There is a consensus that with the introduction of pottery vessels
to Late Maritime culture, beginning sometime prior to 500 B.C.,
subsequent cultural developments led directly to the Micmac,
Maliseet, and Passamaquoddy peoples encountered by Europeans in
the early 17th century. While quite important to archaeologists,
the appearance of pottery vessels simply represented an additional
element of technology that was incorporated into the tool kit of
the previously pre-pottery people. Throughout much of eastern North
America there is an archaeological convention whereby the
appearance of pottery is used as the artifact which ends the
Archaic period and introduces the Woodland period. Initially it
was believed that pottery manufacturing was associated with
increasingly complex societies involved in horticulture and burial
mound ceremonialism and that it ushered in a new stage of cultural
development significantly more sophisticated than the preceding
Archaic. Subsequent research has demonstrated that throughout North
America pottery was simply an introduced element of technology that
had no appreciable effect upon earlier lifeways. In some places the
stone bowls used formerly were simply replaced with pottery
replicas.
Archaeological evidence pertaining to the transition between the
Archaic and Woodland periods is limited. Indeed, the period between
1,500 and 500 B.C. has been referred to as a cultural hiatus
(Keenlyside 1984: 2). As
was outlined in Period III
(Wright 1995), there is
considerable debate whether the Late or Terminal Archaic peoples
of the region participated in a Middle Maritime culture (Maritime
Archaic), a Middle Great Lakes-St. Lawrence culture (Laurentian
Archaic), a Susquehanna Archaic culture, or some amalgamation of
the preceding. The northward spread of the Susquehanna Archaic
culture appears to only partially penetrate the Maritime provinces
and is, therefore, largely peripheral to events during this period.
Both the meagre evidence and the potentially treacherous crutch of
parsimony suggest that the Late Archaic peoples of the Maritime
provinces were derived from an indigenous Middle Maritime culture
and that Late Maritime culture represents a direct descendant of
that culture. This inference is premised on technological,
settlement pattern, and subsistence continuities.
The Late Maritime culture tool kit is composed of large stemmed
and broad side-notched or expanding stemmed projectile points,
large end scrapers which become increasingly smaller and common
through time, a limited number of polished stone celts, abraders,
and other rough stone tools. Finely fashioned pottery vessels,
generally decorated with some form of toothed implement, appear
by 500 B.C. and possibly earlier. The method of pottery
manufacture, as well as the motifs, techniques of decoration,
and general vessel form, are all similar to pottery from sites
in the upper St. Lawrence Valley of Québec and Ontario.
In this regard, the early pottery of the Maritime provinces
represents the easternmost extension of a widespread pottery
tradition that was distinctly northern in character and
distribution. A quite different pottery tradition consisting of
beaker shaped vessels, most often impressed on both the interior
and exterior with a cord-wrapped paddle, has been recorded from
contemporary sites immediately to the south. Although there has
been the suggestion that this particular pottery may have
entered New Brunswick with the Meadowood complex of Late Great
Lakes-St. Lawrence culture, the presence of this complex has not
been convincingly demonstrated and is largely based upon some
very general burial traits and projectile point forms
(Deal 1986;
Ferguson 1988: 17-18;
Turnbull and Allen 1988).
The aforementioned two different pottery traditions are geographically
discrete with the stamped pottery occurring to the north of the
southern cord-impressed pottery. An important exception to the
foregoing is a northern salient of the cord impressed pottery
tradition in the St. Lawrence Valley between, approximately,
Trois-Rivières and Québec City. The north-south
relationship of the two pottery traditions in the Maritimes is
equivalent to that of the interior of North America with regard
to Late Great Lakes-St. Lawrence and Late Western Shield cultures
relative to their southern neighbours. Plain pottery, sometimes
possessing simple incised or punctate decorations, is evidently
early and possibly associated with both the cord-impressed and
the dentate stamped pottery traditions. It has been necessary to
address this matter of pottery traditions and their distributions
as pottery has frequently been used by archaeologists to identify
archaeological cultures, all too often to the exclusion of other
considerations.
Late Maritime culture occupation of coastal and riverine sites
frequently extends into the following time Period V (A.D. 500 to
European Contact). In the Passamaquoddy Bay region of southeastern
New Brunswick, where extensive archaeological reconnaissance and
excavation have been carried out, sites are characterized by south
to southeast exposures adjacent to mud flats rich in shellfish,
canoe landing/launching beaches, and in close proximity to
freshwater (Sanger 1985).
Faunal analysis suggests that the coastal shell midden sites
represent cold weather occupations, although some sites could have
been occupied on a year-round basis. Interior riverine sites,
situated near swifts and rapids, were likely occupied from the
spring through summer to take advantage of the spawning
concentrations of fish such as capelin and smelt (Osmeridae
sp.), sturgeon (Acipenser oxyrhynchus), gaspereau
(Alosa pseudoharengus), shad (Alosa sapidissima),
and salmon (Salmo salar). Fall and winter concentrations
of Atlantic eel (Anguilla rostrata) and tomcod (Microgadus
tomcod), respectively, would also have been exploited
(Scott and Scott 1988).
