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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brazos Valley Slopes THE BRAZOS VALLEY SLOPES ARCHAEOLOGICAL PROJECT: Cultural Resources Assessments for the Texas A&M University 'Animal Science Teaching and Research Complex, Brazos County, Texas edited by Alston V. Thorns with contributions by Barry W. Baker William A.-Dickens Shawn B. Carlson D.R. Kloetzer Patricia A. Clabaugh Ben W. Olive J. Philip Dering Alston V. Thoms Michael R Waters Y Y .2N a 3e ;3L 7 Reports of Investigations No. 14 Archaeological Research Laboratory Texas A&M University College Station 1999 x. THOMs er West Chapter 2 logical The Structure of Natural Resources in the Post Oak Savannah: wed by Regional Productivity Potential tion scribes ction Alston V. Thorns in the ocesses Insights about how prehistoric people used the land are readily derived from knowledge . The of the regional and local ecology, particularly about the productivity potential and spatio-temporal ter 8 by distribution (i.e., the structure) of natural resources. Typically, the structure of locally available chapter and readily exploitable subsistence resources--wild foods, raw materials for tools and ational construction, arable land, and pasturage--conditions the nature of land-use systems (Bettinger ects of 1991; Binford 1983; Jochim 1976). Knowledge about these resources is an important part of ment, understanding the land-use practices of the Indians who participated in intra- and interregional ndix IV hunter-gatherer and simple agricultural land use (Kirch 1982). Old World immigrants also historic occupied the study area, but were active participants in the worldwide agro-industrial land-use system (Jordan 1973, 1980; Jordan et al. 1984; Weniger 1984). With the exception of the "Local Setting" section, this chapter repeats the information previously presented by Thorns (1993e) in a report on archaeological resources in the White Creek basin, about 5 km southeast of the ASTRC property, but in the same ecological area. REGIONAL LANDSCAPE: BRAZOS RIVER BASIN OF THE INNER COASTAL PLAIN The project area is within the portion of the lower Brazos River basin that traverses the interior (i.e., inner) part of the West Gulf Coastal Plain, a major physiographic section of the Coastal Plain Province that, in Texas, extends inland to the Edwards Plateau (Fenneman 1938:100-112; Figure 2.1). This physiographic section is subdivided according to the age of the geological formations (Gulf series) that roughly parallel the Texas coastline. The Eocene-aged geological formations of the inner coastal plain form a series of low, but prominent, cuestas (Fenneman 1938) that constitute what has been called Texas' Undulating Region (Jordan 1980). These cuestas form corridors that are bounded on the northwest by the comparatively high-relief, rocky Edwards Plateau and on the southeast by the low-relief, often boggy, coastal prairies (Figure 2.1). Jacob De Cordova, a Texas immigration promoter in 1858, characterized the upland landscape between the Brazos and Navasota rivers in the vicinity of the project area: 'The ascent to the divide between the two rivers is an almost imperceptible rise through a succession of beautiful sweeps or long slopes of country, gradual in rise and declivity till you reach the ridge that separates their waters" (cited in Jordan 1980:2). While De Cordova's description is romanticized, it nonetheless illustrates the general character of the landscape in the uplands between the Brazos and Navasota rivers. It is, in part, the combination of extensive cuestas and a moderate-relief landscape that affords a traversable corridor along the inner coastal plain. From a land-use research perspective, the corridor is significant because it is a key component that links eastern North American and central Mexico, two parts of the continent that for the last 5,000 years or more had comparatively higher population densities and more intensive land-use systems than the corridor itself. This physiographic corridor constitutes a portion of what has been known as the "Gilmore Corridor," In The Brazos River Valley Slopes Archaeological Project, edited by Alston V. Thorns. 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Claypan and a thin strip of Blackland Prairie soils cover most of the uplands in Brazos and surrounding counties. The geographically more extensive claypan sediments tend to have a veneer of sandy soils that support post oak savannah vegetation; the clayey prairie sediments, as the name implies, support grasslands and scattered trees, mostly oaks (Hatch et al. 1990:12). Various kinds of soils have formed in alluvium that covers the bottomlands and valley walls along the major watercourses. Depending on local conditions, the vegetation varies from prairie to dense forest (Blair 1950:100-101; Frye et al. 1984; Godfrey et al. 1973; McMahan et al. 1984:23; Weniger 1984:3-14,124-129). Brazos and the counties to the southwest and northeast are encompassed, for the most part, by the Post Oak Savannah, a southwest- to northeast-tending "ecological area" that is defined primarily on the basis of modern vegetation patterns (Frye et al. 1984). A Blackland Prairie ecological area intermingles with the Post Oak Savannah, forming the San Antonio or String Prairie (Figure 2.2) that extends along the northern boundary of Brazos County and beyond to the southwest and northeast (Hatch et al. 1990:12; Jordan 1980:19). Vegetation within the Post Oak Savannah of Brazos County ranges from grassland mosaics with less than 10-percent woody canopy, to parks with 11- to 70-percent canopies, to woods (trees 9-30 ft tall) and forests (trees taller than 30 ft) with 71- to 100-percent woody canopy (McMahan et al. 1984:2,19). The density of woody species in non-riverine areas of Brazos and adjacent counties has probably increased since the 1830s as abandoned agricultural fields, over-grazed areas, and cutover woods have undergone wood regrowth (Yantis 1984:13). Thicketization--increasing density of woody species--of the Post Oak Savannah has also occurred with the suppression of fires (Hatch et al. S 1990:12). In Spanish Texas, the term monte grande, roughly translated as "a big brushland or graphic thicket," was typically used to denote what is today called the Post Oak Savannah (Buckley 1911:33; Gonzales 1983). To the early Spanish, who were not familiar with the regional landscape, the monte grande was a frightening obstacle they sometimes called the Monte del Diablo, a part of the region that they sought to avoid; when it was not possible they literally had ultigens to cut their way through the brush (Forrestal 1931:25; Gonzales 1983; Williams 1979). For those There familiar with the regional landscape, the patches and strips of prairie vegetation afforded readily resents negotiable passageways through the otherwise more densely forested region. That one needed to on and be familiar with the monte grande to effectively traverse it is well illustrated in the journals of There is explorers and travelers. In 1721, for example, Father Pena wrote that for the return trip from east a was Texas to San Antonio, the expedition's leader decided to follow a more direct route through the .1992: monte grande, rather than go around it, as was done on the way to east Texas. y street. He decided to return by the old road [the Indian road to the Texas] through the Monte Grande, for he had noticed that the Trinity carried only about half a uara of water, and he had learned from the soldiers whom he had sent out that the Brazos de Dios [Brazos] also offered a good crossing. With the help of an Indian oned by guide, and making its way through clearings and places sparsely timbered for a getation distance of seventeen leagues, the battalion crossed the Monte Grande [between a humid the Trinity and Colorado rivers] [Forrestal 1935:5901. hes per ghts are Concerning his 1767 journey between the Trinity and Brazos rivers, probably in or near Brazos are not County, the Frenchman Pierre Pages recorded that "we went through open country without for the following any path, but the savage soldiers [a reference to half-Indians who served as soldiers], during who knew the country, arrived at exactly the place they intended" (Pages 1985:13). ed near lack of Through the centuries, the precise location of the "easiest route" probably varied as clirriatic conditions changed and as more open spaces were created as a result of fires. The general location of travel routes, however, was conditioned by soil types. 9 OI 'spuplauioq ilagl 3o spoons alqu-lauaduil Alglsuapso ail gWnolgl gsnmdS aql pal A;)ql uolsuaao uo pue 'apuu& aluow aql Ono zqp sXenn aqI Inoge siaioldxa Alma atp plot aldoad uulpul atp Iegl Aus of alelnaau Isom aq plnonn pI 'uagl AITUOl.iolslH 16L61 sUMITIIM :0£6i snot, :Z£61 jagaleH '8061 uoplog '-B•a) silu-Tp uulpul usonn-Mann pamollo; sagaop$oaul\l pup oluoluy upS;o sallla Jsup uiapoui aql Mau pup ul suolssnu aqI uaaenlaq spEoi gslupdS Aueui aqI Imp saluilsuouzap sexaZ olul snptiqua 3o slunoaop s00LI Aj.MQ pee s009I appl ul uolluuuolul al.zolslgougla 'Iaej ul •(Z•Z ain?I3) ppoi u sp pI pasn pup apipid oluoluy tmS atp ,puno3„ saaioldxa gsluudS aqI legp Wulpou uagnn alemaae Alaillua IOU sl ag 'apeui-Mann sl palumuinmp Allpuai aiann ware jagtun asuap lugp pulod s,uupiop ap" 161:0861 uPP-IoP) apls iaglla uo puplslp sallui aaigl To oJKI alglsln iaquill 3luo 3o glnnol$ asuap u gllm'fjpunoa ssalaail Al;)2?rul g$noigl sassed Abort ?Tq aqI lugl aniasgo uua AjunoD uosapng ul IlannpTeD jo unnol aql uioij pietAlsam 'aldumxa so; 'Vulianuil spspolow pup 'I Z ApnngVIH alulS suxa,l, Aq palealldnp nnou sl peoi puapuu slip 30 llud 'PEO-d oluolud upS plo aql su unnou3l aumaq 11 Allaedua galgm ul 'spxa L isug puu suxag mannlaq alnoi lo(euz ilagp sp ll pasn pm dins apmid slip puno3 siaioldxa iall.iua aqI, •Ilaq 3luo Isod aqI q$noigp $ulpual.iopl.uoa so AwAalnoi leinleu lua3l31uVeui u pauuo3 II 'AlluljL aql of Isomlu laArd sozpig aqp puoAaq Isuagl.zou do.zlspg .ruau tuoi; salnu pazpung auo autos ftgapas puu aplnn salnu anl3 iano you 'aplluld VumS io oluolud ueS aqI sl pueMaulg aql ;o ssalpno lpnsnun psouz aql 3o aup pod usoTsso a ~SLBT ' lu ;a dalipo J uioi; pa;dupa) saxQ j, F 3o Ga ip ui suaiu luoTfoloaa aq; of uogulai ul Ajuno3 sozwg;o dupi •Z•Z aanj4,a Alunog ? ewEJd IElse00 SOZEJB spoomAeuld - ysuuenES NEO Isod r x - suiEJd puENOE18 ' Jam...:. ~ !,``'~I•... aweJd 