google-site-verification: google1c6a56b8b78b1d8d.html Adena Hopewell Mound Builders in the Ohio Valley: Hopewell Indians
Showing posts with label Hopewell Indians. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hopewell Indians. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Hopewell Indian Burial Mounds in Jay County, Indiana

Hopewell Indian Burial Mounds in Jay County, Indiana



This mound was once located on an ancient lake that has since been drained.  The shoreline can be seen in the distance.  It is one of the few "lake" mounds left in Indiana. Mounds of this type are associated with the proto-Iroquois.


The general location of early Indian burial mounds in Jay County, Indiana.  Actual locations have been changed because of landowners fears archaeologists would damage the burial mounds.

Indiana Department of Geology and Natural History 12th Annual Report, 1882

Archaeology

     The antiquities of Jay County are full of interest. Though there are no extensive earthworks, the whole region abounds in relics of the aboriginal and prehistoric peoples. The characteristic implements, utensils and ornaments have been found in every township-such as grooved axes, hammers, pestles, fleshers, arrowheads, totems, pipes and pottery. The only mounds observed were very small, and almost obliterated, being in two localities-one group of five small ones, located in Section 35, Penn Township; another of three similar mounds in Section 13, Knox Township. They are all obscurely oval, being from twenty-five to fifth feet in length, and from three to five feet high. Some have been almost obliterated by cultivation.

   Dr. Arthur, of Portland, has thoroughly investigated their structure, but they have yielded no specimens, either in implements, pottery or bones. All of them contained ashes and alternating layers of clay, burned brick red, and beds of charcoal. They were probably habitation mounds, and possibly some of the outlying villages of that numerous people who have left monumental evidences in the great earthworks of Winchester and Anderson that this region was a center of their national power. While the mounds are thus unimportant, the relics gathered from various parts of the county are full of interest.

Their abundance and variety has attracted the attention of many collectors. Extensive collections have been made by Dr. C. S. Arthur, of Portland, Gen. J. P. C. Shanks, Mr. John Lalley. Dr. Porter, of Geneva, Adams County, also has a large number of fine specimens, many of them gathered in Jay County.

These various collections include a variety f articles not often equaled in a single county. Much of the workmanship is quite elaborate, showing in execution both taste and skull. The hardest rock has been fashioned and polished into symmetry and beauty. The excellence of the work is amazing as we remember it was wrought by men who had no knowledge of the harder metals.

The variety of material used is astonishing. We have observed Indian arrowheads of all descriptions, flints of every color, even to green. One arrowhead, in possession of Gen. Shanks, is made from crystalline quartz. Most of the stone axes are made of granite, in its various forms of syenite, diorite, or greenstone. The pipes are usually steatite, or soapstone. Some of these are of curious form, and exhibit considerable skill in copying natural objects. Dr. Arthur’s collection contains one that is a fair representation of an otter, and another a good imitation of a rattlesnake’s head.


Tubular pipes are met with. One in the possession of Dr. Porter, at Geneva, is about ten inches long, made of steatite. The bowl is funnel-shaped and horizontal, not turned up in ordinary pipe form. A shorter one in Dr. Arthur’s cabinet shows the marks of the teeth of some energetic smoker.

Occasionally throughout this county rounded masses of a flinty silicious stone are found, having a sharp angular fracture, quite spheroidal in form, and varying in size from a hen’s egg to the fist of a man. They have evidently been used as implements. They are not the ordinary hammerstones, having neither grooves or polishes surface. All of them have the sharp angular pointed appearance on the sides where the laminations of the material end. They all have this characteristic. Only a few of them have been found.

Dr. Arthur suggests their use in the manufacture of implements from the granitic rocks. It was found upon trial that the burned edges of these stones would readily disintegrate the hardest green stone, when applied with continued yet gentle blows. The sharp points granulated the granite very rapidly, and a few hours only would suffice to form a battle-axe or pestle from any syenitic boulder.

We have not learned whether implements of this description have been observed in other localities. We offer this as a suggestion of their probable use.

Near the Salamonie, south of Portland, on the land of Mr. Jonas Votaw, in Section 28, Wayne Township, is a deposit of sand and gravel, in which were found at one time seventeen human skeletons, lying at a position below the present level of the Salamonie, apparently an ancient sepulcher. The bones and relics were all in an advanced stage of decay, so that many crumbled on exposure. The only relics preserved were a tubular pipe of steatite, and what is evidently the osselet of a squid or calamary, the internal bone or shell of a cephalopod, called the “pen,” from its pointed, pencil-like form. The specimen is a perfect one, with the conical cavity at the lower end, showing distinctly its nature. It must have been transported from the seat coast as an ornament. Other relics of similar nature and origin have been discovered, indicating tribal communications among the ancient people, and interchange of commodities.

In a gravel pit just south of Portland, in Section 20, one of those broad, shoal-like deposits of gravel and sand, overlaid by a few feet of yellow sedimentary sand soil, was found a locality, about three feet below the surface, where ashes and charcoal were found mingled with the gravel, some of the boulders showing the action of heat. Associated with them were fragments of pottery, of rather a rude character, yet exhibiting some symmetry of outline, with traces of ornamentation, being decorated by marks made with the fingernail before the baking of the pottery. There were no indications on the surface of any disturbance of the soil; no irregularity of outline either in elevation or depression. It is probable that a small habitation mound had once occupied this spot, that in such yielding, sandy soil had, in the lapse of ages, been wholly obliterated.

History of Randolph County, Kingman 1887

In a ditch dug by Joseph Stevens, in the northeast part of Green Township, nearly south of Powers station, to drain a pond, great numbers of human bones were taken out, many being of unusual size. The jaw bones were full of teeth.
The jaws were brittle, and the teeth, though sound and solid in nature, were yet so loose as to shake readily in the sockets. There was found also what seemed to be a shriveled hand, like the hand of a little child.

History of Blackford County, 
     One mound builder’s skull, from subject only twelve years old, as is evident from the stage of development which the teeth exhibit, is as large as the skull of a full grown man of modern type. This was found in a mound, accompanied with cup-shaped vessels. With such mounds and relics the Salamonie River abounds.

Indianapolis News, November 5, 1921
    Portland, Ind., November 5 - with the passing of Twin Hills, the object of many sight-seeing trips in Jay County, and which are now being levels for the valuable gravel that they contain many interesting discoveries are being made.
     The bones of these skeletons were found recently and those who know something about the human race say that the skulls look as though they might be from an early race of Indians or more remove races that were known to the early settlers.