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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65573 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65573)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Smithport Landing Site, by
-Clarence H. Webb
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The Smithport Landing Site
- An Alto Focus Component in De Soto Parish, Louisiana
-
-Author: Clarence H. Webb
-
-Release Date: June 9, 2021 [eBook #65573]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SMITHPORT LANDING SITE ***
-
-
-
-
-
- The Smithport Landing Site: An Alto Focus Component in De Soto
- Parish, Louisiana
-
-
- CLARENCE H. WEBB
-
-
- _Reprint from_ Bulletin of the Texas Archeological Society, Vol. 34,
- 1963.
-
-
- ABSTRACT
-
-This is a belated description of the Smithport Landing Site, one of
-several known Alto Focus components in northwestern Louisiana. This
-large village site, on the western margin of the Red River flood plain,
-covers portions of several low hills which front on a former lake.
-
-Nineteen pottery vessels, all but two identifiable as Alto Focus types,
-were found with fourteen burials. Included are _Hickory Fine Engraved_,
-_Davis Incised_, _Kiam Incised_, _Wilkinson Punctated_, and _Smithport
-Plain_ (virtually identical with _Bowles Creek Plain_) types.
-
-Surface materials comprise 1553 sherds, 61 dart and 55 arrow points, and
-a modest number of chipped and polished stone tools or ornaments. The
-stone tool assemblage seems to be basically late Archaic with the
-addition of small arrow points.
-
-Although the sherds as well as whole vessels are predominantly derived
-from Alto Focus ceramics, a small percentage of Coles Creek, a somewhat
-larger representation of Bossier Focus, and a few late Caddoan pottery
-types are identified. Similarities and differences between the ceramics
-of this site, the Davis (Alto) Site in eastern Texas, and the central
-Louisiana sequence of pottery, are pointed out. Possible relationships
-between Coles Creek, Alto, Bossier, and Plaquemine ceramics are
-developed. It is postulated that Caddoan (Alto) and Coles Creek peoples
-or influences entered northwestern Louisiana almost simultaneously, and
-that Bossier Focus developed out of the amalgamation of these two
-previous cultures. A few very late Caddoan sherds indicate a late
-occupation at Smithport Landing, possibly during historic times.
-
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
-The Smithport Landing Site was initially explored by Monroe Dodd, Jr.,
-and the author between 1934 and 1940.[1] It was the first site at which
-we found burials and whole pottery; it was also the first site in
-Louisiana which was identified as an Alto Focus component (Webb, 1948)
-and was recognized as such in the Davis Site report (Newell and Krieger,
-1949: 195, 197, Fig. 62). In describing the Bossier Focus, Smithport
-Landing was one of 15 sites used for comparison and discussion of the
-relative incidence of Bossier Focus pottery types, and of several
-pottery complexes. First suggested in my 1948 paper, and elaborated in a
-more recent study (Webb, 1961) of 20 sites in northwestern Louisiana, is
-the thesis that the Bossier Focus developed out of a simultaneous spread
-of Alto and Coles Creek peoples or influences across this area in
-post-Marksville times. Smithport Landing was one of the key sites in
-this study, because of the admixture of Alto and Coles Creek pottery
-types and the presence of a minor Bossier Focus manifestation.
-
-It therefore seems appropriate to publish the available information
-about this site, despite the limited excavations conducted nearly 30
-years ago. The criticism has been made that too many foci in the Caddoan
-area have been based on excavation of a single site and that the Alto
-Focus, for example, is based on the Davis Site alone. The information
-presented herein concerning Smithport Landing and other Alto Focus
-manifestations in Louisiana was available to, and used by, Krieger as
-indicated in the Davis report. The details should have been published
-for other students, however, especially since burials of the Alto period
-are limited in number.
-
-
- SITE ENVIRONMENT
-
-The Smithport Landing Site is in the eastern edge of De Soto Parish,
-about eight miles east of Mansfield, the Parish seat (Fig. 1). It is a
-relatively large village site situated on eroded and dissected hills
-which project in an expanded tongue of land fronting on Old Smithport or
-Clear Lake (Bayou Pierre Lake). The former lake bed is now dry in the
-summer, swampy during the rainy season. Buffalo Bayou courses through
-this low area to join the outflow of present Smithport Lake about one
-mile northeast of the site. Further eastward this drainage flows into
-Bayou Pierre which continues some 20 miles down the southwestern margin
-of the Red River flood plain until it empties into this river near
-Natchitoches.
-
-The hills on which the site is located (Fig. 2) are 10 to 20 feet above
-the lake bed; where dissected by small drainages the slope is gentle,
-but in several places is abrupt. Most of the site was formerly in
-cultivation and the topsoil, a grayish sand with liberal mixture of
-humus, is three to four feet thick and apparently fertile. The subsoil
-is a rather dense, reddish or orange sandy clay. The trees around the
-site are oak, persimmon, gum, and many smaller hawthorns and sassafras.
-The uplands have heavy growths of pine and the lake bed has the usual
-cypress, willows, and some hardwoods. The nearby lakes still have
-abundant fish—bass, crappie, “bream” and other small perches, as well as
-the “rough” varieties like gar, carp, catfish, shad, and
-“gasper-gou”—and turtles, eels, bullfrogs, snakes, and an occasional
-alligator are present. Bird species are abundant and in former years
-migratory waterfowl came in tremendous numbers. Edible wild fruits and
-nuts in the area are persimmons, haws, crab apples, plums, muscadines
-and other wild grapes, hickory nuts, walnuts, pecans, chinquapins (dwarf
-chestnuts), yoncapins (seed of _Nelumbo lutea_, a water lily), and many
-others. Deer were present until the early part of the 20th century and
-are now returning; squirrels, rabbits, raccoons, and opossums are the
-more prevalent of the edible animals. Mussels and snails are available
-in moderate numbers. In aboriginal and early historic times this
-vicinity afforded, undoubtedly, an abundance of natural resources, with
-good soil and adequate rainfall for domestic crops.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 1. Map of northwestern Louisiana and adjoining
- portion of eastern Texas. Listed sites have Alto Focus or related
- components. Note route of the early historic road, El Camino Real,
- which probably followed prehistoric trails through this area.]
-
-
- HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
-
-During the 18th and 19th centuries this land was spoken of as “the
-coast,” inferring a large body of water into which the tongue of land
-projected. Like so many other lakes formed where streams run into the
-river valley out of the hills, it is probable that old natural river
-levees formed a bar or dam which produced the lake; some, however, are
-of the opinion that the famous log jam in Red River was instrumental in
-production of these lakes. At any rate, much of the traffic on the river
-above Alexandria coursed along these lateral streams and lakes. When we
-first visited this site, old residents spoke of a deep lake with
-steamboat landings at the site and on present Smithport Lake.
-
-The desirability of this land for habitation is attested by the several
-prehistoric sites in the neighborhood, the size of the Smithport Landing
-Site, and the early documents which indicate a white settlement within a
-few years after establishment of Natchitoches Post. About equidistant
-(25-30 miles) from Natchitoches and the Spanish counter post at Los
-Adaes (Fig. 1), families and influences were derived from both the
-French and Spanish. Records at Natchitoches record the birth of Joseph
-Marcel Antonio De Soto, son of Manuel De Soto and Marie De St. Denis,
-member of the family of Louis Juchereau De St. Denis who founded
-Natchitoches, in 1758 (D’Antonio, 1961a). A later daughter married Paul
-Lafitte of Bayou Pierre, as the Smithport Lake Settlement was called.
-
-The Spanish influence became stronger in the latter 1700’s, after
-Louisiana was ceded to Spain. Even after the Louisiana Purchase, this
-land was on the margin of the “neutral ground” and for a time was under
-Spanish jurisdiction. This, as well as a comment about a Yatasi Indian
-village which may be of significance to the site, is indicated by
-D’Antoni’s (1961a) account of the journey in 1808 of Don Marcelo De
-Soto, who had become Spanish judge of Bayou Pierre Community, to San
-Antonio to petition the governor for a resident pastor. The petition
-reads in part:
-
- Don Marcelo de Soto, acting justice of Bayupier, Jurisdiction of
- Nacogdoches, together with Jose Lafitte, Silvestre Poissot, Pedro
- Robleau and Miguel Rambin, all of aforesaid community, who have come
- to this capital together, has the honor of appealing with all respect
- to your lordship’s equity, conjointly with and in the name of all the
- other residents of the specified Bayupier. [These] consist of thirty
- Spanish families gathered together and long established in the
- aforesaid place, with no large number of educated persons at their
- service; besides, there is next to them the village of the Yatasi
- Indians. They are all in need of the church and of an ecclesiastic to
- minister the Holy Sacraments....
-
-Although a resident pastor was not sent, priests from Nacogdoches
-visited the settlement for some years, then visitation was taken over by
-the French priests at Natchitoches. A chapel was constructed in 1843 “in
-the center of De Soto Parish at Bayou Pierre.” In 1855 the first new
-parish of the Natchitoches Diocese was established here and a resident
-priest assigned (D’Antoni, 1961b).
-
-In 1888 a Carmelite Mission was established, with a monastery and
-subsequently separate schools for boys and girls (D’Antoni, 1962). The
-Carmelites built a rock chapel which is now preserved as an historic
-monument to their labors; the small settlement three miles east of the
-site is now called Carmel.
-
-
- SITE EXPLORATION AND EXCAVATION
-
-The Smithport Landing Site is located in Township 13 N, Range 12 W,
-sections 23 and 26, on land owned at present by Edward Lafitte of
-Carmel, but at the time of our excavation by Guy Sample of Shreveport.
-When first visited in 1934, much of the site was in cultivation; now it
-is in pasturage or woodlands. Evidences of occupation were found on
-portions of four hills, heaviest on hills 2 and 3 (Fig. 2). Larger than
-most sites in this area, we estimated that a total of 40 to 50 acres was
-occupied. We first explored Hill 1, a low hill which sloped gently to
-the bottom lands and had been in cultivation for a long time. The
-topsoil was thin and sheet erosion exposed a number of pottery sherds,
-projectile points, and other stone objects. It is possible that this was
-a separate site, since it is set apart by a wide stream bed from the
-other occupied hills, but the artifact types were not different. The
-area of occupation covered about five acres.
-
-Hill 2 is higher, about 20 feet above the old lake bed, and slopes
-rather sharply southward to the lowlands. The top is gently rounded and
-had been put into cultivation only a few years before our first visit.
-The topsoil was very dark and many large pottery sherds were found; in
-fact, this hill showed the heaviest occupation of the site, over an area
-of 20 to 30 acres. The burials (Fig. 3) which are described later
-occurred on the crest of this hill, immediately overlooking the old
-lake.
-
-Hills 3 and 4 run north-south and slope down to a small stream which
-separates them. The occupation areas, chiefly along the slopes to the
-stream, are estimated at five to ten acres on each hill, although we
-were uncertain about Hill 4 because it was partly wooded. There were two
-tenant houses in a nearby deserted field. On the back part of Hill 2 and
-east of the main tenant house, very black soil, found over a radius of
-12-15 feet, contained large sherds, numerous animal bones or bone
-fragments, and ashes (Fig. 2). Two test pits showed that the black
-refuse soil was two to three feet in depth and ashes indicated extensive
-cooking. Our notes show no evidence of a house floor or post molds,
-although we did not trench the area.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 2. Sketch of Smithport landing Site, not to
- scale. Note occupational areas on four hills, burial area and heavy
- midden on Hill 2.]
-
-
- Burial Excavations
-
-In May, 1935, Monroe Dodd, Jr., found a small intact vessel (Fig. 4, O)
-in hog rootings on the crest of Hill 2, which had been left uncultivated
-and put into pasturage that year. Excavations exposed within a radius of
-two to three feet a cluster of nine pottery vessels (Fig. 3, Nos.
-V-94-102), three of which were intact and four largely so. Included are
-vessels shown in Figure 4, B, C, F, K, N, O, and R. Vessels which are
-not illustrated are two broken bottles (probably hit by the plow), one
-_Hickory Fine Engraved_ and an untyped engraved ware with interlocking
-spirals. All of the vessels were within two feet of the surface, as were
-burials 1 and 2 (Fig. 3), male and female adults lying fully extended
-and supine, with heads turned to left and right, respectively. The
-pottery deposit could have related to either or both of these. Two
-_Alba_ points were found to the side of Burial 1.
-
-On weekend trips between May and November, 1935, with permission of the
-owner, we worked out the remainder of the burials; see Figure 3. As a
-result either of our inexperience or of the way the burials had been
-placed, we were not sure of pit outlines and of which skeletons were
-associated. All occurred at a depth of two to three feet from the
-surface, although disturbed soil continued to a depth of three to three
-and a half feet and in a few places to four feet. It was my impression,
-as recorded in notes, that burials 1 and 2 were together and that
-burials 5, 3-4, 6-8 and 11-13, and 9-10 represented interment groups.
-
-Burials 3 and 4 were side by side and undoubtedly placed together. Both
-were supine and fully extended, except that the left arm of Burial 3 was
-abducted and flexed at right angles. Heads were directed almost south,
-that of 3 with face upward; the skull of Burial 4 was turned to the
-right. Both were adults, Burial 3 a female, 4 a male. A large, intact
-bottle (Fig. 4, A) was two feet above the heads and a small bowl (Fig.
-4, I) was in fragments to the left of the skull of Burial 3.
-
-Between this group and Burial 2 we found a skull and several long bones
-in an irregular bundle (Fig. 3, Burial 5). There were no associated
-artifacts.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 3. Burials on Hill 2 of Smithport Landing Site.
- Vessel numbers are catalog numbers. Left arm of B-3 shown
- incorrectly; it should be abducted and flexed.]
-
-Burials 6 to 8 were about a foot apart, on the same level, and were
-thought to be a single interment. Heads were directed north, all turned
-towards the left side, and the bodies were supine and extended, except
-that the left arm of Burial 6 was flexed, with the hand lying over a
-pottery vessel above the head of Burial 7 (Fig. 3). This vessel, an
-intact cylindrical jar of the type _Kiam Incised_ (Fig. 4, D) was the
-only offering. Burial 6 was that of a female, age estimated 40-50 years,
-rather gracile in build. Burial 7 was a child of 13-15 years and Burial
-8 was either an adolescent or young adult female.
-
-Burials 11 to 13, found on a subsequent visit, may have been a part of
-the burial 6-8 interment, as they were at the same depth (three feet),
-were immediately adjacent, and lay in the same orientation. Burial 11
-was a male, supine and extended, with head directed north and turned to
-the left. Age was estimated at 18-20 years. Burial 12 was a female
-adult, also supine, fully extended and head directed north but rotated
-to the right to face Burial 11. Burial 13 was a female adult, lying
-across and directly on the previous two, with head directed just north
-of west and face turned upward. No artifacts were with these three.
-
-Burials 9 and 10 were probably associated but separate from the others.
-They were north of the previous row of burials, with head orientation
-toward the north, supine, extended, and the feet just above the skulls
-of burials 6 and 7. Burial 9 had the face upright, and was a child of
-undetermined age. Burial 10 was of a female adult with head turned to
-the left, toward 9. Above the skull of Burial 10 there were pottery
-fragments which were later assembled to form vessels 130, 133, and 134
-(Fig. 4, H, E, and G, respectively) and a toy bottle (Fig. 4, P). To the
-left of the skull of Burial 9 there were three small vessels, two plain
-bowls, and a fingernail-pinched cup (Fig. 4, L, M, Q).
-
-In November, 1935, a final burial (not shown in Fig. 3) was found, six
-feet east of burials 12 and 13. This was of a male adult, turned on the
-right side with legs partially flexed and the head directed to
-southeast. No artifacts were associated.
-
-Measurements were made on three intact skulls. That of Burial 6, adult
-female, had a circumference of 47 cm., glabella to occipital
-protuberance 27 cm., and zygoma to zygoma 30 cm. The skull of Burial 10,
-adult female, had circumference of 46.8 cm., glabella to occipital
-protuberance 28.5 cm., and zygoma to zygoma 31 cm. That of Burial 14,
-adult male, had circumference of 49.5 cm., glabella to occipital
-protuberance 29.2 cm., and zygoma to zygoma 30.5 cm.
-
-
- DESCRIPTION OF ARTIFACTS
-
-
- Ceramics
-
-There are available for study of pottery from this site 19 whole vessels
-from the burials, of which 10 are decorated and nine plain; 1533 sherds
-from surface collections and the several test pits, of which 875 are
-decorated and 658 plain. Among the sherds there is a group of 37 which
-have paste and decoration characteristics of late wares, historic or
-protohistoric, which will be described in a separate section.
-Consequently there are 19 whole vessels and 1496 sherds which relate to
-the earlier occupation. Most of these are assignable to existing types
-which have been described elsewhere and type descriptions will not be
-repeated, although local or regional variations will be indicated.
-Reference should be made to the Davis Site report (Newell and Krieger,
-1949) and T. A. S. handbooks (Suhm, _et al._, 1954; Suhm and Jelks,
-1962) for descriptions of Alto types; to the Bossier Focus report (Webb,
-1948) and the handbooks for the Bossier types; and to the Crooks (Ford
-and Willey, 1940), Greenhouse (Ford, 1951), and Medora (Quimby, 1951)
-Site reports for Coles Creek and Plaquemine types. One new type of the
-Alto period, _Carmel Engraved_, will be described herein.
-
-Certain characteristics of paste, temper, surface and core colors, and
-sherd thickness extend throughout the earlier wares from this site. The
-paste is generally uniform and compact, rarely lumpy or porous. The
-range of hardness is 2 to 3 (Moh’s Scale), the sherds are broken with
-difficulty and seldom can be scored with a fingernail; the majority of
-the sherds give a metallic ring when dropped on a hard surface (except
-for the dark chocolate to black wares). Tempering is clay-grit in most
-instances, sometimes with finely ground sherds, and a few with enough
-grit to feel slightly sandy (none is fully sand tempered). Bone temper
-occurs in 31 of the 1496 sherds (2%) and shell is totally missing.
-
-Surface colors are predominantly light, showing oxidizing firing
-conditions, and fire clouds are frequent (Fig. 4, A-C), indicating
-incomplete control of firing. The majority of sherds have light
-interiors and cores, but some of the interiors are darker gray or
-smudged and some of the cores are dark brown to black, even though the
-surfaces are light. Surface colors are varying shades of gray, some buff
-or tan, a few orange or reddish-brown; in every type there will be
-varying percentages of dark brown (often chocolate or reddish-brown) to
-black, although these are never as numerous as in the Alto wares of the
-Davis Site, even in the engraved types. The sherds with chocolate brown
-to black exteriors usually have uniform darkness through the core and on
-interior surfaces; the paste is usually softer and the sherds seldom
-give a metallic ring when dropped. Their surfaces tend to be smoothed
-but rarely polished.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 4. Pottery From Burials. A, B, _Smithport Plain_
- bottles, V-104, 95. C, _Hickory Fine Engraved_, V-96. D-G, _Kiam
- Incised_ jars, V-106, 133, 94, 134 (note plain body on D, vertical
- incising on E, fingernail punctating of F, G). H, _Davis Incised_,
- V-130. I, Untyped, V-105 (plain body, scalloped rim with free
- punctations on lower surface). J, _Smithport Plain_ bowl from Allen
- Site. K-N, _Smithport Plain_ bowls, V-99, 667, 668, 100. O-P,
- _Smithport Plain_ miniatures, V-97, 152. Q, _Wilkinson Punctated_
- (pinched miniature), V-669. R, _Smithport Plain_ carinated bowl,
- V-101.]
-
-Sherd thickness varies from 4 to 10 mm., averaging 6 to 7 mm. in most
-types. Variations will be noted.
-
-In general, this early ware is thicker and lighter in color than the
-later Caddoan wares of the Belcher and late Bossier periods. It is about
-the same thickness as the Alto wares of the Davis Site and the Coles
-Creek-Early Plaquemine of central Louisiana, but differs from Davis Alto
-in having less of the reddish and chocolate to black polished pottery
-and more buff to light gray. It shares bone tempering with Texas (Davis)
-Alto. In other respects of hardness and coloration, it more nearly
-approaches Coles Creek ceramics, although seldom having the orange tints
-and never the greenish tints of Coles Creek. It tends to be thicker,
-harder, and lighter in color than Plaquemine pottery, although some of
-the shapes and designs are similar to Plaquemine types.
-
- A. Engraved Wares
-
-_Holly Fine Engraved_ type is represented by 10 sherds (Fig. 5, A, B),
-one from a bottle, five from shallow bowls, and four uncertain.
-Indicated height of bowl rims is 2.5 to 3 cm., vertical or mildly
-outsloping. Colors are tan, gray and brown, no black polished. Two of
-the sherds are bone tempered. Wall thickness is 6 to 9 mm. The engraved
-lines are usually diagonal on the bowls and seven have excised
-triangles.
-
-_Hickory Fine Engraved_ type includes two whole vessels, both bottles,
-and nine sherds from four bowls, one bottle, two small jar or cup forms,
-and two of uncertain form. The first bottle (Fig. 4, C) is 26 cm. high,
-14 cm. in body diameter, has an evenly tapered spout and shouldered
-body. Three lightly engraved lines encircle the shoulder. The second
-bottle, which also occurred with Burial 1, has the spout missing but
-body intact. The body is 12.6 cm. high, 15.2 cm. in diameter, and has
-eight engraved lines encircling the upper body area. Both of these
-bottles are gray in color, with black fire clouds, and are clay
-tempered. Eight of the sherds of this type (Fig. 5, E, G) are tan to
-gray with black areas, while the ninth (Fig. 5, F) is black and
-polished, with cross-engraved decoration. No other _Hickory_ sherd is
-polished. Temper is clay-grit or sherd, one with bone. The bowls appear
-to have vertical or outsloping rims, with walls 5 to 7 mm. thick, but
-one sherd is from an incurvate bowl, 4 mm. thick. Five of the sherds
-have horizontally engraved lines, 4 to 9 mm. apart; three have diagonal
-parallel lines and one has cross diagonals. The latter is a rim sherd
-and the rounded lip has transverse notching 7-9 mm. apart (Fig. 5, F).
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 5. Engraved Sherds. A, B, _Holly Fine Engraved_.
- C, D, _Holly_ or _Hickory Fine Engraved_. E-G, _Hickory Fine
- Engraved_; H, Untyped zig-zag engraved. I-P, _Carmel Engraved_. Q,
- Untyped with spurred engraved lines. R, Probable _Maddox Engraved_.]
-
-Six sherds could be either _Holly_ or _Hickory Fine Engraved_ (Fig. 5,
-C, D). One is from the top of a bottle spout, another from a bottle
-shoulder, two are bowl sherds, and the other forms are doubtful. The
-bottle sherds have horizontally engraved lines, the other four are
-diagonal. One bowl sherd, light in surface color, is only 4 mm. thick.
-The surface colors of both _Holly_ and _Hickory Fine Engraved_ types at
-this site are more like the later (Phase 2 and 3) periods at the Davis
-Site; the earlier vessels at Davis were preponderantly dark in surface
-color.
-
- Carmel Engraved Type
- (Fig. 5, I-P)
-
-This is presented as a new type, as it is a major engraved type at this
-site—with 17 sherds, of which 11 are rim sherds—and has been found with
-Alto pottery at five other sites in northwestern Louisiana. There were
-five _Carmel Engraved_ sherds from the Colbert Site; four each from
-Greer, Mounds Plantation, and Marston sites; and three from Chamarre
-Lake Site. The description is based on the Smithport collection.
-
- METHOD OF MANUFACTURE: Coiled.
- PASTE
- _Temper_: Clay-grit or ground sherd; bone in 2 of 17 sherds.
- _Texture_: Compact, generally fine, occasionally coarse.
- _Color_: Shades of gray from light to almost black, often on same
- sherd (fire clouds); buff, tan and reddish-brown. Nearly half
- of the Smithport sample has reddish-brown exteriors and
- interiors. Cores may be same color as exterior, sometimes
- darker.
- _Surface Finish_: Smoothed exteriors and interiors, a few with fair
- polish, none highly polished.
-
- FORM
- _Wall Thickness_: 5 to 7 mm., uniform.
- _Lip_: Rounded, usually unmodified; occasional thinning.