6uuig r- - --J i_.._ -1---'~-. _jr ~L T-7 t - F- W40HJ 38n.Lon8l.S 3o8noS38 l 8niVN Z 83J-dVHO THOMS CHAPTER 2: NATURAL RESOURCE STRUCTURE THOMS AVAILABLE FOOD RESOURCES The history of the "old San Antonio roads" clearly demonstrates the historical and economic importance of this corridor of roadways connecting the eastern forest regions and the western savannahs and plains (McGraw 1991). These early Spanish roads are especially important to the present study because many of the people who traveled them recorded their observations about the nature and distribution of food resources (Figure 2.3). Brazos County and adjacent counties are within the eastern portion of the Texan biotic province which extends north from Texas' central gulf coast area, through east-central Oklahoma, and beyond. The Texan province is a broad ecotone between the comparatively mesic forest regions of eastern North America and the more xeric grasslands of the central part of the continent omoor (Blair 1950:100). As in most ecotones (Odum 1971), species diversity is high in the Texan rairie province compared with grassland and forest provinces to the west and east, respectively. Alluvial soils in the Brazos and other major river valleys support mesic forests of oaks, hackberries, and pecans. These river valleys serve as westward dispersal routes for forest species, while many subtropical species moved north along the river valleys and more coastal routes (Blair 1950). Upland species characteristic of regions to the south and west could move into the Oak Savannah through the extensive strips of prairie habitat. These same dispersal or migration routes probably have been used by plants and animals for tens of thousands of years (Bryant and Holloway 1985:65). The subtropical humid climate, the extensiveness of the riverine habitat, the mosaic upland vegetation pattern, and the overall ecotonal character of the regional biota indicate a os productive landscape for hunter-gatherers, as well as for simple and complex agriculturalists. ty During the historic period, the Old World immigrants improved the native productivity by introducing intensive agriculture and by burning the Oak Savannah, the Blackland Prairies, and the surrounding regions to create better pasturage (Weniger 1984:187-199). Jordan (1973:252) suggests that the practice of burning was inherited from the Indian people who knew that part of "preservation of the prairies meant that grazing bison would remain in the area." Burning effectively removed dense undergrowth and the mat of dead grasses, thereby facilitating more palatable and nutritious new growth. Browsers, notably white-tailed deer, also benefited from regular burning, and, at the same time, the productivity of other critical food resources, including g edible berries and possibly nuts and root foods, probably increased as well (cf. Lewis 1982). a The mosaic character of the upland vegetation in the vicinity of the project area is e compatible with a long history of regularly occurring grassland and shrub fires. Historical n accounts of the region prior to the mid-1800s fail to show that either juniper or mesquite was a o consistently major component of the upland vegetation in Brazos and surrounding counties, but d in many places today, juniper and mesquite are common, often creating dense thickets (Gonzales n 1983; Jordan 1973; Williams 1979). Since these species are not fire resistant, their presence in comparatively low densities prior to the mid-1800s is consistent with the idea that the Post Oak e Savannah was burned regularly. While it is widely recognized that Indian people purposely burned the prairies and woods of the Post Oak Savannah to increase grass production, some have argued that they "probably learned this use of fire" from the Spanish (Weniger 1984). I suspect, ade, he however, that if the Old World immigrants independently recognized the beneficial effects of o prairie seasonal burning, so, too, did the region's native inhabitants who depended on deer and bison as d early well as the vegetal foods that have higher yields under more open conditions (cf. DeVivo 1990). een the ell-worn For the Anglo-Americans, who were the first Old World peoples to effectively colonize then, it Brazos County and vicinity, the region exhibited extraordinary potential. In 1821, Stephen Austin the ways commented on the prairie's rich, black soils for fields and pasturage, the availability of sufficient tensibly timber for construction, and the abundance of deer for meat (cited in Doughty 1986:426). Some of the more economically significant natural resources for pre-industrial human populations in 11 Zi g Isoux aqI aq of cuaas saap Paid-allgm 'a.xnlexalTT oT.xolsTg pue oTIolsTgougla aql uzoi3 dui; pnp '(9Z -5Z: 1061 Telsa.uo3) ,,Imnb pus 'soWpT,xl.xed 'sAa}l xnl 'saeoq 'uosTq '.iaap jo -1aquxnu luas$ e„ pal.xoda.x aq 'sanTH ulosunuN aql pus aiagl uaamlaq 'pue ,'qsU jo AIddns poo$„ u seen aiagl .IaAT-d sozuig o agl UT lugl palou aH ,-ITenb;o sanoo pus sa$ppVed 'sAaxxnl '.xaap 'uosyq,, AIluToadsa 'sTsuxTuu aumW annuu Auuux panxasgo osle snoS 'ease laa(o.xd aqI 3o Isamgllou ADITun soZU.xg atp uI '(L£V9861 AlgWno(j) quuuunuS 3MO lsod aql;o slsud pasaquxTl pue Agssuux aqI uT panTI osTe „'sjeoq PITm uuado.xng Wulpniaul 'fxlsaoue paxgu 30„ s$oq TE19A '(9Z-57;:1£6T Tels9sso3) palsodai wam „salnux [pue] 'sassog 'aTPPeo„ loa(foid atp ;o glsou mj lou spusTdn papoom aql uT pus ,'SQAIeo [Pue] 'smog 'slTnq 3o ssaquxnu a~seT„ pug uasu auiss STUI TOM L9L I UT alosm sgoS sagluA ' (L 1: 0061 31Tod) „suxa,L oI PTSTA ISST3 "Qql uo [0691 uT uoyl ap] spsuTusdS agl Aq Isol„ aiPleo onsauxoP QM of paingrsllu sum aouaSasd llagl :Eris Iaa]'oid aqI;o Isamglnos uTseq .xanTg sozeig aql palTququT apluo pUm 'simuoloo uuadosng ISSB aql ;o TunTuu agl sallu &MQA 0£ uugl ssal '91 L I uI ' (981-ZB T :I,861 sa$TuatA) 50691 xI•ua aqI uT pagsTTqulsa asam suoTssTux PSIU agl 1313e sapeoap ma; u uTgPTm sassog pus aTlluo PITm;o spsag jo aauasaid aql Aq of palsalle ST puelgouus su Tunualod IuasaguT s,geuuuneS 3MO Isod aq,I, sTnunud awbO -Itam su pasn ST Saosnos Anioduxaluoo uxos3 uoTleuuo3uT Inq 'pazTsugduia am spsooas IeoTsolSTg PUB TuouoPSTgougla uxos;'eluQ 'uonoas STgl3o sapUTuuxas aql uT passnosTp an uoTWas aql -(oznlhd po;aul$udun :6L61 swulMM :g oinIM :L96I uzogloM puv ippug mo,g pa;depe) uoµlnalloe aµlead;o 9dµ}9„ o; uol;alaa ul speos goMdg Al=ea;o suol;aaoZ •g•Z amlT j mun Munoo swell ugsnp , . - 4unoo tiunoo > Hunoo kuno~ aelleM Qe d uo~6u!yseM ~y+ \>>d T. e >Aiewo61uoyyr-..-.-.._- --tit,• a`r \Q. 1 1 uo uo8O2Bg OML4 • eOIsPUedePW BIOSBABN Ajunoo o• J aal ' uoseling \ I 61 p" &mpasj 4b \I seDueon lewlw INCO sup" st of s ~i I ue~ig V sul 6ep luaseimod I ~ I f) ~~1~~~ Pep-M N I Q~ ~N AjunGo l seWIJJ 1 Alunoo I kunoo \ J Some, eH • ` Alunoo uAunnoo \ Hunoo wel!W uosljegob % BWOHJ 38nlon8lS 3o8noS38 ivanlvN :Z 831dVHO THOMS CHAPTER 2: NATURAL RESOURCE STRUCTURE THOMS widely and consistently sighted game animal in Brazos County and vicinity, but it is clear that ty bison and bear were also common. aiker BISON County ' Don Domingo Teran and his expedition group crossed the San Antonio Prairie in Burleson County in July 1691 on their way to the Texas (Tejas) villages in the pineywoods of what is today east Texas. They traveled "over a level country and camped on another arroyo, the water being filled with buffaloes, because of their great number in the vicinity" (Hatcher 1932:17). Father Damian Manzanet, one of the clergymen traveling with the expedition, noted the presence of "many buffaloes" and a "great many alligators" in the Brazos River valley west of present-day Hearne, Texas (Figure 2.3). Of the uplands between the Brazos and Navasota rivers, he noted the mosaic character of the woods and prairies and the "great number of buffalo," adding that it was "a very fine place for water and pasturage" (Hatcher 1932:65). Bison, turkeys, other "wild fowl," t fish, and alligators were also reported in Brazos County and vicinity by members of the Ramon expedition in 1716 (Folk 1933; Tous 1930). During that entrada, the Spanish killed bison in the uplands between the Brazos and Navasota rivers. Ramon also wrote that "in the middle of the road we met four Texas [Tejas] Indians with two women, who were killing bisons" (Folk 1933:17- 18). Bison were regularly sighted in the region through the 1700s, but by 1840 few bison were seen. Bear probably lasted longer, but they too were soon extirpated (Doughty 1986; Jordan 1973; Weniger 1984). According to William DeWees, who settled in 1822 on the Brazos River not far nngomery upstream from the project area, bison were abundant near the mouth of the Little River, and "bear ~~YY are very plenty, but we are obliged to use great care when hunting them, least the havalenas (meaning the peccary) kill our dogs" (cited in Roemer and Carlson 1987:142). Jean Louis Berlandier (1980), a Frenchman employed as a botanist with the Mexican boundary commission in 1828, did not mention any bison in the Brazos River basin along the Old San Antonio Road, although he did encounter them west of the Colorado River. Overhunting (adapted during the nineteenth century is commonly given as the reason for the bisons' demise in the Post Oak Savannah (e.g., Weniger 1984), but it also seems possible that climatic changes may have played a role, perhaps one that created habitats favorable for grass species that are less tolerant of sustained grazing (cf. Mack 1984; Mack and Thompson 1983). In any case, there is ample istorical evidence that bison densities varied considerably in Texas throughout the Holocene period, and that much of the variation was probably in response to climatic change (Bryson and Murray 1977; Dillehay 1974). Considering the abundance of ethnohistoric evidence for bison and bison hunting in the region, it is surprising that bison remains are very rare, if present at all, at excavated presence archaeological sites in the Brazos River basin portion of the Post Oak Savannah. Even though ablished faunal preservation tends to be poor throughout the region, most sites do yield a few burned and al of the unburned mammal bone fragments, but these are usually identified as deer, antelope, or deer- e project sized or smaller animals, including dog/coyote, rabbit, and other rodents (see Chapter 3). Bison in 16901 remains are almost never reported, not even from comparatively well-preserved sites dating within area had the last few centuries. If bison were periodically present during the prehistoric period in the same of the densities that they were during the early historic period, one would expect their remains to be "of mixed reported regularly in the regional archaeological literature. the Post It is possible, of course, that the paucity of bison remains in the regional archaeological record is due to sampling error, but with so many sites test-excavated over the last 30 years, this ve game explanation alone does not seem adequate. An ecological explanation is more likely, especially at in the one that considers population dynamics and climatic change. For example, geographers and River, he historians have argued that prior to A.D. 1500 human predation kept bison from occupying the 1931:25- savannahs and prairies within thE otherwise forested regions of the Southeast. 