Clovis point
Clovis points are the characteristically fluted projectile points associated with the New World Clovis culture, a prehistoric Paleo-American culture. They are present in dense concentrations across much of North America and they are largely restricted to the north of South America. There are slight differences in points found in the Eastern United States bringing them to sometimes be called "Clovis-like".[1] Clovis points date to the Early Paleoindian period, with all known points dating from roughly 11,500 to 10,800 years Before Present. Clovis fluted points are named after the city of Clovis, New Mexico, where examples were first found in 1929 by Ridgely Whiteman.[2]
A typical Clovis point is a medium to large lanceolate point with sharp edges, a third of an inch thick, one to two inches wide, and about four inches (10 cm) long.[3] Sides are parallel to convex, and exhibit careful pressure flaking along the blade edge. The broadest area is towards the base which is distinctly concave with a concave grooves called "flutes" removed from one or, more commonly, both surfaces of the blade. The lower edges of the blade and base are ground to dull edges for hafting.
Around 10,000 years before present, a new type of fluted projectile point called Folsom appeared in archaeological deposits, and Clovis-style points disappeared from the continental United States. Most Folsom points are shorter in length than Clovis points and exhibit longer flutes and different pressure flaking patterns. This is particularly easy to see when comparing the unfinished preforms of Clovis and Folsom points.[4]
Type Description
Only a few recovered Clovis points are in their original condition. Most points were "reworked" to resharpen them or repair damage.[5] This can make it difficult to identify which lithic tradition they come from.[6]
Clovis type description:[7]
- Clovis is a comparatively large and heavy bifacially flaked fluted lanceolate point, lenticular to near oval in cross-section with parallel to moderately convex lateral edges, a majority having the latter.
- Maximum width is usually at or slightly below midpoint, frequently resulting in rather long sharp tips.
- Bases are normally only slightly concave, the depth usually ranging from 1 mm to 4 mm and arching completely across basal width.
- Basal corners range from nearly square to slightly rounded without forming eared projections.
- Length range is considerable, with a majority between 75 mm and 110 mm.
- Maximum width range is 25 mm to 50 mm, a majority near the former.
- Maximum thickness range, 5 mm to 10 mm.
- Normally fluted on both faces.
- Flutes are most often produced by multiple flake removals
- Length and quality of flutes is greatly variable, with length usually 30% to 50% of overall point length, and the majority near the former
- Base of flutes is often widened by subsequent removals of additional channel flakes or short wide flakes.
- There is minimal post-fluting retouch of basal areas.
- Overall flaking frequently irregular in both size and orientation, often including large facet remnants of early stage reduction processes
- There is very moderate evidence of pressure flaking
- Lower lateral and basal edges are smoothed by grinding, often resulting in slight tapering of base.
- Clovis points do not have recurved (fishtail) lateral edges, or pronounced basal constrictions. *Neither do they have convex (Folsom-type) channel flake platform remnants
Specimens are known to have been made of flint, chert, jasper, chalcedony and other stone of conchoidal fracture.[8]
Distribution
Clovis points have been found over most of North America and, less commonly, as far south as Venezuela.[9] Of the around 6000 points currently classified as Clovis found in the United States the majority were east of the Mississippi and especially in the Southeast.[10] Some researchers suggest that many of the eastern points are misclassified and most real Clovis Points are found in the west.[7] Significant Clovis find sites include:[11]
- Anzick site in Montana
- Aubrey site in Texas
- Big Eddy Site in Missouri
- Blackwater Draw type site in New Mexico
- Colby site in Wyoming
- Dent site in Colorado
- Domebo Canyon in Oklahoma
- East Wenatchee Clovis Site in Washington
- El Fin del Mundo in Sonora, Mexico
- Gault site in Texas
- Lange-Ferguson in Florida
- Lehner Mammoth-Kill Site in Arizona
- Murray Springs Clovis Site in Arizona
- Naco Mammoth Kill Site in Arizona
- Paleo Crossing site in Ohio
- Ready site (aka LIncoln Hills site) in Illinois
- Shawnee-Minisink Site in Pennsylvania
- Simon site in Idaho
- Sloth Hole in Florida
Fraudulent Clovis points have also emerged on the open market, some with false documentation.[12]
Caches
Clovis points, along with other stone and bone/ivory tools, have been identified in over two dozen artifact caches.[13] These caches range from the Mississippi River to the Rocky Mountains and Northwest United States. While the Anzick cache is associated with a child burial, the majority of caches appear to represent anticipatory material storage at strategic locations on the Pleistocene landscape.[14] In May 2008, a major Clovis cache, now called the Mahaffey Cache, was found in Boulder, Colorado, with 83 Clovis stone tools though no actual Clovis Points. The tools were found to have traces of horse and cameloid protein. They were dated to 13,000 to 13,500 YBP, a date confirmed by sediment layers in which the tools were found and the types of protein residues found on the artifacts.[15]The Fenn cache, which came to light in private hands in 1989 and whose place of discovery is unknown.
