Perhaps to a greater extent than any other region of Canada cultural
developments on the Northern Plains has been based upon changes in
projectile point styles. Given the general nature of most of the
remaining chipped stone technology this emphasis upon one tool
category is understandable. In many instances, however, the reliance
upon projectile point types to reconstruct culture history has
created problems. Even the major archaeological complexes are
essentially based on their characteristic point types. The 3,000
years involved in Period III is dominated by three such sequential
complexes. The earliest is called Oxbow and was first recognized at
the Oxbow Dam site in southeastern Saskatchewan. There is a
consensus that the Oxbow complex developed out of earlier,
indigenous occupations characterized by side-notched points
variously called Mummy Cave, Bitteroot, Salmon River, etc.
(Walker 1992: 132-142). The
second complex is generally referred to as McKean or as
McKean/Duncan/Hanna or some combination of the three different but
intergrading and sequential projectile point styles. The McKean
complex has been regarded as an intrusive culture on the Canadian
Plains with ultimate origins in the Great Basin of Nevada, Utah and
adjoining states. Contrary to the preceding, a hypothesis advocating
a single unbroken development from Oxbow to McKean is favoured in
this work. The third and latest complex is called Pelican Lake and
is believed to have developed out of the McKean complex. These
three complexes are all included under the rubric Middle Plains
culture. If the relationship between the Oxbow and McKean complexes
should eventually be demonstrated to be something other than a
single, in situ, cultural development then separate cultural
designations will be necessary.
Each complex encompasses roughly 1,000 years within Period III
(Oxbow - 4,000 to 3,000 B.C., McKean - 3,000 to 2,000 B.C.,
and Pelican Lake - 2,000 to 1,000 B.C.) with the Pelican Lake
complex continuing into Period IV (1,000 B.C. to A.D. 500). Given
the fact that many of the Pelican Lake complex dates fall into Period
IV or straddle the Period III/Period IV boundary, the complex will be
mainly considered within the Late Plains culture of Period IV. The
preceding date ranges represent a simplified view of the radiocarbon
evidence and substantial overlapping of dates occurs within the
linear progression from Oxbow to McKean to Pelican Lake as revealed
by stratigraphy. In this respect, the radiocarbon chronology and the
stratigraphic chronology are somewhat at odds. As each of the
complexes within Period III encompasses approximately the same amount
of time, the complex names are retained as useful designations for
the early, middle, and late segments of Middle Plains culture
development.
Much has been made of the fact that the Oxbow and McKean complexes
generally post-date the Altithermal. One palaeoclimatic
classificatory system
(Bryson et al. 1970)
suggests that the warm and dry period of the Altithermal, that
ended around 3,500 B.C., permitted the maximum extension of the
grasslands. During a cooler and moister period shortly after
2,000 B.C. the forests encroached upon the parklands and grasslands
by some 50 km to 100 km with the modern climate becoming
stabilized around 500 B.C. It was after 2,000 B.C. that significant
evidence of mass communal killing of bison herds becomes apparent.
This development has been equated with an increase in bison
populations (Dyck and Morlan:
In press). In
addition to bison, however, Middle Plains culture people were
capable of exploiting the resources of the Boreal Forest and the
Mountain/Foothills environmental zones. Both the Kootenay and Peace
River regions of British Columbia appear to have been occupied by
Middle Plains culture with the Oxbow complex mainly in the north
(Fladmark 1981: 131-135)
and both the Oxbow and McKean complexes in the south
(Choquette 1972;
1973). Any suggestion
that Middle Plains culture had a focal economy based solely upon
bison underestimates the culture's adaptive capabilities even
though the heart of Middle Plains culture was in the
Grasslands/Parklands region.
The Middle Plains culture stone tool kit is dominated by
projectile points, end scrapers, random flake scrapers, and biface
knives. Of interest is the single stone tubular pipe from a McKean
complex level at the Cactus Flower site in Alberta that dated to
2,700 B.C. If this item actually functioned as a smoking pipe, it
would represent the earliest evidence of smoking in Canada. A
characteristic Middle Plains culture trait was the use of local
stone for tool production although limited amounts of exotic
lithics, such as Knife River chalcedony from North Dakota and
obsidian from Wyoming, are often present. The bone tool technology
appears to be quite rudimentary. What would have been dominant
elements in the tool kit, such as objects manufactured from skin
and sinew and wood and plant fibres, of course, have not survived
in the archaeological record.
Of considerable significance is the probability that all three
complexes of Middle Plains culture shared some kind of common
belief system. This is suggested by projectile point offerings
representative of the point styles of all three complexes in the
Majorville Medicine Wheel ceremonial feature
(Calder 1977). Current
differences in the manner in which the Oxbow, McKean, and Pelican
Lake complexes treated their dead may eventually prove to be more a
product of limited evidence and precise component identification
than being indicative of actual cultural differences.
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