- _Base_: Uncertain, probably mildly convex, circular.
- _Vessel Shape and Size_: So far as presently known, open and
- carinated bowls only. Rims are 3 to 7 cm. in height, about
- equally divided between 3-5 and 5-7 cm. range, from an obtuse
- angle at the junction of base and rim. The bases appear to be
- shallow; the rims mildly excurvate, or direct and slanted
- outward. A few appear to be vertical. Curvatures suggest
- diameters of 20-30 cm.
-
- DECORATION
- _Treatment_: Engraving.
- _Designs_: Effected with heavy engraving on exteriors of rims only.
- Curving, wide bands outlined by parallel single engraved
- lines, with transverse, widely spaced lines producing a ladder
- effect. Usually two of such bands form arcs or meanders, with
- undecorated bands of similar width between them (Fig. 5, I-K).
- Occasionally one or more engraved lines flank the engraved
- bands or bisect the intervening plain band. Some sherds (Fig.
- 5, M, N, P) have straight instead of curving bands, but
- otherwise seem to fit into the type.
-
- CULTURAL AFFILIATIONS
-
- This type has occurred only in sites which have Alto Focus pottery; it
- has not been found in Bossier Focus sites which lack established Alto
- types. In the Bossier Focus, the related engraved type seems to be
- _Maddox Engraved_, which in northwestern Louisiana has cross-hatched
- engraved bands, generally not curving and most often vertical, as the
- major element. In central Louisiana _Maddox Engraved_ type has been
- extended to include curvilinear bands of cross-hatched engraving (Suhm
- and Jelks, 1962: Pl. 50). The decoration on Plate 50, _F_ of this
- handbook is very much like _Carmel Engraved_ and this vessel probably
- should be included in this type instead of _Maddox_.
-
- DISTRIBUTION
-
- In addition to the Smithport Site, _Carmel Engraved_ has been found at
- one mound and four village sites in northwestern Louisiana.
-
-There is one untyped engraved vessel and seven sherds. The vessel
-(V-102), from Burial 1 is a bottle (with missing spout) of polished
-black ware, decorated with engraved interlocking spiral design, four
-times repeated. One sherd (Fig. 5, H) has a zig-zag engraved decoration
-with excisions at the angles, similar to the two sherds illustrated from
-the Davis Site (Newell and Krieger: 1949, Fig. 34, S, T). Three sherds
-have bands with cross hatching, probably _Maddox Engraved_ motifs, but
-the sherds are too small to be sure about the design (Fig. 5, R). A
-bottle sherd (Fig. 5, Q) has diagonal spurred engraved lines. Two bowl
-sherds are from polished black wares, with designs which suggest the
-_Glassell Engraved_ type (Webb, 1959: Fig. 118).
-
- B. Incised Pottery Types
-
-_Davis Incised_ type is represented by one vessel (Fig. 4, H) and 17
-sherds. The vessel is a deep, reddish-brown bowl, which curves outward
-from a slightly convex disc base, then is vertical to the rounded,
-unmodified lip. It is 10 cm. in height, 15.2 cm. in greatest diameter.
-There are five parallel, smoothed-over incised lines around the upper
-body, placed about 1 cm. apart. They are shallow and about 2 mm. in
-width. The surfaces are smoothed and questionably polished. The 17
-sherds (Fig. 6, A-E) include 11 rim sherds, nine of which indicate
-vertical walls, two outward sloping (but no excurvate). Most of the
-vessels seem to be deep bowls, but two sherds indicate shallower
-carinated bowls with inward curving or sloping rims. All are clay or
-grit tempered, with walls 4.5 to 8 mm. thick. Three are black, others
-gray, buff, light brown or tan in surface color; surfaces are smoothed
-and one of the black sherds (Fig. 6, C) is polished lightly. The lips
-are rounded and unmodified except that most are thinned by an extra
-outward curving of the interior wall. The incised lines are smoothed
-over, 5 to 13 mm. apart and are 3 to 10 in number. Half of the lines are
-less than 1 mm. in width, the others are between 1 and 2 mm. wide,
-generally shallow and well executed.
-
-Nine sherds are classified as _Sanson Incised_ (Ford and Willey, 1940)
-because of the wide, shallow, smoothed incising in straight lines (Fig.
-6, F, G). No rim sherds were found, hence patterning of the incising is
-indefinite. Tempering is clay-grit, the surface coloring is gray to
-black or dark brown, and the thickness is 5 to 8 mm. The incised lines
-are 2.5 to 4.5 mm. in width and appear to have been made with tools
-which had bluntly rounded or flat ends.
-
-Two sherds (Fig. 6, H, I) are possibly _Mazique Incised_ (Ford, 1951)
-but may be well executed _Dunkin Incised_. They are light gray and tan
-in color, and one is a rim sherd. The decoration consists of finely made
-parallel incisions, closely placed in diagonal fields or herring-bone
-effect on the upper body. Vessel shape is uncertain.
-
-_Coles Creek Incised_ type is represented by eight sherds, although it
-is almost certain that some which are typed as _Hardy_ or _Kiam Incised_
-are in reality _Coles Creek_. In order to be certain of Coles Creek
-Period wares at this site, I have included in this type only those
-sherds whose paste characteristics are consistent and which have
-“overhanging” parallel lines around the rim (Fig. 6, J) or
-characteristically placed triangular punctations below the incised lines
-(Fig. 6, K). Surfaces are smoothed and are buff or gray in color. The
-incisions are bold, horizontal, and usually more closely spaced than in
-_Davis Incised_. The subjacent triangles on four sherds are pressed into
-the paste more deeply at the apex. It must be pointed out that it is not
-a simple task, in studying sherds from northern Louisiana, to
-distinguish the four related types which are characterized by parallel
-incisions around the rim—_Davis Incised_, _Coles Creek Incised_, _Hardy
-Incised_, and _Kiam Incised_—unless the technique and paste are
-characteristic or a large part of the vessel available. Much overlapping
-occurs.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 6. Incised Sherds. A-E, _Davis Incised_ (A
- resembles high rim of jars which are frequent in Haley pottery). F,
- G, _Sanson Incised_. H, I, _Mazique Incised_. J, K, _Coles Creek
- Incised_. L-Q, _Kiam_ or _Hardy Incised_ (note outer lip notching or
- punctations on L-N, also suspension hole and subjacent hemiconical
- punctation on O, almost certainly _Hardy Incised_).]
-
-One hundred and seventy four sherds from this site are included in type
-_Kiam Incised_ or _Hardy Incised_ (Fig. 6, L-Q). No attempt shall be
-made to distinguish between these types, but the problem will be pointed
-out and resolution left for future conferences. These sherds are
-characterized by parallel incised lines covering the rim or upper part
-of the vessel. Fortunately, there are four complete vessels from the
-burials (Fig. 4, D-G) which are typical _Kiam Incised_ (Suhm and Jelks,
-1962: 89, Pl. 45) and established the presence of this type. Vessel 106
-(Fig. 4, D) is a heavy, thick-walled cylindrical jar with a slightly
-recurved and rounded lip. It is 11 cm. high, 10.6 cm. in diameter, clay
-tempered, and dark reddish-brown in color. Decoration consists of
-numerous scratchy incisions covering the upper 3 cm.; it is plain below
-this zone. Vessel 133 (Fig. 4, E) is a jar with narrow excurvate rim and
-semiglobular body. It is 12 cm. in height and in greatest width, and is
-clay tempered, with irregular light and dark gray surface color. The rim
-has three to four irregular, wavy incised lines which are not
-continuous; the body is covered with vertical, firm incisions spaced 4
-to 7 mm. apart. Vessel 94 (Fig. 4, F) is a firm, intact, well made
-cylindrical jar, clay tempered, with dark gray-brown surface color
-except for a few light fire clouds. The upper 2.5 cm. has irregular
-horizontal incisions, 5 to 7 in number, and the remaining body exterior
-is covered with fingernail punctations, spaced rather regularly but not
-in exact rows. Vessel 134 (Fig. 4, G) is a jar with semiglobular body,
-narrowed toward the rim, which is vertical. The clay tempered paste is
-softer than the other three vessels and is fired black over the
-exterior, dark gray on the interior. It is 11 cm. high, 14 cm. wide.
-Decoration consists of five firmly incised lines around the rim
-exterior, spaced 3 to 5 mm. apart, and paired fingernail punctations or
-pinches covering the body. These vessels demonstrate the three most
-frequent body treatment techniques described for the _Kiam Incised_
-type.
-
-The 174 sherds present more variation, and include 82 rim pieces. Temper
-is clay-grit or ground sherd except for five which are bone tempered.
-The surface colors cover the range of tan, buff, yellow-orange, light to
-dark gray, reddish-brown and black; the light colors predominate.
-Interior and exterior surfaces are smoothed. Wall thickness is 5 to 10
-mm., averaging 6.5 to 7 mm. The rim sherds show that about half have
-excurvate rims, ¼ to ⅕ of the vertical, and the others slant outward.
-Five have a row of punctations or notches on the rim exterior (Fig. 6,
-L-N), and one has transverse incisions on a flat lip. The lips are more
-often rounded, but about ¼ are flat; thinning may occur but not
-thickening.
-
-The incising varies from thin scratchy lines made with a pointed tool,
-to rough and irregular (Fig. 6, Q), to firm, well made and regular (Fig.
-6, L, M, P). The number of lines varies from two to 20 and the spacing
-from two to 10 mm. apart, often varying on the same sherd. Generally
-they are placed at 3 to 5 mm. intervals. Although most were produced
-with a pointed tool, a few were made with a blunt or square-tipped tool.
-Five have hemiconical or oval punctations below the last line (Fig. 6,
-O).
-
-These characteristics as a unit do not fit either _Kiam_ or _Hardy
-Incised_ types. The predominant shape, with everted or excurvate rim is
-more like _Kiam_, as are bone tempering, and either punctated bodies
-(two vessels, two sherds) or vertical incising on bodies (one vessel,
-two sherds). The paste and surface coloration are more like _Hardy
-Incised_ (except for the five with bone temper), as are the subjacent
-punctations (Fig. 6, O), occasional stabs or punctations at the ends of
-lines (in central Louisiana, this occurs more often in _Yokena_ and
-_French Fork Incised_ than in _Hardy_), plain bodies (one vessel, five
-sherds), cutting away of the body wall just below the incisions (Fig. 4,
-D), and flattened lips. Not described for either _Kiam_ or _Hardy_ types
-are notched or incised lips, vertical rows of plowed-up paste where the
-incisions meet (Fig. 6, L) or narrow undecorated gaps at this junction,
-which occur on a number of the Smithport sherds. The conclusion seems
-obvious that _Kiam Incised_, _Hardy Incised_ and the similar wares from
-this area are local or regional variations of a single widespread type.
-
-The _Dunkin Incised_ type presents the same problem. Although the sherds
-assigned to this type have more similarities to type _Dunkin Incised_
-than to any other, there are some similarities to _Mazique_ and _Manchac
-Incised_ types of central Louisiana, and some items which differ from
-all of these types. Again, regional or temporal variations of a single
-type are indicated and should be subjected to study.
-
-There are 117 sherds of _Dunkin Incised_ which show incising in varying
-directions (Fig. 7, A-L), usually including diagonal lines, and 65
-sherds (Fig. 7, O-R) which show only diagonal lines but are also
-assigned to _Dunkin_. Thirty of the former group and 25 of the latter
-are rim sherds. Paste characteristics, color, and wall thickness are the
-same as those described for _Kiam Incised_. The majority of the rim
-sherds indicate everted or excurvate shapes, possibly a fourth are
-direct and vertical, none incurvate. Indicated vessel shapes are
-semiglobular jars with flaring rims, similar jars with narrowing at the
-neck and vertical or slightly everted rims, cylindrical vessels, and
-simple deep bowls. Lips are usually narrowed by outward curving of the
-interior wall, but may be rounded or occasionally flattened. There are
-no nodes or handles, and only one rim shows notching.
-
-Incisions are generally bolder than in the _Kiam Incised_ type, spaced 3
-to 8 mm. apart, and seldom smoothed over. On the 117 sherds with lines
-in varying directions, 52 were made with a round-tipped tool, 47 with a
-pointed tool, 16 with square-tipped, and two with forked tool (Fig. 7,
-D). In the instance of the rim sherds with diagonal incising, 17 of the
-25 slant downward from right to left (Fig. 7, P-R), eight from left to
-right (Fig. 7, O). The lines may produce diamonds (Fig. 7, C), triangles
-(Fig. 7, A, D, J), chevrons (Fig. 7, B) or, rarely, squares (Fig. 7, I).
-Hemiconical or oval punctations are placed in a single row below the
-incising in two instances (Fig. 7, L), above in one (Fig. 7, E). The
-trait of making firm punctations at the ends of the lines (Fig. 7, F,
-H-J) is more frequent than in type _Kiam Incised_, and gaps are left at
-times (Fig. 7, F). One sherd (Fig. 7, P) has a wide, smoothed band
-interrupting the previously placed incisions below the lip. The numerous
-body or rim-body sherds which show fields of varying incising more
-nearly resemble _Dunkin Incised_ from the Davis Site in having full body
-decoration than the central Louisiana _Manchac_ and _Mazique_ types,
-where the decoration is usually confined to a narrow rim band.
-
-Cross incising (Fig. 7, M, N), which is called _Harrison Bayou Incised_
-(from the Harrison Bayou Site on Caddo Lake) in central Louisiana, but
-is included in _Dunkin Incised_ in eastern Texas (Suhm and Jelks, 1962:
-Pl. 19), is present on nine sherds from Smithport. They are clay
-tempered, light to dark gray in color, with smoothed surfaces. The
-incisions vary from narrow and closely placed to firm, wide lines.
-
-Curvilinear incising is present on two sherds. These resemble
-curvilinear incising from the Sanson Site in central Louisiana which has
-been tentatively termed _Neild Incised_.
-
- C. Punctated and Punctated-Incised Types
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 7. Incised Sherds. A-L, _Dunkin Incised_ (note
- C, a large sherd with typical design; punctations with lines on E,
- F, L: rectangular design on I). M, N, _Harrison Bayou Incised_. O-R,
- Diagonally incised rim sherds, probably _Dunkin Incised_.]
-
-_Pennington Punctated-Incised_ type is represented by 36 sherds (Fig. 8,
-A-F). Most of these derive from open carinated bowls with excurvate rims
-which are 4 to 7 cm. in height, but a few seem to be rims of recurved
-jars. Eight are chocolate brown in color, others tan, gray and
-brown-black. The paste is firm, hard in all but two sherds, with
-smoothed but not polished surfaces. Two sherds are tempered with bone,
-the others with clay-grit or sherd. Wall thickness is in the range of 5
-to 9 mm., most specimens being 6 to 7 mm. The punctations are
-consistently placed in fields which are outlined by single deeply
-incised lines; the fields are in diagonal bands, diamonds or triangles.
-The punctations and incised lines are bold and the 36 sherds include
-punctations made with a pointed or round-tipped tool in 23 instances,
-comma-shaped in four, square (Fig. 8, E) in five, and triangular in
-four.
-
-Eleven sherds show the hybrid _Pennington-Crockett_ design described in
-the Davis report (Newell and Krieger, 1949: 101). Shapes and paste
-characteristics are described above; two sherds are soft, chocolate
-brown in color. One has an incurving rim and a suspension hole (Fig. 8,
-I). The bordering incised line is curved (Fig. 8, G-I); otherwise these
-sherds do not differ from the _Pennington_ type. Seven have rounded
-punctations, two are comma-shaped, one rectangular, and one square.
-
-Another group of 19 sherds shows _zone punctations_ which differ in
-certain respects from the typical _Pennington_ described above and
-possibly are nearer to _Rhinehart Punctated_ (Ford, 1951: 83-85). These
-19 sherds (Fig. 8, J-O) have the same range of paste and coloration;
-five are of the softer chocolate brown ware. Rim and body sherds are
-represented and in only one instance (Fig. 8, O) is it certain that the
-rim is from an open carinated bowl as are the _Pennington_ sherds. One
-heavy sherd (Fig. 8, J) which is 12 mm. thick, suggests a globular
-vessel which narrows at the neck and recurves to upright at the rim.
-Another sherd includes the lower rim area which is decorated with zoned
-punctations and incisions, and the adjoining upper body which is plain.
-Characteristic of this group is the alternation of punctated and incised
-fields, or the outlining of punctated zones by multiple incised lines.
-The punctations are triangular in three instances, square in one,
-comma-shaped in six, round or oval in five, small pits in three, and
-crescentic in one.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 8. Punctated Sherds. A-F, _Pennington
- Punctated-Incised_. G-I, _Pennington-Crockett_ hybrid (I has
- incurving rim, hole for suspension). J-O, _Pennington_ or _Rhinehart
- Punctated_ (N has triangular punctations between horizontal lines in
- Coles Creek tradition). P, Similar to _Dupree Incised_ but shape
- suggests _Bossier_ sherd. Q, R, Random punctations.]
-
-_Free punctations_ made with tools, without zoning or incising, are
-present on one vessel (Fig. 4, I) and 19 sherds (Fig. 8, Q, R). Paste
-and color are as described above; one is bone tempered, six are soft,
-chocolate brown in color. Rim and body sherds are represented but shapes
-of vessels are uncertain. The punctations are triangular in seven
-instances, comma-shaped in three, square in five, round in three, and
-crescentic in two. The vessel (V-105) is a semiglobular bowl with plain
-body and scalloped, everted rim. The lower surface of the rim is covered
-with free punctations. The relative increase in frequency of triangular
-punctations in this group is significant, in view of the fact that the
-_Rhinehart Punctated_ type in central Louisiana features triangular
-punctations (Ford, 1951: 83), whereas they are infrequent in _Pennington
-Punctated-Incised_ at the Davis Site (Newell and Krieger, 1949: 106-8).
-The absence of ring punctations at Smithport is remarkable, in view of
-their frequency at both the Davis Site and in central Louisiana.
-
-A group of six sherds has minute _free_ or _zoned punctations_. The
-sherds are thinner walled than average, 4 to 6 mm., and five of the six
-have black surfaces and soft pastes. The sixth is buff colored, thin and
-has a strongly excurvate, narrow rim. Another (Fig. 8, P) is from an
-open carinated bowl and has notches along the carina. All of this group
-may relate to the Bossier ceramics at this site, instead of Alto. They
-bear some similarity to _Dupree Incised_ of Plaquemine ceramics in
-central Louisiana (Quimby, 1951: 122-3).
-
-_Weches Fingernail Impressed_ (Suhm and Jelks, 1962: 153, Pl. 77; Newell
-and Krieger, 1949: 118-20, Fig. 46) is represented by 19 sherds of
-characteristic design (Fig. 9, A-E). Nine of these include the lip area,
-but all appear to be rim sherds. In three instances some of the
-subjacent body wall is attached; on two of these the body is plain, on
-the third (Fig. 9, E) the body has diagonal incised lines suggesting
-_Dunkin_-like decoration. These three have globular bodies and outward
-curving or slanting rims, 4 to 4.5 cm. high. Other vessels seem to be
-cylindrical with vertical rims, and open carinated bowls are possible.
-Five of the 19 sherds are chocolate brown in color with clay tempered
-paste; the others range from tan and buff to dark gray and
-reddish-brown. Wall thickness is in the range of 4 to 9 mm., the
-majority 5-7 mm. Typically, the decoration (Fig. 9, A, B, D, E) is with
-widely spaced horizontal incised lines with arcs or quarter circles
-between; the arcs could have been cut with the fingernail and
-occasionally are fingernail impressed, but in most the arc is too large,
-1.8 to 4 cm. (my thumbnail is 1.6 cm. wide). Four of the sherds have the
-arcs without intervening lines (Fig. 9, C).
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 9. Nail Impressed and Punctated Sherds. A-E,
- _Weches Fingernail Impressed_. F, _Weches_ Variant with tool
- punctations. G, H, _Sinner Linear Punctated_. I-K, M-P, _Wilkinson
- Punctated_. L, Ridge pinched, similar to _Killough Pinched_. Q,
- _Wilkinson Punctated_ body, _Kiam Incised_ rim. R, S, U, Narrow
- bands with round or oval punctations. T, Single row of semilunar
- punctations.]
-
-Four sherds are identical with this group except that the spaces between
-the horizontal lines have triangular instead of semilunar punctations
-(Fig. 9, F). Seven other sherds have round or oval punctations in single
-rows between incised lines (Fig. 9, R, S, U). I have not included these
-with type _Pennington Punctated-Incised_, as Krieger did with some
-reservation (Newell and Krieger, 1949: 106). Neither have I assigned
-them to _Coles Creek Incised_, _Hardy Incised_ or _Rhinehart Punctated_,
-as Ford did, also probably with some reservation (Ford, 1951: Pls. 16,
-L; 17, 20, H), but have preferred to describe them separately as
-interesting examples of regional variations and typing difficulties in
-eastern Texas, and northern and central Louisiana.
-
-One sherd (Fig. 9, T) has a single row of semilunar punctations and
-otherwise plain surface. It is thick, clay-grit tempered, and buff
-colored.
-
-_Wilkinson Fingernail Punctated_ type is represented by one vessel and
-153 sherds. This was described as a minor type in central Louisiana
-(Ford and Willey, 1940: 50; Ford, 1951: 88-89) to include clay tempered
-vessels with fingernail punctations scattered over the vessel surface,
-arranged in irregular rows, or pinched in vertical rows. In that area it
-is rarely combined with incising and usually covers the entire vessel.
-Ford (1951: 88) thought it occurred at the latter part of the Coles
-Creek period and reached maximum popularity in the succeeding Plaquemine
-Period or later, but it was missing in Plaquemine context at Bayou Goula
-(Quimby, 1957) and Medora (Quimby, 1951) sites. In the Davis Site report
-(Newell and Krieger, 1949) it was not established as a type, as Krieger
-considered fingernail punctations to be a body treatment present in
-several types (_Kiam_, _Weches_, _Dunkin_, and _Duren Neck Banded_); he
-reported 20,000 body sherds with fingernail roughening from a total of
-96,000 sherds. The difference in attitude toward this type on the part
-of these investigators is understandable when we consider the
-differences in frequency and use of the decoration method in the two
-areas, also that Ford and his co-workers used all sherds in typing,
-whereas Krieger translated sherds to vessels and used rim decoration as
-the determinant.
-
-In northwestern Louisiana I have found _Wilkinson Punctated_ a useful
-type in _sherd collection_ studies because of its great frequency in
-Alto wares, its rarity in Coles Creek, and the rapid shift from nail
-roughening to ridging and brushing as body treatments concurrent with
-the development of Bossier, Belcher, and other later Caddoan ceramics.
-_Wilkinson Punctated_ is therefore a good indicator of early (Alto)
-Caddoan occupation at a given site. At Smithport Landing there were 153
-sherds (Fig. 9, I-K, M-P) and one burial vessel, a pinched toy jar (Fig.
-4, Q), of this type. The vessel is 6 cm. high, 5 cm. wide, made of thick
-clay-tempered paste, roughly finished and decorated with three
-horizontal rows of nail pinching. The sherds include only four rims
-(Fig. 9, I, O, P), showing how rarely this decoration, in northern
-Louisiana, covers the vessel. Most of the other sherds are recognizably
-body sherds, and in eight instances (as in Fig. 9, Q) the body-rim
-juncture is present. The latter sherds have _Kiam Incised_ decoration on
-the rim and appear to have come from a modified globular body shape with
-directly or mildly everted rim. Nine of the 153 sherds are bone
-tempered, the remainder are clay-grit or ground sherd, rather granular
-and coarse. The walls are thick in many instances, the range 4 to 10 mm.
-with the majority 7 to 8 mm. Many of the sherds are large (Fig. 9, I, J)
-indicating large, heavy jar forms. Surface colors range from tan and
-buff to dark grays and a few reddish-browns, with more tendency to
-darker colors than in other types. The majority have irregular
-fingernail gouges (Fig. 9, I, J), but some are pinched (Fig. 9, K, M, N)
-and others impressed more delicately and regularly (Fig. 9, O-Q).
