Elemental analysis of Marksville-style prehistoric ceramics from Mississippi and Alabama
by Baca, Keith Allen, M.A., MISSISSIPPI STATE UNIVERSITY, 2008, 138 pages; 1450417

Abstract:

Distinctive Marksville-style pottery is characteristic of the Middle Woodland period (200 B.C.–A.D. 500) in the Lower Mississippi River Valley and adjacent regions. Marksville material is common in the Lower Mississippi Valley, and the scarcity of similar pottery in northeastern Mississippi and western Alabama has caused claims that Marksville pots were imported into those areas; however, they may have been locally made. To test these alternative possibilities, the elemental composition of some Marksville-style potsherds, other pottery, and clays from various archaeological sites spanning the above regions was characterized using laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry. The results show that the analyzed Marksville-style pottery shares similar elemental profiles with locally common wares and local clays in the sample, allowing the conclusion that all of these Marksville specimens were made in the regions where they were found.

 
AdviserJanet Rafferty
SchoolMISSISSIPPI STATE UNIVERSITY
SourceMAI/ 46-05, p. , Jun 2008
Source TypeThesis
SubjectsArchaeology
Publication Number1450417
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