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In the early 1980s, a few bottomland localities immediately upstream from n during the project area are reported to have had as many as 200 deer per 1,000 acres, but in the "mostly e periods cleared" upland areas there were fewer than 5 deer per 1,000 acres, with the overall average being enough about 40 (Yantis 1984:10). n regime densely There is considerable annual variation in the deer densities and kill rates in the project ng-term area and vicinity. However, in general the data illustrate that in the Post Oak Savannah, at only a including Brazos County, the densities and kill rates are moderate compared to surrounding regions (Table 2.1 and 2.2). From 1986 through 1990, the estimated number of deer hunters each year in the "reporting unit" defined by Brazos, Burleson, Washington, Waller, Grimes, and Madison counties ranged from a low of 13,665 hunters in 1990 to a high of 16,210 in 1989. In 1988, 15,829 hunters spent a total of 117,982 days between November 3 and January 6 in this ring the area, during which they killed 7,436 deer. Within the much larger area encompassing all of the meat and Post Oak Savannah and Pineywoods regions of east Texas, a total of 119,062 deer were killed the Post during 2,033,796 hunting days in 1988 (Boydston 1992:8,11,15,19). and, in quilted Collectively, the data reviewed here, as well as the ecology of white-tailed deer in general (Halls 1978), illustrate that as long as there is a suitable habitat, white-tailed deer are capable of sustaining heavy predation. This, in turn, suggests that deer should have been economically very f the San important to the region's native hunter-gatherers, simple agriculturalists, and Old World e of deer immigrants who replaced them. The faunal record from archaeological sites throughout the region bers that is certainly consistent with this contention (see Thoms, Chapter 3). As the above statistics imply, 1985:15). deer hunting in this part of the Post Oak Savannah continues to be economically important. 834, also Native Plant Foods e in Of the "commonly associated plants" in the Post Oak Savannah, many have edible seeds, e nuts, or berries, including various oaks, mesquite, hackberry, hawthorn, and dewberry. Pecans, y mustang grapes, and greenbriar are among the commonly associated edible plants in the pecan- p elm forests of the region's bottomlands (McMahan et al. 1984:19,23). A less scientific but informative statement about edible plants comes from Father Solis, who traversed the region in 1767. Of the vegetation in the uplands adjacent to the left bank of the Brazos River--not far north ly 1700s, of the project area--he described the "great number of fruit trees, pomegranates [persimmons?], year, the grape-vines, strawberry-plants, blackberry-bushes, sapotes, hazelnuts, chestnuts and sweet anish at potatoes" (Forrestal 1931:26). Although there is a paucity of ethnographic data about the specific 1835, the vegetal foods consumed by the Indian people in Brazos County and vicinity, they are commonly believed to have "utilized a large number of plant foods, including herbs, roots, fruit, and seeds" (Newcomb 1961:139). r, he Fortunately, historic journals contain references to the specific kinds of vegetal foods eaten he by the region's native populations. For example, just after crossing the Navasota River in 1691 on his way to the "Texas [Texas] country," Father Manzanet wrote about finding "a very good fruit which they call as" (Hatcher 1932:66). What as was is not clear, but in this same area in 1721, hunting, Father Pena wrote about finding "an abundance of plums" in a clearing (Forrestal 1935:32). argued, Earlier, during the same trip, but in or near northern Robertson County, Pena noted "a woods that their covered with thorny trees, which in these parts are called mesquites and which produce fruit of tions had which the Indians are very fond" (Forrestal 1935:29). argument, directly to The journals also provide information about the root foods used by the Indian people, as d more of well as by the Spanish and other Old World peoples. That roots were an important overwintering food resource is evident from an account about a Spanish priest and several soldiers who camped along the Navasota River during the winter of 1717-1718. result of exceeding Father Nunez and four soldiers had taken supplies eastward along Ramon's road s (Reagan intended for the East Texas missions but they found the Trinity impassable and 15 91 '(010:086I -101puellag) axPo 30 110s u aNuui Aagl golgm g1Fnn 'ino0 gSTARIV pauualsa Ajq$jg u aonpoid asagl 'puno4f uaaq $ulnuq.1a13H '[AITI lalum p pupj autos Ajqugoid] ba gdwfiN snua$ agl3o slow Buuuz paiaglu~ pug Aagl punoj I lTsln puooas ino up 'lu01f. O 01 -MIT[uTs 31ujsp u aNeul Matt `plot uaaq anuq I `gaTqm LIITm slnu puno4f palou I uuagl `duou u paAIasgo I gaTqm sjjnlspooj iaglo agl $uourV •ullsnd Aup-luasaid .luau 9Zg1 ul pallsln aq dno4i umu3juo,L u Aq pasn spool loos agl jo autos lnoqu uollmuojul 3UI3;)ds Ajannuiuduloo paplnoid ialpuuj.lai3 ' (9Z: 1061 Tu1sail03) „alqulelud allnb„ aiam Aagl lugl sl 'ua.lu loa(oid agl .jo q1 iou pan.lasgo sgos iaglu,3 lugl „saolulod laams„ pjW agl lnoqu mou3j am jTu 'ajdurexa .10,3 •paulnsuoo sum (s)luujd gaTqm AIloexa luaplna IT sl 'Ianamog `Alami Apio •suuTpul agl Aq pasn spoo) loos agl 3o auuos lnoqu uolluuuo3ul luuonippu apjAwd sao.lnos iaglo lnq `ualua a.lam slow gojgm .lualo lou lT `lunooou anoqu agl uIO33 '[9£1:6L61 SuielljTM].... aulnaQ Aup-luasaid 3o ails aql luau puoi aql uo ullg latu [.zapual s,uogjpadxa agl] uo5.mTv 'piumisam puo.l s,uouluM paljanuil oqm uosiad lsjl3 agl uaaq anuq AUU1 aH 'PRO-I s,uouzeH umop APuaplna `p mmisam pawnla l zaunN .lagluA `ulosunuN agl Mau poom asuap u ul lual slq npun pagouo soljddns aql kulnuaq •paulnlai aq lou pjnoo salTddns aql puu awls poo131u sum sozulg agl uT .lalum ag,T, •sloo.l uo lslsgns of uugl padlaq uagl puu palsnugxa sum Alddns aql TTlun tuoo gllm uuagl pallddns suulpul ualulm aql ;o lsotu luads Aagl aiagm (a3M uud uluuS lu) iaArd ulosunuN aql of (lsam) 31ouq panotu as 000-i 08'01 OZ'TT ZZ'01 95'8 8T'£T 8L'01 /sia;unH ON 000`1 V'S 8t'S 6VZ 8£'6 £6'£ V61 /GMx so;ung 99'0 99'0 6Z'0 8T'T S£'0 ZZ'O /GM31 £OL`8 99£`19 81 1l`T IT8'£OZ 869`0£ £1Iv`Z TI1$ P401 sAvp 99£'SZT £8fi'£L£`T VSV£V 8lVC9Z'T T093,68 S£9'SOT so;unH 08 0001T 9'99 8'9£ 9'81 I'VL 6'6£ L'T£ /=aoQ coop £'9I T'LZ Z*tS S'£T 1'SZ 0'T£ /sa=oV •dod 919`901 T8L`ZTV 019`01 L£L`609'T 8ZL'T T£ 298`6£ loop `;sg 1 QvUw I 6L£`TT91 V89'£OZ'IT TL8`OL9 tVC'V£L'TZ 1,98'8T8'L T09`L9Z'I loop .0v sogsaM ITull '1dN PIM ojIasd soj;unoo Lsofo;a3 saTzPt=d epooes puel nvolvid geuuaeeg }uoaa['pu s;a(I Sint) -Aould -3109M spsaesp3 XsO ;sod 19 908 BuHunH -ji '(8'L `u5 alqu.L :Z66T tmllua2T '93, aTqu.L :Z66T uo;spAog) suxa,L;o scald TL 300l0a9 lua.laBTQ uT saluH JIM puu salnsuaQ laaa pallet-a;lgM 'T'Z alquL -SwoHI 38n1on81$ 3o8nos38 -lvanlvN :Z 831dvH0 THOMS CHAPTER 2: NATURAL RESOURCE STRUCTURE THOMS Table 2.2. Summary of Deer Density and Hunting Data for 1990 in Brazos County, Texas and Selected Surrounding Counties (Boydston 1992: Table 6; Reagan 1992: Table 8). Hunting Brazos Robertson Madison Grimes Washington Burleson Data County County County County County County Category Ac. deer 273,457 322,494 165,829 347,321 77,372 295,268 range Est. deer 8,237 13,550 4,645 17,996 1,113 34,333 POP. Acres/deer 33.2 23.8 35.7 19.3 69.5 8.6 Deer/ 30.1 42.0 28.0 51.8 14.4 116.3 1,000 ac Hunter days 26,006 26,962 15,967 33,734 19,075 13,737 Total Kill 446 1,001 655 655 377 308 Kills/ 0.21 0.27 0.37 0.21 0.22 0.17 hunter Kills/ 1.63 3.11 3.97 1.89 4.90 1.04 1,000 ac Hunters/ 9.93 13.95 12.65 11.40 27.11 7.68 1,000 ac Father Manzanet, a member of the de Leon expedition to east Texas in 1690, reported eating "cooked frijoles, with ground-nuts and tamales" at the Texas [Tejas] village on San Pedro Creek (Bolton 1908:376). In 1767, at a "very large and populous town inhabited by the Tejas tribe" and t located a short distance east of San Pedro Creek, Father Solis recorded the following account: s There is another food which they use, known as tuqui, and which is much like the cassava of Havana. It is derived from the roots of a certain tree, which are e pounded in a wooden mortar and then prepared with bear lard. Tuqui is taken as Y a beverage and is very injurious to the health, for it causes dysentery, skin e abrasions, and other diseases [Forrestal 1931:28]. Y S Of course, the native agriculturists also relied on domestic vegetal foods. In particular, the Spanish accounts attest to corn, beans, and squash, but, at least during the late 1600s and early provide 1700s, most of these crops were grown east of the Trinity River. The few fields in proximity to however, Brazos County seem to have been just across the Navasota River, perhaps in southwest Leon Old "sweet County. On June 20, 1716, soon after crossing the Navasota, Ramon wrote that "we arrived at palatable" a small ranch, where we found seven Texans. They received us with great pleasure and of the root demonstrated their delight by giving us green corn and watermelons. 