-
-Eight sherds have distinctly pinched-up ridges (Fig. 9, L) which are
-circular or curvilinear in six instances, vertical in two. The burial
-vessel (Fig. 4, Q) may belong with this group, although it has been
-tentatively classed as _Wilkinson Punctated_. The group with pinched
-ridges bears considerable resemblance to the type _Killough Pinched_
-(Suhm and Jelks, 1962: 91, Pl. 46) of Frankston and Titus foci, but, in
-the absence of other types characteristic of these assemblages, will not
-be so assigned.
-
-_Sinner Linear Punctated_ is a type which so far has been confined to
-Bossier and Haley foci (Suhm and Jelks, 1962: 143; Webb, 1948: 114) and
-the four sherds of this type from the Smithport Landing, although
-similar in paste, thickness and color to the Alto sherds, are probably
-referable to the subsequent (presumably) Bossier period at this site.
-Two are rim sherds; one of these (Fig. 9, G) has parallel, vertical
-linear punctating; another (Fig. 9, H) and a body sherd have horizontal
-lines; the fourth is uncertain. All have linear nail punctating and the
-more typical linear tool punctating is absent.
-
- D. Stamped Types
-
-One sherd of _Chevalier Stamped_ is small (3 × 2 cm.) but has definite
-rocker stamping. It is of firm paste, tan exterior surface color with a
-black fire cloud at one edge, and black interior. Paste is homogeneous
-clay-grit with several bone fragments (accidental?); both surfaces are
-smoothed but not polished. In general appearance it resembles many of
-the Alto sherds from this site.
-
- E. Ridged Types
-
-The eleven sherds of _Belcher Ridged_ type (Fig. 10, G, H) are generally
-thinner and darker than the Alto wares. Six are dark chocolate to black
-on both surfaces and through the cores; the other five have light buff
-to dark gray surfaces, four of these with black cores. One is bone
-tempered, all others clay-grit. No rims are represented and the body
-sherds are 3 to 5 mm. in wall thickness. Typically, the elevated ridges
-are vertical.
-
- F. Brushed and Brushed-Incised types
-
-There are 38 sherds of the _Pease Brushed-Incised_ type (Fig. 10, A-F).
-The paste is smooth, clay-grit tempered except for one bone tempered;
-interiors are smoothed, exteriors roughened all over with the
-decoration. The color range is about as for other types; eight sherds
-are chocolate brown to black and slightly soft. Thickness is 4-5 mm. in
-13 of the 38 sherds, 5 to 9 mm. in the remainder. The vertical panels
-characteristic of this type are separated by notched applique ridges in
-28 (Fig. 10, B, D-F), by rows of tool or nail punctations in seven (Fig.
-10, A), and by applique nodes in three (Fig. 10, C). The panels are
-roughened by diagonal incisions in 24 instances (Fig. 10, A, C), by
-vertical incising in 10 (Fig. 10, E, F), by horizontal incising in one,
-and by brushing in three (Fig. 10, B, D).
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 10. Brushed, Ridged, and Late Wares. A-F, _Pease
- Brushed-Incised_ (note panel separation by punctations on _A_,
- applique notched ridges on _B_, _D-F_, and applique nodes on _C_).
- G, H, _Belcher Ridged_. I-K, M _Bossier_ or _Plaquemine Brushed_. L,
- _Karnack Brushed-Incised_ (note rolled rim, rare). N-S, Late
- Glendora Focus sherds (_N_, _S_, shell tempered, incised; _O_, _P_,
- engraved, untyped; _Q_, linear punctated, untyped; _R_, _Hodges
- Engraved_).]
-
-_Karnack Brushed-Incised_ type (Suhm and Jelks, 1962: 85) is applied to
-barrel-shaped vessels with everted rims, decorated with vertical
-incising or brushing. Thirty-four sherds from Smithport fit this
-category, although it is possible that some of the vertically incised
-body sherds derive from _Kiam Incised_ or _Weches Fingernail Impressed_
-vessels. There are only three rim sherds, one rolled (Fig. 10, L), the
-other two everted. The paste, temper, color range, and wall thickness
-are no different from other types; seven of the sherds are dark
-chocolate brown in color. Only six sherds are less than 5 mm. in
-thickness and the average is 6.5 mm.; brushing is used on six of the
-sherds, vertical incising on the others, varying from firm to sloppy and
-scratchy.
-
-The other brushed sherds from this site fall into the type which we now
-call _Bossier Brushed_ (formerly _Maddox Brushed_ included these and the
-vertically brushed included now in _Karnack Brushed-Incised_). It is
-very similar to or identical with _Plaquemine Brushed_ type of the
-Plaquemine and late Coles Creek periods in central Louisiana. Chief
-indicated differences are rolled or narrow everted rims in some of the
-_Bossier_ type, whereas they are direct or slightly everted in
-_Plaquemine_; more frequent cross brushing in _Plaquemine_ than in
-_Bossier_; bone temper in a few of the _Bossier_, absent in
-_Plaquemine_; and an occasional row of punctations below the brushed
-zone in _Plaquemine_, not found in _Bossier_. These are minor
-differences, easily attributable to regional variations, and it would
-probably be desirable to define a single type, with recognition of minor
-local variations.
-
-There are 31 _Bossier Brushed_ sherds (Fig. 10, I-K, M), of which seven
-are from rims. Temper is clay-grit or ground sherd; one is bone
-tempered. Surface colors include two black, four chocolate brown, the
-others lighter shades of tan, buff, and gray. Only five sherds are 5 mm.
-or less in thickness; others are 5.5-11 mm., averaging 7.3 mm. (It is
-thicker than most types.) The seven rim sherds have horizontal brushing
-on two, diagonal on four, both on one. The body sherds show a similar
-distribution, with diagonal brushing predominating. Cross brushing or
-incising is present on seven (Fig. 10, M).
-
- G. Smithport Plain Type and Other Plain Sherds
-
-There are nine plain vessels (Fig. 4, A, B, K-P, R) from the burials and
-644 plain sherds from this site which apparently relate to the earlier
-ceramics. The vessels, all identified as _Smithport Plain_, include
-three bottles, four simple bowls, one carinated bowl, and one recurved
-jar. _Smithport Plain_ therefore runs the gamut of vessel forms common
-to decorated types; cylindrical jar forms are included in the sherds.
-The 644 plain sherds include 65 rim sherds (the only definite
-_Smithport_ sherds), one-fourth as many as the total rim sherds in the
-decorated types and exceeded only by _Kiam Incised_ with 82 rim sherds.
-The total number of plain sherds in our collection is altered by the
-element of selectivity in surface collecting; we were less likely to
-save plain sherds unless they were large or were rim sherds. The
-frequency of plain wares at this period contrasts with the situation in
-the later Bossier and Belcher ceramics, where undecorated vessels are
-infrequent. For example, at the Belcher Site (Webb, 1959) there were
-only nine plain vessels among the total of 195, and plain sherds
-constituted only 44 per cent of total sherds (most of these were from
-undecorated portions of decorated vessels).
-
-The 65 _Smithport Plain_ rims include 15 which are everted, 26 vertical,
-and 18 incurvate; additionally there are rims from two simple, shallow
-bowls, one rim with an exterior roll, one everted rim with interior
-bevel and exterior strap thickening, one bottle spout, and one shallow
-toy dish. The everted rims are unmodified in seven instances, and
-thinned in eight with rounded lips. Lip thinning of everted rims was
-effected by exaggerating the outward curve of the rim interior; that of
-incurvate bowls by exaggerating the exterior curve. The vertical rims
-are unmodified with rounded lips in 12 instances, thinned and rounded in
-eight, flat in four, and have beveled exteriors in two. The incurvate
-rims are thinned with rounded lips in nine, unmodified with rounded lips
-in five, flattened lips in two, externally beveled in one, and thickened
-with rounding in one.
-
-The plain sherds include 20 recognizable as bases, nine of which are
-complete flat discs. These range from 6 to 13 cm. in diameter and are 6
-to 12 mm. thick. One large basal sherd has a smooth central perforation,
-13 mm. in diameter, and rounded edges. It possibly was used as a spindle
-whorl. These are frequently found at Bossier and Belcher sites, but
-usually are smaller and lighter.
-
-An additional 46 plain sherds show the wall-base junction. Eight of
-these are from open flat bowls, one from a deeper bowl, one from a
-bottle, four from miniature vessels and 32 from jar, deep bowl or
-cylindrical vessel forms.
-
-The plain sherds have paste characteristics similar to the decorated
-types already described. Nine of the 644 sherds are bone tempered.
-
- Glendora Focus and Other Late Ceramics
-
-A group of 37 sherds have characteristics completely alien to the
-ceramics described above. They are lighter feeling, often with porous
-surfaces or with obvious shell tempering, confirmed by tests. Eight are
-engraved; a shell tempered sherd, reddish in color (Fig. 10, P), with
-horizontal engraved lines from which triangular spurs project; four
-other shell tempered with red or orange color and engraved lines,
-untyped; two black shell tempered with indeterminate engraving, and one
-black polished clay tempered sherd of type _Hodges Engraved_ (Fig. 10,
-R).
-
-There are 11 sherds, shell tempered and orange to gray in color, with
-curvilinear incising (Fig. 10, N, S). This ware was once termed
-_Wilkinson Negative Meander_ but was never formally described. Another
-name should be chosen, because the Wilkinson Site, like Smithport, is
-primarily Alto with transition to Bossier, and has a minimal late
-(Natchitoches) occupation.
-
-Two sherds have linear punctations on shell tempered ware (Fig. 10, Q)
-and two others, untyped, have horizontal incising. There are 14 plain,
-4-6 mm. thick, of which nine are shell tempered, two bone, three clay.
-
- Other Pottery Artifacts and Negative Ceramic Traits
-
-A fragment of perforated pottery base, presumably a spindle whorl
-fragment, was mentioned in the discussion of plain pottery. There were
-also three fragments of fired daub with grass impressions and one
-flattened surface. One tiny cone-shaped pottery fragment suggested a
-figurine or doll leg. No other clay or ceramic artifacts were found.
-Noticeable by their absence are pipes or pipe stem fragments, animal
-figurines or heads, clay labrets and ear ornaments, all of which are not
-unusual in this area.
-
-Other negative ceramic traits are the absence of shell temper, except in
-the small group of obviously late wares; red filming; pigment impression
-into the lines of decoration; handles or other vessel appendages;
-squared bases (not unusual elsewhere in Coles Creek and Alto ceramics);
-squared or castellated rims (Vessel 105, Fig. 4, I is the only instance
-of scalloped rim); vessel effigies, either whole vessel or rim
-attachments; stamping (one foreign sherd), and cord marking.
-
-
- Pottery Alignments and Sequences
-
-Table 1 shows the assignment of burial vessel and sherd types to various
-ceramic complexes, based on the descriptions of Ford (1951), Ford and
-Willey (1940), and Quimby (1951) for central Louisiana; Newell and
-Krieger (1949), and Suhm, Krieger, and Jelks (1954) for east Texas Alto;
-and the author’s publications (1948; 1959) and collections from northern
-and central Louisiana. It becomes apparent that neat typing and
-alignment of sherd collections from this site, true of many other sites
-in northwestern Louisiana, is a phantasy. This site lies within a broad
-contact zone, extending into southwestern Arkansas and eastern Texas,
-between the expanding populations and flowering cultures of the lower
-Mississippi-Red River confluence in central Louisiana and Mississippi on
-one side and the four-state Caddoan area on the other, in
-post-Hopewell-Marksville times.
-
- TABLE 1
- Pottery Type or Group
- _Whole _No. of %
- Vessels_ Sherds_
-
- Distinctive Alto Types
- _Holly Fine Engraved_ 10 0.66
- _Hickory Fine Engraved_ 2 9 0.60
- _Holly or Hickory 6 0.40
- Engraved_
- _Carmel Engraved_ 17 1.13
- _Davis Incised_ 1 17 1.13
- _Kiam Incised_ vessels 4
- _Pennington 36 2.40
- Punctated-Incised_
- _Pennington-Crockett_ 11 0.73
- Hybrid
- _Weches Fingernail 19 1.26
- Impressed_
- _Smithport Plain_ 9 65 4.36
- Subtotal 16 190 12.67
- Distinctive Coles Creek or Troyville Types
- _Coles Creek Incised_ 8 0.53
- _Chevalier Stamped_ 1 0.06
- _Mazique Incised_ 2 0.13
- Subtotal 11 0.72
- Types shared by Alto and Coles Creek
- _Wilkinson Punctated_ 1 153 10.20
- Triangular punctations 4 0.26
- between parallel lines
- Subtotal 1 157 10.46
- Types shared by Alto, Coles Creek, Bossier and Plaquemine
- _Kiam-Hardy Incised_ 174 11.60
- _Dunkin-Manchac Incised_ 182 12.13
- _Harrison Bayou Incised_ 9 0.60
- _Sanson Incised_ 9 0.60
- Free and atypical zoned 1 38 2.53
- punctations
- (_Pennington-Rhinehart_)
- Small, zoned punctations 6 0.40
- (_Dupree_-like)
- Round punctations between 7 0.46
- lines
- Isolated, semilunar 1 0.06
- punctations
- Subtotal 1 426 28.40
- Distinctive Bossier Types
- _Pease Brushed-Incised_ 38 2.53
- _Belcher Ridged_ 11 0.73
- _Sinner Linear Punctated_ 4 0.26
- _Maddox Engraved_ 3 0.20
- _Glassell Engraved_ 2 0.13
- Subtotal 58 3.86
- Types Shared by Bossier and Plaquemine
- _Bossier-Plaquemine 31 2.06
- Brushed_
- _Karnack Brushed-Incised_ 34 2.26
- Subtotal 65 4.33
- Uncertain Affiliation or Untyped
- Curvilinear Incised 2 0.13
- Untyped engraved 1 2 0.20
- Plain body sherds 579 38.60
- Fingernail pinched 8 0.53
- Subtotal 1 591 39.46
- Subtotal, Early Occupation 19 1498 100.00
- Late Occupation, Possibly Historic
- Shell tempered 11
- curvilinear incised
- Shell tempered engraved 7
- _Hodges Engraved_ 1
- Other untyped decorated 4
- Late plain 14
- Subtotal 37
- Grand Total 1535
-
-As a result (or as evidence) of this cultural admixture and interchange,
-we see large groups of sherds from this site, in the punctated and
-incised categories, which cannot with impunity be assigned to a
-previously described type in a specific cultural assemblage. They could
-be as easily assigned to a companion type in one, two or even three
-other surrounding assemblages. Only by having whole vessels
-available—from which details of vessel size and shape, and decoration
-can be determined—or by correlation of sherds with distinctive types,
-may one draw tentative conclusions about affiliation. I have therefore
-found it necessary (Table 1) to list certain types from this site as
-possibly deriving from Alto or Coles Creek ceramics, others from Alto,
-Coles Creek, Bossier or Plaquemine, and yet a third group of brushed and
-incised which might derive, insofar as characteristics of a given sherd
-or group of sherds indicate, from Bossier or Plaquemine. The absence of
-distinctive Plaquemine types eliminates this assemblage from
-consideration, but distinctive types of Alto, Coles Creek and Bossier
-are present and give our clues for major alignments. We should be able
-to work on the assumption that the indeterminate types will derive from
-the three complexes, Alto, Coles Creek and Bossier, in about the same
-proportion as these complexes are represented by distinctive types.
-
-It appears, then, that the major complex at this site is Alto; certainly
-the burial pottery is of this complex. Coles Creek is present to a minor
-extent and it is probable that some of the uncertain punctated and
-incised sherds are from _Hardy_, _Manchac_, and _Rhinehart_ types.
-Finally, occupation seems to have lasted into the Alto-Bossier
-transition to the stage when distinctive Bossier Focus types had
-developed, so that there is a respectable representation of this period.
-The brushed wares and some of the incised and punctated also probably
-relate to the Bossier pottery complex. It is improbable, however, that
-Bossier occupation lasted very long, certainly not long enough for a
-transition to late Glendora Focus times when the small group of shell
-tempered sherds would have been made. The site was probably deserted for
-a long time, then briefly occupied by late Natchitoches-related people,
-possibly in the historic period. The Yatasi village mentioned by Marcelo
-De Soto (D’Antoni, 1961a) is to be considered.
-
-
- Stone Artifacts
-
-Dart Points
-
-The 61 larger projectile points which are classified as dart points are,
-with few exceptions, comparatively small and rough. Most are made of
-quartzite, cherts, and petrified wood found locally. Thirty-five are of
-tan chert, four of petrified wood, two of red chert, six of white or
-light gray quartzite, and others of varying shades of brown, or mottled
-materials.
-
-_Gary_ points (Fig. 11, N-P) total 14; with most made of tan chert, two
-of petrified wood, and one of white quartzite. The range in length is
-2.8 to 5.6 cm. with nine of the 14 in the category of _Small Gary_ (Ford
-and Webb, 1956: 52). The latter are less than 4.5 cm. in length.
-
-_Ellis_ points (Fig. 11, Q-S) number 16, of which 12 are made of tan,
-gray or yellow local cherts, two of petrified wood. The length varies
-from 2.6 to 4.6 cm., the width 1.5 to 2.9 cm. Shoulders tend to be
-straight, only two having barbs. Stem bases are usually straight or
-mildly convex.
-
-_Carrollton_ points (Fig. 11, X), four in number, are made of materials
-different from the prevailing tan chert. One each is of granular
-quartzite, waxy gray chert, white chert, and black chert. They are 4.1
-to 4.5 cm. long, 2.3 to 2.8 cm. wide. Stems are not smoothed.
-
-_Kent_ points total five (Fig. 11, T, U), and are typically crude in
-manufacture. They are of gray, tan, and mottled cherts. Lengths are 3.7
-cm. to 4.5 cm., widths 1.6 to 2.4 cm.; they are somewhat smaller than
-those in eastern Texas (Suhm and Jelks, 1962).
-
-The three _Pontchartrain_ points (Fig. 11, EE, FF) are the largest and
-best made points from this site. Two are of light tan chert, the third
-of darker tan. Lengths are 7.7, 9.3, and 9.7 cm.; widths 2.5, 2.9, and
-3.2 cm., respectively. The blades are rounded on one face, ridged on the
-other, have good large flake scars, and typical fine retouch at the
-edges. One (Fig. 11, FF) has an asymmetrically placed stem; another
-(Fig. 11, EE) has a rectangular stem and short barbs; the third has a
-contracting stem.
-
-One projectile point (Fig. 11, Y) is hesitantly called _Ensor_ because
-of the low, narrow side notches and straight stem base. It is small, 3.7
-cm. long and 1.8 cm. wide, of tan chert, roughly flaked. The blade edges
-are convex and irregular serrated.
-
-Two specimens have outlines like _Desmuke_ points but are made of poor
-materials, petrified wood and gnarled chert, and the typing is
-questionable. Both are thick, with bifacial ridges. A third of similar
-appearance has an _Almagre_-like basal tip, but is much smaller than
-this type, 5 cm. long, 2.5 cm. wide.
-
-Two points are classified as _Elam_ (Fig. 11, V, W). They are short,
-thick and stubby, slightly asymmetrical and identical in size, 3.5 cm.
-long, 2.3 cm. wide. They are made of tan and brown quartzite.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 11. Projectile Points and Chipped Stone Tools.
- A, B, _Alba_ type. C, D, _Hayes_. E, F, _Friley_. G, _Maud_. H,
- _Cliffton_. I, Untyped. J, _Catahoula_. K-M, _Colbert_. N-P, _Gary_.
- Q-S, _Ellis_. T, U, _Kent_. V, W, _Elam_. X, _Carrollton_. Y,
- possible _Ensor_. Z-DD, Untyped. EE, FF, _Pontchartrain_. GG-II,
- Rough blades. JJ, KK, Drills. LL, End scraper. MM-PP, Small
- triangular and ovate scrapers.]
-
-Twelve projectile points are unclassified. Three of these are broken. A
-group of four (Fig. 11, Z) is characterized by rough manufacture,
-irregular wide blades with poor tips, and small, poorly formed stems.
-Similar specimens have been found at other sites in north Louisiana,
-never in large numbers. Possibly they were used as hafted knives or
-scrapers. One specimen (Fig. 11, AA) has long, shallow side notches
-which are smoothed and a stubby, poorly made blade. Possibly it is a
-reworked _Yarbrough_ point or an atypical _Trinity_ point. A small point
-of gray quartzite (Fig. 11, BB) has blade edge notches and expanded stem
-resembling _Evans_ points, but it is much smaller than _Evans_. Similar
-small points with one to several blade edge notches have been found on
-sites in Bossier and De Soto parishes, they will probably be typed by
-another name than _Evans_ (the name _Sinner_ has been suggested because
-of their frequency at the Jim Sinner Site).
-
-A small point of white chert (Fig. 11, CC) has a greater width than
-length; the base is wide and short; one shoulder is barbed, the other
-barely suggested. Another small point has a rectangular stem and
-triangular blade but is much smaller than _Carrollton_, or even _Elam_
-points.
-
-The most unusual point (Fig. 11, DD) has a long rectangular stem, a
-small shoulder on one side only, and a short, asymmetrical blade. Blade
-and stem edges are beveled bilaterally on each face, with fine retouch
-flaking which serrates all edges. The base is mildly concave and is
-thinned by removal of a long, shallow channel flake on one face, a
-shorter channel flake on the other, terminating in a hinge fracture. The
-base and lower stem edges are smoothed.
-
- Arrow Points
-
-There are 55 small projectile points sufficiently intact for typing and
-12 broken so that typing is impossible. Materials include tan, red,
-brown, and gray chert from local gravels; two gray-white chert; one
-novaculite, and two dark brown to black flint.
-
-_Alba_ points (Fig. 11, A, B), 20 in number, are mostly of tan or
-reddish-brown local cherts. They vary from slender to wide, with a range
-of 2 to 3.8 cm. in length. Most recurve to form widened shoulders which
-may be right angled or barbed; edges may be mildly serrated. I have
-placed in this type only points with square or rectangular stems.
-
-There are two _Hayes_ points (Fig. 11, C, D), of gray and red-brown
-chert. They are small, 2.6 and 2.8 cm. long, 1.3 and 1.9 cm. wide; the
-first differs from the type description in having straight edges and no
-barbs, but the stem shape is typical.
-
-Five points are of _Friley_ type (Fig. 11, E, F), characterized by
-definite shoulders with extreme curves so that the barbs turn toward the
-blade tip. Stems are expanded or rectangular. Three are of red-brown
-chert, two of tan chert. Lengths are 1.4 to 2.5 cm., widths 1.0 to 1.5
-cm.
-
-One typical _Maud_ point (Fig. 11, G) of tan chert, has a deeply concave
-base and mildly serrated edges.
-
-Four points are included in the _Cliffton_ type (Fig. 11, H). They are
-hardly more than roughly shaped small, wide flakes but have vague stems
-and some secondary flaking. They are uniform in size, 2 to 2.3 cm. long,
-1.6 to 1.9 cm. wide and all are made of tan chert. A fifth small point
-(Fig. 11, I) of dark gray flint has a pointed stem, concave blade edges,
-and a strongly pointed tip; in essence, it is a concave-edged hexagon.
-It may be a variation of _Cliffton_, but has been left untyped.
-
-A group of 21 points (Fig. 11, K-M) is characterized by expanded stems
-produced by corner notching, and blades which are much like _Alba_. This
-point has been the subject of considerable discussion because of its
-frequency in Louisiana and southern Arkansas; it has been included in
-the _Alba_ type in some publications, in the _Scallorn_ type in others,
-but has distinct and, we believe, meaningful differences from each of
-these types. We have therefore given it the type name _Colbert_. It
-rivals the _Alba_ type in frequency at sites like Smithport Landing,
-Colbert, Greer, Swanson’s Landing, and Mounds Plantation (Fig. 1) where
-there are Alto and Coles Creek components in respectable amounts. It is
-found, along with _Alba_, in central Louisiana, especially in
-Troyville-Coles Creek context (Ford, 1951: Fig. 45, U-W). Recent
-excavations at the Crenshaw Site in southwestern Arkansas uncovered
-Coles Creek and Caddoan burials in Mound B; consistently the Coles Creek
-burials had points similar to _Colbert_ (called _Homan_ in Arkansas) and
-the Caddoan had _Alba_ or _Hayes_. The _Colbert_ points have triangular
-blades with concave or recurved edges, distinct and usually wide
-shoulders, barbs, and triangular or fan-shaped stems. The stem bases may
-be straight or more often convex, rarely concave. Specimens from
-Smithport are made of tan, reddish-brown, white and gray local cherts,
-one of novaculite, and two of white quartz. Lengths are from 1.2 to 3.2
-cm., widths from 9 mm. to 2 cm.
