4.2 Article

Ritual dispositions, enclosures, and the passing of time: A biographical perspective on the Winchester Farm earthwork in Central Kentucky, USA

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANTHROPOLOGICAL ARCHAEOLOGY
Volume 62, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaa.2021.101294

Keywords

Biographies & Itineraries; Ritual; Monumentality; Counter-Monumentality; Adena & Hopewell; Geoarchaeology; Bayesian chronological modeling; Eastern North America

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [1545577]
  2. Waitt Foundation through the National Geographic Society [32614]
  3. American Philosophical Society's Lewis and Clark Fund for Exploration and Field Research
  4. Kentucky Organization of Professional Archaeologists (KyOPA)
  5. Graduate School of Arts Sciences
  6. College of Liberal Arts at Colorado State University
  7. George R. Throop Endowment at Washington University in St. Louis
  8. Division Of Behavioral and Cognitive Sci
  9. Direct For Social, Behav & Economic Scie [1545577] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Long-term interactions between people and places have been a key focus for archaeologists, who often study monuments as evidence of cooperative labor and connections to the landscape. However, data providing a detailed description of the landscape before, during, and after monument construction is rare. This article presents diverse datasets from a Middle Woodland ditch and embankment enclosure in the Middle Ohio Valley, illustrating how preconstruction use influenced construction, post-construction use, and societal evaluations of the site.
Long-term interactions between people and places has been a focal point for archaeologists since the beginnings of the discipline. Monuments are one analytical unit of analysis that archaeologists regularly study and interpret as evidence for the ways people organize cooperative labor and inscribe on the landscape their connections to it. However, it is rare to acquire data that affords a rich and long-term description of the landscape before, during, and after a monument was built. In addition, archaeologists who study pre-textual societies are seldom afforded an opportunity to explore detailed questions relating to how monuments were engaged with after social dispositions toward them changed. In this article we present diverse datasets obtained from a small Middle Woodland (ca. 200 cal BC-cal AD 500) ditch and embankment enclosure in the Middle Ohio Valley, USA. Drawing on those data, we offer a detailed biographical description of the site that illustrates how preconstruction use of the area influenced construction of the enclosure, describes how the enclosure was used after construction, and indicates what happened when the enclosure became evaluated differently in society.

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