Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley by E. G. Squier and E. H. Davis
CHAPTER XIII.
8996 words | Chapter 55
IMPLEMENTS OF STONE, ETC.
In the absence of a knowledge of the metals, the ingenuity of man
contrives to fashion from the different varieties of stone, from
the tusks and bones of animals, and the harder kinds of wood, such
rude implements as his necessities demand, and such ornaments as his
fancy suggests. And even among nations who have a limited knowledge
of the metals, we find these characteristic implements of a ruder
state still adhered to. In Mexico and Peru, where the use of most
of the metals, except iron, was well understood, the stone axe and
flint-tipped arrow and lance were in common use, at the period of
the discovery. The early explorers found all the American nations,
from the squalid Esquimaux, who struck the morse with a lance pointed
with its own tusks, to the haughty Aztec, rivalling in his barbaric
splendor the magnificence of the East, in possession of them. We
are not surprised, therefore, at their occurrence in the mounds. We
find them with the original and with the recent deposits, and the
plough turns them up to light on every hand. And so striking is the
resemblance between them all, that we are almost ready to conclude
they were the productions of the same people. This conclusion would
be irresistible, did we not know that the wants of man have ever been
the same, and have always suggested like forms to his implements,
and similar modes of using them. The polished instrument with which
the pioneer of civilization prostrates the forest, has its type in
the stone axe of the Indian which his plough the next day exposes
to his curious gaze. In the barrows of Denmark and Siberia, in the
tumuli on the plains of Marathon, and even under the shadow of the
pyramids themselves, the explorer finds relics, almost identical with
those disclosed from the mounds, and closely resembling each other in
material, form, and workmanship. We have consequently little whereby
to distinguish the remains of the mound-builders, so far as their
mere implements of stone are concerned, except the position in which
they are found, and the not entirely imaginary superiority of their
workmanship, from those of the succeeding races. We have, however,
in the different varieties of stone of which they are composed, the
evidences of a more extended intercourse than we are justified in
ascribing to the more recent tribes.
The articles composed of stone and bone have a great variety of
forms, which were probably suggested by the purposes for which they
were designed. They will be classified, so far as their purposes seem
apparent. [p211]
SPEAR OR LANCE HEADS.—Great numbers of flint points are found which,
it is clear from their size and form, could not have been used for
tipping arrows.
[Illustration: Fig. 99 Half size.]
[Illustration: Fig. 100.]
Fig. 99 presents several of these, greatly reduced from the original
size. Nos. 1 and 2 were designed to be lashed to shafts, previously
drilled or split to receive them. There are others, however, the
manner of using which is not so obvious. No. 3 is an example. It
measures eleven inches in length by two and a half in its greatest
breadth. It has been suggested that it was fastened at right angles
to a handle and used as a sort of battle-axe. In one of the mounds
already several times referred to (page 149) were found, amongst
large quantities of fragments, several perfect specimens of rather
remarkable character; one of which, beautifully worked from milky
quartz, is herewith presented of half size (Fig. 100). The difficulty
of accounting for the manner in which they were used is scarcely less
than in the instance last mentioned. It has been suggested that they
were perhaps designed to be used in the construction of swords, or
offensive weapons, on the plan of those made by the ancient Mexicans.
These were formed by slitting a cane or other slender piece of tough
wood, and inserting blades of stone, usually slips of obsidian, upon
either side. These were retained in their place by firmly lashing
the separated wood together, and filling the cavities with some hard
variety of gum.[133] The implement was wielded with both hands, and,
with its sharp serrated edges, constituted a very formidable [p212]
weapon. This notion is favored by the order in which some of the
specimens, near the edges and least disturbed portions of the altar,
were found.
Some spear-points of «obsidian» have been found, which, judging from
the fragments, must have been of large dimensions. The ready fracture
of this mineral, upon exposure to strong heat, has been exceedingly
unfavorable to the recovery entire of any articles composed of it.
This is the more to be regretted, from the fact that it is believed
to be found «in place» only in Mexico and the volcanic regions of the
South-west, and a comparison of the articles found here with those of
the same material obtained from that direction, might serve to throw
some degree of light upon the origin and connections of the race of
the mounds. A further notice will be taken of the mineral when we
come to speak of the minerals and fossils found in the mounds.
[Illustration: Fig. 103.]
ARROW-POINTS.—Arrow-points are abundant throughout the West,
especially in the valleys where the mounds occur; but although
frequently found, they are not plentiful in the mounds themselves.
