Monday, September 7, 2020

Paleoindian Point Typology - Part Four - Firstview Versus Midland?

Figure One - 2.45 inch long Paleoindian projectile point type surface found on private land in Cheyenne County, Colorado.
Is it a Firstview or a Midland point? That is my question. John Bradford Branney Collection. 

For a long time, I have thought that this 2.45 inch long Paleoindian projectile point surface found in Cheyenne County, Colorado in figure one was a Firstview dart point made by Cody Complex people ca. 9400 B.P.  

Some of you might be asking 'what is a Firstview projectile point'?  Here is a brief description and background.   

In 1957, amateur archaeologist Jerry Chubbuck discovered a Paleoindian site while arrowhead hunting along a tributary of the Big Sandy Creek in Cheyenne County, Colorado. He brought the site to the attention of archaeologist Joe Ben Wheat from the University of Colorado Museum. Dr. Wheat did not have a chance to investigate the site until April 30, 1958. In the meantime, archaeologist H.M. Wormington suggested that Jerry Chubbuck and fellow arrowhead hunter Sig Olsen dig a few test pits near the exposed bonebed. Once Wheat freed up his schedule, Chubbuck and Olsen relinquished their digging permit to the University of Colorado Museum. A few of the projectile points surface found by Jerry Chubbuck are in figure two. Do you see the resemblance between these points and my Firstview projectile point in figures one, three, and four?  
Figure Two - Gerry Chubbuck Firstview projectile points from the
Olsen-Chubbuck bison kill site in Cheyenne County, Colorado. 

Chubbuck originally classified his points as Scottsbluff and Eden points from the Cody Complex. Quite honestly, I would classify his points as Scottsbluff and Eden projectile points even today! I am not sure the world needed the Firstview projectile point type. 

As late as 1967, Joe Ben Wheat classified the projectile points from the Olsen-Chubbuck bison kill site as Scottsbluff, Eden, and Milnesand. By 1972, Wheat modified his original taxonomy for the projectile points and designated them as a new projectile point type called Firstview (Wheat 1972).  

Wheat described the dominant style of points found at the Olsen-Chubbuck site as lanceolate or leaf-shaped, full-bodied points. He stated that the stems on some of the Firstview projectile points were produced by heavy edge grinding. He described the basal edge as predominately straight and mostly wedge-shaped. He defined the projectile point range from broad points with flattened lenticular cross sections to relatively narrow points with diamond-shaped cross sections. He noted that the points had extremely fine and excellent workmanship. I wonder why Wheat changed his mind from originally fitting these points into the existed projectile point typology of Scottsbluff, Eden, and Milnesand to defining a whole new point typology named Firstview?      
   



Figures Three and Four - Side B and profile 
of my 2.45 inch long Paleoindian projectile point.
Is it a Firstview?    

My projectile point in figures one, three, and four does have characteristics from the Firstview projectile point type description, but is that the only projectile point type that it resembles? 
Please, keep reading.

CLICK for SHADOWS on the TRAIL

Figure Five - Cast of the Midland projectile
point used as the type. 
My Firstview projectile point above in figure one would also fit within the Midland Paleoindian point typology. Figure five is a cast of the original point that became the Midland projectile point type from the Scharbauer site near Midland, Texas. An amateur archaeologist by the name of Keith Glasscock discovered fossilized human bone in a sand blowout six miles southwest of Midland, Texas. He had been finding Folsom projectile points and other points that resembled Folsom projectile point but without flutes. He reported the site to archaeologist Fred Wendorf who originally called these points 'unfluted Folsom points'. Marie Wormington was the first archaeologist to coin the name Midland projectile point type.  

Greg Perino (1985) describes Midland points as small, flat points that resemble Folsom but with less basal indentation, and in some cases straight bases. Bruce Bradley (2010) expanded on the definition by stating that Midland points have wide, but relatively flat flake scars and very flat cross sections. He stated that flaking may be pressure, but for the most part Midland points appear to have finely controlled percussion flaking. He stated that Midland knappers finished their points with non-invasive, abrupt continuous marginal retouch which narrowed the pieces so that negative bulbs and thinning flakes were eliminated. 

Figure Six shows my Firstview projectile point (middle point) in a line up with a few of my Midland projectile points. Do you see similarities between the Firstview and the Midland points? How about differences? 
Figure Six - 2.45 inch long Firstview projectile point in center, surrounded by
High Plains Midland projectile points. John Bradford Branney Collection.  
   

Now the big question. Is my projectile point a Firstview or a Midland or something else altogether? It makes no difference to me whether it is a Firstview or a Midland. Both are desirable projectile points. Midland projectile points are a thousand or so years older than Firstview projectile points. I am going to leave it up to you. What type is my projectile point?                        

Bradley, Bruce A
2010   Paleoindian Flaked Stone Technology on the Plains and in the Rockies in Prehistoric Hunter-             Gatherers of the High Plains and Rockies by Marcel Kornfeld, George C. Frison and Mary                   Lou Larson.     

Perino, Gregory
1985   Selected Preforms, Points, and Knives of the North American Indians - Volume 1.

Wheat, Joe Ben
1972    The Olsen-Chubbuck Site in American Antiquity, Volume 37, Number 1, Part 2.   


SOON to be RELEASED in SEPTEMBER 2020

3 comments:

  1. Very nice Midland Much thinner than the firstviews I've observed on both the Southern and high plains.

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  2. How far up the lateral edges is the piece ground? Midland will almost always have very long area of lateral edge grinding. Most of the time, more than half way to tip & to point of maximum blade width.

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  3. The fine, non-invasive retouch along the margins of the Midland type visible on the cast above from Sharbauer should be present to reliably identify Midland points. This retouch is common on Folsom points and reflect that technology-which Midland is part of (it is considered unfluted Folsom).
    Firstview points have been argued to fall within Cody complex point morphology, and along with the point type, the Firstview complex has been disregarded by several current researchers (https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/anth_etds/22/).
    Your point (as well as the ones immediately adjacent to it on either side) may be Milnesand type. They typically have slightly tapering stems and a series of short basal thinning flakes that result in a wedge-shaped basal edge. Those short flakes help distinguish Milnesand from Plainview points-which typically have longer basal basal thinning flakes. The range of morphological variation among unfluted Paleo points from any given site make reliable identification of isolated examples a challenge, and provide fuel for continuing debate regarding validity of types that appear basically similar but show subtle differences. See Plainview: The Enigmatic Paleoindian Artifact Style of the Great Plains by Holliday and others for examples.

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