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VN H:R rLO SWOH I 3unio ldl$ 3o8noS38 iv8nivN :Z 831dVHO THOMS CHAPTER 2: NATURAL RESOURCE STRUCTURE THOMS part of the bedload of the Brazos River; they presently cap most of the higher terraces along the river (Nordt 1983). Chert gravels occur on the surface throughout the region as part of the oductive Pleistocene deposits (Barnes 1974). In the ASTRC area, a low density (usually less than 20 pieces became per square meter) of gravel up to 5 cm in diameter is exposed on the surface above elevations of by the about 270 ft asl. On the treads of Terrace 1 and 2 surface gravels are rare, but they do occur on Brazos the scarps. There are also gravel bars in and adjacent to the modern Brazos River channel. ds just culture These materials did not go unnoticed by the Spanish and other Old World travelers of the ees and historic period. For example, one member of the Aguayo Expedition in 1721 reported "flint stones" jectarea near the Navasota River (Buckley 1911:40), and Berlandier (1980:327) observed "fragments of jasper and flint" near the mouth of the Navasota River. He also described a gravel-rich lens exposed in a Brazos River cutbank near the mouth of the Little Brazos River, a few kilometers ugh the upstream from the project area. The lens below the surface was a "layer about two or three inches e Brazos thick composed of rounded fragments of quartz, flint, chalcedony, etc., mingled underneath with s and pieces of rounded clay" (Berlandier 1980:334). stead ht bank Chert gravel in the vicinity of project area is significant in its importance as a source of raw material for the stone tools made by the Indian people (see Dickens, Chapter 9, and Olive, Chapter 8). Most of the stream-worn chert gravels are brown and grey in color; black and red colors occur d in much lower frequencies. Typically, the chert pebbles and cobbles range in size from less than e a centimeter to 15 cm in diameter (Nordt 1983:56-64). Silicified wood that has eroded from local s Eocene deposits also occurs on the surface in the project area: some of the pieces are more than 20 cm long. This material was also used by the Indian people to manufacture stone tools. Amos Parker (1968:164) observed silicified wood on the surface during his travels through the region r in 1834 and 1835, noting that "it might probably be manufactured into good hones, although it was coarser grained, and of a lighter shade, than those usually found at our stores." y the use Rloetzer, THE LOCAL VALLEY SLOPES os River 4). Slave Past and Present Vegetation Patterns bor was than 10 Post Oak Savannah vegetation, with densely wooded and prairie-like patches, dominates slave in the upland landscape in the project area, but the adjacent parts of the bottomlands are covered e white by riparian forest. Prior to the local impacts from agro-industrial land use, the more densely wooded areas on the ASTRC property probably occurred along tributary streams, and perhaps on the higher terraces. In any case, the journals from the pre-impact days attest to the mosaic d other character of the vegetation throughout the uplands and bottomlands; a person was never very far my and from forests or prairies. Today, the most densely forested areas are on the highest upland principal elevations and on the lowest floodplain elevations. According to local people familiar with the r in 1716 recent history of the ASTRC area, much of the property was cultivated until a few years ago; today, made "of those cultivated areas are planted in coastal bermuda grass. This suggests that these areas were Colorado fairly open prior to cultivation. At least some trees were present, however, as the large post oaks red with and the occasional live oak scattered throughout the project area attest. According to Nordt it obvious (1983:26-33), land cover/land use on the first and second terraces is grassland and pasture and lonce ounty is oak-savannah and pasture on the third and fourth terraces. 1935; Stable carbon isotope interpretations of the abundance of floodplain vegetation during the last 2,500 years indicate that grassland plants represent a climate drier than present between area, about 2,500 and 500 years ago. But with the onset of modern climate conditions beginning about s not 500 years ago, hardwood forests soon covered much of the floodplain (Jacobs et al. cited in Nordt neys. et al. 1992:12). For the region as a whole, including the inner coastal plain and adjacent parts s, are of the central Texas Hill country, there has been a long but apparently steady warming and/or ert is drying trend since the late Pleistocene, with a resulting overall decrease in trees, except for the part oaks, and an increase in grasses and herbaceous plants (Bryant and Holloway 1985:52,61). ation as Available palynological evidence from bogs in the part of the inner coastal plain that encompasses 19 OZ w sanlnlloe paluias-ftlunq;o aotrelsodtul iresano agl loaUas of paloadxa si ploaai iuoi$oioaugose agl `Lase pafoid aql ul kiolsTgaid lnotlWnoitp sieuriue aureS $iq;o aouupunqu aiqugo zd aql $uuaplsuoo •sease 8ulpuno uns pue sadois Aaiiun aql;o asn puei uual-8uoi so3 aouapina aigeiaplsuoo sl asatp `ssaldego oml ixau atp uT passnosip sd •uonednooo uetung;o Asolslq Wtroi a 3o aouaplea piaTA of paloadxa si Lase loa(osd 02&ISH at.p 'sopissoo ianesl ieuol89.z-salui so fetu le of Alltupcosd su iiann se `spueiuiolloq sanig sozeig pule quuuenuS 3po isod atp uT saosnosai ieinleu;o AITUgeilene pue aouepunqu aql uani0 s Y •o$e sseaA 000`01 uugl asotu ease OuLSv atp sleau so ul sadois Aaiien aql $uoie padtuuo Alpalgnopun otpA sueipuioaied agl Aq palunq alarm siuurlue asagl pue '(686I uosiseO pue aiaalS) Lasle loa(oid aql paumo.z 'stpounuletu 2?ulpnioul 'Lunu;ullatu 'ouaoolsiaid alai atp Nui1n(I •s008I Aislea atp of s009I alai aql tuosi Aiuiulsao 'auaooioH aql lnogVno.igl Aiiuolpolsad fllulolA aluipaunul atp uT luasaid Aigegosd asann uosig •seaA aql 3o uosuas Mule spueissua aql 3o slsled luaoL(pL pue sease palsato3 aql ui punol aq Alains pinoo Amp pule 'uoi$as aql uT luepungL Aiieloadsa asam nap `saiisua possnoslp sy •spuleiutolloq at.p uT aigeiTenu asam swag •siool iailue pue auoq pue '.taliags 'vuTtIlop so; Silelsaleur enes atp t.plnn $uoie `Sa$LSioud poo; lsa sei atp papinosd ffagl io3 'ial;e lg$nos Isom atp Algegoid asann sietulue aumW $iq '.tanannoq 'saoinosai pooi aiquiFene Alleooi aql iiu •l0 -seam palsaio; atp uT puno3 aq pinoo sAwlinl pue `sietultre Wulsleaq-sn; lat.ilo 'sllggei 2iulpnioul 'siutuiule atue$ iietus JO Alalsen y •gsjjiiatjs pue qsi; 3o Alnuenb iulluulsgns u piaiA of uo papuadap aq Alqugoid pinoo sanls ag 1, •uielgo of linoijlip asann spoo3 ielaWan satpo uagen salmon xp 8ulsnp Aiieioadsa `.zuaA atp lnogWno zgl 2?np aq pinoo legl poo; goli-alespAgogseo u ao tnosa.i atp tpien seliiure; asot.p 2fulpio p 'spuuituolloq agl ui pue 993e3sns aoessal aql uo nnai2l sloos aigipa Aluiulsao •iiu3 Aiseo otp tMnoitp Wulads tuoi3 A eolpolsad sua m papoom atp ui puno3 aq pinoo 'sueaq alinbsaur AlgL,goid pule 'sllru3 'sawaq su ilaen su `spoo3 lnu satp0 •ssleaA lsout lulepunqu Algegoid asam `stpuotu Auetu so3 pasols aq pinoo goignn 'sueoad 'iiej aql $ulsn(I •seQA atp jo uosuas Cue $ttisnp ootrulsip WuTNIctn hogs L uTglTm paulelgo aq pinoo saosnosas poo; pliM •aidoad plioM PIO agl Aq paonponul 3130lsan4i atp io) AITtrloln alulpatuurl atp ul aigeiieee osie seen a$usnlsud -Lase oHj.SV aql ui alisatuoq lunualod Mule 3o ssalaw paspunq Ana3 u uigplen asnlinols$e xaidtuoo so aldtuis soj Puei aigLSe seen asau •spaau uollorulsuoo olsLq slatp loatu of AllulolA atp uT auolspuus gVnoua puno3 anLtl Aiqugosd pinoo slues$itutui pisoM Pi0 aql pue 'stool auols so3 ielsalutu onus su aiquiiune Aiapinn asam ianesW liag0 -Lase loa f'osd aql ui aoLid Attu tuos; algLuielgo seen uononslsuoo pule '$upieuz cool 'ian3 so; pooen aidtuy •iiann se salenn $ulmoU peq lgnop ou ease OI i sv atp uT sadois Millen aql PaulusP legl sassnoosalwA souittt atp 'suosLas Ames atil $uisnp pue 'sanls agl tuos3 algeiiene sA-emle Senn salenn aigelod •suoneindod ieinlinois$e pue sasatpLW-salunq Aq paiinbai saosnosas aoualslsgns oisuq atp of ssaoaL Asua papsolile Lase sat4H sozesg atp pue 'uluidpooU agl 'sadois A3118n ati 1, sao-mosaa rnanlnN algDpDaV •(29:5861 Aenno11oH Puc luukIg) oWe swat 000'E Aq Pagsliqulsa Aigegosd seen autiBas uonulaWan geuuenes-}ieo luasasd ail lugl saleoipul easle ojiUSV agl SYVOHJ 38nion8IS 3o8nOS38 iv8niVN :3 831dVHO THOMs probably CHAPTER 3 to the INDIAN LAND USE: EXAMPLES AND PATT Potable rcourses ETHNOHISTORICAL AND ARCHAEOLOGIC ple wood a. Chert is could Alston V. Thoms n needs. rs of any That Indian people used the natural resources of the Post Oak Savannah and bottomlands for cinity for thousands of years before the arrival of Old World explorers and immigrants is a matter of record. To illustrate this point and to provide a cultural context for evaluating the project area's archaeological resources, selected aspects of the regional ethnohistorical and archaeological y season records are reviewed here. This chapter draws heavily from Thorns' (1993d) previous review of probably regional ethnohistory and archaeology, but it includes new information as well. The information ite beans, presented here by no means exhausts the available data base, but the examples depict some of Certainly the recorded variation and patterns in how the Indian people used the regional landscape. The with the region is argued to have special research potential as a multicultural, multiethnic crossroads uring the between the forest and prairie regions, and because its ethnohistorical and archaeological records ended on afford the opportunity to study the evolution and diversity of hunter-gatherer and simple including horticultural land-use systems, as well as elements of complex agro-industrial systems. During the Paleoindian, Archaic, Late Prehistoric, and Historic periods, there was widespread bably the use of the inner West Gulf Coastal Plain, including the Brazos River basin (Bowman 1985; Honea terials for 1961; Kotter 1982; Steele and Carlson 1989; Story 1990). Previously recorded archaeological sites ds. As in the uplands, along the valley slopes, and in the bottomlands within a few kilometers of the found in ASTRC property document hunter-gatherer land use during every prehistoric time period (Figure icon were 3.1; Bond 1991; Davis et al. 1987; Ensor 1987; Fletcher 1980; Rogers 1991, 1992, 1993; Shafer ly from 1977; Thoms 1993d). Moreover, the first archaeological site officially recorded in Brazos County-- oths, 41BZ1--is located on the ASTRC property (Collins 1955). That there are hundreds of known sites ed by the in a region where few systematic surveys have been conducted and no large-scale reservoir area more projects have been undertaken suggests fairly extensive and perhaps intensive land-use patterns. This kind of evidence is consistent with the local abundance and ready availability of basic subsistence resources (see Thoms, Chapter 2). And as the next section illustrates, the Indian and people of the ethnographic period hunted and gathered throughout the Post Oak Savannah area. e ASTRC cussed in Other perspectives on past land-use patterns in the region are presented by Black (1989), ey slopes Davis et al. (1987), Honea (1961), Johnson (1989), Kotter (1982), Peterson (1965), Prewitt (1985), mughout Rogers (1992, 1993), Shafer (1977), and Story (1985, 1990). These and other reports by e overall archaeologists working in the region include discussions about cultural history and temporally diagnostic artifacts, paleochmates, technological changes, and cultural influences from the east Texas pineywoods and the central Texas hill country, as well as extensive bibliographies. ETHNOHISTORIC EVIDENCE The Indian people made extensive use of a broad corridor of trails that traversed Brazos unty and vicinity, connecting the pineywoods of east Texas with the hill country of central Texas d the comparatively dry areas of south Texas. In the 1690s, the Spanish followed some of the e trails on their way to and from the major agricultural villages in east Texas occupied by the as and other Indian groups (Figure 3.1; also see Thoms, Chapter 2). The route that crossed The Brazos River Valley Slopes Archaeological Project, edited by Alston V. Thoms. Archaeological Research Laboratory, Texas A&M University, 1993. 