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The gorget found February 13, 2015, in Newtown appears to be engraved with an image that appears to be half bird and half cat [Credit: Cincinnati Museum Center] |
“When the police department actually called us, when I talked to them, he said they found some human remains and he said there was a plate with it. And I kind of knew exactly what he meant because we had found these other two back in 1981,” says Rieveschl Curator for Archeology Bob Genheimer.
Genheimer says the plate is actually a gorget, a decorative seashell, with the image of an animal carved on it.
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This previously found gorget features a mountain lion [Credit: Cincinnati Museum Center] |
Two other gorgets found in Newtown had images of an opossum and a panther carved on them. This one had a hybrid: part bird, part cat.
“Anywhere else in the world, you would refer to this as a griffin. But that’s not something that’s very viable in the Americas.
“We believe that the bird may be a Carolina Parakeet. Which, as many people know, is now an extinct bird, but used to be prevalent in the southern United States and as far north as here,” Genheimer says.
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This gorget, also previously found, features an opossum [Credit: Cincinnati Museum Center] |
“These people lived their lives like anyone else, but they had a little more elaborate ceremonialism when they died, and they would bury things with them.”
But there are still questions. The shell itself is believed to have come from the Gulf Coast, or the southern Atlantic region.
“It’s a good question how these got up here. Obviously it’s probably trade. We don’t think anyone from here went down and got them. One of the real questions is where were they engraved? Were they engraved somewhere in the southeast where the shell came from? Or was the shell brought up here and were they engraved here? We really don’t know the answer to that,” he says.
Remains found with the gorget have been reported, as required by the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, and could be claimed for reburial by a tribe.
Archeologists at the Cincinnati Museum Center are studying the gorget and hoping to make a replica for display.
Author: Bill Rinehart | Source: WVXU [February 26, 2015]