Carlston Annis Shell Mound
The Carlston Annis Shell Mound (designated 15 BT 5) is a prominent archaeological site in the western part of the U.S. state of Kentucky. Located along the Green River in Butler County, this shell midden has been declared a historic site because of its archaeological value.
Carlston Annis Shell Mound (15BT5) | |
Location | Eastern side of the Green River off Kentucky Route 403[1]: 56 |
---|---|
Nearest city | Schulztown, Kentucky |
Coordinates | 37°17′28″N 86°48′19″W |
Area | 2.4 acres (0.97 ha) |
Part of | Green River Shell Middens Archeological District (ID85003182) |
MPS | Green River Shell Middens of Kentucky TR |
NRHP reference No. | 86000632[2] |
Significant dates | |
Added to NRHP | April 1, 1986 |
Designated NHLDCP | May 5, 1994 |
Geography
The Carlson Annis Shell Mound sits on the eastern side of the Green River, somewhat more than 300 feet (91 m) east of the shoreline. Because it lies in the river's floodplain, the mound is the highest point in the area; its top is typically dry even though the surrounding terrain be flooded. It occupies a dark loamy soil, although the edges of the mound are covered by a substantially lighter loam with mixtures of sand and clay.[3]: 267 Since the mound was formed, the river has changed its course; it appears to have flowed directly by the base of the mound as it was being created.[3]: 353 When the area was first settled in the early nineteenth century, the floodplain was recognized as valuable farmland, and because the mound is an island during floods, settlers saw it as a place of refuge; for most of the time since whites arrived, farmsteads have occupied its summit.[3]: 267
Measuring approximately 350 feet (110 m) from north to south and 300 feet (91 m) east to west, the mound rises approximately 6 feet (1.8 m) above the surrounding terrain. The shells extend down from the surface by 7.5 feet (2.3 m) from the center; the difference between the heights is the result of floods since the midden was created, which have deposited multiple layers of earth around the base.[3]: 267
Excavation
In 1939, archaeologists from the University of Kentucky began to excavate the Annis Mound under the leadership of W.D. Funkhouser and W.S. Webb. Initial surveys found minimal damage to the site: a well had been dug into the center, and the surface was slightly affected by the foundations of buildings on the top,[3]: 269 and neighbors from miles around were frequently digging from the edge to procure shells for use as chicken feed.[1]: 58 Excavations began with the digging of a trench through the southern portion of the mound, after which the mound was divided into blocks of 30 by 40 feet (9.1 m × 12.2 m) so that the locations of artifacts could more accurately be plotted on diagrams.[3]: 269 The initial excavation produced evidence of 129 different features:[3]: 271
- Hearths — 71
- Fire basins — 21
- Burned clay patches — 4
- Pits — 12
- Caches of stone tools — 10
- Caches of lithic flakes — 8
- Caches of other objects — 3
This concentration of features was comparable to what had previously been found at other Archaic period shell middens in the region, demonstrating the similarity of the builders to other regional peoples: they lived in the vicinity, ate substantial numbers of shellfish, used the site as a trash heap for the shells, and buried their dead in the midden.[3]: 271 Beside 390 human bodies, the site produced the skeletons of 28 dogs that showed evidence of having been buried.[3]: 272 Many of the bones at the site were substantially decomposed, so the painstaking osteological research undertaken at the comparable Indian Knoll site (15 OH 2) could not be repeated at Carlson Annis.[3]: 274 Nevertheless, some information could be determined from certain bodies: ages ranged from infancy well into adulthood,[3]: 284 more than half of the bodies (215) were accompanied by artifacts — of which 73% were matters of personal clothing, such as shell gorgets, beads, or hairpins[3]: 288 — and some of the bodies were clearly those of victims of violence, such as a group of four that were buried together with projectile points embedded in some of the bones.[3]: 290 While earlier publications' analyses were based largely on the presence of these embedded projectile points, more recent scholars have found evidence that bodies were injured in other fashions, such as by clubbing, and injuries that produce no effect upon the skeleton may also have been responsible for some of the deaths. Studies of other sites in the region suggest that some resources were plentiful enough to permit populations to double approximately every thirty years; this likely would have produced competition for other resources, leading to warfare.[4]: 76 Overall life expectancy at birth was somewhat more than twenty years; 29.7% of the skeletons were of children under five years of age, of which nearly three-quarters were infants,[4]: 93 although examination of these skeletons produced no evidence of violence.[4]: 115
Beside bodies and objects associated with them, the excavation found a total of 19,733 artifacts, which were made from the following materials:[3]: 296
- Flint — 4,228
- Ground stone — 977
- Copper — 2
- Bone — 3,523
- Antler — 1,324
- Shell — 9,679
Additionally, the top of the mound produced 65 sherds of prehistoric pottery. As the Archaic peoples who inhabited the site have shown no evidence of producing their own pottery, these sherds are believed to have been the work of later peoples. Strengthening this proposal was the presence of Euro-American pottery in addition to the 65 sherds — Euro-Americans are known to have used the site because of its high location above floodwaters, and it is believed that later prehistoric peoples likewise camped at the site and would have left behind occasional broken pieces of pottery.[3]: 296 Of the 4,000+ flint pieces found at the site, nearly half (1,997) were projectile points of various sorts, with corner-notched and long-shallow-notched shapes being the most common. Other types of flint stone tools included approximately 500 knives, 23 lithic cores, more than 500 drills, and approximately 1,000 scrapers.[3]: 298 Artifacts of ground stone included almost fifty axes, seventy atlatl weights, more than one hundred mauls, more than one hundred sandstone discs, more than two hundred hammerstones, and nearly three hundred pestles.[3]: 299 The two copper pieces were one bead and one awl,[3]: 300 while the bone artifacts comprised over 1,000 awls, 900 fishhooks,[3]: 301 occasional projectile points and flakers,[3]: 302 and even occasional human bones that had been converted into tools.[3]: 303 Most of the antler pieces were projectile points or pieces of unknown purpose, while nearly all of the shells were discs that were being used as beads.[3]: 304 Aside from the numerous bits of pottery produced by whites, most of the potsherds found at Annis were grit- or shell-tempered pieces.[3]: 305
