Page-Ladson prehistory site

Page-Ladson prehistory site
Location Jefferson and Taylor Counties, USA
Type Florida Historic Site

The Page-Ladson prehistory site (8JE591) is a deep hole in the bed of the Aucilla River (between Jefferson and Taylor Counties in the Big Bend region of Florida) that has stratified deposits of late Pleistocene and early Holocene animal bones and human artifacts. A group of eleven artifacts have an average age of 15,405 to 14,146 calendar years Before Present (12,425 ± 32 14C years BP). The earliest dates for artifacts recovered from the site are between 1,000 and 1,500 years before the advent of the Clovis culture.[1]

Prehistoric environment

At the height of the last ice age (the Wisconsin glaciation), the sea level was up to 100 meters lower than at present. Most of Florida is a thick limestone platform, with typical Karst topography. As limestone is porous, salt water penetrates the lower part of the Florida platform, and fresh water floats on top of the salt water. With the lowered sea level of the ice age, the fresh water table in Florida was also lowered, leaving most of Florida much drier than it is at present. The only reliable sources of fresh water at elevations that are currently above sea level were sinkholes and the deeper parts of river beds. The Page-Ladson site was one of those watering holes, located in a ravine that is now the bed of the river.[2][3]

The lower part of the Aucilla River (from the Cody Scarp to the Gulf of Mexico) crosses the Woodville Karst Plain, which consists of a thin layer of sand over limestone bedrock. Much of the flow of the Aucilla River has been captured by an underground drainage system created by karst processes. Sections of the river are entirely underground, surfacing for short stretches and then disappearing again. The Page-Ladson site is located in one of the above ground sections, known as Half-Mile Run (although it is closer to one mile long). Other sites on the Aucilla River are also yielding paleontological and archaeological finds, all as part of a long-running Aucilla River Prehistory Project.[4][5][6]

Aucilla River Prehistory Project

Starting in 1959, Dick Ohmes and other scuba divers began retrieving artifacts and Pleistocene animal bones with butcher marks from the lower reaches of the Aucilla River. A team led by archaeologist James Dunbar and paleontologist S. David Webb began a survey of Half-Mile Run in 1983. A former U.S. Navy Seal, Buddy Page, showed them a site where he had found elephant bones. A 20-inch-deep (510 mm) test pit yielded elephant bones, bone tools and chips from tool making. Radiocarbon dating of organic material from the pit yielded dates from 13,000 to 11,700 years Before Present. The owners of the land surrounding Half-Mile Run, the Ladson family, granted permission to the team to access and camp along Half-Mile Run. The Site was therefore named Page-Ladson.[7]

Excavation of the Page-Ladson site spanned the period from 1983 until 1997. As the project progressed, the team developed new methods of recording the stratigraphic placement of all material in an underwater environment.[8][9]

Archaeological excavation at the Page-Ladson site resumed in 2012 with the intention of validating the dating of human artifacts obtained in earlier work, and of finding the oldest dates for human remains and artifacts at the site. The excavation was funded by the Center for the Study of First Americans, and carried out by archaeologists from Texas A&M University and Indiana University of Pennsylvania and local volunteers.[10]

Late Pleistocene animals and Paleoindians

The lowest strata in Page-Ladson is late Pleistocene. In includes mastodon, mammoth, horse and ground sloth, palaeolama bones and "straw mats" of chopped vegetation (leaves, bark and wood) of relatively uniform length.The length of the chopped vegetation is consistent with the spacing between cusps on mastodon teeth, and the "straw mats" have been interpreted as equivalent to the layers of trampled elephant dung found around water holes in Africa. Elephant steroids have been identified in the "digesta" deposits at Page-Ladson and Latvis-Simpson (a 32,000-year-old mastodon site farther south in the Aucilla). Some of the bones from this level show apparent human-made cut marks, particularly a complete mastodon tusk. Ivory spear points (often called "foreshafts") are found more frequently in the Aucilla River than everywhere else in North America combined. Samples from the "straw mat" level have yielded radiocarbon dates from 13,130 +/- 200 to 11,770 +/- 90 years Before Present. The "straw mat" level is covered by a layer of mud that did not contain any bones of extinct animals.[11]

People of the early Archaic period

In 1996 an Early Archaic Bolen habitation level was found. At least three hearths were identified, and various stone points, scrapers, adzes and gouges were found, as well as antler points used to press flakes off the stone tools. Three wooden stakes were found upright in the ground, and a cypress log that had been burned on the top side and hollowed out. Radiocarbon dating yielded dates around 10,000 years Before Present. The site was well preserved because it had been flooded by a rise in the river level within a hundred years after the site was occupied.[12]

See also

Notes

  1. Dunbar: 414
  2. Brown:13-14
  3. Milanich:38-40
  4. Brown:13-14
  5. Webb, S. David. "Aucilla River Prehistory Project". Florida Museum of Natural History. Retrieved 13 November 2011.
  6. Donoghue, Joseph E. (2006). "Geography and Geomorphology of the Aucilla River Region". In S. David Webb. First Floridians and Last Mastodons: The Page-Ladson Site in the Aucilla River. Springer. pp. 31–48. ISBN 978-1-4020-4325-3.
  7. Brown:14-15
  8. Brown:14-18
  9. Webb, S. David and James S. Dunbar (March 1998). "Page/Ladson site update". Aucilla River Times XI (1). Retrieved 30 November 2011.
  10. "Anthropology Student and Faculty Excavate at Submerged Prehistoric Site". Indiana University of Pennsylvania Department of Anthropology. Retrieved 29 January 2013.
  11. Mihlbachler, Matt. "Mastodon dung (It's a dirty job but.....)". Aucilla River Times (Newsletter of the Aucilla River Prehistory Project). Florida Museum of Natural History. Retrieved 13 November 2011.
  12. "Aucilla River Paleoindian Site". Archaeology (Archaeological Institute of America) 50 (2): Newsbriefs. March–April 1997. Retrieved 30 November 2011.

References

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