Origins
Whether Clovis toolmaking technology was developed in the Americas in response to megafauna hunting or originated through influences from elsewhere is a open question among archaeologists. Lithic antecedents of Clovis points have not been found in northeast Asia, from where the first human inhabitants of the Americas originated in the current consensus of archaeology. Some archaeologists[16] have argued that similarities between points produced by the Solutrean culture in the Iberian peninsula of Europe suggest that the technology was introduced by hunters traversing the Atlantic ice-shelf and suggests that some of the first American humans were European (the Solutrean hypothesis). However, this hypothesis is not well-accepted as other archaeologists have pointed out that Solutrean and Clovis lithic technologies are technologically distinct (e.g. a lack of distinctive flutes in Solutrean technology),[17] there is no genetic evidence for European ancestry in Indigenous North Americans,[18] and the proposed Solutrean migration route was likely unsuitable.[19]
See also
- Barnes projectile point
- Beaver Lake point
- Cascade point
- Cumberland point
- Eden point
- Golondrina point
- Goshen point
- Plainview point
- Plano point
- Simpson point
- Suwannee point
References
- ^ C. J. Ellis and J. C. Lothrop, "Early Fluted-biface Variation in Glaciated Northeastern North America", PaleoAmerica 5, no. 2 (2019): 121–131, 2019
- ^ "THE INITIAL RESEARCH AT CLOVIS, NEW MEXICO: 1932-1937", Plains Anthropologist, vol. 35, no. 130, pp. 1–20, 1990
- ^ Mann, Charles C. (November 2013). "The Clovis Point and the Discovery of America's First Culture". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
- ^ Sellers, Paul V. “Fluted Points.” Central States Archaeological Journal, vol. 2, no. 3, pp. 113–20, 1956
- ^ Peck, Rodney M., "Re-Worked Clovis Projectile Points", Central States Archaeological Journal, vol. 57, no. 1, pp. 26–28, 2010
- ^ Roosa, William B., "Some Great Lakes Fluted Point Types", Michigan Archaeologist 11(3,4), pp. 89-102, 1965
- ^ a b Howard, Calvin D., "The Clovis Point: Characteristics and Type Description", Plains Anthropologist, vol. 35, no. 129, pp. 255–62, 1990
- ^ WILKE, PHILIP J., et al., "Clovis Technology at the Anzick Site, Montana", Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology, vol. 13, no. 2, pp. 242–72, 1991
- ^ Dillehay, Tom D., and Jeremy A. Sabloff, "Probing Deeper into First American Studies", Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 106, no. 4, 2009, pp. 971–78, 2009
- ^ Toner, Mike. “Impossibly Old America?” Archaeology, vol. 59, no. 3, pp. 40–45, 2006
- ^ Waters, Michael R., and Thomas W. Stafford, "Redefining the Age of Clovis: Implications for the Peopling of the Americas", Science, vol. 315, no. 5815, pp. 1122–26, 2007
- ^ "A Variety of Replica Fluted Clovis Points.", Central States Archaeological Journal, vol. 54, no. 2, pp. 102–03, 2007
- ^ J. David Kilby (10 May 2019). "A North American perspective on the Volgu Biface Cache from Upper Paleolithic France and its relationship to the "Solutrean Hypothesis" for Clovis origins". Quaternary International. 515. ScienceDirect: 197–207. Bibcode:2019QuInt.515..197K. doi:10.1016/j.quaint.2018.06.019.