21 zz •ianlH salaaN agI luau paluaol aWUlTln 3190-13 oipad uuS slq u oij IgWnoiq,,qqugoid aq Iugl 'usoa uioij apuTm pooj u 'alrnnd jo Wuq u anug of palsodas sum m;)ql jo auo 'salllnllae aaualslsgns saldood asall Inoqu apuui alarm sluaunuoa ou 11TIVA •Isua aqI of suase puu ulsuq AIlujj L aqI of anlluu alarm oq m aldoad suxaL io su fal all of pa uaj;).i „suxa,L aqL, '(V1V'9LE:8061 uollog) ,suuTpul ledlaulsd uaallnoj.fq paluuduioaau suxaj, aql 3o iou3ano$„ aqI pasalunoaua Mall '(1 •g ainWF3 aas '.ianlH AIluTkL aqI 3o AmingpI xuuq IgWj1 u) ulsuq 31;)wD sulpog aqI ul aialnmaTuos paluaol Alqugozd ,oAouu„ ue Ie '1anlanmOH •Aliadold DjiUSV aql jo Isuaglnos unj gZ Inoqu spueldn luaau(pu puu snAp ulosunuN puu sozuig aqI passoia AQgl uagnm 0691 jo AuW ul suulpul Wulaas liodw lou plp suxaL Isua of uolllpadxa uoa-I aQ aqI 3o slspulp all 999T-0691 :slvwnor PalOalaS wolf s7unoaaV asn-puM -Aunm aql $uole onus Mall aldood uelpul all Inoqu suoqunzasgo ilagl papioaai ual;o uuall paianuil ognm aldoad plso,& Pi0 aql lull sl spuoi asagl jo aauulloduil all 'sasodind ino so3 '(6L61 suiellilM) PulloO Cup-Iuasaid au uolsslui sexa L llnos all IITm suolssluz sex;) 1, Isua all palaauuoa IT :puoi t7 qvg to se umoux sum jan42i elosunuN jo llnoui all Tuau zanl2l soze zg all Wulssoi3 alnoi aq L •oluoluy uus 1o dllulafA all ul suolssIM gllnm sagaopVoauN Abp-Iuasaid nau suolssluz suxaL Isua all palaauuoa MISAs puoi SILI,I, '(1661 le Ia nmusOaW '1661 nme100W) T Z AunmOIH suxQ L PtM WSO) PeOH oluOluV trBS PIO aqI PaliuO sl IT AuPOI :1naH 014WDD 3gI30 (0061-96L1) v%uV oulwno all Pailu3 senor f4iado id o2&LSV aql jo g7pou sialauzo" nma3 E ianu aql passoia lugl alnoi aq L '(0081-1691) /al sol ap oulwno aql su unmoux auzeaaq wArd allll'I agI 3o llnoui aqI luau iaAPd sozeig aqI 'AIYUlo>fs pue,4uno3 sozwzg u} swazw A-Ame polloloawgozw puw 'ea;>le jwoTjWotoawgozw •spwoz gsMdg polooloo jo suopwool •i•g omf,d • SNMOl AvC-1N3S 3bd 031 X3335 • ~ /0 ~ SC VOb Abfi1N3C u16i.iLi ~ / f0 NCilbOOI 31ti-Obbbtl A3A V "3111 n"Atl31S0II j oi•oi•r oil v3tlv A3nHOS 3d Oi'JC l03bb ObV [ , tlI0AY 3f 3 31 iS lVOi90l03tl HCbb 030bOC3H • / •D3e O? Nolvoo3 dvw~~~ ~ • v e~d~ ""'1~f4.//. 13Mar\ /y 11 Zi! S311S / II311II Jtl1SY/ ~ 'tlo 311M 1l ZBI! / ~ e ` 9l Oi!! c~ l 3AYOi /d \ Z33Y0 A ~ SNOlilo a /5 1 , R~ \ • 9128!! j 114 ONOM ton" l' It-LIC 1, II1118~ / tl38Y" MO-oLZi1 / ' 1 3e- s!✓ .01 A3AY03 -ter- 1133113 / - - - - s lONIVm + / W J ■11 / • \ ~S3HOaDOJYM / - 1 / e f\ OHJ 3sn ONV~ NVIONI £ 83ldVHO THOMS CHAPTER 3: INDIAN LAND USE THOMS In June of 1716, near present-day Cameron in the lower Little River basin, members of the Ramon expedition visited a large village inhabited by at least 500 and possibly as many as 2,000 Yerbiptame (also spelled Yeripiano), Pamaya, Payaya, Cantonae, Mixcal, Xarame, and Sijame people (Folk 1933:16; Tous 1930:17). Many of these peoples' native homelands were in present- day south Texas and northern Mexico (A. Joachim McGraw, personal communication 1992; ' Newcomb 1961), and among them were both "gentiles" and Christianized Indians called "apostates" (Foik 1933:16). They were probably in the Brazos basin to hunt bison. Soon after crossing the Brazos below the mouth of the Little River, the expedition came upon an "abandoned rancheria or village" situated in a clearing surrounded by an "open forest of oaks" (Tous 1930:17). In the uplands between the Brazos and Navasota rivers, probably in the present-day Cedar Creek basin, the Spanish encountered several Texas [Tejas] men and women who were "killing bison" (Foik 1933:17-18: Williams 1979:152). Father Pena, a member of the 1721 Aguayo expedition, reported seeing "three old Indian huts" on June 27th when he was between the Brazos and Navasota rivers northeast of the project area, probably along or near Camino de Los Tejas (see Figure 3.1). A few days later and a little farther to the east, still in the uplands between the two rivers, the expedition "came upon some old huts, sheltered by very tall and beautiful trees" (Forrestal 1935:32-33). A short distance after crossing the Navasota River on July 8th, the Marquis of Aguayo--the expedition's leader and the Spanish governor of Texas and Coahuila--and several of his men turned south "to search for huts of Texas Indians" reported to be in the vicinity. Leaving the highway [the Camino de los Tejas used by previous expeditions] and following a path, these went south three leagues until they came to some fields planted in the Texas fashion. As they did not notice any huts, they called out in the language of the natives, and a response came back from the direction of the woods The soldiers advanced to the aforesaid huts, which were nearby, and observed there were assembled with all those of the Rancheria Grande [i.e., the people encamped near Cameron in 17161 some Indians of survey the Vidays and Agdocas tribes [groups culturally similar to the Texas or Tejas people] [Forrestal 1935:351. After visiting with about 200 men, women, and children, the Spanish Governor "admonished" the los Tejas Rancheria Grande people "to retire to their old homes beyond the Brazos de Dios" (Forrestal erty was 1935:36). Brazos de Dios refers to the lower Little River basin, and in general to the region around Antonio the confluence of the Brazos and Little rivers. system vicinity In 1767, when Father Solis traveled along the Camino de Los Tejas, he commented that near s known the mouth of the Little River "there were some very famous Indians, all of whom are pagan." He ion near also reported that "Cocos, Meyeyes, Jcjuanes, Tancagues and many other pagan and barbarous that the Indians live along the banks of these rivers [i.e., the Brazos and Little rivers] (Forrestal 1931:25- people 27). The Cocos were a Karakawa group native to areas farther downstream, and the other groups were native to the Brazos River basin upstream from the mouth of the Little River (Newcomb 1961). Jean Louis Berlandier, a French botanist employed by the Mexican government, traveled along the Camino An iba in June of 1828. He camped for several days about 10 km north of the ASTRC [071u6 May of property, near the mouth of the Little Brazos River where some Anglo-Americans had settled. Just 25 km ' before reaching the river he encountered an abandoned Indian encampment, later writing "on the e in the sedge of a large forest not far away we found a rancheria of indigenes which was abandoned." He ntered did not state what people lived there, although he noted that the Waco and Tonkawa people were ,414)-among the native inhabitants of the region (Berlandier 1980:333). While he was encamped at the d areas river, other people began to arrive and camp nearby; "there was a Bidai, some Chicapoos , one of OUckapoos), a Chiraque (Cherokee), a Texas, a Chicas (Chickasaw), and a family of Cados" ht from (Berlandier 1980:334). It is noteworthy that the multi-cultural/linguistic characteristic of this particular gathering was also evident at the larger encampments described during the late 1600s and throughout the 1700s, although the ethnic make-up was not the same. The gathering 23 10861 pjojuTg jo) samnosaj luelslp a.zouz amaoid of sKujo; Tems0iol xooliapun antli tuoj3 puu 'sdureo asuq leuosuas uT paplsaj sdnoiW AlTumj ulajagnm „'sjoloalloo,, Jo Iugl ST tualsAs asn-puel 1ajaglu8-.ralunq agl legl salujlsnUT geuuunuS Neo Isod aql jo3 p10331 aTiolsTgougla agl lugl an$jm Aagl 'asnuajd sTgl uzoi,q •uoTIuTIT,1iu oTugla s,dnoj~f auo Auu uegl smallud aoualslsgns puu Iuauulllas $uTuoTlTpuoa uT lueljodtul ajolu Algegojd soon saarnosai leinluu jo uoiingTllsTp puu ainluu aql asnuoaq slapout asn-puel $unonjlsuoo uT lnjasn 11TIs am spioaai aql 'geuueneS xep Isod 3ql oI paluj$Ttu Alluaoaj ognn sdnoii? sianoo AJUTetu pjooaj luoUolsTgougla IuuoT!fas aqI gWnoglre Iugl alou (G861) AQPfl Puu 'uldin,L'sTnuQ •paauldai Alalaldtuoo alarm slsTTejnllnoT-d?u aldtuTs puu sjajatpL-W -.zalunq agl jo stualsAs asn-puul aql `aseo Auu ul •Ino palp pug io 'Ino pazaanbs 'palulTulTsse alarm uolliaj at.p uT aldoad uuTpul agl3o i1u Isotulu `atupa3TT al$uTs a uTgllA,I •sdnoiW zaiaglu~l-.ralunq reool tllW uonnaduuoo oluT puu suaju lujnllnolj~tu anponpoid aql puoAaq 'Isanmglnos puu Isanm pagsnd ajaem sexa,L Isea uT slsqujnllnonjog aAiluN •(1,961 AtuaH) sjajoqul treoTjauzd-ueocj J panulsua Aq palan3 AlaWml 'w,?IsXs ueopauiV-olWuV Wulpuudxa agl tuoj3 aum arnssaid atp 'OZ81 Inoqu jaIN -Anunoo quuuenus xup Isod aqI oluT suxa,L ujaglnos pue oolx;)W tuagljou woj3 siaragluV -ialunq paqsnd asnssaid slgl 'AllaalTpul puu AllaajTQ •glrios aql uT suonulndod ueolxaW puu gsTuedS tuo ij auIUO ajnssajd panljap AjTrTjlsnpuT-oj$u `s008I Aljea aqI of s009I alul aqI coo i q •(2661 XCunw) luaulluoo agl jo lrud watllnos aql }o snualuld aql puu eoljauiy gljoN tualsua 3o spuulpoonm agl uT suollelndod IuujWTunuT pljom PTO Bulpuedxa 3o IonpojdAq u Apuajlu suns suxa,L Cup-luasajd •To Uud sTgl 3o do-axutu oTugla aql `sopnl7ua IsaTljua agI3o atuTl aqI Mfg •(L86l Aailfl puu 'uTdrn,L 'sTnu(j•30) .ioArd auTquS agI3o Isua Sean of puu `jaAT21 pa21 aql 3o gljou mj suOTWaj of 'oolxaw wagljou of antluu AlsnoTnajd sdnoAl snld 'JCITuTaTn puu AIunoD sozejg of anlluu pajaplsuoo ajanm Iegl sdnojkf panlonuT suonukfajnu uollulndod reuosuaS •alqulTunu AITpuaj puu luupunqu Klluaol ajanm uosTq saute asat.p ~fuprtp lugl AlaxTl smas Il •jaununs atp jo Ind $uljnp swAp kITuTj.L puu ulosunuN at{I uaanmlaq spuuTdn atp uT rF= puu sozejg atp Wuole padum ual3o suollulndod luajalpp AlTuolugla $uTluasajdaj sdnoj$ aWje-1 •sjanlj sozejg pm ulosenuN aqI uaanmlaq spuuldn agl uT jo janT1 ElosunEN agl •lo glnoui aip luau spl;)U lejrtllnauWu sljodaj ajag p;)Malnaj saamos agl,lo auoN •jaArd AITuTj,L aqI 3o spuuTwolloq atp uT puu saau.ual jannol aqI Wuolu spTalj anlsualxa ajaem ajagl lugl pup 'sjanjj AITuTj L puu ulosunuN aqI uaaemlaq spueldn aql uT ajnlln3PwU paonoujd (aldoad se[•a,L agl ' a 1) suuxa,L Imp Ijodaj s00L I Kl ma puu s0091 alul atp Luoj3 sTeujnof, •(IOZ:L86T Aarlfl Puu 'uTdjnL'sTnua uT paip) sujallud asn-puul luuoTVaj agl jo luauzala IuuljoduzT uu sum VuTgsll lugl Aljualo aluls of sajn~?U oljolsTg Al iua nma•1 at.p 3o auo suns `L IL T uT ~uTlp m 'sTuaCl *IS 'pauonuatu Alluanbaj3 aju gsU aITtyA •(Z jaldugo aas) palou ualjo ST saxel puuiurolloq puu sjanT1 all uT gsU jo aouepunqu aqI puu `silru; puu `saTnaq 'slooj pllnn •lo Alaljen apTm agl `osre 'nap jo aouuvoduzl lenua$ aql of Isallu sTetuno( pouad ouolsTg Aljua aq,L •saonoujd aaualsTsgns 3UT33ds pue sadSi alTs uaanmlaq sdlgsuollulaj aql Inoqu aIIITI sn Ilal slunooau agl '$ununq uosTq 3o uondaoxa aqI t1ITAj (,,saojnosaa lumluN jagl0,, 'Z jaldugo 'sutog,L aas osTe) Allure3 u alupounuooou Alquljojtuoo of i4Wnoua aWxel puu 'pajanoo-apTg -to `-Iuuz '-gsnjq puu paljoddns-ajod AUuoldAl ajaem sasnol4 •auolu padtueo Almmj u sauin jaglo IIT;s lu puu 'jaglavoi paduzua sallr.umj Ma•1 u Aluo satuTl jaglo IL, 'aldoad 3o spajpunq glTem sluatudumma ul paAq anuq of uAmoux aju Aagl sxeaA agl 3o satun autos WuTjnCj •spueltuolloq agl uT puu 'sadols Callen at.p $uore 'spueldrt aqI uT panTI Pue tlWnojgl palanujl AlauTlnoj aldoad uulpul Imp luanaj Elup reoljolsTgouglg uolssnasiQ '[su[•a,L) suxaj'Tuplg) suxa,L Isua o swd ja to uu ulsu jan (opPuD 3 q p q pd ITuTj,L jamol agl oI annuu sdnoj.W su Ilann su `(Ams"3TgD puu 'aa3fojag3 'oodux31}1) suxa,L Cup-luasajd 3o Ism pue gvou aqI of je3 ajaem jaTljua sapuoap Ma; u spuulatuog olugla asognn sTenpinTpuT papnlaul passaujim laTpueljag SWOHj asn ONV-1 NVIONI :E 83ldVHO THOMS CHAPTER 3: INDIAN LAND USE THOMS ere far In all probability, Old World diseases significantly decreased the regional population density ell as long before the first organized entradas (Ewers 1973, Murry 1992). One way or another, this {Tejas), probably led to a net increase in habitable space. The unoccupied or under-occupied but potentially productive areas probably would have been settled quickly by displaced groups who were "moving on," perhaps as an adaptive response to demographic factors such as extra-regional population growth or in-migrations (Figure 3.2). Beginning within a few decades after the initial depopulation by Old World diseases, and continuing until the 1870s, the impact of the horse was increasingly felt as mounted hunter-gatherers expanded south from the plains and effectively in the compressed previous Indian homelands into and within the West Gulf Coastal Plain (Prewitt 1985; s they Story 1990). a few ically Mounted groups may have been preceded by bison-hunting foot nomads (i.e., the Toyah phase) odate who, by about 700 B.P., appear to have begun to displace local, less specialized groups, and bison possibly by less mobile hunter-gatherer groups (i.e., the Austin phase) who had "appeared" in the pecific region about 1350 B.P. (Prewitt 1985:225-228). Archaeological data have also been used to support the contention that sometime between 10,000 and 8000 B.P. populations from the eastern woodlands, or "plains interlopers," expanded into what today are the cross timbers and savannah e wide ecological areas of east and central Texas (Johnson 1989). To the extent that some of the ideas mland about cultural influences, migrations, population expansion, or other factors related to ting in demographics and cultural or ethnic differences have merit, it seems clear that the inner West ortant Gulf Coastal Plain, including a portion of the Gilmore Corridor (Krieger 1948, Story 1985; Thorns, urnals Chapter 2), is an area where important research about the relationship between ethnicity and the cticed archaeological record might be carried out (cf. Binford 1986; Sackett 1986; Wiesner 1983). ensive urces What role, if any, population pressure had in the long-term regional population dynamics plands remains to be explored systematically. It seems likely, however, that there are many facets to population pressure, especially considering that it depends partly on the landscape's productivity potential (cf. Cohen 1977, 1989:140-141). At one time and under one set of environmental os and conditions, population pressure might exert its effects on forest foragers, at another time on likely horticulturalists, and at still other times on specialized bison hunters, whether foot or mounted ulation nomads. How we find evidence for population pressure in the archaeological record is yet another plus matter, just as is how we might recognize archaeological evidence for in-migration or external o areas influences, and how to distinguish it from evidence of local or regional population growth. How tradas, we might provide the evidence for adaptational differences resulting from long-term changes in ng Old environmental conditions is another question yet to be resolved. s of the Historic records show that the project area was within an important interregional crossroads t that, within the span of only a few hundred years, was occupied by several culturally and panish ethnically distinct populations (Murry 1992). It is also evident that exotic (i.e., extra-regional) hunter- goods and ideas regularly accompanied travelers and traders as they traversed the region. The IF. After pattern of ethnic diversity continued in the historic period with settlement by Hispanic, Anglo- eled by American, African-Americans, and other Old World groups. Written records and historical were research indicate that to some extent land-use patterns probably vary with cultural and ethnic on with affiliations (cf. Carlson 1993a, 1993b; Carlson and Thorns 1993; Davis, Turpin and Utley 1987; region Weissner 1983; see also Carlson and Kloetzer, Chapter 4). Efforts, some successful, have also hunter- been made to find ethnic "signatures" in the archaeological records of hunter-gatherers and agro- Industrialists, and there has been considerable discussion about just how one goes about demonstrating ethnic affiliations (e.g., Binford 1986; Carlson 1993a, 1993b; Carlson and Thorns mainly 1993; Sackett 1986; Weissner 1983). As a cultural and ethnic crossroads, the archaeological seful in `record in the Brazos River basin portion of the Post Oak Savannah zone has considerable potential es was o yield information useful in the study of ethnically distinctive material culture and land-use y one tterns during the prehistoric and historic eras. the Post herein rays to 25 9Z sad~l l3uinse uouIIIIO3 Isoul atp alam splatis 3ituu103 pus '31301 pax3L'13-a1i; •siool pus a$saigap ouols paddigZ) •Alalatua3 pus 'slallu39 31tuu193 pus 3itpii 'slallie3s oitpii 'salts AITAp3e poliuiii 'duie3 piaU A1elodtual 'luauodtuo3nintu :8uimono; aLp ants suoiluindod usipul of paingpglu sadki alas poluOlsap atp Wuouiy •sula 3ilolsigald pus 3ilolsiq atp ;o poilad ielnlin3 1o(Etu faaAo ~?unuasaldal 'salts iu3TVojoaug3.m pap1o3a1 filei3Ego OZI uetp alotu mou are alatp •auois i AlunoO sozulg uI •(I •g a1nWiq) seals Aamns asatp ui pap1o3a1 alarm salts OOZ AlalsuzpcolddV •si3uiillu 3itpii jo slallu3s Alisuap mot 3o Aiano3sip atp ui palinsal sl3a(o1d Awans atp ;o Auetu pus 's0861 PE SOL61 otp Vuplnp sWunlas puuidn ui pa13npuo3 alarm saipnls asap 3o IsoW -Alunoo sozulg ui suonu$nsanui Ie3iifoioamlaiv uazop u uutp a.iotu;o nmainai u sapiAold (6861) alooW '(L861 "lu la STAuQ 'Z661 Aapf1 ptre luatuag) suonmado $uiuiuz iuo3 •io uonsdi3nuu ui 'uissq xawo InuluAj aql (V) Puu ' (ZS61 lallox) pauuuid sum sloa('o1d lpmasa13o sodas u alagm 'uissq lanig ulosuASH lamoi atp (0) '(5661 'Z661 '1661 slaVog 0861 1ag31a13) suonulado $uiuitu ie03 Vuiuui$aq of 1oi1d 'uisuq 313a1o suoggiO atp (Z) :(9961 uoslalad :1961 uauoH) papnllsuoo Apuanbasgns sum 1IoAIasaH aninlatuoS alagm 'uissq 31aa1o un$a i E aippitu atp (1) :sualu W.iimoiio3 atp ui papnpum uaaq aAml •suonuAuDxa lsal Aq paiuudtuo33u autos 'sAamns is3i$oioasg3.m afe3s-aWm-I •(LL61 1a3ugS L86i uosiluO puu IQtuaod '0661 slaleA& f pue poomAeH :9861 uuuimog) abut so s m;)A 000'01 Isui atp 1oi paidn33o uaaq suq uoiBal atp Imp aPni3uo3 of aIgouosual si IT •suietual ieinlin3 atp uo sable uoq1u 3oipul ma3s AIuo ale a1ap aIiqm 'puu •uisuq 1aAiH sozelg atp;o lmd sitil ui paplo3ai si salts ie3iWoio3ug3lu 3o AIZ)WA apim y 33M2GIA2'IVOI O IOZVHO'dV i •auoz Ie01001000 gauuaABg 3PO 490d DID M ui „saauonEM,, pus sommmid oigdwllowop isusawra;o uoi;Bgsnin oi;eu:agog 'Z'g am8ig 31VOS s` V•uuss•S M•O 720d •y7 !o soR•ool gsmRoidds WA wM10Z O `•~a~ •inss•id uogyndod pozllsi•uM I -PIP o.