They are much less numerous than the lance-heads just noticed.
Sketches of a number, exhibiting their predominant forms, are given
in the engraving. It will be noticed that they possess a great
diversity of form. Some are barbed and have a serrated edge quite
as sharp and ragged as the edge of a saw; some are so chipped that
the line of their edges forms a large angle to their planes, as
if to give them a revolving or «tearing» motion; and others are
narrow and pointed, as if particularly designed for penetrating
deeply. If anything were to be gained by it, a classification of
these relics might be attempted. We might designate those having
serrated edges and barbs, as the «war-arrow», intended not only to
penetrate the flesh, but retain their hold and rankle and fester in
the wound; those destitute of this feature, as the «peace-arrow», or
«hunter-arrow».
Many, as has already been remarked, and as will be perceived from
the [p213] engravings, are delicately wrought, and from the richest
materials within the reach of their makers. From one of the mounds in
that, by this time, familiar locality, Mound City, (see page 149,)
were taken a number of beautiful ones of transparent or hyaline
quartz, which, from the brilliant play of colors upon their fractured
surfaces, are real gems. It is not likely that these, and some others
of like delicate material, were used for ordinary purposes, but
rather for display and ornament.[134] From the same mound were also
taken one or two arrow-points of «obsidian».
Arrow-points, differing from each other only in the variety of stone
of which they are composed, are discovered in all quarters of the
globe. They have been found in the Scythian tumuli of Siberia, in the
tombs of Egypt,[135] upon the plains of Greece;[136] and in the rude
monuments of ancient Scandinavia. But whether obtained from Asia,
from Europe, Africa, or America, they are almost identical in form
and workmanship, and might readily be mistaken for the productions
of the same people. Their prevalence seems to mark that stage of
man’s progress which the antiquaries of the north of Europe have
denominated the “stone age,” and which was followed by the “age of
bronze,” and the “age of iron.” The manufacture of these arrow-points
involves no inconsiderable degree of skill, as will be very apparent
to any one who has the curiosity to attempt an imitation from the raw
material. It has hence been inferred that it was anciently an art,
like that of the potter, assigned to a class of armorers or makers
of arrow-heads, whose skill was the result of long experience in the
manufacture.
[Illustration: Fig. 104.]
Arrow and lance heads, and cutting implements of the numerous
varieties of quartz, embracing every shade of color and degree of
transparency, from the dull blue of the ordinary hornstone to the
brilliant opalescence of the chalcedonic varieties, are frequent
in the mounds. Some are worked with great skill from pure, limpid
crystals of quartz, others from crystals of manganesan garnet, and
others still from «obsidian» (the «itzli» of the Mexicans, and
«gallinazo stone» of the Peruvians). It is a singular fact, however,
that few weapons of stone or other materials are discovered in the
sepulchral mounds; most of the remains found with the skeletons are
such evidently as were deemed ornamental, or recognised as badges
of distinction. Some of the altar or sacrificial mounds, on the
other hand, have the deposits within them almost entirely made up
of finished arrow and spear points, intermixed with masses of the
unmanufactured material. From one altar were taken several bushels
of finely worked lance-heads of milky quartz, nearly all of which
had been broken up by the action of fire. (See page 149.) In another
mound, an excavation six feet long and four broad disclosed upwards
of six hundred spear-heads or discs of hornstone, rudely [p214]
blocked out, and the deposit extended indefinitely on every side.
(See page 158.) Some of these are represented in the accompanying
engraving. They are necessarily much reduced. The originals are
about six inches long and four broad, and weigh not far from two
pounds each. Some specimens from this deposit are nearly round,
but most are of the shape of those here figured. We are wholly at
a loss respecting their purposes, unless they were designed to be
worked into the more elaborate implements to which allusion has
been made, and were thus roughly «blocked out» for greater ease of
transportation from the quarries. With these relics, were found
several large nodules of similar material, from which portions had
been chipped off, exposing a nucleus, around which the accretion
seems to have taken place. These nodules are covered to the depth
of half an inch, with a calcario-silicious deposit, white, and of
great hardness. Such nodules are found in the secondary limestone
formations.
Several localities are known from which the material may have been
obtained. One of these, named “Flint Ridge,” exists in the counties
of Muskingum and Licking, in Ohio. It extends for many miles, and
countless pits are to be observed throughout its entire length,
from which the stone was taken. These excavations are often ten or
fourteen feet deep, and occupy acres in extent. It is possible that
the late, as well as the more remote races worked these quarries.
