Publication | Closed Access
Paleoindian Aggregation and Social Context at Bull Brook
95
Citations
64
References
2009
Year
Historical GeographyPaleoenvironmental ReconstructionLandscape ArchaeologyCultural HeritageGeographyLarge Social AggregationsArchaeological RecordAmerican ArchaeologyArchaeologyArchaeological ExcavationSocial SciencesAnthropologyBull BrookNorth AmericaSingle Occupation
Large social aggregations are among the most highly organized events associated with mobile hunter-gatherers. The Bull Brook Paleoindian site in Ipswich, Massachusetts provides the strongest case for large-scale Paleoindian aggregation in North America, with 36 discrete concentrations of artifacts arranged in a large circle. Avocational archaeologists who salvaged the site in the 1950s interpreted it as a single occupation. Professionals first rejected and then revived this hypothesis, but the site remained insufficiently analyzed to evaluate. New research supports the single occupation hypothesis with a fully reconstructed site plan and the first complete analysis of artifact distributions. Clear spatial structure of activities within the ring-shaped site plan provides a window on social contexts that are also visible in smaller Paleoindian settlements.
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