-
-A large flat point of tan chert (Fig. 11, J) has the flake
-characteristics of an arrow point despite its large size, 4.3 by 3 cm.
-It has the corner notching and wide barbs characteristic of _Catahoula_
-points.
-
-A small triangular point of brown chert probably belongs to the _Fresno_
-type. The tip is broken but the original length was about 2 cm.
-
-
- Miscellaneous Chipped Stone Tools
-
-Generally, the tools from this site are made from native tan chert cores
-and flakes, or from petrified wood, and are rough to the point of being
-almost nondescript. Imagination is often required to attempt assignment
-to types.
-
-A massive axe-shaped object of petrified wood is worked to a near-blade
-form at the expanded end (Fig. 12, K), but appears to have been used as
-a maul. The groove is natural. It is 15 cm. long, 9 cm. wide, and 4.5
-cm. in thickness. Two smaller objects of petrified wood (Fig. 12, G, H)
-are partially shaped, showing some of the original surfaces. They
-resemble choppers or picks and are 7 × 5.1 × 2.3 cm. and 8.8 × 4.7 × 2
-cm. A fourth object of petrified wood, 10.5 cm. long and 4.2 cm. wide,
-is more suggestive of a pick but shows little evidence of use.
-
-Smaller core tools include two choppers or end scrapers of tan chert and
-quartzite. The first has much of its original surfaces, with one end
-pointed by bifacial beveling. It is 5.5 cm. long. The second is
-unifacially beveled across one end and onto one edge; it is similar in
-size. Two possible gouges of red and tan chert, 3.4 and 4.2 cm. long,
-are ovate in outline and roughly flaked bifacially at one end. Eight
-smaller objects are keel-shaped core scrapers or small choppers of tan
-and gray chert. They are irregularly ovate, triangular or elongate, from
-2.5 to 4 cm. in length, 1.8 to 3.3 cm. in width. Flaking is bifacial but
-those with one flat face have minimal flaking on this side. Two larger,
-thick leaf-shaped forms (Fig. 11, GG, HH) may have served as knives or
-scrapers.
-
-Other tools are made from flakes. Two might be knives: one (Fig. 11, II)
-is of gray chert, long and ovoid, rough at the base but well finished
-around the edges. It is 5.9 cm. long, 2 cm. wide. The second is made
-from a flat, triangular-shaped piece of petrified wood, which is
-unmodified at one end (the base), but has good secondary flaking around
-the edges. It is 5.1 cm. long, 3 cm. wide, and 6 mm. in thickness.
-
-A thumbnail end scraper (Fig. 11, LL) is of gray quartz, 3 × 2 cm. in
-diameters, 6 mm. thick. Unifacial beveling on one end and one side is
-quite steep and the reverse face shows many tiny fractures around the
-cutting curve.
-
- [Illustration: Fig. 12. Ornaments and Stone Tools. A, Polished stone
- tablet. B, Banded slate bead. C, Bone bead. D, Sandstone bead or
- concretion. E, Pitted stone. F, Brown sandstone whetstone. G, H,
- Choppers of petrified wood. I, Polished stone celt. J, Small
- hammerstone. K, Maul of petrified wood. (All to scale except _B_,
- _C_ and _D_ which are only slightly reduced.)]
-
-There are 15 small scrapers (Fig. 11, MM-PP) which are ovate or
-triangular in outline and made from flakes which vary from 3 to 8 mm. in
-thickness. They are of tan, brown and mottled gray chert, petrified
-wood, and gray quartzite. Most are flaked bifacially but some show a
-preponderance of flaking on the convex face. Sizes range from 2 to 4.5
-cm. Five small broken flake objects show some flaking.
-
-There are four drills, all made of tan chert. One flake drill (Fig. 11,
-KK) has an expanded base, a shaft which is triangular in cross section
-and a keen point which shows use polish. A second (Fig. 11, JJ) has a
-geniculate form, is less well made, but shows usage at the tip. The
-other two are tiny, 2.1 and 2.2 cm. long, have one flat and one
-keel-shaped face, and are worked on two of the three planes. They could
-have been used as gravers or drills.
-
-
- Polished and Ground Stone Objects
-
-Few objects of polished stone were found. One large celt (Fig. 12, I) is
-from the surface. It is symmetrically ovate, 17.5 cm. long, 7.5 cm.
-wide, and 3.8 cm. thick. It shows pecking marks on the faces, but is
-well ground at the bit and along the edges. A triangular hard sandstone
-pebble, 7.5 × 7 × 3.3 cm., has round pits, 3 cm. in diameter, on each
-face, (Fig. 12, E). There are smooth depressions on two edges. A large
-pitted mortar stone is of ferruginous sandstone, 22 × 16 cm. One face
-has an oval depression, 13 × 12 cm., in the center of which, and on the
-opposite face, are deep hemispherical pits, 3.5 cm. in diameter.
-
-An oval-shaped hammerstone (Fig. 12, J) of tan chert is smoothed on two
-faces, roughened by pecking around all edges. A whetstone of brown
-sandstone (Fig. 12, F) has one deep and two shallow grooves on one face,
-two grooves on the opposite.
-
-A rectangular flat tablet of mottled brown slate (Fig. 12, A) was found
-during the burial excavations but not in direct association. It is 6 cm.
-long, 4.5 cm. wide, and 3.5 mm. thick. The faces are polished and the
-edges ground smooth with rounded corners, but there are no decorations
-or perforations.
-
-A bead of gray and brown banded slate (Fig. 12, B) was found on the
-surface of Hill 1. It is pear-shaped, 9 mm. long, 12 mm. wide,
-counter-drilled and highly polished. A small perforated sandstone
-concretion (Fig. 12, D) may have been used as a bead, but the
-perforation seems to be natural, and the surfaces are not modified.
-
-An oval, reddish claystone concretion was found on the surface. It is 12
-× 6.5 cm., and 2.7 cm. thick. The hard cortex had been removed, exposing
-the soft ocher, which was a probable source of paint.
-
-
- Bone Object
-
-A segment of bone, 2.6 cm. long, was found on the surface. The ends are
-cut squarely across and there is a small (natural?) perforation. It is
-probably a bead of bird bone (Fig. 12, C), is hard, very white, and the
-surface is polished. No other artifacts of bone or shell were found, but
-the test pits in dark soil exposed numerous animal bones as well as
-mussel and snail shells. No identifications were secured.
-
-
- DISCUSSION
-
-The Smithport Landing Site is one of a number of village and mound sites
-along the Red River valley and its tributaries in northwestern Louisiana
-(Fig. 1) at which varying amounts of Alto Focus pottery, whole vessels
-or sherds, have been found. The mound sites shown are within the river
-flood plain, with exception of Thigpen Mound and Village Site, which are
-on a terrace immediately overlooking the valley; Gahagan, Curtis, Mounds
-Plantation, and Belcher mounds are on old river channels near the
-present stream. The burial vessels at Gahagan were Alto types—five
-_Holly Fine Engraved_, three _Hickory Engraved_, one _Kiam Incised_—and
-12% of the 76 sherds from the surface are the distinctive Alto types
-(_Hickory_, _Carmel_ and _Holly Engraved_, _Davis Incised_, _Crockett
-Curvilinear Incised_, _Weches Fingernail Impressed_ and _Pennington
-Punctated-Incised_). The Thigpen Site is preponderantly Bossier, but
-included in the scant collection of 102 sherds are one _Weches_, five
-_Dunkin_, and five _Wilkinson_. We have only a few sherds from the
-Curtis Mound (Sunny Point in Moore’s 1912 report) but _Hickory Fine
-Engraved_ is included. At the Belcher Mound Site (Webb, 1959) the
-premound level had sherds and burial vessels of both Alto and Haley
-types.
-
-The Mounds Plantation (Pickett Landing in Moore’s 1912 report) Site has
-recently been explored with some intensity (McKinney, Plants and Webb,
-to be reported). Twenty-six percent of the decorated sherds in the
-previous surface collection were of the distinctive Alto types, 4.15%
-Coles Creek. A trench through one of the mounds showed intrusive Belcher
-Focus burials but the fill, habitation, and premound level sherds were
-Coles Creek and Alto, with admixture at all levels but increasing
-amounts of Alto in the top levels. Alto types are _Davis_ and _Harrison
-Bayou Incised_; _Hickory_, _Holly_ and _Carmel Engraved_; _Pennington_,
-_Crockett_, _Wilkinson_, and _Weches_ in the punctated and
-punctated-incised categories. Coles Creek types were _Coles Creek_,
-_Chase_ and _Beldeau Incised_; _Rhinehart Punctated_; and the shared
-types _Hardy_ and _Sanson Incised_. Deep burials in a second mound had
-scant pottery but the two vessels were _Holly Engraved_ and a bowl with
-_Crockett_ and _Pennington_ designs, both black and polished.
-
-The non-mound village sites shown in Figure 1 are on hills fronting the
-valley or on tributaries and lakes. All of those shown have Alto and
-Bossier pottery types, most have Coles Creek-Troyville, all have a good
-representation of the shared types _Hardy-Kiam_, _Dunkin-Manchac_,
-_Harrison Bayou_ and _Sanson Incised_, _Wilkinson Punctated_, and
-_Rhinehart_-atypical, _Pennington Punctated-Incised_. Omitting these
-shared types and using only distinctive types, the Allen Site has 7%
-Alto, no Coles Creek; the Wilkinson Site has 10.5% Alto, 0.3% Coles
-Creek; the Chamarre Site has 14% Alto, 1.5% Troyville; Williams Point
-has 4% Alto, no Coles Creek; East Smithport has 8% Alto, no Coles Creek;
-the Colbert Place has 1.6% Alto, 5.45% Coles Creek; Greer has 6.7% Alto,
-1.8% Coles Creek; Pease and Sinner are strong Bossier sites but have
-0.3% and 0.5% Alto, respectively; Swanson’s Landing has 4% Alto and 4%
-Coles Creek; and Harrison Bayou has 1% Alto.
-
-Not all of the mound or village sites in this same area show this kind
-of representation of Alto or Coles Creek; there are as many or more
-which are well developed Bossier sites and have little or no Alto. For
-example, we have 230 surface sherds from the Vanceville Mound in Bossier
-Parish with no Alto or Coles Creek types; the 3942 sherds from the lower
-and premound levels of the Oden Mound include two questionable _Hickory
-Engraved_, no other Alto or Coles Creek types; 1275 surface sherds from
-the Marston Village Site show no Coles Creek, one _Holly Fine Engraved_,
-and three _Pennington Punctated-Incised_. In these same sites, as the
-distinctive types drop out, the shared incised and punctated types like
-_Dunkin-Manchac_, _Rhinehart-Pennington_ variants, _Wilkinson_,
-_Harrison Bayou Incised_ and even _Hardy-Kiam Incised_ are almost
-completely replaced by _Pease Brushed-Incised_, _Belcher Ridged_, and
-the brushed types (Webb, 1959). Large projectile points and heavy
-scraper types also disappear, replaced by small arrow point types and
-thumbnail-size, triangular and rectangular flake scrapers (Webb, 1959:
-Fig. 126).
-
-The Smithport Landing Site shares with the other hilltop or hill slope
-village sites of this earlier Caddoan period the carry-over of late
-Archaic dart points, especially types like _Gary_, _Ellis_, _Kent_,
-_Carrollton_, _Palmillas_, _San Patrice_, _Evans_, _Maçon_, and
-_Pontchartrain_. Large as well as small scrapers, pitted stones, manos
-of hand size, oval metates, small drills, large and small celts, brown
-and white sandstone hones, hammerstones, and crude choppers are usual at
-these sites. Triangular and ovate knives, recurved-edge (_Copena_-like)
-knives, stone beads and polished stone problematicals (boatstones,
-bannerstones, gorgets) or plummets are all missing or very rare,
-although stone beads and problematicals occur in the late Archaic. The
-slate bead from Smithport, a recurved (_Copena_) blade fragment from the
-Thigpen Site, and a two-hole gorget from a small site north of Wallace
-Lake (Webb, 1948: Pl. 16, 9) are exceptions. Small projectile points,
-generally of _Alba_ and _Colbert_ types, about equal the number of large
-ones at these sites. Ear ornaments, shell and bone tools are infrequent.
-
-In conclusion, the Smithport Landing Site is one of the larger village
-sites of the earlier Caddoan (Gibson Aspect, Alto Focus) period along
-the Red River valley in northwestern Louisiana. It shares with a number
-of other village sites of this period evidences of a carry over of late
-Archaic projectile points and stone artifact traits. It also shares with
-numerous village and mound sites evidences of admixture of Coles Creek
-ceramic types and influences with the Alto pottery types as the earliest
-pottery at these sites. It seems increasingly clear that the advent of
-Coles Creek and Alto Caddoan peoples and/or ceramics, arrow points, and
-riverine mound building into this area were virtually simultaneous
-occurrences. Out of this blending developed the subsequent Bossier Focus
-ceramics and other cultural manifestations over a wide portion of
-northwestern Louisiana, extending into eastern Texas and southern
-Arkansas.
-
-It is possible that the large ceremonial mound groups, like Gahagan and
-Mounds Plantation, served as ceremonial centers for a number of
-villages, including those in the adjoining hill areas, accounting for
-the frequency of specialized burials, with ceremonial copper and
-polished stone objects, pipes and ornamentation, and highly developed
-burial ceramics, in the mound sites, in comparison with the paucity of
-these objects in the hill villages.
-
-Considerable research is needed (1) to establish the nature of the
-relationships between mound sites in the valleys and the villages in the
-hills; (2) to trace the extent of Coles Creek and Alto contacts and the
-process of amalgamation of these two strong cultures over the wide area
-from central Louisiana into Arkansas, Oklahoma and eastern Texas (this
-must have been friendly, as it is inconceivable that Caddoan peoples
-would have supplanted Coles Creek almost overnight in hundreds of
-villages); (3) and the development out of this amalgamation of Bossier,
-Plaquemine, and other later cultures.
-
-
- FOOTNOTES
-
-
-[1]Thanks are extended to Monroe Dodd, Jr., George Freeman, and other
- friends who assisted in the site exploration; to Alex Krieger and
- James A. Ford for assistance with pottery identification and
- typology; to A. L. Wedgeworth, Jr., for photography; and to Gordon
- Maxcy for film developing and assistance with the plates.
-
-
- REFERENCES CITED
-
-D’Antoni, Blaise C.
-
-1961a. Bayou Pierre, Land of Yesteryear, Chapter 2. Newsletter, North
- Louisiana Historical Assn., April, pp. 9-14.
-
-1961b. Bayou Pierre, Land of Yesteryear, Chapter 3. Newsletter, North
- Louisiana Historical Assn., July, pp. 7-12.
-
-1962. Bayou Pierre, Land of Yesteryear, Chapter 5. Newsletter, North
- Louisiana Historical Assn., May, pp. 13-15.
-
-Ford, James A.
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-1951. Greenhouse: A Troyville-Coles Creek Period Site in Avoyelles
- Parish, Louisiana. Anthropological Papers of the American Museum
- of Natural History, Vol. 44, Part 1.
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-Ford, James A., and Clarence H. Webb
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-1956. Poverty Point, A Late Archaic Site in Louisiana. Anthropological
- Papers of the American Museum of Natural History, Vol. 46, Part 1.
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-Ford, James A., and G. R. Willey
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-1940. Crooks Site, A Marksville Period Burial Mound in La Salle Parish,
- Louisiana. Department of Conservation, Louisiana Geological
- Survey, Anthropological Study No. 3.
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-Moore, Clarence B.
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-1912. Some Aboriginal Sites on Red River. Journal of the Academy of
- Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 2nd. Series, Vol. 14, Part 4.
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-Newell, H. Perry, and Alex D. Krieger
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-1949. The George C. Davis Site, Cherokee County, Texas. Memoirs of the
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-Quimby, George I.
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-1951. The Medora Site, West Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana. Field Museum
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-1957. The Bayou Goula Site, Iberville Parish, Louisiana. Fieldiana:
- Anthropology, Vol. 47, No. 2.
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-Suhm, Dee Ann, Alex D. Krieger, and Edward B. Jelks
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-1954. An Introductory Handbook of Texas Archeology. Bulletin of the
- Texas Archeological Society, Vol. 25.
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-Suhm, Dee Ann, and Edward B. Jelks (editors)
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-1962. Handbook of Texas Archeology: Type Descriptions. The Texas
- Archeological Society, Special Publication No. 1, and The Texas
- Memorial Museum Bulletin, No. 4.
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-Webb, Clarence H.
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-1948. Caddoan Prehistory: The Bossier Focus. Bulletin of the Texas
- Archeological and Paleontological Society, Vol. 19.
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-1959. The Belcher Mound, A Stratified Caddoan Site in Caddo Parish,
- Louisiana. Memoirs of the Society for American Archaeology, No.
- 16.
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-1961. Relationships between the Caddoan and Central Louisiana Culture
- Sequences. Bulletin of the Texas Archeological Society, Vol. 31.
-
- 1560 Line Avenue
- Shreveport, Louisiana
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-—Silently corrected a few typos.
-
-—Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook
- is public-domain in the country of publication.
-
-—In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
- _underscores_.
-
-
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Smithport Landing Site, by Clarence H. Webb</div>
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-<div style='display:table; margin-bottom:1em;'>
- <div style='display:table-row'>
- <div style='display:table-cell; padding-right:0.5em'>Title:</div>
- <div style='display:table-cell'>The Smithport Landing Site</div>
- </div>
- <div style='display:table-row;'>
- <div style='display:table-cell'></div>
- <div style='display:table-cell'>An Alto Focus Component in De Soto Parish, Louisiana</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-<div style='display:table; margin-bottom:1em;'>
-<div style='display:table-row'>
- <div style='display:table-cell; padding-right:0.5em'>Author:</div>
- <div style='display:table-cell'>Clarence H. Webb</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: June 9, 2021 [eBook #65573]</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
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-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SMITHPORT LANDING SITE ***</div>
-<div id="cover" class="img">
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-</div>
-<div class="box">
-<h1>The Smithport Landing Site: An Alto Focus Component in De Soto Parish, Louisiana</h1>
-<p class="center"><b class="small">CLARENCE H. WEBB</b></p>
-<p class="tbcenter"><i>Reprint from</i> <span class="sc">Bulletin of the Texas Archeological Society</span>, Vol. 34, 1963.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_143">143</div>
-<h3 id="c1">ABSTRACT</h3>
-<p>This is a belated description of the Smithport Landing Site, one of several known
-Alto Focus components in northwestern Louisiana. This large village site, on the
-western margin of the Red River flood plain, covers portions of several low hills
-which front on a former lake.</p>
-<p>Nineteen pottery vessels, all but two identifiable as Alto Focus types, were found
-with fourteen burials. Included are <i>Hickory Fine Engraved</i>, <i>Davis Incised</i>, <i>Kiam
-Incised</i>, <i>Wilkinson Punctated</i>, and <i>Smithport Plain</i> (virtually identical with <i>Bowles
-Creek Plain</i>) types.</p>
-<p>Surface materials comprise 1553 sherds, 61 dart and 55 arrow points, and a modest
-number of chipped and polished stone tools or ornaments. The stone tool assemblage
-seems to be basically late Archaic with the addition of small arrow points.</p>
-<p>Although the sherds as well as whole vessels are predominantly derived from
-Alto Focus ceramics, a small percentage of Coles Creek, a somewhat larger representation
-of Bossier Focus, and a few late Caddoan pottery types are identified.
-Similarities and differences between the ceramics of this site, the Davis (Alto) Site
-in eastern Texas, and the central Louisiana sequence of pottery, are pointed out.
-Possible relationships between Coles Creek, Alto, Bossier, and Plaquemine ceramics
-are developed. It is postulated that Caddoan (Alto) and Coles Creek peoples or
-influences entered northwestern Louisiana almost simultaneously, and that Bossier
-Focus developed out of the amalgamation of these two previous cultures. A few
-very late Caddoan sherds indicate a late occupation at Smithport Landing, possibly
-during historic times.</p>
-<h3 id="c2">INTRODUCTION</h3>
-<p>The Smithport Landing Site was initially explored by Monroe Dodd,
-Jr., and the author between 1934 and 1940.<a class="fn" id="fr_1" href="#fn_1">[1]</a> It was the first site at
-which we found burials and whole pottery; it was also the first site in
-Louisiana which was identified as an Alto Focus component (Webb,
-1948) and was recognized as such in the Davis Site report (Newell
-and Krieger, 1949: 195, 197, Fig. 62). In describing the Bossier Focus,
-Smithport Landing was one of 15 sites used for comparison and discussion
-of the relative incidence of Bossier Focus pottery types, and of
-several pottery complexes. First suggested in my 1948 paper, and
-elaborated in a more recent study (Webb, 1961) of 20 sites in northwestern
-Louisiana, is the thesis that the Bossier Focus developed out
-of a simultaneous spread of Alto and Coles Creek peoples or influences
-across this area in post-Marksville times. Smithport Landing was one
-of the key sites in this study, because of the admixture of Alto and Coles
-Creek pottery types and the presence of a minor Bossier Focus manifestation.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_144">144</div>
-<p>It therefore seems appropriate to publish the available information
-about this site, despite the limited excavations conducted nearly 30
-years ago. The criticism has been made that too many foci in the
-Caddoan area have been based on excavation of a single site and that
-the Alto Focus, for example, is based on the Davis Site alone. The information
-presented herein concerning Smithport Landing and other
-Alto Focus manifestations in Louisiana was available to, and used by,
-Krieger as indicated in the Davis report. The details should have been
-published for other students, however, especially since burials of the
-Alto period are limited in number.</p>
-<h3 id="c3">SITE ENVIRONMENT</h3>
-<p>The Smithport Landing Site is in the eastern edge of De Soto Parish,
-about eight miles east of Mansfield, the Parish seat (<a href="#fig1">Fig. 1</a>). It is a relatively
-large village site situated on eroded and dissected hills which
-project in an expanded tongue of land fronting on Old Smithport or
-Clear Lake (Bayou Pierre Lake). The former lake bed is now dry in
-the summer, swampy during the rainy season. Buffalo Bayou courses
-through this low area to join the outflow of present Smithport Lake
-about one mile northeast of the site. Further eastward this drainage
-flows into Bayou Pierre which continues some 20 miles down the southwestern
-margin of the Red River flood plain until it empties into this
-river near Natchitoches.</p>
-<p>The hills on which the site is located (<a href="#fig2">Fig. 2</a>) are 10 to 20 feet above
-the lake bed; where dissected by small drainages the slope is gentle,
-but in several places is abrupt. Most of the site was formerly in cultivation
-and the topsoil, a grayish sand with liberal mixture of humus,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_145">145</span>
-is three to four feet thick and apparently fertile. The subsoil is a rather
-dense, reddish or orange sandy clay. The trees around the site are oak,
-persimmon, gum, and many smaller hawthorns and sassafras. The uplands
-have heavy growths of pine and the lake bed has the usual cypress,
-willows, and some hardwoods. The nearby lakes still have abundant
-fish&mdash;bass, crappie, &ldquo;bream&rdquo; and other small perches, as well as
-the &ldquo;rough&rdquo; varieties like gar, carp, catfish, shad, and &ldquo;gasper-gou&rdquo;&mdash;and
-turtles, eels, bullfrogs, snakes, and an occasional alligator are present.