Pertinent to the Maritimes has been the suggestion that along the
New England coast shellfish gathering was a limited activity until
terminal Archaic and subsequent 'Woodland' times when it became
increasingly important
(Braun 1974: 582). Since the
majority of the coastal Archaic period sites have likely been
destroyed by rising sea levels it is simply not known how long
shellfish exploitation has been a significant subsistence activity.
Surviving Middle Maritime culture shell midden sites in Maine,
such as the Nevin Shellheap
(Byers 1979) and Turner Farm
(Bourque 1976), suggest that
the destruction of Period III shell middens is a more appropriate
explanation for the scarcity of early shell middens than any earlier
disinterest in a resource that was nutritious, easy to harvest and
process, and locally abundant. The opinion that intensive shellfish
gathering was associated with interior riverine oriented Late
Archaic populations adapting to the littoral resources of the coast,
ignores the probability of a much earlier history of shellfish
gathering. While the relative instability of the coast during Middle
Maritime culture times could have curtailed the establishment of
productive shellfish beds in many regions, it was not likely to have
affected all areas.
In attempts to explain the scarcity of archaeological evidence
relating to the transition from Archaic to Woodland a number of
scenarios or models have been proposed. These have ranged from
propositions of environmentally disrupted ecosystems forcing
interior hunters to rely on coastal littoral resources, to
environmental stability permitting effective exploitation of
coastal resources by northward advancing pre-adapted Susquehanna
Archaic peoples or their descendants who pushed the indigenous
populations aside or eventually merged with them. The evidence of a
major environmental flux of sufficient magnitude to elicit such
drastic readjustments is weak. It is apparent that both Late Maritime
culture and their ancestors possessed adaptive systems that were
broadly based and flexible. The cultural hiatus which some see, or
the environmentally induced rapid changes perceived by others, are
not responsible for the poorly understood nature of the archaeological
record of this time. Rather, it appears that inadequate analytical
methods may be largely responsible for the perceived break in cultural
continuity. It is not a coincidence that the confusion in interpreting
the archaeological record first occurs with the disappearance of a
number of Late Archaic diagnostic traits such as gouges, ground slate
lances-projectile points-knives, and plummets, specific mortuary
practices, and the initial appearance of a major new class of
artifacts: pottery. The difficulty with the archaeological record
during Period IV could be the current lack of convenient artifact
'index fossils'. As a number of researchers have noted, however, the
chipped stone element of the technology exhibits clear continuities
between the pre-pottery and pottery producing components of sites.
This continuity is reinforced by correspondences in Late
Archaic-Ceramic Period settlement patterns and subsistence.
A significant archaeological event in the Maritimes and the
Gaspé involved the appearance of the Adena mortuary complex
from the Ohio Valley. Why the earlier elaborate mortuary ceremonialism
of Middle Maritime culture disappeared to eventually be replaced
nearly 1,000 years later by mortuary practices originating in the
interior of North America some 1,700 km away cannot be answered.
If the Adena mortuary complex expansion to the Maritimes was related
to an expanding trade network, what was the purpose of that trade,
where is the archaeological evidence of secular as opposed to
religious exchange, and why did the direction of contact change to the
interior of the continent away from earlier routes along the Atlantic
coast? What was happening during the 1,000 year gap between the two
mortuary systems of Middle and Late Maritime cultures? And, as was the
case with both Late Great Lakes-St. Lawrence culture and Late Western
Shield culture, why did only an apparently very small proportion of
Late Maritime culture people participate in the introduced mortuary
ceremonialism? Even though the highly prescribed nature of Adena
mortuary ceremonialism, recognized throughout an extensive area of
northeastern North America, suggests the existence of an overseeing
priesthood or priest-shaman class, there is also clear evidence of
local participation in ceremonial activities as reflected in
implements manufactured from local materials and in local styles
appearing in the graves. The relatively rigid adherence to a specific
set of burial practices and the use of specific classes of grave
offerings, including objects from the Ohio Valley, would appear to
support the proposition that some highly structured form of
sanctified behaviour emanating from an Ohio Valley centre is being
reflected in the evidence. Late Maritime culture participation in
this religious manifestation, albeit limited, included a burial
mound near the Miramichi River which, within living memory, was still
regarded as a sacred place by the resident Micmac population. This
suggests the existence of a possible 2,500-year-old oral tradition.
Another related burial mound, largely destroyed by construction
activity, has been identified outside of Halifax (Dr. Steven Davis,
St. Mary's University, Halifax: Personal communication and
examination). Site distributional evidence suggests that the Adena
mortuary complex spread to the Maritime provinces via the St.
Lawrence River rather than northward along the Atlantic coast.
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