Like the red pipe-stone quarry of the «Coteau des Prairies», this
locality may have been the resort of numerous tribes,—a neutral
ground, where the war-hatchet for the time was buried, and all
rivalries and animosities forgotten.
KNIVES AND OTHER CUTTING INSTRUMENTS.—Knives of flint and obsidian
have been taken from several of the mounds. Some are identical with
those of Mexico, most if not all of which were made of obsidian.
That material, as also some varieties of flint, breaks with a very
clear, conchoidal fracture. With skill and experience in the art,
the mound-builders, as well as the Mexicans, succeeded in striking
off thin, narrow slips, with edges sharp as razors. Clavigero states
that so skilful were the Mexicans in the manufacture of obsidian
knives, that a single workman could produce a hundred per hour.
These answered many of the purposes for which the more delicate
cutting instruments of the present day are used, such as shaving,
and incising in surgical operations, not to mention the part which
they [p215] performed in the bloody observances of the Aztec ritual.
Several knives of this description are represented in the following
engraving, which also exhibits the absolute identity which sometimes
exists between the remains of widely-separated people, and how,
almost as it were by instinct, men hit upon common methods of meeting
their wants.
[Illustration: Fig. 105 Half size.]
No. 1 is of flint from a Scandinavian barrow; No. 2 is of hornstone
from a mound in Ohio; and No. 3 is obsidian from the pyramids of
Teotihuacan in Mexico. Some of these are not less than six inches
in length and three-fourths of an inch in breadth; others are not
more than two inches long, and of exceeding delicacy. Besides these,
and constituting a much larger class, are found cutting implements
chipped with great neatness, so as to produce as clear and smooth
a cutting edge as practicable. In shape they somewhat resemble an
old-fashioned table-knife. Some are composed of the beautiful hyaline
before mentioned, others of obsidian. Some irregular chips of flint
have been found, with one or more sharp edges, which, it is presumed,
were used for like purposes.
[Illustration: Fig. 106.]
[Illustration: Fig. 107.]
There is another variety of cutting instrument which it may not be
out of place to notice here. These consist of hard compact minerals,
worked into a chisel shape. Some have a very sharp, smooth edge,
and form quite a good substitute for metal. Engravings of two, of
full size, are herewith presented. They are formed of very compact
nodules of brown hematite, which have been ground into form and
polished with great labor. They have a submetallic lustre, and very
nearly the specific gravity of iron. A file produces a scarcely
perceptible impression upon their rounded surfaces. Another variety
is occasionally found in [p216] the Eastern States, of which Fig.
107 is an example. They are sometimes composed of slate, and are of
various sizes, often measuring five or six inches in length. They are
very well adapted for flaying animals, and other analogous purposes.
AXES.—The remark made in respect to the occurrence of the
arrow-points, is equally true of the ancient axes. Although abundant
in the valleys occupied by the mound-builders, they are not frequent
in the mounds themselves. Those taken from the tumuli do not,
however, differ materially from others found scattered over the
surface of the earth from the St. Lawrence to Panama and the hills
of Chili. They all have the same general features, and vary only in
their materials and the style of their workmanship. Some of those
found in the mounds and elsewhere at the West, are wrought with great
skill, and from rare and beautiful materials, usually of the granitic
or sienitic series of minerals. Amongst the Mexicans and Peruvians,
axes of obsidian, and of basalt, greenstone, etc., were retained in
common use, long after the discovery of the art of hardening copper.
The form of these relics seems to have been determined entirely by
the manner in which they were designed to be used. Those intended
for deadening trees or as war axes, have grooves for the adjustment
of handles. There are many which are destitute of this feature, and
which were probably designed to be used as chisels or «gouges».
Examples are given of each of these classes.
[Illustration: Fig. 108.]
Fig. 108 is a fine specimen of the ancient axe. It was found within
the large enclosure on Paint creek, noticed on page 58, and is
regarded as a genuine relic of the mound-builders. Its form is almost
identical with that of the forest axe of the present day. It is made
of a very compact greenstone, and measures eight inches in length
by five inches and a half in its greatest breadth, and weighs eight
pounds. The marks of the pointed instrument with which it was chipped
into form, are still discernible, notwithstanding the long use to
which it has evidently been subjected.