-Bird species are abundant and in former years migratory waterfowl
-came in tremendous numbers. Edible wild fruits and nuts in the
-area are persimmons, haws, crab apples, plums, muscadines and other
-wild grapes, hickory nuts, walnuts, pecans, chinquapins (dwarf chestnuts),
-yoncapins (seed of <i>Nelumbo lutea</i>, a water lily), and many
-others. Deer were present until the early part of the 20th century and
-are now returning; squirrels, rabbits, raccoons, and opossums are the
-more prevalent of the edible animals. Mussels and snails are available
-in moderate numbers. In aboriginal and early historic times this vicinity
-afforded, undoubtedly, an abundance of natural resources, with
-good soil and adequate rainfall for domestic crops.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig1">
-<img src="images/p01.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="446" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 1. Map of northwestern Louisiana and adjoining portion of eastern Texas. Listed
-sites have Alto Focus or related components. Note route of the early historic road, El
-Camino Real, which probably followed prehistoric trails through this area.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_146">146</div>
-<h3 id="c4">HISTORICAL BACKGROUND</h3>
-<p>During the 18th and 19th centuries this land was spoken of as &ldquo;the
-coast,&rdquo; inferring a large body of water into which the tongue of land
-projected. Like so many other lakes formed where streams run into
-the river valley out of the hills, it is probable that old natural river
-levees formed a bar or dam which produced the lake; some, however,
-are of the opinion that the famous log jam in Red River was instrumental
-in production of these lakes. At any rate, much of the traffic
-on the river above Alexandria coursed along these lateral streams and
-lakes. When we first visited this site, old residents spoke of a deep lake
-with steamboat landings at the site and on present Smithport Lake.</p>
-<p>The desirability of this land for habitation is attested by the several
-prehistoric sites in the neighborhood, the size of the Smithport Landing
-Site, and the early documents which indicate a white settlement within
-a few years after establishment of Natchitoches Post. About equidistant
-(25-30 miles) from Natchitoches and the Spanish counter post
-at Los Adaes (<a href="#fig1">Fig. 1</a>), families and influences were derived from both
-the French and Spanish. Records at Natchitoches record the birth of
-Joseph Marcel Antonio De Soto, son of Manuel De Soto and Marie De
-St. Denis, member of the family of Louis Juchereau De St. Denis who
-founded Natchitoches, in 1758 (D&rsquo;Antonio, 1961a). A later daughter
-married Paul Lafitte of Bayou Pierre, as the Smithport Lake Settlement
-was called.</p>
-<p>The Spanish influence became stronger in the latter 1700&rsquo;s, after
-Louisiana was ceded to Spain. Even after the Louisiana Purchase, this
-land was on the margin of the &ldquo;neutral ground&rdquo; and for a time was
-under Spanish jurisdiction. This, as well as a comment about a Yatasi
-Indian village which may be of significance to the site, is indicated by
-D&rsquo;Antoni&rsquo;s (1961a) account of the journey in 1808 of Don Marcelo
-De Soto, who had become Spanish judge of Bayou Pierre Community,
-to San Antonio to petition the governor for a resident pastor. The petition
-reads in part:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Don Marcelo de Soto, acting justice of Bayupier, Jurisdiction of Nacogdoches,
-together with Jose Lafitte, Silvestre Poissot, Pedro Robleau and Miguel Rambin,
-all of aforesaid community, who have come to this capital together, has the honor
-of appealing with all respect to your lordship&rsquo;s equity, conjointly with and in the
-name of all the other residents of the specified Bayupier. [These] consist of thirty
-Spanish families gathered together and long established in the aforesaid place, with
-no large number of educated persons at their service; besides, there is next to them
-the village of the Yatasi Indians. They are all in need of the church and of an
-ecclesiastic to minister the Holy Sacraments....</p>
-</blockquote>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_147">147</div>
-<p>Although a resident pastor was not sent, priests from Nacogdoches
-visited the settlement for some years, then visitation was taken over
-by the French priests at Natchitoches. A chapel was constructed in
-1843 &ldquo;in the center of De Soto Parish at Bayou Pierre.&rdquo; In 1855 the
-first new parish of the Natchitoches Diocese was established here and
-a resident priest assigned (D&rsquo;Antoni, 1961b).</p>
-<p>In 1888 a Carmelite Mission was established, with a monastery and
-subsequently separate schools for boys and girls (D&rsquo;Antoni, 1962).
-The Carmelites built a rock chapel which is now preserved as an historic
-monument to their labors; the small settlement three miles east
-of the site is now called Carmel.</p>
-<h3 id="c5">SITE EXPLORATION AND EXCAVATION</h3>
-<p>The Smithport Landing Site is located in Township 13 N, Range
-12 W, sections 23 and 26, on land owned at present by Edward Lafitte
-of Carmel, but at the time of our excavation by Guy Sample of
-Shreveport. When first visited in 1934, much of the site was in cultivation;
-now it is in pasturage or woodlands. Evidences of occupation
-were found on portions of four hills, heaviest on hills 2 and 3 (<a href="#fig2">Fig. 2</a>).
-Larger than most sites in this area, we estimated that a total of 40 to
-50 acres was occupied. We first explored Hill 1, a low hill which
-sloped gently to the bottom lands and had been in cultivation for a
-long time. The topsoil was thin and sheet erosion exposed a number of
-pottery sherds, projectile points, and other stone objects. It is possible
-that this was a separate site, since it is set apart by a wide stream bed
-from the other occupied hills, but the artifact types were not different.
-The area of occupation covered about five acres.</p>
-<p>Hill 2 is higher, about 20 feet above the old lake bed, and slopes
-rather sharply southward to the lowlands. The top is gently rounded
-and had been put into cultivation only a few years before our first visit.
-The topsoil was very dark and many large pottery sherds were found;
-in fact, this hill showed the heaviest occupation of the site, over an area
-of 20 to 30 acres. The burials (<a href="#fig3">Fig. 3</a>) which are described later occurred
-on the crest of this hill, immediately overlooking the old lake.</p>
-<p>Hills 3 and 4 run north-south and slope down to a small stream
-which separates them. The occupation areas, chiefly along the slopes
-to the stream, are estimated at five to ten acres on each hill, although
-we were uncertain about Hill 4 because it was partly wooded. There
-were two tenant houses in a nearby deserted field. On the back part of
-Hill 2 and east of the main tenant house, very black soil, found over
-<span class="pb" id="Page_148">148</span>
-a radius of 12-15 feet, contained large sherds, numerous animal bones
-or bone fragments, and ashes (<a href="#fig2">Fig. 2</a>). Two test pits showed that the
-black refuse soil was two to three feet in depth and ashes indicated
-extensive cooking. Our notes show no evidence of a house floor or post
-molds, although we did not trench the area.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig2">
-<img src="images/p02.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="423" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 2. Sketch of Smithport landing Site, not to scale. Note occupational areas on four
-hills, burial area and heavy midden on Hill 2.</p>
-</div>
-<h4>Burial Excavations</h4>
-<p>In May, 1935, Monroe Dodd, Jr., found a small intact vessel (<a href="#fig4">Fig. 4</a>, O)
-in hog rootings on the crest of Hill 2, which had been left uncultivated
-and put into pasturage that year. Excavations exposed within a
-radius of two to three feet a cluster of nine pottery vessels (<a href="#fig3">Fig. 3</a>, Nos.
-V-94-102), three of which were intact and four largely so. Included
-are vessels shown in <a href="#fig4">Figure 4</a>, B, C, F, K, N, O, and R. Vessels which
-are not illustrated are two broken bottles (probably hit by the plow),
-one <i>Hickory Fine Engraved</i> and an untyped engraved ware with
-interlocking spirals. All of the vessels were within two feet of the
-surface, as were burials 1 and 2 (<a href="#fig3">Fig. 3</a>), male and female adults
-lying fully extended and supine, with heads turned to left and right,
-respectively. The pottery deposit could have related to either or both
-of these. Two <i>Alba</i> points were found to the side of Burial 1.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_149">149</div>
-<p>On weekend trips between May and November, 1935, with permission
-of the owner, we worked out the remainder of the burials;
-see <a href="#fig3">Figure 3</a>. As a result either of our inexperience or of the way
-the burials had been placed, we were not sure of pit outlines and of
-which skeletons were associated. All occurred at a depth of two to three
-feet from the surface, although disturbed soil continued to a depth of
-three to three and a half feet and in a few places to four feet. It was
-my impression, as recorded in notes, that burials 1 and 2 were together
-and that burials 5, 3-4, 6-8 and 11-13, and 9-10 represented interment
-groups.</p>
-<p>Burials 3 and 4 were side by side and undoubtedly placed together.
-Both were supine and fully extended, except that the left arm of Burial
-3 was abducted and flexed at right angles. Heads were directed almost
-south, that of 3 with face upward; the skull of Burial 4 was turned to
-the right. Both were adults, Burial 3 a female, 4 a male. A large, intact
-bottle (<a href="#fig4">Fig. 4</a>, A) was two feet above the heads and a small bowl (<a href="#fig4">Fig. 4</a>, I)
-was in fragments to the left of the skull of Burial 3.</p>
-<p>Between this group and Burial 2 we found a skull and several long
-bones in an irregular bundle (<a href="#fig3">Fig. 3</a>, Burial 5). There were no associated
-artifacts.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig3">
-<img src="images/p02a.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="337" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 3. Burials on Hill 2 of Smithport Landing Site. Vessel numbers are catalog numbers.
-Left arm of B-3 shown incorrectly; it should be abducted and flexed.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Burials 6 to 8 were about a foot apart, on the same level, and were
-thought to be a single interment. Heads were directed north, all turned
-towards the left side, and the bodies were supine and extended, except
-that the left arm of Burial 6 was flexed, with the hand lying over a pottery
-<span class="pb" id="Page_150">150</span>
-vessel above the head of Burial 7 (<a href="#fig3">Fig. 3</a>). This vessel, an intact
-cylindrical jar of the type <i>Kiam Incised</i> (<a href="#fig4">Fig. 4</a>, D) was the only offering.
-Burial 6 was that of a female, age estimated 40-50 years, rather
-gracile in build. Burial 7 was a child of 13-15 years and Burial 8 was
-either an adolescent or young adult female.</p>
-<p>Burials 11 to 13, found on a subsequent visit, may have been a part
-of the burial 6-8 interment, as they were at the same depth (three
-feet), were immediately adjacent, and lay in the same orientation.
-Burial 11 was a male, supine and extended, with head directed north
-and turned to the left. Age was estimated at 18-20 years. Burial 12
-was a female adult, also supine, fully extended and head directed
-north but rotated to the right to face Burial 11. Burial 13 was a female
-adult, lying across and directly on the previous two, with head directed
-just north of west and face turned upward. No artifacts were
-with these three.</p>
-<p>Burials 9 and 10 were probably associated but separate from the
-others. They were north of the previous row of burials, with head
-orientation toward the north, supine, extended, and the feet just above
-the skulls of burials 6 and 7. Burial 9 had the face upright, and was a
-child of undetermined age. Burial 10 was of a female adult with head
-turned to the left, toward 9. Above the skull of Burial 10 there were
-pottery fragments which were later assembled to form vessels 130, 133,
-and 134 (<a href="#fig4">Fig. 4</a>, H, E, and G, respectively) and a toy bottle (<a href="#fig4">Fig. 4</a>, P).
-To the left of the skull of Burial 9 there were three small vessels, two
-plain bowls, and a fingernail-pinched cup (<a href="#fig4">Fig. 4</a>, L, M, Q).</p>
-<p>In November, 1935, a final burial (not shown in <a href="#fig3">Fig. 3</a>) was found,
-six feet east of burials 12 and 13. This was of a male adult, turned on
-the right side with legs partially flexed and the head directed to southeast.
-No artifacts were associated.</p>
-<p>Measurements were made on three intact skulls. That of Burial 6,
-adult female, had a circumference of 47 cm., glabella to occipital protuberance
-27 cm., and zygoma to zygoma 30 cm. The skull of Burial
-10, adult female, had circumference of 46.8 cm., glabella to occipital
-protuberance 28.5 cm., and zygoma to zygoma 31 cm. That of Burial
-14, adult male, had circumference of 49.5 cm., glabella to occipital
-protuberance 29.2 cm., and zygoma to zygoma 30.5 cm.</p>
-<h3 id="c6">DESCRIPTION OF ARTIFACTS</h3>
-<h4>Ceramics</h4>
-<p>There are available for study of pottery from this site 19 whole vessels
-<span class="pb" id="Page_151">151</span>
-from the burials, of which 10 are decorated and nine plain; 1533
-sherds from surface collections and the several test pits, of which 875
-are decorated and 658 plain. Among the sherds there is a group of 37
-which have paste and decoration characteristics of late wares, historic
-or protohistoric, which will be described in a separate section. Consequently
-there are 19 whole vessels and 1496 sherds which relate to the
-earlier occupation. Most of these are assignable to existing types which
-have been described elsewhere and type descriptions will not be repeated,
-although local or regional variations will be indicated. Reference
-should be made to the Davis Site report (Newell and Krieger,
-1949) and T. A. S. handbooks (Suhm, <i>et al.</i>, 1954; Suhm and Jelks,
-1962) for descriptions of Alto types; to the Bossier Focus report (Webb,
-1948) and the handbooks for the Bossier types; and to the Crooks (Ford
-and Willey, 1940), Greenhouse (Ford, 1951), and Medora (Quimby,
-1951) Site reports for Coles Creek and Plaquemine types. One new
-type of the Alto period, <i>Carmel Engraved</i>, will be described herein.</p>
-<p>Certain characteristics of paste, temper, surface and core colors, and
-sherd thickness extend throughout the earlier wares from this site. The
-paste is generally uniform and compact, rarely lumpy or porous. The
-range of hardness is 2 to 3 (Moh&rsquo;s Scale), the sherds are broken with
-difficulty and seldom can be scored with a fingernail; the majority of
-the sherds give a metallic ring when dropped on a hard surface (except
-for the dark chocolate to black wares). Tempering is clay-grit in
-most instances, sometimes with finely ground sherds, and a few with
-enough grit to feel slightly sandy (none is fully sand tempered). Bone
-temper occurs in 31 of the 1496 sherds (2%) and shell is totally missing.</p>
-<p>Surface colors are predominantly light, showing oxidizing firing
-conditions, and fire clouds are frequent (<a href="#fig4">Fig. 4</a>, A-C), indicating incomplete
-control of firing. The majority of sherds have light interiors
-and cores, but some of the interiors are darker gray or smudged and
-some of the cores are dark brown to black, even though the surfaces
-are light. Surface colors are varying shades of gray, some buff or tan,
-a few orange or reddish-brown; in every type there will be varying
-percentages of dark brown (often chocolate or reddish-brown) to black,
-although these are never as numerous as in the Alto wares of the Davis
-Site, even in the engraved types. The sherds with chocolate brown to
-black exteriors usually have uniform darkness through the core and on
-interior surfaces; the paste is usually softer and the sherds seldom give
-a metallic ring when dropped. Their surfaces tend to be smoothed but
-rarely polished.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_152">152</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig4">
-<img src="images/p03.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="920" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 4. Pottery From Burials. A, B, <i>Smithport Plain</i> bottles, V-104, 95. C, <i>Hickory Fine
-Engraved</i>, V-96. D-G, <i>Kiam Incised</i> jars, V-106, 133, 94, 134 (note plain body on D,
-vertical incising on E, fingernail punctating of F, G). H, <i>Davis Incised</i>, V-130. I, Untyped,
-V-105 (plain body, scalloped rim with free punctations on lower surface). J, <i>Smithport Plain</i>
-bowl from Allen Site. K-N, <i>Smithport Plain</i> bowls, V-99, 667, 668, 100. O-P, <i>Smithport
-Plain</i> miniatures, V-97, 152. Q, <i>Wilkinson Punctated</i> (pinched miniature), V-669. R, <i>Smithport
-Plain</i> carinated bowl, V-101.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_153">153</div>
-<p>Sherd thickness varies from 4 to 10 mm., averaging 6 to 7 mm. in
-most types. Variations will be noted.</p>
-<p>In general, this early ware is thicker and lighter in color than the
-later Caddoan wares of the Belcher and late Bossier periods. It is about
-the same thickness as the Alto wares of the Davis Site and the Coles
-Creek-Early Plaquemine of central Louisiana, but differs from Davis
-Alto in having less of the reddish and chocolate to black polished pottery
-and more buff to light gray. It shares bone tempering with Texas
-(Davis) Alto. In other respects of hardness and coloration, it more
-nearly approaches Coles Creek ceramics, although seldom having the
-orange tints and never the greenish tints of Coles Creek. It tends to be
-thicker, harder, and lighter in color than Plaquemine pottery, although
-some of the shapes and designs are similar to Plaquemine types.</p>
-<h5 id="c7">A. Engraved Wares</h5>
-<p><i>Holly Fine Engraved</i> type is represented by 10 sherds (<a href="#fig5">Fig. 5</a>, A, B),
-one from a bottle, five from shallow bowls, and four uncertain. Indicated
-height of bowl rims is 2.5 to 3 cm., vertical or mildly outsloping.
-Colors are tan, gray and brown, no black polished. Two of the sherds
-are bone tempered. Wall thickness is 6 to 9 mm. The engraved lines
-are usually diagonal on the bowls and seven have excised triangles.</p>
-<p><i>Hickory Fine Engraved</i> type includes two whole vessels, both bottles,
-and nine sherds from four bowls, one bottle, two small jar or cup
-forms, and two of uncertain form. The first bottle (<a href="#fig4">Fig. 4</a>, C) is 26 cm.
-high, 14 cm. in body diameter, has an evenly tapered spout and shouldered
-body. Three lightly engraved lines encircle the shoulder. The
-second bottle, which also occurred with Burial 1, has the spout missing
-but body intact. The body is 12.6 cm. high, 15.2 cm. in diameter, and
-has eight engraved lines encircling the upper body area. Both of these
-bottles are gray in color, with black fire clouds, and are clay tempered.
-Eight of the sherds of this type (<a href="#fig5">Fig. 5</a>, E, G) are tan to gray with black
-areas, while the ninth (<a href="#fig5">Fig. 5</a>, F) is black and polished, with cross-engraved
-decoration. No other <i>Hickory</i> sherd is polished. Temper is
-clay-grit or sherd, one with bone. The bowls appear to have vertical
-or outsloping rims, with walls 5 to 7 mm. thick, but one sherd is from
-an incurvate bowl, 4 mm. thick. Five of the sherds have horizontally
-engraved lines, 4 to 9 mm. apart; three have diagonal parallel lines and
-one has cross diagonals. The latter is a rim sherd and the rounded lip
-has transverse notching 7-9 mm. apart (<a href="#fig5">Fig. 5</a>, F).</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_154">154</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig5">
-<img src="images/p04.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="880" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 5. Engraved Sherds. A, B, <i>Holly Fine Engraved</i>. C, D, <i>Holly</i> or <i>Hickory Fine Engraved</i>.
-E-G, <i>Hickory Fine Engraved</i>; H, Untyped zig-zag engraved. I-P, <i>Carmel Engraved</i>. Q, Untyped
-with spurred engraved lines. R, Probable <i>Maddox Engraved</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_155">155</div>
-<p>Six sherds could be either <i>Holly</i> or <i>Hickory Fine Engraved</i> (<a href="#fig5">Fig. 5</a>,
-C, D). One is from the top of a bottle spout, another from a bottle shoulder,
-two are bowl sherds, and the other forms are doubtful. The bottle
-sherds have horizontally engraved lines, the other four are diagonal.
-One bowl sherd, light in surface color, is only 4 mm. thick. The surface
-colors of both <i>Holly</i> and <i>Hickory Fine Engraved</i> types at this site are
-more like the later (Phase 2 and 3) periods at the Davis Site; the earlier
-vessels at Davis were preponderantly dark in surface color.</p>
-<h5 id="c8">Carmel Engraved Type
-<br /><span class="ni">(<a href="#fig5">Fig. 5</a>, I-P)</span></h5>
-<p>This is presented as a new type, as it is a major engraved type at this
-site&mdash;with 17 sherds, of which 11 are rim sherds&mdash;and has been
-found with Alto pottery at five other sites in northwestern Louisiana.
-There were five <i>Carmel Engraved</i> sherds from the Colbert Site; four
-each from Greer, Mounds Plantation, and Marston sites; and three
-from Chamarre Lake Site. The description is based on the Smithport
-collection.</p>
-<dl class="undent"><dt>METHOD OF MANUFACTURE: Coiled.</dt>
-<dt>PASTE</dt>
-<dd><i>Temper</i>: Clay-grit or ground sherd; bone in 2 of 17 sherds.</dd>
-<dd><i>Texture</i>: Compact, generally fine, occasionally coarse.</dd>
-<dd><i>Color</i>: Shades of gray from light to almost black, often on same sherd (fire clouds); buff, tan and reddish-brown. Nearly half of the Smithport sample has reddish-brown exteriors and interiors. Cores may be same color as exterior, sometimes darker.</dd>
-<dd><i>Surface Finish</i>: Smoothed exteriors and interiors, a few with fair polish, none highly polished.</dd></dl>
-<dl class="undent"><dt>FORM</dt>
-<dd><i>Wall Thickness</i>: 5 to 7 mm., uniform.</dd>
-<dd><i>Lip</i>: Rounded, usually unmodified; occasional thinning.</dd>
-<dt class="pb" id="Page_156">156</dt>
-<dd><i>Base</i>: Uncertain, probably mildly convex, circular.</dd>
-<dd><i>Vessel Shape and Size</i>: So far as presently known, open and carinated bowls only. Rims are 3 to 7 cm. in height, about equally divided between 3-5 and 5-7 cm. range, from an obtuse angle at the junction of base and rim. The bases appear to be shallow; the rims mildly excurvate, or direct and slanted outward. A few appear to be vertical. Curvatures suggest diameters of 20-30 cm.</dd></dl>
-<dl class="undent"><dt>DECORATION</dt>
-<dd><i>Treatment</i>: Engraving.</dd>
-<dd><i>Designs</i>: Effected with heavy engraving on exteriors of rims only. Curving, wide bands outlined by parallel single engraved lines, with transverse, widely spaced lines producing a ladder effect. Usually two of such bands form arcs or meanders, with undecorated bands of similar width between them (<a href="#fig5">Fig. 5</a>, I-K). Occasionally one or more engraved lines flank the engraved bands or bisect the intervening plain band. Some sherds (<a href="#fig5">Fig. 5</a>, M, N, P) have straight instead of curving bands, but otherwise seem to fit into the type.</dd></dl>
-<dl class="undent"><dt>CULTURAL AFFILIATIONS</dt></dl>
-<blockquote>
-<p>This type has occurred only in sites which have Alto Focus pottery; it has not
-been found in Bossier Focus sites which lack established Alto types. In the Bossier
-Focus, the related engraved type seems to be <i>Maddox Engraved</i>, which in
-northwestern Louisiana has cross-hatched engraved bands, generally not curving
-and most often vertical, as the major element. In central Louisiana <i>Maddox
-Engraved</i> type has been extended to include curvilinear bands of cross-hatched
-engraving (Suhm and Jelks, 1962: Pl. 50). The decoration on Plate 50, <i>F</i> of this
-handbook is very much like <i>Carmel Engraved</i> and this vessel probably should
-be included in this type instead of <i>Maddox</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<dl class="undent"><dt>DISTRIBUTION</dt></dl>
-<blockquote>
-<p>In addition to the Smithport Site, <i>Carmel Engraved</i> has been found at one
-mound and four village sites in northwestern Louisiana.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>There is one untyped engraved vessel and seven sherds. The vessel
-(V-102), from Burial 1 is a bottle (with missing spout) of polished
-black ware, decorated with engraved interlocking spiral design, four
-times repeated. One sherd (<a href="#fig5">Fig. 5</a>, H) has a zig-zag engraved decoration
-with excisions at the angles, similar to the two sherds illustrated
-from the Davis Site (Newell and Krieger: 1949, Fig. 34, S, T). Three
-sherds have bands with cross hatching, probably <i>Maddox Engraved</i>
-motifs, but the sherds are too small to be sure about the design (<a href="#fig5">Fig. 5</a>,
-R). A bottle sherd (<a href="#fig5">Fig. 5</a>, Q) has diagonal spurred engraved lines. Two
-bowl sherds are from polished black wares, with designs which suggest
-the <i>Glassell Engraved</i> type (Webb, 1959: Fig. 118).</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_157">157</div>
-<h5 id="c9">B. Incised Pottery Types</h5>
-<p><i>Davis Incised</i> type is represented by one vessel (<a href="#fig4">Fig. 4</a>, H) and 17
-sherds. The vessel is a deep, reddish-brown bowl, which curves outward
-from a slightly convex disc base, then is vertical to the rounded,
-unmodified lip. It is 10 cm. in height, 15.2 cm. in greatest diameter.
