There’s a lot archaeologists still don’t know about the American Indian culture in our region; but they’re analyzing what they found during the dig to clear land for the Stan Musial Veterans Memorial Bridge and they’re ready to share.
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| In 2011, trackhoes and other excavation work related to the future Mississippi River Bridge can be seen in the background of the dig site near the old stockyards [Credit: Derik Holtmann/BND] |
“The occupation is heavy,” says Tamira Brennan, the interim field station manager for the Illinois State Archaeological Survey in Fairview Heights. Although the scientists haven’t yet done a population study for the area, they can say it was “densely populated.”
“This is the first big city in North America,” said Brad Koldehoff, the chief archaeologist for the state. “Now we have details, and it’s – wow. Some conjecture had been that all Cahokia moved to East St. Louis, but that’s not it. When Cahokia was big, East St. Louis was big; and this was even bigger than people thought.”
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| In 2011, August Traeger and Justin Wallace use shovels to remove thin layers of dirt from their dig site [Credit: Derik Holtmann/BND] |
Many in the area were immigrants, the study is revealing. Brennan said the archaeological record at Cahokia led to the research on immigrants, but the East St. Louis site confirms the significance of immigration.
“They couldn’t have reproduced fast enough to make that number of people,” she said from her office in Fairview Heights, which has tables full of pottery and pottery fragments. “Like New York City or Washington, D.C.,” Koldehoff said, “that’s what it looks like in East St. Louis. ... something was happening here that drew people from all over the Midwest and the South.” Koldehoff thinks it may have been a religious movement, “like this was the founding of a holy site.”
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| In 2011, Patrick Durst cleans out a handle to a piece of pottery that was found at the site [Credit: Derik Holtmann/BND] |
The scientists look at how many recovered pottery pots were made in the local style. Materials and style show that immigrants brought some of their own pots when they arrived, but as broken pottery was replaced they “got with the program” Koldehoff said, adopting the local style.
“There’s definitely a population increase,” said research archaeologist Alleen Betzenhauser. “Some of the ‘ah-ha’ moments come when processing the data,” she said, which the archaeologists have been compiling since digging stopped at the old stockyards in October 2012.
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| In 2011, Melissa Frederick works on the site [Credit: Derik Holtmann/BND] |
Because of the number of people living there and the fragile nature of pottery, there is a continuous record for the scientists to study and analyze from the Terminal Late Woodland People all the way to the late Mississippian period.
“The bowls become smaller ... less like group eating from big communal bowls,” Betzenhauser said. She says a typical family might have had five or six jars and a couple of bowls, although “not every household would have every type of pottery,” she said. Some of the pottery is finely crafted, as though someone with great time and skill made it, but others are more utilitarian. Betzenhauser said nearly everyone is likely to have known how to shape and craft pottery.
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| In 2011, Patrick Durst points to some of the unique features in the excavation site [Credit: Derik Holtmann/BND] |
“Most every other tool was made locally,” he said, referring to hoes and other heavier gardening tools. “But arrows are probably coming in with people.” The stone and style suggests arrowheads coming from as far away as North Dakota, but more commonly from Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Wisconsin.
Boles says it’s unlikely the arrows were planned for hunting given the population’s size and the number of arrows found in the later time period. “They couldn’t have found a rabbit to shoot after 100 years (of the heavy population) ... more arrowheads likely means warfare.”
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| Stan Musial Veterans Memorial Bridge [Credit: AP] |
There’s no indication that the significant population in East St. Louis at the time was a rival to the Cahokia population, Betzenhauser said. “They seem to be cohorts,” but palisades were built in about 1150 around Cahokia.
Brennan says a number of factors likely played into the populations’ sudden decrease. “There is evidence of severe drought” when the stockade was built, which coincides with the increase in arrow points as well. “When you have drought, you have war...” Brennan said, linking the dwindling resources to reasons people may have left the area.
Author: Mary Cooley | Source: BND [January 10, 2015]











