrower (atlatl) weights
Grooved stone axes (ground)
Ground stone celts
Chipped flint digging tools (hoes)
Small area settlement sites in the open
Rock shelters
Post holes in line
Necklaces and pendants
Plummets
Copper tools
Dog bones
Bone-awls
Whet- or abrading stones
Bannerstones (with cylindrical hole)
Flexed burials in Medial and Terminal subculture
Projectile weapon
Hunting of deer and small mammals and collecting edible plants, clams, etc.
Technologies: flint-chipping, pecking, grinding and polishing of stone, grinding and polishing bone, boring bone and stone with flint drills and with tube, sand and water, making string (from hides and [?] plant-fibers), weaving (?), basket-making (?)
Dog the only domesticated animal
Marriage
Family
Extended family or lineage
“Independent” local groups
Windbreaks or flimsy shelters
Family hunting territory
Rotating hamlet
Non-political tribe
Family-typesocial control
Puberty rites (Initiation ceremonies)
Tribal elders and temporary headmen
Insignia possibly as social acceptance of personal achievement, or as family crest
Belief in friendly and ancestral spirits, in mana and in revelation by vision or dream
Sacred tradition (“mythology”)
The shaman—intercessor with spirits and healer of sick—magic medicines
Fertility ceremonies—to insure abundant game and to perpetuate sacred traditions
Recreational activities and creative arts practiced chiefly in connection with religious ceremonies
Funeral rites for all deceased tribal members
Socially important persons on death given special care and preparation for burial, and possibly buried in a specially selected place
Mourning period for dead
Food and grave offerings left especially for important dead
INITIAL (WOODLAND) PHASE 1500-500 B.C.
Elongated globular pots with pointed (conoidal) bases
Copper ornaments
Burial mounds and cemeteries
Probably very similar to Archaic
Copper breastplate or gorgets
Socially important persons buried in mounds (?)
Very similar to Archaic
Dog graves in burial mounds
ADVANCED (WOODLAND) PHASE 1000(?)-100(?) B.C.
Numerous storage pits containing acorn and hickory nut remains
Medium-sized settlement sites
Post holes outlining a square area
Post holes outlining a circular or oval area
Flat-bottomed flaring-walled Woodland pots (“flower pots”)
Polished stone gorgets
Burials in settlement sites
Storage of acorns, nuts and seeds
Larger population concentrations of perhaps a 100 or 150 persons
Semi- to permanent log dwellings, logs upright
Possibly insignia or badges of leadership or individual prowess
Religion probably transitional between Archaic and plant-raising types
CLASSIC (WOODLAND) PHASE [HOPEWELLIAN] 500 B.C.-500 A.D.
Chipped limonite hoes
Charred maize kernels and cobs (and in Ohio, beans and squash seeds)
Cloth and feather cloth remains
Basketry, matting and colored textile impressions
Marine shell vessels
Tortoise shell dishes
River mussel shell spoons with “handles”
Excellent polished black and painted pottery with occasional variation of form—shallow bowls, beakers, effigy and globular shapes
A coarser duty Woodland ware with elongated bodies and pointed or flattened bases
Large areas with village refuse and numerous mounds
Post holes outlining an oval or circular area (rare)
Pottery statuettes showing dress and ornaments worn
Jewelry of copper, silver, meteoric iron, cut and polished shell beads, small marine shells, bears teeth sometimes set with copper, pearls or colorful stones, etc.
Ear ornaments of copper, etc.
Marine shells from south Atlantic and Gulf Coasts of United States
Mica from North Carolina
Obsidian from Wyoming (?)
Copper from Lake Superior region
Galena from northwestern Illinois
Native pearls from river clams
Gorgets of stone, shell and copper (breastplates)
Pearls and ground shell beads distributed over the torso of skeleton
Deer antlers near human skull in grave
Cut maxillaries (more rarely mandibles) of bear or man on skeletons as if worn as pendants
Cassis madagascarensis shell vessels
Copper hatchets and adzes etc.
Platform type tobacco pipes
Medium to large “dome-shaped” burial mounds enclosing
Log (rarely stone) tomb chambers
Bundle burials and ossuaries in mounds with central tomb (northern Illinois)
Cemeteries near mounds (southern Illinois)
Bodies buried generally in extended position rarely flexed and often accompanied by pots, weapons and artistic products
“Pipes of Pan”
Beautifully chipped broad spearheads of special subtypes
Effigy dagger with sheath made from bears’ teeth
Planting-raising economy supplemented by hunting and collecting
Crops: Maize, beans, squash, tobacco
Weaving of cloth, basket- and mat-making
Clothing: Wrap-around-skirt for women, breech cloth for men, supplemented by robes in cold weather, feather cloth robes in ceremonies. Mocassins for women and probably for men.
Large villages (or clusters of villages) as well as small settlements
The wigwam (for lower classes?)
Possibly log cabin dwellings for highest social class, logs laid horizontal as in tomb chambers
Rise of wealth, rich and extensive trade
Dug-out boats (?)
Two or three social classes seem to be indicated by burial customs
Chiefs—a political form of government, with some of the clans, possibly bear, wolverine and bobcat, predominant in certain areas
A tribe organized either politically or into clans with subsidiary districts or villages and political or clan chiefs.
Chiefs may have worn deer antler headdresses.
Chiefs probably wore feather headdresses, feather cloth robes, mantles embroidered with pearls shells and cut shell beads, and other insignia of office.
Tomb chambers probably for chiefs with relatives and retainers slain to accompany them
Chief person in tomb sometimes woman (May indicate matrilineal descent or simply ranking woman of highest caste)
Maxillary (jaw) pendants worn maybe as trophies of war and hunt, or to indicate clan of a chief (?)
Doubtless the pipe served (as it did later) as a safe conduct to visiting officials, travellers and traders, and a signature and seal to important agreements whether economic, political or intertribal
Probably a formalized religion based on the chief food plant, maize
Regularly appointed priests
The priest probably wore feather robes and insignia of rank and position
Religion probably included ceremonies connected with plant- or maize-raising
Deities or gods with special powers related to food-raising, etc.
The spring or planting festival
The green corn or first fruits festival
The harvest festival and perhaps minor festivals revolving about the deer
High-ranking priests were probably of the highest caste and their bodies given special care on death, elaborate funeral ceremonies and burial in the tomb chambers of mounds, with tribal mourning
Beautiful pipes either with or without long wooden items probably figured largely in the religious ceremonies
Shamans probably still practiced the healing art (and black magic). They probably used herbals instead of mineral medicines
High development of art in pottery, ceramic, copper and stone sculpture, in engraving on bone in personal adornment and technological expertness
FINAL (WOODLAND) PHASE 200(?)-1000 A.D.
Boatstones and bar “amulets”
L-shaped pipe, long-stemmed
Crude flint arrowheads
Flexed and semi-flexed skeletons in mound graves and tomb chambers
Except for above, much like Initial Phase
Spear and spearthrower still the chief weapon, weights tied (?) to spearthrower
Small hamlets
Bow and arrow known but as yet ineffective as a practical weapon
Otherwise very similar to Initial Phase
Religion probably with shamans rather than priests and a mixture of Initial and Classic Phase religious beliefs and practices and superstitions
Some considerable sanctity probably still attached to tobacco, tobacco smoke and the pipe
Shamans undoubtedly still practiced the healing arts (as well as black magic) and possibly simple religious rites
MIDDLE (MISSISSIPPI) PHASE 1000-1500 A.D.
Hoes of chipped flint and numerous digging tools
Charred maize kernels and cobs
Large settlement areas with flat-topped pyramidal mounds, with cabin remains on summits, surrounded by palisade remains in low ridges of earth
Post holes and/or trenches outlining rectangular house floors. Fired clay from wattle and daub structure, burned house with charred thatch, timbers, rafters, mats, etc.
