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Program on
Ancient Technologies and Archaeological Materials
at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
ATAM is a Division of the Illinois Transportation Archaeological Research Program
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LAKE SHELBYVILLE PROJECT
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In the 1980's, a study was funded by the Construction
Engineering Research
Laboratory (CERL) in Champaign, Illinois, as part of their effort to
recover
and analyze artifacts from Lake Shelbyville, Illinois.
Archaeometric techniques were employed to determine why four
ceramic forms
from sixteen sites in the area called the American Bottom (the
floodplain of
the Mississippi around East St. Louis from the Illinois river north to
the
Kaskaskia River) had such similar shape and decoration. Were they all
manufactured at one site and then traded to the others? Or were they
manufactured from local clay at several sites, with the technology
being
shared information between potters who came into contact through
marriage,
war or other means?
In this provenance study, thin-sections were examined using a
petrographic
microscope to study the structure and mineral composition of the clay
and to
confirm the types of temper used. Then selected samples were prepared
for
chemical analysis by neutron activation, which yields major, minor, and
trace elements. Both techniques revealed several distinct clays and
different tempers (shell, grog, and bone), supporting the second
hypothesis
of multiple ceramic manufacturing centers.
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For more information
Riley, T. J., Hopke, P., Martin, R. & Porter, J. (1988).
Provenience of Selected Middle Mississippian Vessel Forms from the
Central Mississippi
Valley Using Hierarchical and Non-Hierarchical Clustering of NAA
Results. In (S. Wisseman, J. Isaacson, W. William, T. Riley, J.
Fittipaldi, D. Mann, & P. Hopke, Eds)
Instrumental Techniques in Archeological Research. USA-CERL
Technical Report N-88/24, pp. 82-99.
Riley, T. J., Hopke, P., Martin, R. & Porter, J. (1994). The
Diffusion of
Technological Knowledge: a Case Study in North American Ceramic
Analysis.
In (S. U. Wisseman & W. S. Williams, Eds) Ancient Technologies
and Archaeological Materials.Langhorne, PA: Gordon and Breach
Science Publishers, pp. 41-58.
Copyright 1999. University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign.