|
Click Item For details Visit These Non-Profit Web Sites: Alliance For Native American Indian Rights Native American Educational Association Tennessee Trail of Tears Association Books about Indians: Loud Hawk : The United States Versus the American Indian Movement
|
TOUR GUIDE
The Woodland Period began about 3,000 years ago. Many aspects of daily life during this time were not much different from those of the preceding Archaic Period. Houses, tools, clothing, and foods were similar. But there were changes which definitely distinguish the Woodland era from the earlier period. The major change was in the way the Woodland People obtained certain foods. They began to cultivate plants such as sunflowers and chenopodium, planting and tending the crops as they grew. Cultivating these plants, instead of simply gathering them in the wild, led to a more settled way of life. The bow and arrow replaced the spear-thrower during the
Woodland Period. The Woodland version of the bow and arrow was probably similar to the
weapon used by Southeastern Indian nations of the Historic Period. Black locust, ash, and
Osage orange made excellent bows. Bowstrings were made from twisted strips of
stretched buckskin. The arrow shaft was made from cane, with
the nock cut next to a joint in the stem to prevent the shaft from splitting.
Arrowheads chipped from flint were attached to the shaft with animal sinew
and a glue made from deer antlers. Indian men began using the bow as young
boys, and by the time they reached adulthood they could shoot arrows with
great accuracy and force. The weapon was highly accurate at a range of
forty yards, and arrows could penetrate oak trees as thick as the calf
of a man's leg.
Woodland Scene The use of pottery became widespread at this time. Woodland potters used clay mixed with limestone. They used the coil method to manufacture their pots. Long strips of clay were rolled up and coiled into a cone shape for the bottom of the vessel. Then additional rolled strips were added, one coil at a time until the pot was completed. The walls were then scraped smooth. Early Woodland pottery was decorated by beating the moist surface with a paddle wrapped with a rough fabric or cord. This roughened the surface and made the finished pot easier to hold. Later styles were decorated by stamping designs on the surface with a carved paddle, a technique still used by the Cherokee in historic times. The pot was dried in the sun, and then placed in a hot fire for several hours.
Long distance trade, which began during Archaic times, increased during the Woodland Period. In Middle Tennessee, more objects were being made with "exotic" materials from places like the Rocky Mountains and the Great Lakes. In the early Woodland Period, the People buried their dead near their
houses in the village. These
Woodland Period Pipe From Wilson County, Tennessee
Previous Page - The Archaic Period Next Page - The Mississippian Period
|
|
Questions? Comments? Suggestions? |