The manner in which these instruments are mounted is apparent enough
from their construction, and could hardly be mistaken even though the
explanation were not furnished by the practice of the tribes still
retaining their use.[137] A tough «withe», or green slip of wood
of proper size was bent into the groove and encircled the axe; the
ends were then firmly bound together with ligatures of hide or other
material. [p217] Still further to fasten and render the instrument
firm and immovable in the handle, it was «wedged» on the inner edge,
which usually was slightly hollowed for that purpose.
It is clear, from the weight of many of these axes, that they were
designed to be wielded with both hands. Some weigh not less than
«fourteen» pounds, but most range from six to ten. The average weight
of the ordinary wood-axe of the present day, is about six pounds.
[Illustration: Fig. 109.]
Engravings of a number of axes analogous to that above described,
but less symmetrical in form, are herewith presented, Fig. 109. The
smaller varieties were probably designed for war-axes or hatchets.
They weigh from one to two and three pounds, and frequently have
rounded heads, as if to serve the double purpose of hatchet and club.
Occasionally one is found with a double blade, as shown in No. 1 of
the engraving.
[Illustration: Fig. 110.]
[Illustration: Fig. 111.]
The «Hand-axes» are destitute of grooves, and, as already observed,
seem designed to be used as chisels or gouges. They are more numerous
than the other variety, and are of all sizes, from two inches to a
foot in length. Some, like Fig. 110, are nearly cylindrical; others,
like Fig. 111, are gouge-shaped. Fig. 110 is remarkable as being the
only specimen of this kind of axe recovered from the mounds, under
such circumstances as to establish conclusively that it pertained
to the builders. It is composed of greenstone, and the marks of the
tool, by which it was «pecked» into shape, are distinctly visible
upon it. The subjoined engraving (Fig. 112) presents examples of a
number [p218] of these axes. No. 3 is composed of tough sienite,
is finely worked, and highly polished. No. 4 is of a species of
variegated slate, and was found near Middletown, Connecticut.[138]
Nos. 1 and 2 are miscellaneous examples; both are composed of
greenstone. This form of the stone axe is not peculiar to America.
Numbers, differing only in material, are found in almost all parts
of the globe. Fig. 113 represents two, composed of flint, which
were brought from Denmark, by the late J. F. WOODSIDE, Esq., U. S.
Consul at Copenhagen, and are now in possession of his family, at
Chillicothe, Ohio. They were obtained from a Scandinavian barrow. No.
1 seems to have been simply chipped into shape, and never used; No.
2, on the other hand, is well polished, and has evidently seen much
use. Except in respect to material, they are undistinguishable from
thousands found in the United States.
[Illustration: Fig. 112.]
[Illustration: Fig. 113.]
[Illustration: Fig. 114.]
It will be observed that the various kinds of axes above described,
are imperforate. A few implements have however been discovered, which
are generally called hatchets, and which have holes for the reception
of handles. Examples [p219] are given, Fig. 114. It is clear
nevertheless, both from their form and material, that they were not
designed for use. They may be regarded as having been intended simply
for ornament or display. No. 1 is composed of a beautiful talcose
slate of a greenish brown color, slightly veined with dark lines. It
measures six inches in length, is two inches and a half broad at the
centre, and five inches between the tips.
No. 4 was found in South Carolina, and is composed of a dark
steatite. The others were found in Mississippi, and are for the most
part composed of soft and easily-worked stone.[139]
[Illustration: Fig 115.]
[Illustration: Fig 116.]
[Illustration: Fig 117.]
Fig. 115 is of similar material with No. 1, Fig. 114, is highly
polished, and measures six inches in length. The hole is half an inch
in diameter at one end, but less at the other.[140]
Fig. 116 is an example of a kind of hammer or club-head of stone. It
weighs about two pounds. Articles of this kind are not frequent; and
none have been found in the mounds. It is probable that a withe was
passed around the groove in the middle, and the ends firmly bound
together. By this means the implement might be very efficiently used
as a hammer or war-club. Spherical stones are often found, weighing
from half a pound to two pounds. The manner in which they were
used is, no doubt, correctly explained by Lewis and Clarke: “The
Shoshonee Indians use an instrument which was formerly employed among
the Chippeways, and called by them «pogamoggon». It consists of a
handle, twenty-two inches long, made of wood, covered with leather,
about the size of a whip-handle. At one end is a thong two inches in
length, which is tied to a stone weighing two pounds, enclosed in a
cover of leather. At the other end is a loop of the same material,
which is passed around the wrist to secure the implement, with which
they strike a powerful blow.” It is probable that the pear-shaped
stones represented in the above engraving, Fig. 117, were used in
like manner. Carver describes a weapon, in use by the tribes beyond
the Mississippi river, which consisted of a curiously wrought stone,
enclosed in leather as above, and fastened, like the slung-shot of
the present day, to a thong, a yard [p220] and a half long, which
was also wound around the wrist. These weapons were often used in
battle.
