The original
construction in this wall section
included a slide trench smaller
in scale than that found in
Trench II (Greber 1999:Fig.
5). A line of small decayed
posts crossed the northerly
end of the excavation near
the outer edge of the Great
Circle wall (Figure
7). The
posts ended in the underlying
natural gravels. The separate
covering over this feature
was truncated by the plow zone.
A mantle composed of a
layer of heavy gravels
in a clayey
matrix had been placed
on the original activity
floor. Infrequently,
small areas of reddened
soils and/or burnt pebbles
were found
in the loadings that formed
this stratum, but no evidence
for in situ burning was
found. One large post
intruded into
the top of this stratum
and possibly a line of
shallow
post holes near the inner
edge of the Great Circle
wall. The
first stratum of the wall
itself, found immediately
below the
plow zone, was a reddish
sandy clay placed over
a portion
of the gravelly layer.
The southerly end of
this stratum
indicates the inner edge
of the Great Circle wall
and appears
to correspond to a change
within the pattern of
the geophysical
anomalies.
Studies are continuing
to work towards identifying
the correspondence
between the ground truth
data and specific elements
of the
pattern of the anomaly
for possible use in interpreting
future geophysical surveys.
Due to the lack of contrast
between the materials
of the
floor and the re-filled
post holes there is not,
to my knowledge,
a currently available
geophysical survey instrument
that
would detect such features.
A contrasting
fill, particularly one
that contained burned
materials or fired ceramics,
would
provide
a better target. The
mantle materials, even
those that
are redeposited unaltered
sub-soils and gravels,
can provide more
contrast with the ground
areas immediately surrounding
the
walls. These are the
types of signals we hope
to clarify.
Radiocarbon Dates
Three AMS radiocarbon
assays have been
completed (Table
1). Two dates, Beta
170562 and Beta 170564,
come
from bits of charred
oak recovered
from the slide trench
(Feature 2) and are
consistent with
the dates obtained
from the larger charred
oak
posts
that composed the
dismantled fence
found in Trench II
(Greber 1999: Table 1).
The average
at two sigma for
the dates based on the
small line
of posts in Trench
III is 1860 ± 80
years BP. Averaging
the date based on charcoal
from an
above-ground section
of the dismantled fence
and the three dates
from
the in situ below-ground
posts
found in Trench II
gives the same date.
The third
date,
Beta 170563, is apparently
not associated with
the Hopewell wall construction.
It is
based on charred
oak bits found at
the edge of a post
hole directly north of
the slide trench
(Feature 6). Beta
Analytic conducted
a second independent
run based on materials
selected
from
the remaining pretreated
portion of the sample.
The resulting
date is the same
as for the first run,
many millennia
before the Hopewell
era (Table 1).
Feature 6, a post hole
that originated
on the activity
floor, contained
a humic soil (7.5 YR
3/4, dark
brown). It
tapered downward
some 40 cm deep into
the
underlying natural
gravels. Tiny flecks
of
charcoal occurred
in parts of the fill.
The charred wood
found
on the activity
floor at the edge
of the post hole
appears to have been
the remains
of some
earlier use of
the site. The only portable
artifact
recovered
this season is
a small,
burnt, worked flint
flake that was
probably an accidental
inclusion in the
soils used for wall
construction. It
is possible that a second
accidental
inclusion of charcoal
bits occurred during
Hopewell earth
moving.
Unfortunately,
Beta 170563 is not useful
for
dating the original
building time of
the
Great Circle
wall.
Table 1. Radiocarbon dating
information, Great Circle
Wall excavations, High Bank
Works.
Comments
It must be kept in mind
that the following comments
are based on a very small
excavation sample of
the
wall. The six usable
radiocarbon dates from
essentially
opposite sides of the
circle suggest a relatively
short
time, in terms of human
generations, for initial
construction of the wall.
This is consistent with
the condition of the
lower strata found in
Trenches
I and II where about
thirty percent (40 cm)
of the
wall height recorded
in 1846 is still intact.
Here
the top surfaces of the
inner “red” and
outer “yellow” base
strata showed no signs
of exposure. The total
construction time that
left a significantly
higher wall is still
not known.
Edges of the upper layers
and two erosional episodes,
apparently before and after
AD 1800, were seen in Trenches
I and II. The materials
used to form the “red” stratum
near the neck and also
to re-fill post holes
on the
opposite side of the circle,
likely came from a horizontal
stripping of the pre-Hopewell
natural ground surface.
Dan LeMaster, Regional
Soils Specialist, USDA Natural
Resources Conservation Service,
has found evidence for this
stripping in his observations
of the present ground surface
within the circle (personal
communications 1997, 2001,
and 2002). Such stripping
was also clearly documented
beyond the inner edge of
the original circle wall
at the southerly end of Trench
III.
Prior to wall construction,
appropriate Hopewell architects
and engineers determined
a ground plan, wall design,
and construction techniques.
Prior to raising the wall,
activities took place at
the site that emphasize
the importance of the
initiation
of the building process,
and perhaps of the planning
phase. At least some of
these activities could
have been
seen by those carrying
the required special
soils and
gravels that they deposited,
each in their proper arrangement.
The remains of the ritual
activities found at the
base of the wall differ
near the
neck and across the circle
from the neck. None of
the portable objects
used in
any associated activities
have been found. The plethora
of posts adds new, and
as yet unexplained, elements
to possible interpretations
of the range of pre-construction
activities.
Acknowledgments
Permission for the excavation
came from the United
States Department of
the Interior
and Hopewell Culture
National Historical Park.
Funding
was provided by the Robert
M. Utley Research Fund,
the Laub Foundation,
the NPS
Challenge Cost Share
Program, and Hopewell
Culture National
Historical Park. Services
in kind came from Hopewell
Culture National Historical
Park, the Midwest Archeological
Center, Hocking College,
and the Cleveland Museum
of Natural History.
References Cited
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a Prehistoric Culture. The
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