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Oneota

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A map showing approximate areas of various Mississippian and related cultures, including the Oneota.

Oneota is a designation archaeologists use to refer to a cultural complex that existed in the Eastern Plains and Great Lakes area of what is now occupied by the United States from around AD 900 to around 1650 or 1700. Based on the classification defined in Gordon Willey and Philip Phillips' 1958 book Method and Theory in American Archaeology, the Oneota culture belongs to formative stage.[1] The culture is believed to have transitioned into various Siouan cultures of the protohistoric and historic times, such as the Ioway.[1] A long-accepted ancestry to the Ho-chunk has yet to be conclusively demonstrated.

Oneota is considered a major component of Upper Mississippian culture. It is characterized by globular, shell-tempered pottery that is often coarse in fibre.[2] Pieces often had a spherical body, short necks and/or a flat lip. Sometimes the vessels had strap handles. Decoration includes wavy and zigzag lines, often in parallel. Most decoration was done on the top half of the vessel.[3] One site occupied by the Oneota people for a period was the Aztalan site off of the Crawfish river in Wisconsin.[4]

Analytically, the culture has been broken down into various stages or horizons. Generally accepted are the following:

  • Emergent Horizon (c. AD 900-1000),
  • Developmental Horizon (c. AD 1000-1300),
  • Classic Horizon (c. AD 1300-1650) (previously called the Oneota Aspect),
  • Historic Horizon (post-contact, generally after 1650).

In addition, the Oneota culture has been divided geographically based on stylistic and socio-economic differences. Some of these traditions are Orr, Langford, and Fisher-Huber.

The Oneota diet included corn, beans, squash, wild rice, nuts, fish, deer, and bison, varying according to the region and locale.[5]

Relationships with Middle Mississippian were present but are not yet clearly understood. Whether Oneota developed in situ out of Late Woodland cultures, was invasive, was the result of influence from (proto-)Middle Mississippian peoples, or was some mix of these, is not clear.

See also

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Sources

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  • Gibbon, Guy E. (1982) Oneota Studies.
  • Green, William (ed.)(1995) Oneota Archaeology: Past, Present, and Future.
  • Iowa. Office of State Archaeologist. [1976?] Oneota. [Iowa City, Iowa] : Office of the State Archaeologist.

References

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  1. ^ a b Gordon R. Willey and Philip Phillips (1957). Method and Theory in American Archaeology. University of Chicago Press. p. 167 ISBN 978-0-226-89888-9.
  2. ^ Schurr, Mark R. (2017). "The Upper Mississippian Occupation at the Collier Lodge Site (12PR36): Ceramics and Chronology on the Eastern Edge of Oneota". Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology. 42 (1): 87–110. ISSN 0146-1109. JSTOR 26599949.
  3. ^ Behm, Jeffrey (2007 April). Oneota Tradition. University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh. Oshkosh, WI.
  4. ^ Krus, Anthony; Richards, John; Jeske, Robert (2022). "Chronology for Mississippian and Oneota Occupations at Aztalan and the Lake Koshkonong Locality". American Antiquity. 87 (1): 124–141. doi:10.1017/aaq.2021.82.
  5. ^ Birmingham, Robert A. & Eisenberg, Leslie E. (2000). Indian Mounds of Wisconsin, p. 166. University of Wisconsin Press.
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