[Illustration: Fig. 118.]
PESTLES.—A large number of implements have been discovered, which
have evidently been used for pounding and reducing maize. Fig. 118
presents examples. These weigh generally not more than four or
five pounds, though some are much heavier. Occasionally they are
elaborately worked, but most are rude. None of these have been found
in the mounds. Similar articles were in common use among the modern
Indians. Rude mortars of various dimensions, composed of stone, were
also frequent.
[Illustration: Fig. 119.]
IMPLEMENTS OF BONE.—Pointed or sharpened bones of the deer and
elk have been obtained from the ancient deposits in the mounds.
Several are here represented, Fig. 119. They are reduced with entire
regularity; and some of them, notwithstanding their decay, evince
that they were originally highly polished. Nos. 1 and 3 were obtained
from a mound in Cincinnati, and are evidently formed from the tibia
of the elk.[141]
No. 2 was taken, together with several others, from a mound near
Chillicothe, (see page 178,) and measures eight inches in length. It
is formed from the ulna of the deer.
[Illustration: Fig. 120.]
Some very delicate awl-shaped instruments have been found in the
mounds, of which the above are full-sized sketches. They have been
burned, and it is [p221] impossible to tell of what description
of bone they are made. They are as compact as ivory. Judging from
the abundance of fragments, a considerable deposit must have been
made where they were found. None were recovered entire; pieces were
nevertheless found three inches in length. Some have round and
tapering, others flat and chisel-shaped points; resembling in this,
as in other respects, the different varieties of awls in use at the
present day. They were probably used for similar purposes as needles
and bodkins.[142]
Many implements made of elk and deer horns, and of the bones of the
buffalo, have been found with the recent deposits in the mounds.
These are all exceedingly rude.
[Illustration: Fig. 121.]
DISCOIDAL STONES.—A few singular discs of stone have been discovered
in the mounds, which seem related to a very numerous class of relics
found scattered over the surface, from the valley of the Ohio to
Peru. Those from the mounds will claim our first attention. Fig. 121,
Numbers 3 and 5, are examples. They were taken, in connection with
numerous other remains, from a mound numbered 1 within the great
enclosure on the North fork of Paint creek. (See Plate X, [p222]
and also page 157). They are simple discs, (cut from plates of
stone,) perfectly circular, but of variable thickness. The largest
measures three inches and three fourths in diameter, by one inch and
one tenth in thickness; the smallest, two and eight tenths, by nine
tenths. They are of all intermediate sizes; a few have their edges
slightly convex, but most are perfectly plane. Those first found by
individuals residing in the vicinity, were called “«weights»,” from
their resemblance to the iron weights in common use. They are made
of a very dense ferruginous stone, of a black or dark brown ground,
thickly interspersed with minute and brilliant specks of yellow mica;
it receives a remarkably high polish, displaying the mica flakes with
great beauty. The material was, not inaptly, termed “«gold stone»”
by the persons who first discovered it. Several delicately carved
articles of this material have been taken from the same locality;
but it is a singular fact, that none have been found except in this
particular mound. Judging from the accounts of others, and the number
of fragments of these discs disclosed upon a full investigation of
the mound, the deposit must have been very considerable; probably not
less than thirty or forty were originally placed there.
It has been suggested that these stones were used in certain games,
analogous to those known to have been practised by the North American
tribes. The perfect polish of the edges of some of them weighs
against this conclusion. They are certainly enigmatical in their
purposes.
The numerous class of discoidal stones already referred to, as being
in some degree related to those above described, are composed of
a large variety of hard materials,—granite, porphyry, greenstone,
jasper, quartz, etc.
They are of all sizes from two to six inches in diameter, and of
variable thickness, seldom, however, less than an inch and a half.
Some have concave sides, often perforated; others are solid or
lenticular in shape, with oblique margins. Nos. 1, 2, 4, and 6,
represent four varieties.