~~ • set J n"r die0r I;s~ so p5.00 01 oo~ S O J O^g OOS. t so revusj ueolp•rb I1 of i de o i i Y SWOH I 3sn ONV-1 NVIONi :6 831dVHO MS CHAPTER 3: INDIAN LAND USE THOMS The Late Prehistoric (ca. 1,300-300 B.P.), Transitional Archaic (ca. 2,300-1,300 B.P.), and late Archaic (ca. 3,000-2,300 B.P.) time periods were best represented, but projectile points characteristic of the middle Archaic (ca. 4,500-3,000 B.P.), early Archaic (ca. 8,000-4,500 B.P.) and PaleoIndian (ca. 11,200-8,000 B.P.) periods were present as well (time period designations from Turner and Hester 1985). In keeping with the land-use perspective and for heuristic purposes, it is useful to characterize and analyze archaeological sites according to their placement on the landscape. Sites in similar settings probably afford access to similar resources, and, generally speaking, they are expected to have been subjected to similar site formation processes (cf. Butzer 1982; Jochim 1976; Waters 1992). For purposes here, the regional landscape is sub-divided into three physiographic settings, bottomlands, valley slopes, and uplands (see also Thorns and Olive, Chapter 6). Sites on the Bottomlands Most of the bottomlands are encompassed by the floodplain, as delimited by the zone of periodic flooding (Nordt 1983). But throughout the bottomlands in the local basin, there are and probably always have been high spots that were seldom inundated. These are kinds of places favored as campsites through the millennia, but regularly flooded localities were routinely used when conditions permitted. Other things being equal, site preservation is expected to be good in the seasonally flooded places where the rates of sediment deposition were comparatively rapid. Bottomlands, as the major component of the riverine zone, afford the best access to the greatest diversity and abundance of potential food resources (Hester 1989). Fish, shellfish, beaver, bear, rabbits, and deer should have been especially abundant, as were pecans, other nuts, and most berries and fruits. It is likely that a substantial proportion of the edible root foods in the region grew well in bottomlands, but reliable information on the relative productivity potential of vegetal foods in different parts of the landscape is lacking altogether. We do have some information on the productivity potential of game animals. For example, the highest deer densities e in the Post Oak Savannah, about 200 animals per 1,000 hectares (ca. 2,500 acres), are expected to be in the bottomlands (Yantis 1984). There are historic accounts of bison in the bottomlands as well, but except for those times when grasses dominated the bottomlands, bison densities were probably highest in the prairie patches along the valley slopes and in the uplands (see Thorns, Chapter 2). d, The earliest, albeit tentative, evidence for occupation in the bottomlands comes from the de Duewall-Newberry site (41BZ75; Steele and Carlson 1989) where the remains of a mostly [er disarticulated mammoth, presumably late Pleistocene (ca. 12,500-10,000 B.P.), were found eroding from a steep cutbank (7.5 m bs) of the Brazos River several kilometers upstream from the mouth of the Little Brazos River (Figure 3.1). Although chipped stone was not recovered during excavations, impact scars and the breakage patterns on several of the long-bones, as well as the presence of a bone pile, were considered to be strong inferential evidence for human activity (Steele and Carlson 1989). A variety of stone tools and several pieces of pottery were recovered during excavations at Winnie's Mound--41BU 17--located in the bottomlands of east-central Burleson County (Figure 3.1; Bowman 1985). Paleoindian--Plainview and San Patrice--as well as early Archaic points, including Hoxie, Bell, and various stemmed, indented-base forms, were found, as were Dart, Lange, Edgewood, Ensor, Frio, Gary-Kent, Marcos, and Yarbrough types representative of the middle or ty late Archaic periods. Scallorn arrow points and ceramics indicated occupation during the Late ,y Prehistoric period. Other bifaces, edge-modified flakes, and cores were also recovered, along with es thousands of pieces of debitage that were analyzed according to flake type and material type. p, Faunal remains were abundant, but most were too poorly preserved for identification to family or e genus. Of the 15 identified fragments, there were 11 deer and 3 turtle bones and 1 beaver tooth. 27 8Z 0~3 ~ ~PnP ' (Z ~a~d~go 'sLuoq L aas) spuuldn acid ul inooo uolWas aql uT uosTq wupunq sueipui 3o slunoaole agl jo 61soui aou ji `AueW •IPIEgL-g iaap pooh papio3;u Ajwevaa sauTusd puu spuelpoom Sluo agl 3o ial3urug3 oTusotu ;)q L •spueldn agl uT atquTTuAU Atlpual uaaq anuq plnogs spoor loo z PuB '(6861 suiotLL jo) sagolud aTiMid pue smopuaui uT luepunqu Alfe3ol aq of paloadxa am spoof lou `Tenualful •spuulurolloq atp uT su gVtq su uaaq anuq Auui ua-M llun sad Tupualod AjTAnonpo.rd aql '(sAalluA Areingpl ` B a) saould autos uT 'lnq `sadols AQUUA aql ~fuolu .zo spuulurolloq agl uT asogl uugl asx)ATp ssal puu luupunqu ssal AIqugoid am spuuldn aql uT saoinosa r poo,q •sassaooid IeiAnHoo pue uuTloa Aq aiagmasla puu tunTAnlle uT paunq aq of Ala3UI axe saps `sAalTuA ia$iei aql;o autos uT 'lnq 'spueltuolloq agl uT uugl iamol sT Tellualod uonutuasaid alts 'uolsora lau jo sauoz uT sT spuuldn agl jo gonw asnuoag •sumails luallluualul puu luauuuuad $uTuruluoo sA;)IleA AmingTil su Bann su 'sulsano puu 'sa$pn aplnlp 'snTg a.M spuuldn aql UT papnToul •.raATI L, 3o sadols io sUBm AalleA atp puoAaq aduospuul aql jo I and lugl a.iu 'aiaq pasn su `spuuld fl spunldn ai{T Ul sans '(6861 3t3utg) suxa,L lerluao 3o slmd luaou('pu zo1 palsonns uaaq suq su 'luaur A.rulaTp 3o SIInq aql papiAO.id AIqugoid .zaap lugl ldaouoo aql gllm lualslsuoo sT uonuuuo3rzT algulTunu agl •suocsnlouoo alquTTa-i-io; palnuTt ool axe ulup luunu•I alquTTaa atTrtAt1 'A1TAnou aoualslsgns ro(uru u suns kfununq lugs WuTluolpuT `luupunqu AlaATlu.ruduroo an Wulssaooid apTq 3o anpuoTpuT stool pup 'saoujTq uTgl iaglo 'slulod aploaFo.rd •spuultuolloq iaApdsozu.rg aql uT sluatudureoua uzral-Wuol Ali1e•I aram mail s.M;)A 000`£ lsul aql loj lugs lsawwr►s `saTialauiao su Bann su sureuzai Tuunu; puu sadAl Tool jo a$uu r aplm u ~luTuToluoo sllsodap goT-r-laupljegllm' L 1 flg 1 p Puu 9 T flgT t,su gons `salTS •p rooa.r IuoTBoloapgosu panrasaid-Bann pup paUlluils u of lsallu osle sainluaj asaqL •ITam su auaoolsTald alui atp ,To laud lsut aql Alqugoid puu auaooloH aql sueds spuelmollog atp 3o asn lugl alurlsnIlT U xTpuaddv :£661 SJQWM 'Z661 'lu la 1PJON :0661 sialuM puu poomAPH) salpnls oTgdroruoaw aql puu sTmglno s,iaATi aql uT pasodxa sainlua3 Luo 13 pauTelgo saWu uoq.ruoolpui ma•I aq L •(g a.rn$T3 :Z661 'tu la 1PioN) 3lueglno s,.raATi aql uT pasodxa gl3:uaq a uT Tew.Mgo uo pauTelgo suns •d'g OLI + OZ£I 3o a$e uogmz)olpu.r u 'Alunoo uosliagog uT ua.ru OUj.SV aql uior3 umarlsdfl '(Z661 'uonuoTunuruuoo luuos.rad •sialuA%,) •d•g sxe;)A 05+088 3o a$e uogruooTpui u pup 'slulod zlplad Puu U-iollnoS PaplaTd Slaa z~ alTg11A 3o r{lnoui aql iuau alts y ' (Z661 uonuoTunururoo luuosiad 'sralutlA) d'g SM;)A OT T+08V9 3O a$u ue paplaTA UMJJIsuMOp Iaglluj pasodxa aanlua3 -MITuzTs u MO.IJ IU03lpg3 '(0661 S191'eM pue poomAuH) sa3TeU liago WuTuruluoo ;)inlua1 nags Iassnur u uo pauTelgo suns 'd•g s.m;)A 0££+06£'8 3o aWu ud •spoT.rad auzTl oTegory Aj.M;; puu uuTpuToalud alel aql $uTinp uolludnooo 3o aATluoTpuT saBu I,1-o paplaV Aliado.rd Z)2i,LSV aql.iuau salTs om L •alqupunu 1;)A lou aSe sTsAjuup IuoTWoioaugo.m palula r agl jo sllnsai puu `s3luugln3 s,. oAp atp uT pasodxa sarnlua3 uioij salpnls TuoT$ologdrouioa!f Wupnp pauTulgo wam asagl jo lsoui lnq `spuupuolloq aql uT salls Te3lWoloaugw-e uioi3 Tuoo.mgo uo sa$e uoq-uooTpu z Tuaanas axe a rag 1, '(L861 uoslmo puu i;)waoH) fralaimn u su pasn sum osTe alTs aql 'satuTl lua.raljTp ly •paluasa.ida.i aram Aa3lin1 AlgTssod puu 'Iassnui ialumgsar3 `qs8 'aTlinl 'slTgqur '.raap `uosTq nq 'paAIasaad Aliood puu as mds w am suTeuia.r Teunu3 •uollu.rallu Teuuagl jo aouapTAa pue 'adAl B `azTs of $uTpsooou pazeCluuu a.ram sa3lup 000'Ol uegl a.row •saroo pue `sauols.raunuuq `saNBu paUTpoui-aVpa `suuol aoujTq snoTmA papnlouT slouJille auoos .raglp 'pasanooai a.raM sluauzItu.zj allod pue slulod wolluag Puu 'ziplad 'Ugly 'Ima `luag 'Rmg 'punt nnj `y6nolq rvA `aplaaing '(L861 uoslsuo puu lauuao-a) spopad oµolsTgQld alwi atp gWno rgl oTego rd aTppTur aql uzo r; onudnooo paluasaidai lugl sloujTlmjo a$uur apps a paplaTA'(1'£ arn2?T3) iaAlnl sozexg aql jo apls unoo uosaling agl uo Avadoid DILLSV agl uioij ruea ilsdn unl 01 lnoqu paluool ' 9 T fle T fi alTs '(9861 urmog) saualamao g1Tm palepossu aiam sluauoduioo oT.rolsTgaJd alul puu oTugord aluT aql, Hi 3sn (INV1 NVIONI £ 831d`dHC) CHAPTER 3: INDIAN LAND USE THOMS the general structure of the available resources, hunting is expected to have been especially important in the uplands. ty Projectile points characteristic of the late Paleoindian and early Archaic time periods (ca. 10,000-4,500 B.P.) were recovered from a surface context at the Thurmond site (Shafer 1977), n located in the uppermost part of the Thompson Creek basin within the city limits of Bryan, Texas ry (Figure 3.1). Temporally diagnostic point types from these sites include Plainview, Meserve, d Scottsbluff, Angostura, miscellaneous lanceolate points characteristic of the Paleoindian period, and various stemmed, indented-base early Archaic types. Other tool types from the site are a ut perforator, thin bifaces, gouges, small end scrapers, and grooved pebbles (Shafer 1977). A corner- At notched arrow point was also recovered from one part of the site (Harry Shafer, personal communication 1992). S, There are also lithic scatter sites in the uplands that have a much lower artifact density and e few tool types than the Thurmond site. Some areas have such a low density of debitage that they are not recorded as sites (e.g., Moore 1989). In other places, excavations reveal that artifacts are an also buried at shallow depths, but there, too, the densities are low. An example is 41BZ74 ell (Richard Carter site), a site located in the uppermost part of the Carter Creek basin (a secondary re stream in the lower Navasota River basin), just over the low divide with the Thompson and White al Creek basins (Figure 3.1). It was tested to assess a mid-nineteenth century Anglo-American ts, homesite, but during excavations, a sample of chipped stone artifacts was recovered and am subsequently analyzed (Carlson 1983, 1987). The very low density of chipped stone (37 items in ed 95.25 m2 test units: 33 flakes, 2 cores, 1 scraper, 1 biface fragment) was argued to represent short-term foraging activities, possibly "manufacture of expedient flake tools, and/or raw material procurement and some food processing; in other words, occasional exploitation of widely scattered the upland resources" (Ensor 1987:79). I) late Four sites (41 BZ 114-117) previously recorded along White Creek were located on the tops and cal slopes of low ridges (Figure 3.1). These sites had a low density of chipped stone debitage on the e surface, and, in several cases, flakes were recovered from shallow shovel probes. Only one ere chipped stone tool--a thin biface fragment from 41BZ112--was observed in the narrow survey area in that stretched for several kilometers along the creek (Whitsett and Jurgens 1992). Results of at additional survey work along White Creek and limited testing at 41BZ115 suggests that the ble paucity of tools is an inherent characteristic of these particular White Creek sites, and this ded " suggests that a very limited range of activities is represented, mostly lithic procurement