Fire pits or fireplaces within house
Fine polished black and painted wares with globular and flattened globular bodies, in many shapes—water bottles, shallow bowls, beakers, ollas or jars and effigy forms
An excellent, dull-gray service ware with similar varieties of shapes
An excellent storage ware of medium to large size, chiefly globular in form
Busycon, marginella, olivella shells from south Atlantic and Gulf Coasts
Copper from Lake Superior region
Busycon dippers and drinking cups
L-shaped pipe (“equal armed” and and medium long-stemmed varieties)
Massive effigy stone pipes
Skeletons, in extended positions, (distributed) in single and multiple graves throughout mounds and in cemeteries
Pottery Vessels, weapon heads, jewelry, and polished stone discoidals, etc. associated with skeletons
Shell gorgets engraved with realistic and conventional designs
Repoussee copper eagle gorgets or plaques
Copper sheeted ornaments and jewelry of pottery, bone, shell, wood and leather
Polished stone disks or “wheels”
Ground and squared astragalus bone of deer and elk
Intensive maize growing with other crops supplemented by hunting
Repeating weapon (bow and arrows)
Energy sources for labor and transportation still entirely human
The finer pottery and burials in mounds and cemeteries may reflect class differences. The extension of the pottery shapes from the fine black ware to the less decorative service ware may indicate an improvement of lower class conditions over those in Hopewellian times
Clothing much like Hopewellian in general styles
Large villages, small cities and small villages
Large centers or cities had temples and tribal officers’ cabins on flat-topped mounds, and were protected by palisades and/or mud walls
Dwellings semi- to permanent, with rectangular floors, vaulted or gabled roofs of thatch, walls consisting of vertical posts, wattle and daub construction, covered inside and out with mats, sometimes possibly bark-covered. Cabin remains numerous.
Dug-out boats (?)
Wealth considerable. Trade in fewer materials than in Hopewellian
Two or three social classes present in population as in Hopewellian
Probably a political government with tribal and war chiefs and village chiefs. Head tribal chief may have been chief priest also, or a member of his family may have filled later office. War chief probably also member of ruling caste (as among Natchez). Other war chiefs probably of other classes, rank based on their past deeds
Tribal and war chief. In some villages, village chief possibly had dwellings on pyramid tops
Headdresses, probably with feathers, and regalia, including feather-cloth robes were probably worn on tribal occasions of importance
Calumet pipe doubtless served as safe conduct to travellers and visiting officials, as seal and signature to important agreements. Effigy stone pipes may have been Middle Phase calumet pipe since it had to be smoked with a stem
War parties still of simple or no organization except leader and followers, object to take prisoners but not territory
Religious ceremonial centers or cities existed to which outlying smaller village populations journeyed for religious festivals
Priesthood with appropriate dress and regalia
Temples or sacred groves for worship
Religion with deities having special powers relating to maize-growing. Veneration or worship of ancestors
Spring, first fruits, and harvest festivals
Tobacco smoke, tobacco pipes used in ceremonies as incense offerings
Athletic games form part of ceremonies
Shamans still exist but chiefly for healing, etc. as among Hopewellians
High-ranking officials and priests buried in graves in mounds. Usual preparation of body, burial, mourning periods, elaborated proportionately to the rank of the deceased.
Art well developed
Games of chance were probably known and played
UPPER PHASE 1100(?)-1600 A.D.
Note: These are fringe groups in relation to Middle and Lower phases, living in more wooded regions perhaps, where game was especially abundant and topography less favorable to plant-raising by a backward culture and where the social impetus for high cultural development was largely lacking
Artifacts are a mixture of Woodland and Mississippi types
Generally a single pottery ware with both elongated and globular pots is characteristic and there is little other specialization of form
A hunting-collecting economy with plant-raising probably in garden-like plots
Large and small villages
A social development similar to but simpler than the Middle Phase, probably a combination of Woodland and Mississippi elements
A religion based on plant-raising but probably with considerable emphasis on chief animals hunted.