-There are five parallel, smoothed-over incised lines around the upper
-body, placed about 1 cm. apart. They are shallow and about 2 mm. in
-width. The surfaces are smoothed and questionably polished. The 17
-sherds (<a href="#fig6">Fig. 6</a>, A-E) include 11 rim sherds, nine of which indicate
-vertical walls, two outward sloping (but no excurvate). Most of the
-vessels seem to be deep bowls, but two sherds indicate shallower carinated
-bowls with inward curving or sloping rims. All are clay or grit
-tempered, with walls 4.5 to 8 mm. thick. Three are black, others gray,
-buff, light brown or tan in surface color; surfaces are smoothed and
-one of the black sherds (<a href="#fig6">Fig. 6</a>, C) is polished lightly. The lips are
-rounded and unmodified except that most are thinned by an extra
-outward curving of the interior wall. The incised lines are smoothed
-over, 5 to 13 mm. apart and are 3 to 10 in number. Half of the lines
-are less than 1 mm. in width, the others are between 1 and 2 mm. wide,
-generally shallow and well executed.</p>
-<p>Nine sherds are classified as <i>Sanson Incised</i> (Ford and Willey, 1940)
-because of the wide, shallow, smoothed incising in straight lines (<a href="#fig6">Fig. 6</a>, F, G).
-No rim sherds were found, hence patterning of the incising
-is indefinite. Tempering is clay-grit, the surface coloring is gray to
-black or dark brown, and the thickness is 5 to 8 mm. The incised lines
-are 2.5 to 4.5 mm. in width and appear to have been made with tools
-which had bluntly rounded or flat ends.</p>
-<p>Two sherds (<a href="#fig6">Fig. 6</a>, H, I) are possibly <i>Mazique Incised</i> (Ford, 1951)
-but may be well executed <i>Dunkin Incised</i>. They are light gray and
-tan in color, and one is a rim sherd. The decoration consists of finely
-made parallel incisions, closely placed in diagonal fields or herring-bone
-effect on the upper body. Vessel shape is uncertain.</p>
-<p><i>Coles Creek Incised</i> type is represented by eight sherds, although it
-is almost certain that some which are typed as <i>Hardy</i> or <i>Kiam Incised</i>
-are in reality <i>Coles Creek</i>. In order to be certain of Coles Creek Period
-wares at this site, I have included in this type only those sherds whose
-paste characteristics are consistent and which have &ldquo;overhanging&rdquo;
-parallel lines around the rim (<a href="#fig6">Fig. 6</a>, J) or characteristically placed
-triangular punctations below the incised lines (<a href="#fig6">Fig. 6</a>, K). Surfaces are
-smoothed and are buff or gray in color. The incisions are bold, horizontal,
-and usually more closely spaced than in <i>Davis Incised</i>. The subjacent
-triangles on four sherds are pressed into the paste more deeply
-at the apex. It must be pointed out that it is not a simple task, in studying
-sherds from northern Louisiana, to distinguish the four related
-types which are characterized by parallel incisions around the rim&mdash;<i>Davis
-Incised</i>, <i>Coles Creek Incised</i>, <i>Hardy Incised</i>, and <i>Kiam Incised</i>&mdash;unless
-the technique and paste are characteristic or a large part of the
-vessel available. Much overlapping occurs.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_158">158</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig6">
-<img src="images/p05.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="873" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 6. Incised Sherds. A-E, <i>Davis Incised</i> (A resembles high rim of jars which are frequent
-in Haley pottery). F, G, <i>Sanson Incised</i>. H, I, <i>Mazique Incised</i>. J, K, <i>Coles Creek Incised</i>.
-L-Q, <i>Kiam</i> or <i>Hardy Incised</i> (note outer lip notching or punctations on L-N, also suspension
-hole and subjacent hemiconical punctation on O, almost certainly <i>Hardy Incised</i>).</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_159">159</div>
-<p>One hundred and seventy four sherds from this site are included in
-type <i>Kiam Incised</i> or <i>Hardy Incised</i> (<a href="#fig6">Fig. 6</a>, L-Q). No attempt shall
-be made to distinguish between these types, but the problem will be
-pointed out and resolution left for future conferences. These sherds
-are characterized by parallel incised lines covering the rim or upper
-part of the vessel. Fortunately, there are four complete vessels from
-the burials (<a href="#fig4">Fig. 4</a>, D-G) which are typical <i>Kiam Incised</i> (Suhm and
-Jelks, 1962: 89, Pl. 45) and established the presence of this type. Vessel
-106 (<a href="#fig4">Fig. 4</a>, D) is a heavy, thick-walled cylindrical jar with a
-slightly recurved and rounded lip. It is 11 cm. high, 10.6 cm. in diameter,
-clay tempered, and dark reddish-brown in color. Decoration consists
-of numerous scratchy incisions covering the upper 3 cm.; it is
-plain below this zone. Vessel 133 (<a href="#fig4">Fig. 4</a>, E) is a jar with narrow excurvate
-rim and semiglobular body. It is 12 cm. in height and in greatest
-width, and is clay tempered, with irregular light and dark gray
-surface color. The rim has three to four irregular, wavy incised lines
-which are not continuous; the body is covered with vertical, firm incisions
-spaced 4 to 7 mm. apart. Vessel 94 (<a href="#fig4">Fig. 4</a>, F) is a firm, intact,
-well made cylindrical jar, clay tempered, with dark gray-brown surface
-color except for a few light fire clouds. The upper 2.5 cm. has irregular
-horizontal incisions, 5 to 7 in number, and the remaining body
-exterior is covered with fingernail punctations, spaced rather regularly
-but not in exact rows. Vessel 134 (<a href="#fig4">Fig. 4</a>, G) is a jar with semiglobular
-body, narrowed toward the rim, which is vertical. The clay tempered
-paste is softer than the other three vessels and is fired black over the
-exterior, dark gray on the interior. It is 11 cm. high, 14 cm. wide.
-Decoration consists of five firmly incised lines around the rim exterior,
-spaced 3 to 5 mm. apart, and paired fingernail punctations or pinches
-covering the body. These vessels demonstrate the three most frequent
-body treatment techniques described for the <i>Kiam Incised</i> type.</p>
-<p>The 174 sherds present more variation, and include 82 rim pieces.
-Temper is clay-grit or ground sherd except for five which are bone
-tempered. The surface colors cover the range of tan, buff, yellow-orange,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_160">160</span>
-light to dark gray, reddish-brown and black; the light colors
-predominate. Interior and exterior surfaces are smoothed. Wall thickness
-is 5 to 10 mm., averaging 6.5 to 7 mm. The rim sherds show that
-about half have excurvate rims, &frac14; to &#8533; of the vertical, and the others
-slant outward. Five have a row of punctations or notches on the rim
-exterior (<a href="#fig6">Fig. 6</a>, L-N), and one has transverse incisions on a flat lip.
-The lips are more often rounded, but about &frac14; are flat; thinning may
-occur but not thickening.</p>
-<p>The incising varies from thin scratchy lines made with a pointed
-tool, to rough and irregular (<a href="#fig6">Fig. 6</a>, Q), to firm, well made and regular
-(<a href="#fig6">Fig. 6</a>, L, M, P). The number of lines varies from two to 20 and the
-spacing from two to 10 mm. apart, often varying on the same sherd.
-Generally they are placed at 3 to 5 mm. intervals. Although most
-were produced with a pointed tool, a few were made with a blunt or
-square-tipped tool. Five have hemiconical or oval punctations below
-the last line (<a href="#fig6">Fig. 6</a>, O).</p>
-<p>These characteristics as a unit do not fit either <i>Kiam</i> or <i>Hardy Incised</i>
-types. The predominant shape, with everted or excurvate rim is
-more like <i>Kiam</i>, as are bone tempering, and either punctated bodies
-(two vessels, two sherds) or vertical incising on bodies (one vessel, two
-sherds). The paste and surface coloration are more like <i>Hardy Incised</i>
-(except for the five with bone temper), as are the subjacent punctations
-(<a href="#fig6">Fig. 6</a>, O), occasional stabs or punctations at the ends of lines (in
-central Louisiana, this occurs more often in <i>Yokena</i> and <i>French Fork
-Incised</i> than in <i>Hardy</i>), plain bodies (one vessel, five sherds), cutting
-away of the body wall just below the incisions (<a href="#fig4">Fig. 4</a>, D), and flattened
-lips. Not described for either <i>Kiam</i> or <i>Hardy</i> types are notched
-or incised lips, vertical rows of plowed-up paste where the incisions
-meet (<a href="#fig6">Fig. 6</a>, L) or narrow undecorated gaps at this junction, which
-occur on a number of the Smithport sherds. The conclusion seems
-obvious that <i>Kiam Incised</i>, <i>Hardy Incised</i> and the similar wares from
-this area are local or regional variations of a single widespread type.</p>
-<p>The <i>Dunkin Incised</i> type presents the same problem. Although the
-sherds assigned to this type have more similarities to type <i>Dunkin Incised</i>
-than to any other, there are some similarities to <i>Mazique</i> and
-<i>Manchac Incised</i> types of central Louisiana, and some items which
-differ from all of these types. Again, regional or temporal variations of
-a single type are indicated and should be subjected to study.</p>
-<p>There are 117 sherds of <i>Dunkin Incised</i> which show incising in
-varying directions (<a href="#fig7">Fig. 7</a>, A-L), usually including diagonal lines, and
-65 sherds (<a href="#fig7">Fig. 7</a>, O-R) which show only diagonal lines but are also
-<span class="pb" id="Page_161">161</span>
-assigned to <i>Dunkin</i>. Thirty of the former group and 25 of the latter are
-rim sherds. Paste characteristics, color, and wall thickness are the same
-as those described for <i>Kiam Incised</i>. The majority of the rim sherds
-indicate everted or excurvate shapes, possibly a fourth are direct and
-vertical, none incurvate. Indicated vessel shapes are semiglobular jars
-with flaring rims, similar jars with narrowing at the neck and vertical
-or slightly everted rims, cylindrical vessels, and simple deep bowls.
-Lips are usually narrowed by outward curving of the interior wall, but
-may be rounded or occasionally flattened. There are no nodes or handles,
-and only one rim shows notching.</p>
-<p>Incisions are generally bolder than in the <i>Kiam Incised</i> type, spaced
-3 to 8 mm. apart, and seldom smoothed over. On the 117 sherds with
-lines in varying directions, 52 were made with a round-tipped tool, 47
-with a pointed tool, 16 with square-tipped, and two with forked tool
-(<a href="#fig7">Fig. 7</a>, D). In the instance of the rim sherds with diagonal incising, 17
-of the 25 slant downward from right to left (<a href="#fig7">Fig. 7</a>, P-R), eight from
-left to right (<a href="#fig7">Fig. 7</a>, O). The lines may produce diamonds (<a href="#fig7">Fig. 7</a>, C),
-triangles (<a href="#fig7">Fig. 7</a>, A, D, J), chevrons (<a href="#fig7">Fig. 7</a>, B) or, rarely, squares
-(<a href="#fig7">Fig. 7</a>, I). Hemiconical or oval punctations are placed in a single row below
-the incising in two instances (<a href="#fig7">Fig. 7</a>, L), above in one (<a href="#fig7">Fig. 7</a>, E).
-The trait of making firm punctations at the ends of the lines (<a href="#fig7">Fig. 7</a>,
-F, H-J) is more frequent than in type <i>Kiam Incised</i>, and gaps are left at
-times (<a href="#fig7">Fig. 7</a>, F). One sherd (<a href="#fig7">Fig. 7</a>, P) has a wide, smoothed band
-interrupting the previously placed incisions below the lip. The numerous
-body or rim-body sherds which show fields of varying incising
-more nearly resemble <i>Dunkin Incised</i> from the Davis Site in having
-full body decoration than the central Louisiana <i>Manchac</i> and <i>Mazique</i>
-types, where the decoration is usually confined to a narrow rim band.</p>
-<p>Cross incising (<a href="#fig7">Fig. 7</a>, M, N), which is called <i>Harrison Bayou Incised</i>
-(from the Harrison Bayou Site on Caddo Lake) in central Louisiana,
-but is included in <i>Dunkin Incised</i> in eastern Texas (Suhm and
-Jelks, 1962: Pl. 19), is present on nine sherds from Smithport. They
-are clay tempered, light to dark gray in color, with smoothed surfaces.
-The incisions vary from narrow and closely placed to firm, wide lines.</p>
-<p>Curvilinear incising is present on two sherds. These resemble curvilinear
-incising from the Sanson Site in central Louisiana which has
-been tentatively termed <i>Neild Incised</i>.</p>
-<h5 id="c10">C. Punctated and Punctated-Incised Types</h5>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_162">162</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig7">
-<img src="images/p06.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="902" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 7. Incised Sherds. A-L, <i>Dunkin Incised</i> (note C, a large sherd with typical design;
-punctations with lines on E, F, L: rectangular design on I). M, N, <i>Harrison Bayou Incised</i>.
-O-R, Diagonally incised rim sherds, probably <i>Dunkin Incised</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_163">163</div>
-<p><i>Pennington Punctated-Incised</i> type is represented by 36 sherds
-(<a href="#fig8">Fig. 8</a>, A-F). Most of these derive from open carinated bowls with excurvate
-rims which are 4 to 7 cm. in height, but a few seem to be rims of recurved
-jars. Eight are chocolate brown in color, others tan, gray and
-brown-black. The paste is firm, hard in all but two sherds, with
-smoothed but not polished surfaces. Two sherds are tempered with
-bone, the others with clay-grit or sherd. Wall thickness is in the range
-of 5 to 9 mm., most specimens being 6 to 7 mm. The punctations are
-consistently placed in fields which are outlined by single deeply incised
-lines; the fields are in diagonal bands, diamonds or triangles. The
-punctations and incised lines are bold and the 36 sherds include punctations
-made with a pointed or round-tipped tool in 23 instances,
-comma-shaped in four, square (<a href="#fig8">Fig. 8</a>, E) in five, and triangular in
-four.</p>
-<p>Eleven sherds show the hybrid <i>Pennington-Crockett</i> design described
-in the Davis report (Newell and Krieger, 1949: 101). Shapes
-and paste characteristics are described above; two sherds are soft,
-chocolate brown in color. One has an incurving rim and a suspension
-hole (<a href="#fig8">Fig. 8</a>, I). The bordering incised line is curved (<a href="#fig8">Fig. 8</a>, G-I);
-otherwise these sherds do not differ from the <i>Pennington</i> type. Seven
-have rounded punctations, two are comma-shaped, one rectangular,
-and one square.</p>
-<p>Another group of 19 sherds shows <i>zone punctations</i> which differ in
-certain respects from the typical <i>Pennington</i> described above and possibly
-are nearer to <i>Rhinehart Punctated</i> (Ford, 1951: 83-85). These
-19 sherds (<a href="#fig8">Fig. 8</a>, J-O) have the same range of paste and coloration;
-five are of the softer chocolate brown ware. Rim and body sherds are
-represented and in only one instance (<a href="#fig8">Fig. 8</a>, O) is it certain that the
-rim is from an open carinated bowl as are the <i>Pennington</i> sherds. One
-heavy sherd (<a href="#fig8">Fig. 8</a>, J) which is 12 mm. thick, suggests a globular vessel
-which narrows at the neck and recurves to upright at the rim. Another
-sherd includes the lower rim area which is decorated with zoned
-punctations and incisions, and the adjoining upper body which is plain.
-Characteristic of this group is the alternation of punctated and incised
-fields, or the outlining of punctated zones by multiple incised lines.
-The punctations are triangular in three instances, square in one,
-comma-shaped in six, round or oval in five, small pits in three, and
-crescentic in one.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_164">164</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig8">
-<img src="images/p07.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="925" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 8. Punctated Sherds. A-F, <i>Pennington Punctated-Incised</i>. G-I, <i>Pennington-Crockett</i>
-hybrid (I has incurving rim, hole for suspension). J-O, <i>Pennington</i> or <i>Rhinehart Punctated</i> (N
-has triangular punctations between horizontal lines in Coles Creek tradition). P, Similar to
-<i>Dupree Incised</i> but shape suggests <i>Bossier</i> sherd. Q, R, Random punctations.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_165">165</div>
-<p><i>Free punctations</i> made with tools, without zoning or incising, are
-present on one vessel (<a href="#fig4">Fig. 4</a>, I) and 19 sherds (<a href="#fig8">Fig. 8</a>, Q, R). Paste and
-color are as described above; one is bone tempered, six are soft, chocolate
-brown in color. Rim and body sherds are represented but shapes of
-vessels are uncertain. The punctations are triangular in seven instances,
-comma-shaped in three, square in five, round in three, and
-crescentic in two. The vessel (V-105) is a semiglobular bowl with
-plain body and scalloped, everted rim. The lower surface of the rim is
-covered with free punctations. The relative increase in frequency of
-triangular punctations in this group is significant, in view of the fact
-that the <i>Rhinehart Punctated</i> type in central Louisiana features triangular
-punctations (Ford, 1951: 83), whereas they are infrequent in
-<i>Pennington Punctated-Incised</i> at the Davis Site (Newell and Krieger,
-1949: 106-8). The absence of ring punctations at Smithport is remarkable,
-in view of their frequency at both the Davis Site and in
-central Louisiana.</p>
-<p>A group of six sherds has minute <i>free</i> or <i>zoned punctations</i>. The
-sherds are thinner walled than average, 4 to 6 mm., and five of the six
-have black surfaces and soft pastes. The sixth is buff colored, thin and
-has a strongly excurvate, narrow rim. Another (<a href="#fig8">Fig. 8</a>, P) is from an
-open carinated bowl and has notches along the carina. All of this group
-may relate to the Bossier ceramics at this site, instead of Alto. They
-bear some similarity to <i>Dupree Incised</i> of Plaquemine ceramics in
-central Louisiana (Quimby, 1951: 122-3).</p>
-<p><i>Weches Fingernail Impressed</i> (Suhm and Jelks, 1962: 153, Pl. 77;
-Newell and Krieger, 1949: 118-20, Fig. 46) is represented by 19 sherds
-of characteristic design (<a href="#fig9">Fig. 9</a>, A-E). Nine of these include the lip
-area, but all appear to be rim sherds. In three instances some of the
-subjacent body wall is attached; on two of these the body is plain, on
-the third (<a href="#fig9">Fig. 9</a>, E) the body has diagonal incised lines suggesting
-<i>Dunkin</i>-like decoration. These three have globular bodies and outward
-curving or slanting rims, 4 to 4.5 cm. high. Other vessels seem to be
-cylindrical with vertical rims, and open carinated bowls are possible.
-Five of the 19 sherds are chocolate brown in color with clay tempered
-paste; the others range from tan and buff to dark gray and
-reddish-brown. Wall thickness is in the range of 4 to 9 mm., the
-majority 5-7 mm. Typically, the decoration (<a href="#fig9">Fig. 9</a>, A, B, D, E) is with
-widely spaced horizontal incised lines with arcs or quarter circles between;
-the arcs could have been cut with the fingernail and occasionally
-are fingernail impressed, but in most the arc is too large, 1.8
-to 4 cm. (my thumbnail is 1.6 cm. wide). Four of the sherds have the
-arcs without intervening lines (<a href="#fig9">Fig. 9</a>, C).</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_166">166</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig9">
-<img src="images/p08.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="905" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 9. Nail Impressed and Punctated Sherds. A-E, <i>Weches Fingernail Impressed</i>. F,
-<i>Weches</i> Variant with tool punctations. G, H, <i>Sinner Linear Punctated</i>. I-K, M-P, <i>Wilkinson
-Punctated</i>. L, Ridge pinched, similar to <i>Killough Pinched</i>. Q, <i>Wilkinson Punctated</i> body,
-<i>Kiam Incised</i> rim. R, S, U, Narrow bands with round or oval punctations. T, Single row of
-semilunar punctations.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_167">167</div>
-<p>Four sherds are identical with this group except that the spaces between
-the horizontal lines have triangular instead of semilunar punctations
-(<a href="#fig9">Fig. 9</a>, F). Seven other sherds have round or oval punctations
-in single rows between incised lines (<a href="#fig9">Fig. 9</a>, R, S, U). I have not included
-these with type <i>Pennington Punctated-Incised</i>, as Krieger did
-with some reservation (Newell and Krieger, 1949: 106). Neither have
-I assigned them to <i>Coles Creek Incised</i>, <i>Hardy Incised</i> or <i>Rhinehart
-Punctated</i>, as Ford did, also probably with some reservation (Ford,
-1951: Pls. 16, L; 17, 20, H), but have preferred to describe them separately
-as interesting examples of regional variations and typing difficulties
-in eastern Texas, and northern and central Louisiana.</p>
-<p>One sherd (<a href="#fig9">Fig. 9</a>, T) has a single row of semilunar punctations and
-otherwise plain surface. It is thick, clay-grit tempered, and buff colored.</p>
-<p><i>Wilkinson Fingernail Punctated</i> type is represented by one vessel
-and 153 sherds. This was described as a minor type in central Louisiana
-(Ford and Willey, 1940: 50; Ford, 1951: 88-89) to include clay
-tempered vessels with fingernail punctations scattered over the vessel
-surface, arranged in irregular rows, or pinched in vertical rows. In that
-area it is rarely combined with incising and usually covers the entire
-vessel. Ford (1951: 88) thought it occurred at the latter part of the
-Coles Creek period and reached maximum popularity in the succeeding
-Plaquemine Period or later, but it was missing in Plaquemine context
-at Bayou Goula (Quimby, 1957) and Medora (Quimby, 1951) sites.
-In the Davis Site report (Newell and Krieger, 1949) it was not established
-as a type, as Krieger considered fingernail punctations to be a
-body treatment present in several types (<i>Kiam</i>, <i>Weches</i>, <i>Dunkin</i>, and
-<i>Duren Neck Banded</i>); he reported 20,000 body sherds with fingernail
-roughening from a total of 96,000 sherds. The difference in attitude
-<span class="pb" id="Page_168">168</span>
-toward this type on the part of these investigators is understandable
-when we consider the differences in frequency and use of the decoration
-method in the two areas, also that Ford and his co-workers used all
-sherds in typing, whereas Krieger translated sherds to vessels and used
-rim decoration as the determinant.</p>
-<p>In northwestern Louisiana I have found <i>Wilkinson Punctated</i> a
-useful type in <i>sherd collection</i> studies because of its great frequency in
-Alto wares, its rarity in Coles Creek, and the rapid shift from nail
-roughening to ridging and brushing as body treatments concurrent
-with the development of Bossier, Belcher, and other later Caddoan
-ceramics. <i>Wilkinson Punctated</i> is therefore a good indicator of early
-(Alto) Caddoan occupation at a given site. At Smithport Landing there
-were 153 sherds (<a href="#fig9">Fig. 9</a>, I-K, M-P) and one burial vessel, a pinched
-toy jar (<a href="#fig4">Fig. 4</a>, Q), of this type. The vessel is 6 cm. high, 5 cm. wide,
-made of thick clay-tempered paste, roughly finished and decorated
-with three horizontal rows of nail pinching. The sherds include only
-four rims (<a href="#fig9">Fig. 9</a>, I, O, P), showing how rarely this decoration, in
-northern Louisiana, covers the vessel. Most of the other sherds are
-recognizably body sherds, and in eight instances (as in <a href="#fig9">Fig. 9</a>, Q) the
-body-rim juncture is present. The latter sherds have <i>Kiam Incised</i>
-decoration on the rim and appear to have come from a modified globular
-body shape with directly or mildly everted rim. Nine of the 153
-sherds are bone tempered, the remainder are clay-grit or ground sherd,
-rather granular and coarse. The walls are thick in many instances, the
-range 4 to 10 mm. with the majority 7 to 8 mm. Many of the sherds are
-large (<a href="#fig9">Fig. 9</a>, I, J) indicating large, heavy jar forms. Surface colors
-range from tan and buff to dark grays and a few reddish-browns, with
-more tendency to darker colors than in other types. The majority have
-irregular fingernail gouges (<a href="#fig9">Fig. 9</a>, I, J), but some are pinched (<a href="#fig9">Fig. 9</a>,
-K, M, N) and others impressed more delicately and regularly (<a href="#fig9">Fig. 9</a>,
-O-Q).</p>
-<p>Eight sherds have distinctly pinched-up ridges (<a href="#fig9">Fig. 9</a>, L) which
-are circular or curvilinear in six instances, vertical in two. The burial
-vessel (<a href="#fig4">Fig. 4</a>, Q) may belong with this group, although it has been
-tentatively classed as <i>Wilkinson Punctated</i>. The group with pinched
-ridges bears considerable resemblance to the type <i>Killough Pinched</i>
-(Suhm and Jelks, 1962: 91, Pl. 46) of Frankston and Titus foci, but,
-in the absence of other types characteristic of these assemblages, will
-not be so assigned.</p>
-<p><i>Sinner Linear Punctated</i> is a type which so far has been confined to
-Bossier and Haley foci (Suhm and Jelks, 1962: 143; Webb, 1948: 114)
-<span class="pb" id="Page_169">169</span>
-and the four sherds of this type from the Smithport Landing, although
-similar in paste, thickness and color to the Alto sherds, are probably
-referable to the subsequent (presumably) Bossier period at this site.