and tool 89) manufacture (Clabaugh 1993; Dickens 1993; Olive 1993). Of the four White Creek sites in an upland setting, 41BZ115 had the most dense scatter of ' chipped stone material, and it was recommended for test excavation (Whitsett and Jurgens 1992). Test excavations revealed that the cultural material usually extended no more than 20 cm below surface to the top of the clay-rich (Bt) soil horizon. Although features were not encountered in any of the 11 excavation units, approximately 100 flakes, five cores, and six edge-modified, "expedient" of a tools were recovered. The primary activity at the site seems to have been the initial stages of tool leys manufacturing, but some of the expedient tools were probably used there as well, and the few f net pieces of fire-cracked rock might represent some type of food preparation (Dickens 1993; Olive ger 1993). es. The most salient ecological characteristic, in terms of understanding how Indian people used the the upland landscape in the White Creek basin, is the cobble-sized, chert gravel scattered along the a ridge tops and slopes. Almost everywhere natural gravel was found on the surface, along with root pped stone artifacts made from the gravel. The identified lithic scatters appeared to be and mponents of a widespread, low-density lithic procurement and manufacturing area that extends oak o the uplands beyond the project boundaries. Although reliable chronological controls are unts Ong, it seems likely that these lithic procurement areas were used throughout the period of from dian occupation (Carlson and Thorns 1993:101-102). 29 0£ 11 L61 uunpp ••Io) suzalsAsooa Iuasajjip oml Iloldxa of Allunlioddo aqI papio•Ile sadols AJUBA aqI;o Vulllas Iuuolooa agI 'spiom laglo uT •liam se saoinosa t ureldpooU pus aupaAlz agI oI ssaooe Apeai suleaui spuulmolloq agl of Alitupcoid lnq `spueltuolloq aqI uegl aiout spuuldn aqI algmasaj saoinosai lu.inluu;o AIIIlgelluAu alulpatutul aqI pue stualled uollula$aA •uonsginlopod alqu.iapisuoo of Ioa(gns uaaq aAug of Ala3ul a to salts luolvoloago.m Isom 'saou.ual lualouu 3o spea.il agI uo mols aw uopisodap 3o salm puu `alqulsun aq of pual leiauaV ul sadols sV •spuultuolloq agI WuplooliaAo puu of luaou(pe (3I3oipaq '•a•I) suollututo; pa$e-auaoog aql 3o s;)Wpo papota agl ,Kq osle Inq `samnal auaoolslald 3o sd.reos puu spec tl aql Aq Alulutu pauuo3 an sadols AalleA `uaiu loa(o.zd agI ui •spuulmolloq puu spuuldn aql uaamlaq aoeds aql Adnooo sadols A9IIUA sadols fiapnn aqI uo saIIS i f •sroloalloo alsAlld,Cq spuuidn agI tuog panotuoi uaaq aAeq Imp slulod alpoa(•oid•Io spuusnogl agI Wulpnloul 'poolsnpun nllaq aq Isnm sassaoo td uopuuuo•I ails iun►Ilno pue Imnluu 3o sl3a33a agI '.zaAannoq `utallud alglsualso 3o puisl sigl of aouuol3luWis luiolnugaq ?ulu$Isse aso;ag •tunluualljtu$ulpaoald aql $ulinp uetp smaA pussnogl aaigl ISul aql $ulinp amid uaNul ;)Aug of maddu suollednooo palslai-$ullunq agI 3o aiotu Isgl Inq 'uonednooo uutung s uoTVai aql 3o poliad pagsligslsa aqI Inoq$no.igl pasn a.iam spueldn agl lugl lsaVWns sails agl utot3 pa.tanooa t slulod aliloa(oid •lo sadAl atLL •(sululdpooU pue 'suu•I 'suoidu iulAnIloo ` a) gWig Alanllumduzoo are uollisodap luauilpas ;o salsa ajagm p;)pnq Aldaap a.m puu patuasa.td llam AIVulslid.ins aiu sails '(s)uosuas Ilunq aqI $uprtp Aluletu pasn sdum asuq sr palaidialul uaaq ansq sails Ietanas `saninnou 3o oWu-ei p;)ITugl u Aluo aouapW spuuidn agI ul sails umouX agl3o Auetu allcltlA •aouapina Ieol$oloaegote $un.ioddns alllll sl antli `alup of Inq 'Mann su palloldxa Klqugoid anm 'slooi puu 'slnu `saluaq ~?ulpnloul `spoo•I luuid •slepalutu muj olglll ioj suate amnos su `pajjnooo IaAeiV aiagnn 'pue 'spunot l $unung su AIaAlsualxa pasn aiam spueldn aqI 'waq pamalAai uolleuuo•Iul uioi3 $ulvpnp -salts uonudnooo puu suwu luatuamootd olglll uaamlaq dlgsuollelai ielluds agl Aq pauleldxa aq Algsgoid uuo Wultnloujnuum fool ul suiallud aqI •Io Auetu Iutp lu.taua$ ul apnlouoo puu uolWai quuuuneS VO Isod aql ul sails iuiaAas le sasAluus olglq 3o sllnsai aqI malnal (L861) usltuo 1, puu slnuQ •(L861 m uroZ pus slAu(j) sails 3Iaaio InuluAA aqI 3o AlluplA aqI ul sluatulpas food-IaAuB ul Ielsalutu alquXiom•lo Allanud aAllulat aql puu ease 3Iaazo suogglo aql ul aduospuul agI •Io gonui sduo legl IaAmIl aqI uioi3 iulialuui mui;o aouupunqu aql Aq paululdxa aq Aut u ijawZ) InuluA4, pule 3lawo suogglg lu saltelgtuassu Vupnloe•Inuutu fool olglll ul aouaia•Illp aql ;o gonW •salts 31aaio InuluAA aql of paleduzoo iaq$Iq sem AIlsuap Ioe•III.M olglli IleiaAO aqI pue 'salts 3I331D suogglo agI Iu uounuoo ante aaam sasluU a~aul puu 'sa3luU &utultd `saioo `sauolsiatutuuH •(L861 UNMOi, PUR slneQ) sagoua-Tl ao"auq L puu slid Isal I I aql ul pwalunoma aiam sainlua3 313o.i pa3l3si3-ail3 pamaswd-Liam aAl; `Iiu ui •uozilog Ilos (le) Bali-Auto aqI anoqu SAemlu puu `stpdap iamoUugs gontu Iu puno3 aiam salnlua; puu sloujll m nlis ul aiagmasl2 •aoujlns molaq ut Z• I le puno; sem ainlua3 auo aiagm 'a.Wpp agl jo a,Vpa agI.Wtzole aole•Ilns molaq to Z Irtoge 3o sgldap of papualxa slulialutu Iumilno •spiags olurena ma) a puu `sasleU pazlllln jo ~kjaWA a glim $uole 'slulod y6nolgm j puu `Amo `MV 'WOIM39 PaPiafS'L9USIi, 'sails dol-a.Wpli palsal alp 3o aup •(L861 •iu la slAleQ) Alunoo uosliago2l ul ease DILLSH atp;o Isamgliou unl OZO£ Inoge 'a$uule.tp nARI somig;o ulsuq 31aaao InuIuAA agI ul papzooai aru sainlua3 puu stool miffs gllm sails •(£661 uolluoluntutuoo Iuuosiad '£661 'Z661 '1661 siaVou liagoH) •d•g oooZ alup-Isod ulsuq 3lawo suogglo atll ul sa inleaj paAjasa td-llam tuoi3 saj~u uogmz)oipui aql 3o Ile Isou Tv •puTn Aue 3o slid tplm paleloossu lou si golgm;o Isom '3I3oi paslmn-wU 3o aouupunqu ule $ulululuoo sainlual Aq puu sluatufel•I Aiallod Aq paouaplAa aq Aum $ulssamid poo•I lueld •salllATlos palsla.i-$tznung ;o aoulel.todug aql of Isallu snduios-pua puu 'saou;iq Mill 'slulod alnoa(o.id •Iuatua mwd olglll Pue saplnnou aoualsisgns 3o aouaplAa .rualo molts (I alnWTA :0-&LSd 3o lsuaglnos unI 0£ •so) ulseq 3Iaato suogglo at.p ul sails poliad ol.iolslgasd alle'I pule olego tV alel paAuasaid-llam SWOHJ 3sn ONV-1 NVIONj li31dVHC) CHAPTER 3: INDIAN LAND USE THOMS Sites 41BZ112 and 41BZ113 are located near the mouth of White Creek on the tread of c Terrace 2, where it is capped by a veneer of colluvium from the adjacent valley slopes (cf. Waters of 1993). A few pieces of debitage were seen on the surface at both sites, but the only observed tool- -a thin biface fragment--was at 41BZ112 (Whitsett and Jurgens 1992). Test excavations at is 41BZ112 yielded from 3 to 39 flake and flake fragments per 0.1 m3, but the only tools from k excavation units were edge-modified flakes and the mid-section of a biface. An arrow point fragment was found on the surface during the testing phase. Artifacts were recovered from as deep as 0.9 m below surface, but neither features nor lenses of artifacts were observed in any of er the backhoe trenches or test pits, and there was considerable evidence for pedoturbation and bioturbation (Olive 1993). Based on the results of the lithic analysis, the initial stages of stone tool manufacturing are well represented at 41BZ112, and the use-wear patterns on some of the to edge-modified tools indicate they were used in cutting and scraping tasks. The small quantity of 2 fire-cracked rock and the single arrow point fragment are also suggestive of food preparation and s, hunting-related tasks (Dickens 1993). ck Three small interior chert flakes were observed on the surface of 41 BZ 105, a "small prehistoric lithic scatter' 'located on the tread of a low Brazos River terrace about a kilometer from the mouth ns of the Little Brazos River (Figure 3.1). None of the shovel probes yielded cultural material (Bond es 1991:9). Farther upstream along the Thompson Creek basin, but still in the valley slope section, ut there are two low-density lithic scatters--41BZ87 and 41BZ88--on "sandy knolls adjacent to the the creek bottom;" neither site yielded temporally or functionally diagnostic tools (Bond 1991:6). Low- or density lithic scatters are also on the low "sandy ridges" farther down Thompson Creek (e.g., 41BZ31). but there are also sites that appear to represent more intensive or repeated occupations d of the valley slopes. At 41 BZ32, for example, San Patrice, Bulverde, Gary, Kent, and Ensor points ed were found, as were gouges and sandstone netweights (Bond 1991:6). Site 41BZ1, the only previously recorded site on the ASTRC property, also yielded a wide g variety of artifacts on the surface (Collins 1955). The "site" is actually a set of localities in close ds, proximity, with each component on a separate remnant of one of the terraces that form the lower the valley slopes. Two of these localities are on the ASTRC property (see Figure 3.1). Locality 6 my occupies a remnant of Terrace 1 and contained several dozen decorated and undecorated sand- 9 tempered pottery sherds in addition to a variety of chipped stone tools and debitage. Locality 5 of occupies a fairly flat surface between the Terrace 2 scarp and the tread of Terrace 1 (Waters, The Appendix I). In addition to two undecorated, sand-tempered sherds, a stemmed scraper and drill out were collected along with several arrow and dart points, including Alba, Gary, Kent, Yarbrough, ated Pedernales, and Bulverde types. Localities 1-4 yielded the same kinds of artifacts, as well as the sherd and shell tempered pottery, Perdiz and Scallorn and Bonham/Alba arrow points, te;n, Travis/Morrill dart points, blades, knives, and a thumb scraper (Collins 1955). ood, vate Previously recorded sites along the valley slopes vary from those with a low density and range of artifact types, suggesting limited activities, to sites with much higher artifact densities and a greater range of artifact types, indicative of more diverse and intensive land use. Compared to the uplands and bottomlands, relatively little work has been conducted at valley slope sites, but the results suggest that lithic procurement and hunting were important activities, as they were everywhere else in the Brazos River basin. The kinds of projectile points indicate only that area, occupation occurred throughout the Holocene. Too little work has been done to detect meaningful y the patterns. Yet, it is interesting that of the eight sites with temporally diagnostic artifacts, six have the a Late Prehistoric component(s), as evidenced by arrow points or pottery sherds. 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