Between A.D. 1000 and 1635, the inhabitants of southwestern Pennsylvania and portions of adjacent states—known to archaeologists as the Monongahela Culture or Tradition—began to reside regularly in ring-shaped village settlements. These circular settlements consisted of dwellings around a central plaza. A cross-cultural and cross-temporal review of archaeological, ethnohistorical, and ethnographic cases demonstrates that this settlement form appeared repeatedly and independently worldwide, including throughout portions of the Eastern Woodlands, among the Plains Indians, and in Central and South America. Specific archaeological cases are drawn from Somerset County, Pennsylvania, that has the largest number of completely excavated Monongahela villages. Most of these villages, excavated in the 1930s as federal relief projects, were recently dated. Full analysis of the extensive excavations reveals not only the geometric architectural patterning of the villages, but enables an analysis of the social groupings, population estimates, and economic status of residents who inhabited the circular villages. Circular patterning can be revealed at less fully excavated archaeological sites. Focused test excavations can help confirm circular village plans without extensive and destructive excavations.
1932a The Algonkin Sequence in New York. American Anthropologist 34:406–414. ———. 1932b The Lamoka Lake Site: The Type Station of the Archaic Algonkin Period in New York. Researches and Transactions of the New York State Archaeological ...
Prior to 1990, many Southwestern archaeologists recognized there are many sources ofinequality, but most shied away from actually using the term hierarchy. Gregory Johnson's chapter (1989) in a volume titled Dynamics of Southwestern ...
Under the auspices of work relief programs, people were provided the opportunity to explore and document American Indian villages and mounds, important historic places, and homes associated with events and people critical to the foundation ...
... Tennessee River Valley: The Role of Cultural Resource Management Investigations in Archaeological Research. In TVA Archaeology: Seventy-Five Years of Prehistoric Research, edited by Erin E. Pritchard, 269–298. University of Tennessee ...
The chapters in this book creatively examine these interactions, revealing the dynamic nature of ancient and modern groups in the American Southwest.
In this book, Robert A. Cook brings a theoretically and methodologically holistic perspective to his study on the origins and continuity of Native American villages in the North American Midcontinent.
... Circular Villages ofthe Monongahela Tradition. University Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa. Mills, William C. 1904 Explorations of the Gartner Mound and Village Site. Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society Publications 13:129-191 ...
Unlike extant texts, this textbook treats pre-Columbian Native Americans as history makers who yet matter in our contemporary world.
Flotation of feature fill and other archaeological contexts has been practiced more or less continuously throughout the United States since at least the late 1960s (Bryant 2000), but the extent to which flotation has been used in the ...
... Circular Villages of the Monongahela Tradition. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 2007. Meltzer, D. J., “Late Pleistocene Human Adaptations in Eastern North America,” Journal of World Prehistory 2 (1988):1–51. — “Was Stone ...