-Two are rim sherds; one of these (<a href="#fig9">Fig. 9</a>, G) has parallel, vertical
-linear punctating; another (<a href="#fig9">Fig. 9</a>, H) and a body sherd have horizontal
-lines; the fourth is uncertain. All have linear nail punctating
-and the more typical linear tool punctating is absent.</p>
-<h5 id="c11">D. Stamped Types</h5>
-<p>One sherd of <i>Chevalier Stamped</i> is small (3 &times; 2 cm.) but has definite
-rocker stamping. It is of firm paste, tan exterior surface color with
-a black fire cloud at one edge, and black interior. Paste is homogeneous
-clay-grit with several bone fragments (accidental?); both surfaces are
-smoothed but not polished. In general appearance it resembles many
-of the Alto sherds from this site.</p>
-<h5 id="c12">E. Ridged Types</h5>
-<p>The eleven sherds of <i>Belcher Ridged</i> type (<a href="#fig10">Fig. 10</a>, G, H) are generally
-thinner and darker than the Alto wares. Six are dark chocolate
-to black on both surfaces and through the cores; the other five have
-light buff to dark gray surfaces, four of these with black cores. One is
-bone tempered, all others clay-grit. No rims are represented and the
-body sherds are 3 to 5 mm. in wall thickness. Typically, the elevated
-ridges are vertical.</p>
-<h5 id="c13">F. Brushed and Brushed-Incised types</h5>
-<p>There are 38 sherds of the <i>Pease Brushed-Incised</i> type (<a href="#fig10">Fig. 10</a>,
-A-F). The paste is smooth, clay-grit tempered except for one bone
-tempered; interiors are smoothed, exteriors roughened all over with the
-decoration. The color range is about as for other types; eight sherds
-are chocolate brown to black and slightly soft. Thickness is 4-5 mm. in
-13 of the 38 sherds, 5 to 9 mm. in the remainder. The vertical panels
-characteristic of this type are separated by notched applique ridges in
-28 (<a href="#fig10">Fig. 10</a>, B, D-F), by rows of tool or nail punctations in seven (<a href="#fig10">Fig. 10</a>, A),
-and by applique nodes in three (<a href="#fig10">Fig. 10</a>, C). The panels are
-roughened by diagonal incisions in 24 instances (<a href="#fig10">Fig. 10</a>, A, C), by
-vertical incising in 10 (<a href="#fig10">Fig. 10</a>, E, F), by horizontal incising in one, and
-by brushing in three (<a href="#fig10">Fig. 10</a>, B, D).</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_170">170</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig10">
-<img src="images/p09.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="922" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 10. Brushed, Ridged, and Late Wares. A-F, <i>Pease Brushed-Incised</i> (note panel separation
-by punctations on <i>A</i>, applique notched ridges on <i>B</i>, <i>D-F</i>, and applique nodes on <i>C</i>).
-G, H, <i>Belcher Ridged</i>. I-K, M <i>Bossier</i> or <i>Plaquemine Brushed</i>. L, <i>Karnack Brushed-Incised</i>
-(note rolled rim, rare). N-S, Late Glendora Focus sherds (<i>N</i>, <i>S</i>, shell tempered, incised; <i>O</i>, <i>P</i>,
-engraved, untyped; <i>Q</i>, linear punctated, untyped; <i>R</i>, <i>Hodges Engraved</i>).</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_171">171</div>
-<p><i>Karnack Brushed-Incised</i> type (Suhm and Jelks, 1962: 85) is applied
-to barrel-shaped vessels with everted rims, decorated with vertical
-incising or brushing. Thirty-four sherds from Smithport fit this
-category, although it is possible that some of the vertically incised body
-sherds derive from <i>Kiam Incised</i> or <i>Weches Fingernail Impressed</i> vessels.
-There are only three rim sherds, one rolled (<a href="#fig10">Fig. 10</a>, L), the other
-two everted. The paste, temper, color range, and wall thickness are no
-different from other types; seven of the sherds are dark chocolate
-brown in color. Only six sherds are less than 5 mm. in thickness and
-the average is 6.5 mm.; brushing is used on six of the sherds, vertical
-incising on the others, varying from firm to sloppy and scratchy.</p>
-<p>The other brushed sherds from this site fall into the type which we
-now call <i>Bossier Brushed</i> (formerly <i>Maddox Brushed</i> included these
-and the vertically brushed included now in <i>Karnack Brushed-Incised</i>).
-It is very similar to or identical with <i>Plaquemine Brushed</i> type of the
-Plaquemine and late Coles Creek periods in central Louisiana. Chief
-indicated differences are rolled or narrow everted rims in some of the
-<i>Bossier</i> type, whereas they are direct or slightly everted in <i>Plaquemine</i>;
-more frequent cross brushing in <i>Plaquemine</i> than in <i>Bossier</i>; bone
-temper in a few of the <i>Bossier</i>, absent in <i>Plaquemine</i>; and an occasional
-row of punctations below the brushed zone in <i>Plaquemine</i>, not
-found in <i>Bossier</i>. These are minor differences, easily attributable to
-regional variations, and it would probably be desirable to define a single
-type, with recognition of minor local variations.</p>
-<p>There are 31 <i>Bossier Brushed</i> sherds (<a href="#fig10">Fig. 10</a>, I-K, M), of which
-seven are from rims. Temper is clay-grit or ground sherd; one is bone
-tempered. Surface colors include two black, four chocolate brown, the
-others lighter shades of tan, buff, and gray. Only five sherds are 5 mm.
-or less in thickness; others are 5.5-11 mm., averaging 7.3 mm. (It is
-thicker than most types.) The seven rim sherds have horizontal brushing
-on two, diagonal on four, both on one. The body sherds show a
-similar distribution, with diagonal brushing predominating. Cross
-brushing or incising is present on seven (<a href="#fig10">Fig. 10</a>, M).</p>
-<h5 id="c14">G. Smithport Plain Type and Other Plain Sherds</h5>
-<p>There are nine plain vessels (<a href="#fig4">Fig. 4</a>, A, B, K-P, R) from the burials
-<span class="pb" id="Page_172">172</span>
-and 644 plain sherds from this site which apparently relate to the
-earlier ceramics. The vessels, all identified as <i>Smithport Plain</i>, include
-three bottles, four simple bowls, one carinated bowl, and one recurved
-jar. <i>Smithport Plain</i> therefore runs the gamut of vessel forms common
-to decorated types; cylindrical jar forms are included in the sherds.
-The 644 plain sherds include 65 rim sherds (the only definite <i>Smithport</i>
-sherds), one-fourth as many as the total rim sherds in the decorated
-types and exceeded only by <i>Kiam Incised</i> with 82 rim sherds. The
-total number of plain sherds in our collection is altered by the element
-of selectivity in surface collecting; we were less likely to save plain
-sherds unless they were large or were rim sherds. The frequency of
-plain wares at this period contrasts with the situation in the later Bossier
-and Belcher ceramics, where undecorated vessels are infrequent.
-For example, at the Belcher Site (Webb, 1959) there were only nine
-plain vessels among the total of 195, and plain sherds constituted only
-44 per cent of total sherds (most of these were from undecorated portions
-of decorated vessels).</p>
-<p>The 65 <i>Smithport Plain</i> rims include 15 which are everted, 26 vertical,
-and 18 incurvate; additionally there are rims from two simple,
-shallow bowls, one rim with an exterior roll, one everted rim with interior
-bevel and exterior strap thickening, one bottle spout, and one
-shallow toy dish. The everted rims are unmodified in seven instances,
-and thinned in eight with rounded lips. Lip thinning of everted rims
-was effected by exaggerating the outward curve of the rim interior;
-that of incurvate bowls by exaggerating the exterior curve. The vertical
-rims are unmodified with rounded lips in 12 instances, thinned and
-rounded in eight, flat in four, and have beveled exteriors in two. The
-incurvate rims are thinned with rounded lips in nine, unmodified with
-rounded lips in five, flattened lips in two, externally beveled in one, and
-thickened with rounding in one.</p>
-<p>The plain sherds include 20 recognizable as bases, nine of which are
-complete flat discs. These range from 6 to 13 cm. in diameter and are
-6 to 12 mm. thick. One large basal sherd has a smooth central perforation,
-13 mm. in diameter, and rounded edges. It possibly was used as a
-spindle whorl. These are frequently found at Bossier and Belcher sites,
-but usually are smaller and lighter.</p>
-<p>An additional 46 plain sherds show the wall-base junction. Eight of
-these are from open flat bowls, one from a deeper bowl, one from a
-bottle, four from miniature vessels and 32 from jar, deep bowl or cylindrical
-vessel forms.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_173">173</div>
-<p>The plain sherds have paste characteristics similar to the decorated
-types already described. Nine of the 644 sherds are bone tempered.</p>
-<h5 id="c15">Glendora Focus and Other Late Ceramics</h5>
-<p>A group of 37 sherds have characteristics completely alien to the
-ceramics described above. They are lighter feeling, often with porous
-surfaces or with obvious shell tempering, confirmed by tests. Eight are
-engraved; a shell tempered sherd, reddish in color (<a href="#fig10">Fig. 10</a>, P), with
-horizontal engraved lines from which triangular spurs project; four
-other shell tempered with red or orange color and engraved lines, untyped;
-two black shell tempered with indeterminate engraving, and
-one black polished clay tempered sherd of type <i>Hodges Engraved</i>
-(<a href="#fig10">Fig. 10</a>, R).</p>
-<p>There are 11 sherds, shell tempered and orange to gray in color,
-with curvilinear incising (<a href="#fig10">Fig. 10</a>, N, S). This ware was once termed
-<i>Wilkinson Negative Meander</i> but was never formally described. Another
-name should be chosen, because the Wilkinson Site, like Smithport,
-is primarily Alto with transition to Bossier, and has a minimal
-late (Natchitoches) occupation.</p>
-<p>Two sherds have linear punctations on shell tempered ware (<a href="#fig10">Fig. 10</a>, Q)
-and two others, untyped, have horizontal incising. There are
-14 plain, 4-6 mm. thick, of which nine are shell tempered, two bone,
-three clay.</p>
-<h5 id="c16">Other Pottery Artifacts and Negative Ceramic Traits</h5>
-<p>A fragment of perforated pottery base, presumably a spindle whorl
-fragment, was mentioned in the discussion of plain pottery. There
-were also three fragments of fired daub with grass impressions and
-one flattened surface. One tiny cone-shaped pottery fragment suggested
-a figurine or doll leg. No other clay or ceramic artifacts were
-found. Noticeable by their absence are pipes or pipe stem fragments,
-animal figurines or heads, clay labrets and ear ornaments, all of which
-are not unusual in this area.</p>
-<p>Other negative ceramic traits are the absence of shell temper, except
-in the small group of obviously late wares; red filming; pigment
-impression into the lines of decoration; handles or other vessel appendages;
-squared bases (not unusual elsewhere in Coles Creek and
-Alto ceramics); squared or castellated rims (Vessel 105, <a href="#fig4">Fig. 4</a>, I is
-the only instance of scalloped rim); vessel effigies, either whole vessel
-or rim attachments; stamping (one foreign sherd), and cord marking.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_174">174</div>
-<h4>Pottery Alignments and Sequences</h4>
-<p><a href="#t1">Table 1</a> shows the assignment of burial vessel and sherd types to
-various ceramic complexes, based on the descriptions of Ford (1951),
-Ford and Willey (1940), and Quimby (1951) for central Louisiana;
-Newell and Krieger (1949), and Suhm, Krieger, and Jelks (1954) for
-east Texas Alto; and the author&rsquo;s publications (1948; 1959) and collections
-from northern and central Louisiana. It becomes apparent that
-neat typing and alignment of sherd collections from this site, true of
-many other sites in northwestern Louisiana, is a phantasy. This site
-lies within a broad contact zone, extending into southwestern Arkansas
-and eastern Texas, between the expanding populations and flowering
-cultures of the lower Mississippi-Red River confluence in central
-Louisiana and Mississippi on one side and the four-state Caddoan area
-on the other, in post-Hopewell-Marksville times.</p>
-<table class="center">
-<tr class="th"><th id="t1" colspan="4">TABLE 1</th></tr>
-<tr class="th"><th colspan="4">Pottery Type or Group</th></tr>
-<tr class="th"><th> </th><th><i>Whole Vessels</i> </th><th><i>No. of Sherds</i> </th><th>%</th></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="4" class="l">Distinctive Alto Types</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Holly Fine Engraved</i> </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">10 </td><td class="r">0.66</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Hickory Fine Engraved</i> </td><td class="r">2 </td><td class="r">9 </td><td class="r">0.60</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Holly or Hickory Engraved</i> </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">6 </td><td class="r">0.40</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Carmel Engraved</i> </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">17 </td><td class="r">1.13</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Davis Incised</i> </td><td class="r">1 </td><td class="r">17 </td><td class="r">1.13</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Kiam Incised</i> vessels </td><td class="r">4 </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r"></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Pennington Punctated-Incised</i> </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">36 </td><td class="r">2.40</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Pennington-Crockett</i> Hybrid </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">11 </td><td class="r">0.73</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Weches Fingernail Impressed</i> </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">19 </td><td class="r">1.26</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Smithport Plain</i> </td><td class="r">9 </td><td class="r">65 </td><td class="r">4.36</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">Subtotal </td><td class="r">16 </td><td class="r">190 </td><td class="r">12.67</td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="4" class="l">Distinctive Coles Creek or Troyville Types</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Coles Creek Incised</i> </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">8 </td><td class="r">0.53</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Chevalier Stamped</i> </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">1 </td><td class="r">0.06</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Mazique Incised</i> </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">2 </td><td class="r">0.13</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">Subtotal </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">11 </td><td class="r">0.72</td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="4" class="l">Types shared by Alto and Coles Creek</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Wilkinson Punctated</i> </td><td class="r">1 </td><td class="r">153 </td><td class="r">10.20</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Triangular punctations between parallel lines </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">4 </td><td class="r">0.26</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">Subtotal </td><td class="r">1 </td><td class="r">157 </td><td class="r">10.46</td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="4" class="l">Types shared by Alto, Coles Creek, Bossier and Plaquemine</td></tr>
-<tr class="pbtr"><td colspan="4">
-</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Kiam-Hardy Incised</i> </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">174 </td><td class="r">11.60</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Dunkin-Manchac Incised</i> </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">182 </td><td class="r">12.13</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Harrison Bayou Incised</i> </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">9 </td><td class="r">0.60</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Sanson Incised</i> </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">9 </td><td class="r">0.60</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Free and atypical zoned punctations (<i>Pennington-Rhinehart</i>) </td><td class="r">1 </td><td class="r">38 </td><td class="r">2.53</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Small, zoned punctations (<i>Dupree</i>-like) </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">6 </td><td class="r">0.40</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Round punctations between lines </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">7 </td><td class="r">0.46</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Isolated, semilunar punctations </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">1 </td><td class="r">0.06</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">Subtotal </td><td class="r">1 </td><td class="r">426 </td><td class="r">28.40</td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="4" class="l">Distinctive Bossier Types</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Pease Brushed-Incised</i> </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">38 </td><td class="r">2.53</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Belcher Ridged</i> </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">11 </td><td class="r">0.73</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Sinner Linear Punctated</i> </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">4 </td><td class="r">0.26</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Maddox Engraved</i> </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">3 </td><td class="r">0.20</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Glassell Engraved</i> </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">2 </td><td class="r">0.13</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">Subtotal </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">58 </td><td class="r">3.86</td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="4" class="l">Types Shared by Bossier and Plaquemine</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Bossier-Plaquemine Brushed</i> </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">31 </td><td class="r">2.06</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Karnack Brushed-Incised</i> </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">34 </td><td class="r">2.26</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">Subtotal </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">65 </td><td class="r">4.33</td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="4" class="l">Uncertain Affiliation or Untyped</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Curvilinear Incised </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">2 </td><td class="r">0.13</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Untyped engraved </td><td class="r">1 </td><td class="r">2 </td><td class="r">0.20</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Plain body sherds </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">579 </td><td class="r">38.60</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Fingernail pinched </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">8 </td><td class="r">0.53</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">Subtotal </td><td class="r">1 </td><td class="r">591 </td><td class="r">39.46</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">Subtotal, Early Occupation </td><td class="r">19 </td><td class="r">1498 </td><td class="r">100.00</td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="4" class="l">Late Occupation, Possibly Historic</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Shell tempered curvilinear incised </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">11</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Shell tempered engraved </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">7</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l"><i>Hodges Engraved</i> </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">1</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Other untyped decorated </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">4</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Late plain </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">14</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">Subtotal </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">37</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">Grand Total </td><td class="r"> </td><td class="r">1535</td></tr>
-</table>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_176">176</div>
-<p>As a result (or as evidence) of this cultural admixture and interchange,
-we see large groups of sherds from this site, in the punctated
-and incised categories, which cannot with impunity be assigned to a
-previously described type in a specific cultural assemblage. They could
-be as easily assigned to a companion type in one, two or even three
-other surrounding assemblages. Only by having whole vessels available&mdash;from
-which details of vessel size and shape, and decoration can
-be determined&mdash;or by correlation of sherds with distinctive types, may
-one draw tentative conclusions about affiliation. I have therefore found
-it necessary (<a href="#t1">Table 1</a>) to list certain types from this site as possibly
-deriving from Alto or Coles Creek ceramics, others from Alto, Coles
-Creek, Bossier or Plaquemine, and yet a third group of brushed and
-incised which might derive, insofar as characteristics of a given sherd
-or group of sherds indicate, from Bossier or Plaquemine. The absence
-of distinctive Plaquemine types eliminates this assemblage from consideration,
-but distinctive types of Alto, Coles Creek and Bossier are
-present and give our clues for major alignments. We should be able
-to work on the assumption that the indeterminate types will derive
-from the three complexes, Alto, Coles Creek and Bossier, in about the
-same proportion as these complexes are represented by distinctive
-types.</p>
-<p>It appears, then, that the major complex at this site is Alto; certainly
-the burial pottery is of this complex. Coles Creek is present to a minor
-extent and it is probable that some of the uncertain punctated and incised
-sherds are from <i>Hardy</i>, <i>Manchac</i>, and <i>Rhinehart</i> types. Finally,
-occupation seems to have lasted into the Alto-Bossier transition to the
-stage when distinctive Bossier Focus types had developed, so that there
-is a respectable representation of this period. The brushed wares and
-some of the incised and punctated also probably relate to the Bossier
-pottery complex. It is improbable, however, that Bossier occupation
-lasted very long, certainly not long enough for a transition to late
-Glendora Focus times when the small group of shell tempered sherds
-would have been made. The site was probably deserted for a long time,
-then briefly occupied by late Natchitoches-related people, possibly in
-the historic period. The Yatasi village mentioned by Marcelo De Soto
-(D&rsquo;Antoni, 1961a) is to be considered.</p>
-<h4>Stone Artifacts</h4>
-<h5 id="c17">Dart Points</h5>
-<p>The 61 larger projectile points which are classified as dart points
-<span class="pb" id="Page_177">177</span>
-are, with few exceptions, comparatively small and rough. Most are
-made of quartzite, cherts, and petrified wood found locally. Thirty-five
-are of tan chert, four of petrified wood, two of red chert, six of
-white or light gray quartzite, and others of varying shades of brown,
-or mottled materials.</p>
-<p><i>Gary</i> points (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, N-P) total 14; with most made of tan chert,
-two of petrified wood, and one of white quartzite. The range in length
-is 2.8 to 5.6 cm. with nine of the 14 in the category of <i>Small Gary</i>
-(Ford and Webb, 1956: 52). The latter are less than 4.5 cm. in length.</p>
-<p><i>Ellis</i> points (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, Q-S) number 16, of which 12 are made of tan,
-gray or yellow local cherts, two of petrified wood. The length varies
-from 2.6 to 4.6 cm., the width 1.5 to 2.9 cm. Shoulders tend to be
-straight, only two having barbs. Stem bases are usually straight or
-mildly convex.</p>
-<p><i>Carrollton</i> points (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, X), four in number, are made of materials
-different from the prevailing tan chert. One each is of granular
-quartzite, waxy gray chert, white chert, and black chert. They are 4.1
-to 4.5 cm. long, 2.3 to 2.8 cm. wide. Stems are not smoothed.</p>
-<p><i>Kent</i> points total five (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, T, U), and are typically crude in
-manufacture. They are of gray, tan, and mottled cherts. Lengths are
-3.7 cm. to 4.5 cm., widths 1.6 to 2.4 cm.; they are somewhat smaller
-than those in eastern Texas (Suhm and Jelks, 1962).</p>
-<p>The three <i>Pontchartrain</i> points (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, EE, FF) are the largest
-and best made points from this site. Two are of light tan chert, the
-third of darker tan. Lengths are 7.7, 9.3, and 9.7 cm.; widths 2.5, 2.9,
-and 3.2 cm., respectively. The blades are rounded on one face, ridged
-on the other, have good large flake scars, and typical fine retouch at the
-edges. One (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, FF) has an asymmetrically placed stem; another
-(<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, EE) has a rectangular stem and short barbs; the third has a
-contracting stem.</p>
-<p>One projectile point (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, Y) is hesitantly called <i>Ensor</i> because
-of the low, narrow side notches and straight stem base. It is small, 3.7
-cm. long and 1.8 cm. wide, of tan chert, roughly flaked. The blade
-edges are convex and irregular serrated.</p>
-<p>Two specimens have outlines like <i>Desmuke</i> points but are made of
-poor materials, petrified wood and gnarled chert, and the typing is
-questionable. Both are thick, with bifacial ridges. A third of similar
-appearance has an <i>Almagre</i>-like basal tip, but is much smaller than
-this type, 5 cm. long, 2.5 cm. wide.</p>
-<p>Two points are classified as <i>Elam</i> (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, V, W). They are short,
-thick and stubby, slightly asymmetrical and identical in size, 3.5 cm.
-long, 2.3 cm. wide. They are made of tan and brown quartzite.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_178">178</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig11">
-<img src="images/p10.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="853" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 11. Projectile Points and Chipped Stone Tools. A, B, <i>Alba</i> type. C, D, <i>Hayes</i>. E, F,
-<i>Friley</i>. G, <i>Maud</i>. H, <i>Cliffton</i>. I, Untyped. J, <i>Catahoula</i>. K-M, <i>Colbert</i>. N-P, <i>Gary</i>. Q-S, <i>Ellis</i>.
-T, U, <i>Kent</i>. V, W, <i>Elam</i>. X, <i>Carrollton</i>. Y, possible <i>Ensor</i>. Z-DD, Untyped. EE, FF, <i>Pontchartrain</i>.
-GG-II, Rough blades. JJ, KK, Drills. LL, End scraper. MM-PP, Small triangular and
-ovate scrapers.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_179">179</div>
-<p>Twelve projectile points are unclassified. Three of these are broken.