Although Carlston Annis and many other Green River shell middens were test excavated in the 1920s, much more extensive work was performed in the 1930s. Between 1937 and 1941, extensive information was revealed by excavations conducted by Works Progress Administration workers between 1937 and 1941.[5]: 5
Conclusions
Radiocarbon dating has suggested that some artifacts at Carlston Annis date back to 5424 BC, although most artifacts dated between 3200 and 1400 BC.[5]: 4 Most of its projectile points clearly dated from the Archaic period, although one Adena and occasional Mississippian points were found; they seemingly were left by later peoples, just like the pottery pieces. Two projectile points that were found underneath the mound were fluted points from the Paleoindian period; they are believed to have been sitting on the riverside before the shell mound was started.[3]: 309 Like several other shell mound sites in Kentucky,[3]: 315 Carlston Annis produced pieces of three stone pipes and of a single stone cup; these objects may have been religious artifacts used by shamans in attempts to heal diseases.[3]: 316 Kentucky's larger riverine Archaic sites vary widely in the amount of shell refuse that they have yielded; the much larger amount of shell refuse at sites such as Carlston-Annis and Indian Knoll is seemingly due to the presence of nearby bivalve beds.[4]: 71 The numbers and types of non-human bones at the mound were typical of Archaic shell middens in the region,[3]: 318 as was the number of antler pieces,[3]: 318 although tools made of human bone were unusually numerous.[3]: 319 At least three different processes were used to produce fishhooks from bones: some had been made from deer toes;[3]: 327 some from bird bones of all sizes, a technique common at Kentucky shell middens;[3]: 329 and a few by drilling large bones. Carlston Annis was the first Kentucky shell midden at which fishhooks made by this technique were found,[3]: 330 although evidence of this technique is plentiful at the later Fort Ancient-period Madisonville site near Cincinnati.[3]: 331 Numerous animal bones appear to have been used as ceremonial "medicine bags," which in later centuries were often made by skinning an animal without removing some of the bones.[3]: 338
The diets of Archaic peoples at many Green River sites has been determined largely from incomplete excavation data at better-known sites, such as Carlston Annis. It appears that the inhabitants' floral diets rested almost completely on nuts, with hickory nuts dominating; both Carlston-Annis and the Bowles Site in Ohio County produced evidence suggesting that 80% of identifiable floral remains were hickory nuts, and 85% of the remnant was acorns. Some evidence exists at these sites for plants such as squash, little barley, and wild rice.[4]: 72 Analysis of the burials at Carlston-Annis and other Green River sites demonstrates that the inhabitants' demographics were similar to those of comparable sites elsewhere and to those of modern hunter-gatherer societies.[4]: 74 Besides methods of producing fishhooks, Archaic technology can be seen from Carlston Annis in the atlatl components. No direct evidence of specific techniques was apparent from this excavation, but substantial circumstantial evidence was present.[3]: 342 Because very few burials were accompanied by stone atlatls, it is believed that many individuals were also buried with wooden atlatls (comparable to modern Eskimo technology) that have not survived to the present.[3]: 346 Comparison with Indian Knoll suggests that early inhabitants at Annis used all-wooden atlatls more commonly than the Indian Knoll people.[3]: 351
Preservation
In April 1986, the Carlston Annis Shell Mound was listed on the National Register of Historic Places because of its archaeological importance. It was one of twenty-four shell middens along the Green River known together as the "Green River Shell Middens of Kentucky" that were listed on the National Register together.[2] Eight years later, some of the Green River middens were named a historic district, the Green River Shell Middens Archeological District, and designated a National Historic Landmark.[6]
See also
References
- Funkhouser, W.D., and W.S. Webb. "Archaeological Survey of Kentucky: Butler County". University of Kentucky Reports in Anthropology 2 (1932).
- "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
- Webb, William S. "The Carlson Annis Mound: Site 5 Butler County Kentucky". University of Kentucky Reports in Anthropology 7.4 (1950): 265-354.
- Prufer, Olaf H., et al. Archaic Transitions in Ohio & Kentucky Prehistory. Kent: Kent State UP, 2001.
- Hockensmith, Charles D., et al. National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: The Green River Shell Middens of Kentucky. National Park Service, 1985-08-23.
- Green River Shell Middens Archeological District Archived 2010-06-03 at the Wayback Machine, National Park Service, 2006. Accessed 2012-12-21.
Further reading
- Claassen, Cheryl. Feasting with Shellfish in the Southern Ohio Valley: Archaic Sacred Sites and Rituals. Knoxville: U of Tennessee P, 2010.
- Funkhouser, W.D., and W.S. Webb. Ancient Life in Kentucky. Frankfort: Kentucky Geological Survey, 1928.
- Jefferies, Richard. Holocene Hunter-Gatherers of the Lower Ohio River Valley. Tuscaloosa: U of Alabama P, 2009.
- Moore, Christopher. "A Macroscopic Investigation of Technological Style and the Production of Middle to Late Archaic Fishhooks at the Chiggerville, Read, and Baker Sites, Western Kentucky". Archaeology 29.1 (2010): 197-221.
- Pollack, David, ed. The Archaeology of Kentucky: An Update. Vol. 1. Frankfort: Kentucky Heritage Council, 2008.