- St. Johns culture
The St. Johns culture was an
archaeological culture in northeasternFlorida , USA that lasted from about 500BCE (the end of the Archaic period) until shortly afterEurope an contact in the 17th century. The St. Johns culture was present along theSt. Johns River and its tributaries (including theOklawaha River , and along the Atlantic coast of Florida from the mouth of the St. Johns River south to a point east of the head of the St. Johns River, near present-dayCocoa Beach, Florida . At the time of first European contact, the St. Johns culture area was inhabited by speakers of the Mocama (or Agua Salada), Agua Fresca and Acuera dialects of theTimucua language and by the Mayacas. [Milanich. Pp. 40-1 (map)] "Florida Historical Contexts Chapter 7. EAST AND CENTRAL FLORIDA, 3200 B.P.-A.D. 1565". Florida Division of Historical Resources. At [http://dhr.dos.state.fl.us/facts/reports/contexts/wwwecfl.pdf] - RetrievedJuly 14 ,2007 ]Defining characters and environment
The St. Johns culture is defined in terms of
pottery styles. Plain chalky ware was the dominant St. Johnsceramic type. ("Chalky" ware was made from clay taken from fresh water sources, which containedspicule s from fresh watersponge s. The spicules in the clay helped strengthen the pottery, and created a "chalky" surface, soft enough to be scratched with a fingernail.) [http://pelotes.jea.com/inwood.htm Pelotes Island Nature Preserve - Woodland Period - St. Johns Cultures - 500 BC to 1500 AD] - RetrievedJuly 17 ,2007 ] "Exotic" ceramic ware is common, especially in ceremonial contexts. These "exotic" ceramics represent types from the Deptford, Glades, Belle Glade, Swift Creek, Weeden Island, Savannah, Safety Harbor, and Fort Walton cultures. There was a transitional area from the mouth of the St. Johns River extending into southeastern Georgia where St. Johns ware overlapped with Savannah ware, and another transitional area, the Indian River region (southern Brevard County, and Indian River and St. Lucie counties), where St. Johns ware overlapped with Belle Glade and Glades ware. [Milanich. P. 46]The St. Johns culture was based on the exploitation of marine and fresh water resources. Villages and camps were located close to rivers, lakes,
wetland s, coastallagoon s and estuaries. During the 2000 years of the St. Johns culture, largemidden s of shell and other debris, sometimes covering severalacre s and often up to convert|25|ft|m high, accumulated throughout the region (Turtle Mound , nearNew Smyrna Beach, Florida , was estimated to be convert|75|ft|m high before it was reduced by shellrock mining in the 19th and 20th centuries). [Milanich. P. 38-9] Some existing mounds extend for as long as a half-mile along the banks of the St. Johns River.Diet and resources
While
oyster ,clam andmussel shells dominate the middens,bone s found in the middens indicate thatcatfish were a much larger component of the St. Johns people's diet than wereshellfish . [Milanich. P. 40] The St. Johns diet consisted of a wide variety offish , shellfish,reptile s,mammal s andbird s. Investigation of a site at Hontoon Island indicated that fresh watersnail s, fish andturtle s provided most of the meat consumed at the site, and that those resources were exploited year-round. Plant foods included berries, nuts, cabbage palm,amaranth , and various small plants, especially those growing in wetlands.Gourd s were grown, but probably used as containers. [Milanich. P.42]Maize cultivation reached the Timucua speakers of the St. Johns culture area around 750, although some authorities think the arrival was as late as 1050. The southernmost part of the St. Johns culture area (the Mayacas) had not acquired maize cultivation at the time of first European contact. The St. Johns peoples were not as dependent on maize cultivation as were most cultures in thesoutheastern United States , as suitable soil for sustainable maize production was scarce in the wetlands favored for habitation, and abundant wetland resources were available year-round. [Milanich. P. 44-5] [ [http://volusiahistory.com/howthey.htm Volusia County Heritage - People of the Shell Mounds: the Earliest Volusians - How They Lived] - RetrievedJuly 17 ,2007 ]Except along the western fringes of the region, the only stone resources available were soft
coquina andsandstone , which were used for grinding and abrading tools. Tools and implements were more often made of bone and shell, than of stone. Stone artifacts (usually made ofchert ) in the St. Johns culture are a mixture of styles preserved from the Archaic period with styles representative of neighboring cultures. Wooden artifacts that were preserved in water and wet soils have also been found.Mounds
Purpose-built
mound s of sand (as opposed to shell middens) first appeared in the St. Johns culture region around the year 100. As was common throughout Florida, mounds were used for burials. Some bodies were buried intact, in a flexed position, but most were first placed incharnel house s, which were often built on top of a mound. Theflesh was removed from, or allowed to rot off of, the bones, and the bones were cleaned. Eventually the accumulatedlong bone s andskull s of each individual were bundled and then buried in a group in the mound. The charnel house would then be destroyed, often by fire. A new layer of sand might then be added to the mound, and a new charnel house build on the top. [Milanich. Pp. 48-9]The early mounds in the St. Johns culture region were generally four feet high up to an occasional ten feet. The number of burials in a mound might be as high as 100, but most held fewer than 25. After 1050 influence from the
Mississippian culture led some groups to constructplatform mound s, which may have been topped by temples and/or chiefs' residences. One of these mounds, the Shields mound in Duval County, eventually reached convert|190|ft|m along each side of the base, and held 150 burials. Another mound, Mt. Royal Mound, just north of Lake George, which was convert|15|ft|m high and convert|160|ft|m in diameter, was primarily a burial mound. This mound also contained many items apparently received as trade goods from the region of the Mississippian culture.Chiefdoms in the St. Johns culture region did not achieve the size and power of those to the west, from the Florida panhandle through to the Mississippi valley, and large platform mounds were rare in the St. Johns region. [Milanich. Pp. 50-2]Notes
References
*Milanich, Jerald T. (1998) "Chapter 3: St. Johns Culture of East and Central Florida", "Florida's Indians from Ancient Times to the Present." University Press of Florida. ISBN 0-8130-1599-5
External links
* [http://www.nps.gov/history/seac/outline/04-woodland/index-2.htm Southeastern Prehistory - Middle Woodland Period] - Retrieved
July 17 ,2007
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=jnIKQL2BGvcC&pg=PA78&lpg=PA78&dq=%22st+johns+culture%22&source=web&ots=bIKjT79ndX&sig=N3E65r-MtHYgGygXL81DHfTERHc#PPA80,M1 An Environmental History of Northeast Florida By Miller, James J.] - RetrievedJuly 17 ,2007
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