Smith Maria Ostendorf
Department of Anthropology, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, Illinois 60115, USA.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2003 Aug;121(4):303-18. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.10232.
Based on the presence of palisades and an iconography suggesting a warrior elite, warfare is presumed to be endemic in the Late Mississippian period (AD 1200-1600) of the southeastern United States. Warfare is theorized to play a vital role in the cycling of chiefdoms. However, apart from a few exemplary cases that display double-digit frequencies, very little direct (i.e., skeletal) evidence of violent trauma has dovetailed with the archaeological presumptions of warfare. Eight sites from the Chickamauga Reservoir of east Tennessee were examined for skeletal evidence of deliberate violent trauma. Violent trauma was anticipated because these sites are in close proximity and consist of two adjacent, sociopolitically distinct, and temporally overlapping phases: Dallas (AD 1300-1600) and Mouse Creek (AD 1400-1600). In addition to small, round, nonlethal ectocranial blunt-force trauma (BFT) on the frontal and upper parietal bones, inflicted projectile points and scalping were identified. The low total trauma frequency in the Dallas sample (3.86%, n = 259) is consistent with emerging evidence from east and west Tennessee Late Mississippian data, but significantly different from Mouse Creek (8.06%, n = 273). The proportion of nonlethal cranial BFT in the collective Chickamauga sample is large and at odds with the Tennessee River Valley comparative literature. Based on other bioarchaeological literature, this pattern suggests intragroup violence, but not face-to-face ritual contests. It is better explained as interpersonal conflict resolution along codified lines. This is consistent with southeastern ethnohistoric data and may explain the more frequent cranial BFT in the less stratified Mouse Creek phase, which likely would not have had an overarching civil authority.
基于栅栏的存在以及表明存在 warrior elite 的图像学,人们推测在美国东南部密西西比晚期(公元 1200 - 1600 年)战争是普遍存在的。从理论上讲,战争在酋邦的循环中起着至关重要的作用。然而,除了少数显示两位数频率的典型案例外,几乎没有直接(即骨骼方面的)暴力创伤证据与战争的考古推测相吻合。对田纳西州东部奇卡莫加水库的八个遗址进行了检查,以寻找蓄意暴力创伤的骨骼证据。预计会发现暴力创伤,因为这些遗址彼此相邻,由两个相邻的、社会政治上不同且时间上重叠的阶段组成:达拉斯阶段(公元 1300 - 1600 年)和鼠溪阶段(公元 1400 - 1600 年)。除了在额骨和顶骨上部发现的小而圆的、非致命的颅外钝器伤(BFT)外,还发现了投射点和剥头皮的痕迹。达拉斯样本中的总创伤频率较低(3.86%,n = 259),这与田纳西州东部和西部密西西比晚期数据中出现的证据一致,但与鼠溪样本(8.06%,n = 273)有显著差异。奇卡莫加集体样本中非致命性颅骨 BFT 的比例很大,这与田纳西河谷的比较文献不一致。根据其他生物考古学文献,这种模式表明是群体内部暴力,但不是面对面的仪式性竞赛。更好的解释是沿着编纂的规则进行人际冲突解决。这与东南部的民族历史数据一致,并且可以解释在分层较少的鼠溪阶段中更频繁的颅骨 BFT,因为该阶段可能没有一个总体的民政当局。