-A group of four (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, Z) is characterized by rough manufacture,
-irregular wide blades with poor tips, and small, poorly formed stems.
-Similar specimens have been found at other sites in north Louisiana,
-never in large numbers. Possibly they were used as hafted knives or
-scrapers. One specimen (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, AA) has long, shallow side notches
-which are smoothed and a stubby, poorly made blade. Possibly it is a
-reworked <i>Yarbrough</i> point or an atypical <i>Trinity</i> point. A small point
-of gray quartzite (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, BB) has blade edge notches and expanded
-stem resembling <i>Evans</i> points, but it is much smaller than <i>Evans</i>. Similar
-small points with one to several blade edge notches have been
-found on sites in Bossier and De Soto parishes, they will probably be
-typed by another name than <i>Evans</i> (the name <i>Sinner</i> has been suggested
-because of their frequency at the Jim Sinner Site).</p>
-<p>A small point of white chert (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, CC) has a greater width than
-length; the base is wide and short; one shoulder is barbed, the other
-barely suggested. Another small point has a rectangular stem and triangular
-blade but is much smaller than <i>Carrollton</i>, or even <i>Elam</i>
-points.</p>
-<p>The most unusual point (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, DD) has a long rectangular stem,
-a small shoulder on one side only, and a short, asymmetrical blade.
-Blade and stem edges are beveled bilaterally on each face, with fine retouch
-flaking which serrates all edges. The base is mildly concave and
-is thinned by removal of a long, shallow channel flake on one face, a
-shorter channel flake on the other, terminating in a hinge fracture.
-The base and lower stem edges are smoothed.</p>
-<h5 id="c18">Arrow Points</h5>
-<p>There are 55 small projectile points sufficiently intact for typing and
-12 broken so that typing is impossible. Materials include tan, red,
-brown, and gray chert from local gravels; two gray-white chert; one
-novaculite, and two dark brown to black flint.</p>
-<p><i>Alba</i> points (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, A, B), 20 in number, are mostly of tan or
-reddish-brown local cherts. They vary from slender to wide, with a
-range of 2 to 3.8 cm. in length. Most recurve to form widened shoulders
-which may be right angled or barbed; edges may be mildly serrated.
-I have placed in this type only points with square or rectangular stems.</p>
-<p>There are two <i>Hayes</i> points (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, C, D), of gray and red-brown
-chert. They are small, 2.6 and 2.8 cm. long, 1.3 and 1.9 cm. wide; the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_180">180</span>
-first differs from the type description in having straight edges and no
-barbs, but the stem shape is typical.</p>
-<p>Five points are of <i>Friley</i> type (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, E, F), characterized by definite
-shoulders with extreme curves so that the barbs turn toward the
-blade tip. Stems are expanded or rectangular. Three are of red-brown
-chert, two of tan chert. Lengths are 1.4 to 2.5 cm., widths 1.0 to 1.5 cm.</p>
-<p>One typical <i>Maud</i> point (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, G) of tan chert, has a deeply concave
-base and mildly serrated edges.</p>
-<p>Four points are included in the <i>Cliffton</i> type (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, H). They are
-hardly more than roughly shaped small, wide flakes but have vague
-stems and some secondary flaking. They are uniform in size, 2 to 2.3
-cm. long, 1.6 to 1.9 cm. wide and all are made of tan chert. A fifth
-small point (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, I) of dark gray flint has a pointed stem, concave
-blade edges, and a strongly pointed tip; in essence, it is a concave-edged
-hexagon. It may be a variation of <i>Cliffton</i>, but has been left
-untyped.</p>
-<p>A group of 21 points (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, K-M) is characterized by expanded
-stems produced by corner notching, and blades which are much like
-<i>Alba</i>. This point has been the subject of considerable discussion because
-of its frequency in Louisiana and southern Arkansas; it has been
-included in the <i>Alba</i> type in some publications, in the <i>Scallorn</i> type in
-others, but has distinct and, we believe, meaningful differences from
-each of these types. We have therefore given it the type name <i>Colbert</i>.
-It rivals the <i>Alba</i> type in frequency at sites like Smithport Landing,
-Colbert, Greer, Swanson&rsquo;s Landing, and Mounds Plantation (<a href="#fig1">Fig. 1</a>)
-where there are Alto and Coles Creek components in respectable
-amounts. It is found, along with <i>Alba</i>, in central Louisiana, especially
-in Troyville-Coles Creek context (Ford, 1951: Fig. 45, U-W). Recent
-excavations at the Crenshaw Site in southwestern Arkansas uncovered
-Coles Creek and Caddoan burials in Mound B; consistently the Coles
-Creek burials had points similar to <i>Colbert</i> (called <i>Homan</i> in Arkansas)
-and the Caddoan had <i>Alba</i> or <i>Hayes</i>. The <i>Colbert</i> points have
-triangular blades with concave or recurved edges, distinct and usually
-wide shoulders, barbs, and triangular or fan-shaped stems. The stem
-bases may be straight or more often convex, rarely concave. Specimens
-from Smithport are made of tan, reddish-brown, white and gray local
-cherts, one of novaculite, and two of white quartz. Lengths are from
-1.2 to 3.2 cm., widths from 9 mm. to 2 cm.</p>
-<p>A large flat point of tan chert (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, J) has the flake characteristics
-of an arrow point despite its large size, 4.3 by 3 cm. It has the corner
-notching and wide barbs characteristic of <i>Catahoula</i> points.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_181">181</div>
-<p>A small triangular point of brown chert probably belongs to the
-<i>Fresno</i> type. The tip is broken but the original length was about 2 cm.</p>
-<h4>Miscellaneous Chipped Stone Tools</h4>
-<p>Generally, the tools from this site are made from native tan chert
-cores and flakes, or from petrified wood, and are rough to the point of
-being almost nondescript. Imagination is often required to attempt
-assignment to types.</p>
-<p>A massive axe-shaped object of petrified wood is worked to a near-blade
-form at the expanded end (<a href="#fig12">Fig. 12</a>, K), but appears to have been
-used as a maul. The groove is natural. It is 15 cm. long, 9 cm. wide, and
-4.5 cm. in thickness. Two smaller objects of petrified wood (<a href="#fig12">Fig. 12</a>, G,
-H) are partially shaped, showing some of the original surfaces. They
-resemble choppers or picks and are 7 &times; 5.1 &times; 2.3 cm. and 8.8 &times; 4.7
-&times; 2 cm. A fourth object of petrified wood, 10.5 cm. long and 4.2 cm.
-wide, is more suggestive of a pick but shows little evidence of use.</p>
-<p>Smaller core tools include two choppers or end scrapers of tan chert
-and quartzite. The first has much of its original surfaces, with one
-end pointed by bifacial beveling. It is 5.5 cm. long. The second is unifacially
-beveled across one end and onto one edge; it is similar in size.
-Two possible gouges of red and tan chert, 3.4 and 4.2 cm. long, are
-ovate in outline and roughly flaked bifacially at one end. Eight smaller
-objects are keel-shaped core scrapers or small choppers of tan and gray
-chert. They are irregularly ovate, triangular or elongate, from 2.5 to
-4 cm. in length, 1.8 to 3.3 cm. in width. Flaking is bifacial but those
-with one flat face have minimal flaking on this side. Two larger, thick
-leaf-shaped forms (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, GG, HH) may have served as knives or
-scrapers.</p>
-<p>Other tools are made from flakes. Two might be knives: one (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, II)
-is of gray chert, long and ovoid, rough at the base but well
-finished around the edges. It is 5.9 cm. long, 2 cm. wide. The second is
-made from a flat, triangular-shaped piece of petrified wood, which is
-unmodified at one end (the base), but has good secondary flaking
-around the edges. It is 5.1 cm. long, 3 cm. wide, and 6 mm. in thickness.</p>
-<p>A thumbnail end scraper (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, LL) is of gray quartz, 3 &times; 2 cm.
-in diameters, 6 mm. thick. Unifacial beveling on one end and one side
-is quite steep and the reverse face shows many tiny fractures around
-the cutting curve.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_182">182</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig12">
-<img src="images/p11.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="879" />
-<p class="pcap">Fig. 12. Ornaments and Stone Tools. A, Polished stone tablet. B, Banded slate bead.
-C, Bone bead. D, Sandstone bead or concretion. E, Pitted stone. F, Brown sandstone whetstone.
-G, H, Choppers of petrified wood. I, Polished stone celt. J, Small hammerstone. K,
-Maul of petrified wood. (All to scale except <i>B</i>, <i>C</i> and <i>D</i> which are only slightly reduced.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_183">183</div>
-<p>There are 15 small scrapers (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, MM-PP) which are ovate
-or triangular in outline and made from flakes which vary from 3 to 8
-mm. in thickness. They are of tan, brown and mottled gray chert, petrified
-wood, and gray quartzite. Most are flaked bifacially but some show
-a preponderance of flaking on the convex face. Sizes range from 2 to
-4.5 cm. Five small broken flake objects show some flaking.</p>
-<p>There are four drills, all made of tan chert. One flake drill (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>,
-KK) has an expanded base, a shaft which is triangular in cross section
-and a keen point which shows use polish. A second (<a href="#fig11">Fig. 11</a>, JJ) has a
-geniculate form, is less well made, but shows usage at the tip. The other
-two are tiny, 2.1 and 2.2 cm. long, have one flat and one keel-shaped
-face, and are worked on two of the three planes. They could have been
-used as gravers or drills.</p>
-<h4>Polished and Ground Stone Objects</h4>
-<p>Few objects of polished stone were found. One large celt (<a href="#fig12">Fig. 12</a>, I)
-is from the surface. It is symmetrically ovate, 17.5 cm. long, 7.5 cm.
-wide, and 3.8 cm. thick. It shows pecking marks on the faces, but is
-well ground at the bit and along the edges. A triangular hard sandstone
-pebble, 7.5 &times; 7 &times; 3.3 cm., has round pits, 3 cm. in diameter, on
-each face, (<a href="#fig12">Fig. 12</a>, E). There are smooth depressions on two edges. A
-large pitted mortar stone is of ferruginous sandstone, 22 &times; 16 cm. One
-face has an oval depression, 13 &times; 12 cm., in the center of which, and
-on the opposite face, are deep hemispherical pits, 3.5 cm. in diameter.</p>
-<p>An oval-shaped hammerstone (<a href="#fig12">Fig. 12</a>, J) of tan chert is smoothed
-on two faces, roughened by pecking around all edges. A whetstone of
-brown sandstone (<a href="#fig12">Fig. 12</a>, F) has one deep and two shallow grooves
-on one face, two grooves on the opposite.</p>
-<p>A rectangular flat tablet of mottled brown slate (<a href="#fig12">Fig. 12</a>, A) was
-found during the burial excavations but not in direct association. It
-is 6 cm. long, 4.5 cm. wide, and 3.5 mm. thick. The faces are polished
-and the edges ground smooth with rounded corners, but there are no
-decorations or perforations.</p>
-<p>A bead of gray and brown banded slate (<a href="#fig12">Fig. 12</a>, B) was found on the
-surface of Hill 1. It is pear-shaped, 9 mm. long, 12 mm. wide, counter-drilled
-and highly polished. A small perforated sandstone concretion
-(<a href="#fig12">Fig. 12</a>, D) may have been used as a bead, but the perforation seems
-to be natural, and the surfaces are not modified.</p>
-<p>An oval, reddish claystone concretion was found on the surface. It
-is 12 &times; 6.5 cm., and 2.7 cm. thick. The hard cortex had been removed,
-exposing the soft ocher, which was a probable source of paint.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_184">184</div>
-<h4>Bone Object</h4>
-<p>A segment of bone, 2.6 cm. long, was found on the surface. The ends
-are cut squarely across and there is a small (natural?) perforation. It
-is probably a bead of bird bone (<a href="#fig12">Fig. 12</a>, C), is hard, very white, and
-the surface is polished. No other artifacts of bone or shell were found,
-but the test pits in dark soil exposed numerous animal bones as well as
-mussel and snail shells. No identifications were secured.</p>
-<h3 id="c19">DISCUSSION</h3>
-<p>The Smithport Landing Site is one of a number of village and mound
-sites along the Red River valley and its tributaries in northwestern
-Louisiana (<a href="#fig1">Fig. 1</a>) at which varying amounts of Alto Focus pottery,
-whole vessels or sherds, have been found. The mound sites shown are
-within the river flood plain, with exception of Thigpen Mound and Village
-Site, which are on a terrace immediately overlooking the valley;
-Gahagan, Curtis, Mounds Plantation, and Belcher mounds are on old
-river channels near the present stream. The burial vessels at Gahagan
-were Alto types&mdash;five <i>Holly Fine Engraved</i>, three <i>Hickory Engraved</i>,
-one <i>Kiam Incised</i>&mdash;and 12% of the 76 sherds from the surface are the
-distinctive Alto types (<i>Hickory</i>, <i>Carmel</i> and <i>Holly Engraved</i>, <i>Davis
-Incised</i>, <i>Crockett Curvilinear Incised</i>, <i>Weches Fingernail Impressed</i>
-and <i>Pennington Punctated-Incised</i>). The Thigpen Site is preponderantly
-Bossier, but included in the scant collection of 102 sherds are one
-<i>Weches</i>, five <i>Dunkin</i>, and five <i>Wilkinson</i>. We have only a few sherds
-from the Curtis Mound (Sunny Point in Moore&rsquo;s 1912 report) but
-<i>Hickory Fine Engraved</i> is included. At the Belcher Mound Site (Webb,
-1959) the premound level had sherds and burial vessels of both Alto
-and Haley types.</p>
-<p>The Mounds Plantation (Pickett Landing in Moore&rsquo;s 1912 report)
-Site has recently been explored with some intensity (McKinney, Plants
-and Webb, to be reported). Twenty-six percent of the decorated sherds
-in the previous surface collection were of the distinctive Alto types,
-4.15% Coles Creek. A trench through one of the mounds showed intrusive
-Belcher Focus burials but the fill, habitation, and premound
-level sherds were Coles Creek and Alto, with admixture at all levels
-but increasing amounts of Alto in the top levels. Alto types are <i>Davis</i>
-and <i>Harrison Bayou Incised</i>; <i>Hickory</i>, <i>Holly</i> and <i>Carmel Engraved</i>;
-<i>Pennington</i>, <i>Crockett</i>, <i>Wilkinson</i>, and <i>Weches</i> in the punctated and
-punctated-incised categories. Coles Creek types were <i>Coles Creek</i>,
-<i>Chase</i> and <i>Beldeau Incised</i>; <i>Rhinehart Punctated</i>; and the shared types
-<span class="pb" id="Page_185">185</span>
-<i>Hardy</i> and <i>Sanson Incised</i>. Deep burials in a second mound had scant
-pottery but the two vessels were <i>Holly Engraved</i> and a bowl with
-<i>Crockett</i> and <i>Pennington</i> designs, both black and polished.</p>
-<p>The non-mound village sites shown in <a href="#fig1">Figure 1</a> are on hills fronting
-the valley or on tributaries and lakes. All of those shown have Alto and
-Bossier pottery types, most have Coles Creek-Troyville, all have a
-good representation of the shared types <i>Hardy-Kiam</i>, <i>Dunkin-Manchac</i>,
-<i>Harrison Bayou</i> and <i>Sanson Incised</i>, <i>Wilkinson Punctated</i>, and
-<i>Rhinehart</i>-atypical, <i>Pennington Punctated-Incised</i>. Omitting these
-shared types and using only distinctive types, the Allen Site has 7%
-Alto, no Coles Creek; the Wilkinson Site has 10.5% Alto, 0.3% Coles
-Creek; the Chamarre Site has 14% Alto, 1.5% Troyville; Williams
-Point has 4% Alto, no Coles Creek; East Smithport has 8% Alto, no
-Coles Creek; the Colbert Place has 1.6% Alto, 5.45% Coles Creek;
-Greer has 6.7% Alto, 1.8% Coles Creek; Pease and Sinner are strong
-Bossier sites but have 0.3% and 0.5% Alto, respectively; Swanson&rsquo;s
-Landing has 4% Alto and 4% Coles Creek; and Harrison Bayou has
-1% Alto.</p>
-<p>Not all of the mound or village sites in this same area show this kind
-of representation of Alto or Coles Creek; there are as many or more
-which are well developed Bossier sites and have little or no Alto. For
-example, we have 230 surface sherds from the Vanceville Mound in
-Bossier Parish with no Alto or Coles Creek types; the 3942 sherds from
-the lower and premound levels of the Oden Mound include two questionable
-<i>Hickory Engraved</i>, no other Alto or Coles Creek types; 1275
-surface sherds from the Marston Village Site show no Coles Creek, one
-<i>Holly Fine Engraved</i>, and three <i>Pennington Punctated-Incised</i>. In
-these same sites, as the distinctive types drop out, the shared incised
-and punctated types like <i>Dunkin-Manchac</i>, <i>Rhinehart-Pennington</i>
-variants, <i>Wilkinson</i>, <i>Harrison Bayou Incised</i> and even <i>Hardy-Kiam
-Incised</i> are almost completely replaced by <i>Pease Brushed-Incised</i>, <i>Belcher
-Ridged</i>, and the brushed types (Webb, 1959). Large projectile
-points and heavy scraper types also disappear, replaced by small arrow
-point types and thumbnail-size, triangular and rectangular flake scrapers
-(Webb, 1959: Fig. 126).</p>
-<p>The Smithport Landing Site shares with the other hilltop or hill
-slope village sites of this earlier Caddoan period the carry-over of late
-Archaic dart points, especially types like <i>Gary</i>, <i>Ellis</i>, <i>Kent</i>, <i>Carrollton</i>,
-<i>Palmillas</i>, <i>San Patrice</i>, <i>Evans</i>, <i>Ma&ccedil;on</i>, and <i>Pontchartrain</i>. Large
-as well as small scrapers, pitted stones, manos of hand size, oval
-metates, small drills, large and small celts, brown and white sandstone
-<span class="pb" id="Page_186">186</span>
-hones, hammerstones, and crude choppers are usual at these sites. Triangular
-and ovate knives, recurved-edge (<i>Copena</i>-like) knives, stone
-beads and polished stone problematicals (boatstones, bannerstones,
-gorgets) or plummets are all missing or very rare, although stone beads
-and problematicals occur in the late Archaic. The slate bead from
-Smithport, a recurved (<i>Copena</i>) blade fragment from the Thigpen
-Site, and a two-hole gorget from a small site north of Wallace Lake
-(Webb, 1948: Pl. 16, 9) are exceptions. Small projectile points, generally
-of <i>Alba</i> and <i>Colbert</i> types, about equal the number of large ones
-at these sites. Ear ornaments, shell and bone tools are infrequent.</p>
-<p>In conclusion, the Smithport Landing Site is one of the larger village
-sites of the earlier Caddoan (Gibson Aspect, Alto Focus) period along
-the Red River valley in northwestern Louisiana. It shares with a number
-of other village sites of this period evidences of a carry over of late
-Archaic projectile points and stone artifact traits. It also shares with
-numerous village and mound sites evidences of admixture of Coles
-Creek ceramic types and influences with the Alto pottery types as the
-earliest pottery at these sites. It seems increasingly clear that the advent
-of Coles Creek and Alto Caddoan peoples and/or ceramics, arrow
-points, and riverine mound building into this area were virtually
-simultaneous occurrences. Out of this blending developed the subsequent
-Bossier Focus ceramics and other cultural manifestations over
-a wide portion of northwestern Louisiana, extending into eastern Texas
-and southern Arkansas.</p>
-<p>It is possible that the large ceremonial mound groups, like Gahagan
-and Mounds Plantation, served as ceremonial centers for a number of
-villages, including those in the adjoining hill areas, accounting for the
-frequency of specialized burials, with ceremonial copper and polished
-stone objects, pipes and ornamentation, and highly developed burial
-ceramics, in the mound sites, in comparison with the paucity of these
-objects in the hill villages.</p>
-<p>Considerable research is needed (1) to establish the nature of the
-relationships between mound sites in the valleys and the villages in the
-hills; (2) to trace the extent of Coles Creek and Alto contacts and the
-process of amalgamation of these two strong cultures over the wide
-area from central Louisiana into Arkansas, Oklahoma and eastern
-Texas (this must have been friendly, as it is inconceivable that Caddoan
-peoples would have supplanted Coles Creek almost overnight in
-hundreds of villages); (3) and the development out of this amalgamation
-of Bossier, Plaquemine, and other later cultures.</p>
-<h3 id="c20">FOOTNOTES</h3>
-<div class="fnblock"><div class="fndef"><a class="fn" id="fn_1" href="#fr_1">[1]</a>Thanks are extended
-to Monroe Dodd, Jr., George Freeman, and other friends
-who assisted in the site exploration; to Alex Krieger and James A. Ford for
-assistance with pottery identification and typology; to A. L. Wedgeworth, Jr., for
-photography; and to Gordon Maxcy for film developing and assistance with the
-plates.
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_187">187</div>
-<h3 id="c21">REFERENCES CITED</h3>
-<p>D&rsquo;Antoni, Blaise C.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="revint">1961a. Bayou Pierre, Land of Yesteryear, Chapter 2. Newsletter, North Louisiana
-Historical Assn., April, pp. 9-14.</p>
-<p class="revint">1961b. Bayou Pierre, Land of Yesteryear, Chapter 3. Newsletter, North Louisiana
-Historical Assn., July, pp. 7-12.</p>
-<p class="revint">1962. Bayou Pierre, Land of Yesteryear, Chapter 5. Newsletter, North Louisiana
-Historical Assn., May, pp. 13-15.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Ford, James A.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="revint">1951. Greenhouse: A Troyville-Coles Creek Period Site in Avoyelles Parish,
-Louisiana. Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural
-History, Vol. 44, Part 1.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Ford, James A., and Clarence H. Webb</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="revint">1956. Poverty Point, A Late Archaic Site in Louisiana. Anthropological Papers
-of the American Museum of Natural History, Vol. 46, Part 1.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Ford, James A., and G. R. Willey</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="revint">1940. Crooks Site, A Marksville Period Burial Mound in La Salle Parish, Louisiana.
-Department of Conservation, Louisiana Geological Survey, Anthropological
-Study No. 3.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Moore, Clarence B.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="revint">1912. Some Aboriginal Sites on Red River. Journal of the Academy of Natural
-Sciences of Philadelphia, 2nd. Series, Vol. 14, Part 4.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Newell, H. Perry, and Alex D. Krieger</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="revint">1949. The George C. Davis Site, Cherokee County, Texas. Memoirs of the
-Society for American Archaeology, No. 5.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Quimby, George I.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="revint">1951. The Medora Site, West Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana. Field Museum of
-Natural History, Anthropological Series, Vol. 24, No. 2.</p>
-<p class="revint">1957. The Bayou Goula Site, Iberville Parish, Louisiana. Fieldiana: Anthropology,
-Vol. 47, No. 2.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Suhm, Dee Ann, Alex D. Krieger, and Edward B. Jelks</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="revint">1954. An Introductory Handbook of Texas Archeology. Bulletin of the Texas
-Archeological Society, Vol. 25.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Suhm, Dee Ann, and Edward B. Jelks (editors)</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="revint">1962. Handbook of Texas Archeology: Type Descriptions. The Texas Archeological
-Society, Special Publication No. 1, and The Texas Memorial
-Museum Bulletin, No. 4.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Webb, Clarence H.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="revint">1948. Caddoan Prehistory: The Bossier Focus. Bulletin of the Texas Archeological
-and Paleontological Society, Vol. 19.</p>
-<p class="revint">1959. The Belcher Mound, A Stratified Caddoan Site in Caddo Parish, Louisiana.
-Memoirs of the Society for American Archaeology, No. 16.</p>
-<p class="revint">1961. Relationships between the Caddoan and Central Louisiana Culture Sequences.
-Bulletin of the Texas Archeological Society, Vol. 31.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="lr">1560 Line Avenue</p>
-<p class="lr">Shreveport, Louisiana</p>
-</div>
-<h2>Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes</h2>
-<ul>
-<li>Silently corrected a few typos.</li>
-<li>Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.</li>
-<li>In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by _underscores_.</li>
-</ul>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SMITHPORT LANDING SITE ***</div>
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