Sacred groves and shrines, possibly temples in some of larger villages
No pyramidal mounds
Dead buried in mounds and in cemeteries
CONTACT PHASE (ILLINI) 1673-1833 A.D.
Note: The artifacts of all tribes in the historic period probably became gradually much the same regardless of their prior cultural status due to deterioration of native technology and trading of furs for European tools, weapons, cloth, etc.
Arrowheads of chipped flint, and native-made of European copper, brass or iron
Numerous trade articles such as glass beads, gun parts, copper or brass kettles, bottles for wine, olives, etc. and other objects of European production
Native stone molds and cast lead balls (for guns) and native chipped gun flints
Rectangular L-shaped (“Siouan type”) pipes of catlinite and other stone. Micmac pipes after 1700.
Bow and arrows preferred in war because they could be discharged more rapidly than gun could be loaded and fired. Guns and ammunition often not available
Little knowledge of proper care of guns, and no attempt to manufacture guns and powder, or iron knives, copper kettles, etc.
Society largely disorganized, prestige of chiefs largely a matter of personal prowess and reputation with some regard for earlier methods of appointment and succession.
Religion practiced by a fraction of tribe but falling into dispute without adequate substitute
Probably appointment and succession of priests more or less regular and based on earlier customs.

FOOTNOTES

[5]All dates, even those determined by radiocarbon methods, should be taken as only roughly approximate.
[6]These dates and those given hereafter refer to the earliest and latest sites known in Illinois for the cultures under consideration. Although supported by radiocarbon dating methods, they are only approximate. Undoubtedly also cultures in one area disappeared while they continued to flourish in another part of the state or in other states.
[7]Generally speaking, each succeeding higher culture in the area made most of the tool and weapon types of their predecessors, adding certain improvements and sometimes new types. The Archaic people used flint scrapers, chipped flint choppers, and native cobblestone hammers as had the Paleo-Indians. The narrow-bladed spearheads were occasionally made but the fluting or channel is practically always lacking. Polished stone forms, possibly the spearthrower, were new inventions in Archaic times.
[8]In the page that follows a tentative reconstruction of the less tangible customs of these people will be presented, based on a study of several tribes now or recently in the Archaic status. The Archaic culture as used in this paper refers to those tribes who lived mainly by hunting, supplemented to a degree by collecting native edible plant foods. They are distinguished here from other peoples of the Stone Age or non-farming stage—from Big Game Hunters on the one hand (none of whom exist today) and on the other, from Food Stores, who were able by one means or another to store food over one or more seasons and so establish more or less fixed homes. The peoples recently living in the Archaic status include the native tribes of Central and Coastal Australia, the Tasmanians, the Andaman Island tribes, the Terra del Fuegians, the African Bushmen and a number of others.
[9]The Initial Woodland in Illinois is usually considered to consist of three cultural divisions or units, the Black Sand, the Red Ochre and the Morton. The only known Red Ochre sites are mounds which undoubtedly are the burial places of important personages of a cultural group whose campsites and artifact assemblages have not as yet been identified as such. The graves yield a number of artifact types that are identical with those found in Black Sand villages. It is possible the Red Ochre mounds belong to the Black Sand people and that the mounds and special burial customs may have been continued into or adopted by the Morton cultural group and served still later as a framework for the highly elaborated Hopewellian funeral practices.
[10]The narrow-bladed leaf-shaped spearhead, well-chipped and without fluting, reminiscent of the general Yuma, Folsom and Clovis shape, are found in the Red Ochre subculture and are worthy of note. This type appears rarely in campsites but occurs in relatively large numbers in mounds. Profuse amounts of red ochre are found in graves as in Terminal Archaic (Titterington focus) in western Illinois. Copper ornaments may indicate Wisconsin (Old Copper Culture) influence.
[11]The Poole village (Pike County) is dated 550 B.C. and the Wilson Mound (White County) about 89 B.C. The Poole village appears to have been occupied from 550 B.C. to 200 A.D.
