Brentwood Library Site

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Brentwood Library Site
(40 WM 210)
Brentwood Library Site
(40 WM 210)
Location within Tennessee today
Location
Coordinates 35°59′45.06″N 86°47′23.60″W / 35.9958500°N 86.7898889°W / 35.9958500; -86.7898889
Country  USA
Region Williamson County, Tennessee
Municipality Brentwood, Tennessee
History
Culture Mississippian culture
Excavation and maintenance
Responsible body City of Brentwood
Dates excavated 1997

The Brentwood Library Site (40 WM 210), also known as the Jarman Farm Site, is a Mississippian culture archaeological site located in the city of Brentwood, in Williamson County, Tennessee. It was occupied during the Thurston Phase of the local chronology and artifacts from the site have been radiocarbon dated to 1298 to 1465 CE.[1]

Excavations

The Brentwood Library Site is located on a low ridge next to the Harpeth River and a small spring-fed creek. The site was first mentioned by Frederic Ward Putnam as part of an Harvard Peabody Museum Expedition in the 1882, but the exact location was not mentioned. Putnam excavated forty-eight stone box graves at the site. At least one example of a Nashville style shell gorget was found by Putnam during his excavations of an infants grave, along with a notched-rim bowl, a human effigy hooded bottle and eight marine shell beads. The site was then forgotten until construction for the new Brentwood library in 1997 uncovered a substantial village and associated burial area.[2][3]

Ceramics

Mississippian culture pottery vessels and sherds found at the site were made with techniques and forms found across the Mississippian world. Common shapes include bowls with notched rim straps and jars with a direct rim. Strap handles were the only closed handle style found, although bifurcate and tabular lugs were sometimes attached. Some sherds were found to be fabric impressed and other examples used a technique known as negative painting,[3] a technique which involved painting the background and allowing the natural buff or grey of the clay to create the positive image.[4] Notable pottery classifications found were examples of Mound Place Incised, Matthews Incised var. Matthews, Manly Incised and Beckwith Incised, with Beckwith Incised being found in the largest numbers.[3] A few pieces of effigy pottery were also found, mostly of zoomorphic figures such as fish, frogs, and ducks although some examples with anthropomorphic shapes were found. These humans effigies often depicted a standing woman with top-knots in her hair, a pronounced hunchback and ear spools[3] Similar ceramic and stone statues are found throughout the Middle Tennessee area.

See also

References

  1. Lankford, George E.; Reilly, F. Kent; Garber, James F. (2011-01-15). Visualizing the Sacred: Cosmic Visions, Regionalism, and the Art of the Mississippian World. University of Texas Press. p. 198. ISBN 978-0-292-72308-5. 
  2. Moore, Michael C. (Winter 2005). "A NASHVILLE STYLE SHELL GORGET FROM THE JARMAN FARM SITE, WILLIAMSON COUNTY, TENNESSEE". Tennessee Archaeology (Tennessee Council for Professional Archaeology) 2 (1): 59–61. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Michaelyn Harle, Shannon D. Koerner, and Bobby R. Braly, Chapter 12: The Late Mississippian Period (AD 1350-1500) - Draft, pp. 23–24, retrieved 2010-04-19 
  4. Fundaburk, Emma Lila (2001 (1957)). Mary Douglass Fundaburk Foreman, ed. Sun Circles and Human Hands: the Southeastern Indians - Art and Industry. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press. pp. 170–171. ISBN 978-0-8173-1077-6. 

External links

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