- ^ David Kilby; B.B. Huckell (January 2014). "Clovis Caches: Current perspectives and future directions".
- ^ "13,000-Year-Old Stone Tool Cache in Colorado Shows Evidence of Camel, Horse Butchering". University of Colorado at Boulder. February 25, 2009. Retrieved 22 September 2010.
- ^ Bradley, Bruce; Stanford, Dennis (December 2004). "The North Atlantic ice-edge corridor: A possible Palaeolithic route to the New World". World Archaeology. 36 (4): 459–478. doi:10.1080/0043824042000303656. eISSN 1470-1375. ISSN 0043-8243.
- ^ Straus, Lawrence Guy; Meltzer, David J.; Goebel, Ted (December 2005). "Ice Age Atlantis? Exploring the Solutrean-Clovis 'connection'". World Archaeology. 37 (4): 507–532. doi:10.1080/00438240500395797. eISSN 1470-1375. ISSN 0043-8243.
- ^ Raff, Jennifer A.; Bolnick, Deborah A. (October 2015). "Does Mitochondrial Haplogroup X Indicate Ancient Trans-Atlantic Migration to the Americas? A Critical Re-Evaluation". PaleoAmerica. 1 (4): 297–304. doi:10.1179/2055556315Z.00000000040. eISSN 2055-5571. ISSN 2055-5563.
- ^ Westley, Kieran; Dix, Justin (July 2008). "The Solutrean Atlantic Hypothesis: A View from the Ocean". Journal of the North Atlantic. 1: 85–98. doi:10.3721/J080527. eISSN 1935-1933. ISSN 1935-1933.
Further reading
- Collins, Michael B., "Clovis Blade Technology", University of Texas Press, Austin, 1999
- Di Peso, Charles C., "Clovis Fluted Points from Southeastern Arizona", American Antiquity 19, pp. 82-85, 1953
- Frison, George C., "Experimental Use of Clovis Weaponry and Tools on African Elephants", American Antiquity, vol. 54, no. 4, pp. 766–84. 1989
- Greene, F. E., "The Clovis Blades: An Important Addition to the Llano Complex", American Antiquity 29, pp. 145-165, 1963
- HAYNES, C. VANCE, "DISTRIBUTION OF CLOVIS POINTS IN ARIZONA AND THE CLOVIS EXPLORATION OF THE STATE, 11,000 B.C.", Kiva, vol. 76, no. 3, pp. 343–67, 2011
- Hesse, India S., "A Reworked Clovis Point near Chevelon Ruin, Arizona", Kiva, vol. 61, no. 1, pp. 83–88, 1995
- Holen, Steven R., "Clovis Projectile Points and Preforms in Nebraska: Distribution and Lithic Sources", Current Research in the Pleistocene 20, pp. 31-33, 2003
- Morrow, Juliet E., "CLOVIS PROJECTILE POINT MANUFACTURE: A PERSPECTIVE FROM THE READY/LINCOLN HILLS SITE, 11JY46, JERSEY COUNTY, ILLINOIS", Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology, vol. 20, no. 2, pp. 167–91, 1995
- Peck, Rodney M., "Clovis Points of Early Man in North Carolina", The Piedmont Journal of Archaeology 6, pp. 1-22, 1988
- Peck, Rodney M., "UNIQUE FEATURES OF AN UNUSUAL LARGE NORTH CAROLINA CLOVIS POINT", Central States Archaeological Journal, vol. 51, no. 4, 2004
- Prasciunas, Mary M., "MAPPING CLOVIS: PROJECTILE POINTS, BEHAVIOR, AND BIAS", American Antiquity, vol. 76, no. 1, pp. 107–26, 2011