[12]Civilization, as used in this paper, signifies exhaustive exploitation of the natural resources and accompanying significant elaborations of the social and spiritual aspects (as exemplified by ceremonies, regalia, insignia, art and extensive architectural structures), accomplished by means of specialization of the existing tools and technologies, with or without fundamental inventive developments. Artisans of the Initial and Final Woodland cultures seem to have practiced all the crafts employed by Hopewellians but failed to produce the beautiful chipped spearheads, “pipes of pan”, excellent sculpture in stone and pottery, etching in bone, the extensive earthworks and the mounds with timbered burial chambers. Perhaps some additional stimuli—the introduction of maize or the intensification of its cultivation, a satisfying new religion with stirring ceremonies together with intergroup competition—gave the spiritual impetus that produced the Hopewellian fluorescence.
[13]Specialization was foreshadowed in the Red Ochre culture but the small total of grave offerings discovered to date fail to demonstrate any greater leisure than occurs at favorable times among any simple hunting people.
[14]An early subculture termed Old Village preceding the generally known Middle Mississippi (Trappist or Bean Pot) period has been proposed on the strength of stratification at the Cahokia village near East St. Louis. Although this appears logically sound, the evidence has not been published and no pure Old Village site has yet been found and reported upon.
[15]Except where noted as based directly on archaeological evidence, the broad cultural features suggested in the rest of this section, are inferred from similar customs found generally among tribes in the plant-raising status without food-draft animals. The results were derived by the writer from a study of anthropological reports of the following tribes or groups of tribes: Polynesians, Delawares, Natchez (and their neighbors) and the western Pueblo Indians. The Pueblos, in their social, political and religious customs and institutions have been for seven hundred years in a transitional status between the Archaic hunters (or possibly “food storers”) and a “fully-developed” plant-raising stage.
[16]The archaeological evidence for this section is chiefly from The Fisher Mound Group, etc. by George Langford in the AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGY, Vol. XXIX, No. 3, pp. 153-205 (July-September, 1927).
[17]These Indians called themselves Ilini (pronounced Il´-i-nee) or Illini signifying “man,” in the plural Illiniwek, “the men.” The French dropped the -iwek and substituted their own ending whence the name Illinois by which they were generally known thereafter. In this booklet Illini will be generally used to designate these tribes, their culture and language to avoid confusion with other tribes who, like the Sauk, Fox, Kickapoo, Potawatomi, and Miami, have occupied parts of the state and are sometimes called Illinois Indians.
[18]Information given on historic tribes is from notes and manuscript assembled by Dr. Wayne C. Temple.
[19]The term calumet, originally applied to the stem of the tobacco pipe, is now generally used to designate the pipe and stem. “It is fashioned from a red stone, polished like marble, and bored in such a manner that one end serves as a receptacle for the tobacco, while the other fits into the stem; this is a stick two feet long, as thick as an ordinary cane, and bored through the middle. It is ornamented with the heads and necks of various birds, whose plumage is very beautiful. To these they also add large feathers—red, green, and other colors—wherewith the whole is adorned. They have a great regard for it....” (R. G. Thwaites, ed., The Jesuit Relations, Vol. LIX, p. 131.) The war calumet differed from that of peace and was decorated with red feathers. See Fig. 34, A.
[20]Artifact types having once appeared are likely to appear again in subsequent culture even though rare or even lacking in some intervening assemblages (e.g. necklaces of anculosa beads of similarly ground [snail] shells found from Medial Archaic through Middle Phase; grooved axes from Medial Archaic to Mississippi but rare or lacking in most subcultures and cultures except Archaic and Initial Woodland). On account of unwieldiness of complete accumulative lists only new artifact types when they first appear will be recorded here. Exceptions: 1) the name of an artifact entered as probably present (indicated by a following ?) will be repeated in the first subsequent culture in which definite evidence for it has been reported and 2) when an artifact once reported assumes a new form or presumably takes on a new significance (e.g. Archaic hoe becomes a tool of the plant-raisers in Classic and Middle Phases), it will appear again in the text.