The sketches and accompanying sections will give a good idea of their
character. Nos. 1 and 2 are the predominant forms, with sides more
or less concave, and centre perforated. Many of this kind are marked
with radiating lines, resembling bird tracks, as exhibited in No. 1.
Occasionally both surfaces are thus marked. Some of those possessing
concave sides are imperforate. No. 4 constitutes the simplest form,
and approaches nearest to those found in the mounds; a very few are
observed of the form represented by No. 6.
By far the larger proportion of these relics are worked with great
symmetry, and are well polished; some, however, of manifestly similar
purpose, are quite rude in workmanship and of coarse materials. None
have been discovered in the mounds examined by the authors; and it is
doubtful whether any have been found in them elsewhere, except with
the recent deposits. We may safely set them down as of comparatively
modern origin. It is known that, among the Indian tribes on the
Ohio, and along the Gulf, such stones were in common use, in certain
favorite games. Beyond the Mississippi their use is still retained.
They display considerable skill, but undoubtedly fall within the
capabilities of a very rude people. Their shape is that most easily
obtained by attrition or grinding with other stones. [p223] Adair
describes them, and the game in which they were used, and remarks
that they were “from time immemorial rubbed smooth on the rocks, and
with prodigious labor,” and furthermore were so highly valued, “that
they were kept with the strictest religious care from one generation
to another, and were exempted from being buried with the dead.”
It is a singular fact that similar stones are found in Denmark, and
Molina describes them as numerous in Chili. We may conclude that they
everywhere had much the same use.[143] [p224]
RINGS.—Among the implements maybe classed certain small grooved
rings, beautifully worked from stone and bone. Some are composed of
the micaceous stone, of which the mound discs already described are
made, and are carved with the utmost delicacy, and highly polished.
They measure about two inches and three fourths in diameter, and
the thickness of the periphery is half an inch. They are deeply
grooved upon the outer edge, and are pierced by eight small holes,
at equal distances from each other, all radiating from the centre.
Similar rings, of smaller size, have been found, cut from bone. They
are pierced in the same manner with those above described. It is
suggested that they formed part of a drilling apparatus, something
like the “bow and drill” of the present day. Several of larger
size than those here noticed were found, some years since, in a
mound at Cincinnati. A variety of relics are found which resemble
paint-mullers. Some of these are composed of brown hematite, and are
very symmetrical in figure.
[Illustration: Fig. 122.]
TUBES.—Not among the least remarkable and interesting relics,
obtained from the mounds, are the stone tubes, of which several
examples are given in the subjoined engraving, Fig. 122. They are
all carved from fine-grained materials susceptible of receiving a
polish and of being made ornamental, as well as useful. The finest
specimen yet discovered, and which can scarcely be surpassed in the
delicacy of its workmanship, was found in a mound in the immediate
vicinity of Chillicothe. No. 1 is a greatly reduced sketch. It is
composed of a compact variety of slate; the ground is brownish or
leaden green, interstratified with veins of pure black, of variable
thickness, from a line to the fourth of an inch. These, when worked
obliquely to their planes, are decidedly ornamental. This stone cuts
with great clearness, and receives a fine though not glaring polish.
The tube under notice is thirteen inches long, by one and one tenth
in diameter; one end swells slightly, and the other terminates in
a broad, flattened, triangular «mouth-piece», (so called for lack
of a better designation,) of fine proportions, which is carved with
mathematical precision. It is drilled throughout; the bore is seven
tenths of an inch in diameter at the cylindrical end of the tube, and
retains that [p225] calibre until it reaches the point where the
cylinder subsides into the mouth-piece, when it contracts gradually
to one tenth of an inch at the end. The inner surface of the tube
is perfectly smooth, till within a short distance of the point of
contraction. For the remaining distance the circular striæ, formed by
the drill in boring, are distinctly marked. The mound in which this
relic was found is sepulchral in its character, and the burial had
been made by fire. One end of the tube is somewhat discolored by the
heat to which it was exposed. The carving, in this instance, is very
fine, and much superior to anything of which the Indians of this day
are known to be capable.
No. 2 is a sketch of another tube, also found in one of the
sepulchral mounds near Chillicothe (see page 164). It is made of
different material, less beautiful and more destructible than the one
just described,—a variety of limestone. It measures but six inches
in length by three fourths of an inch in diameter; the bore is half
an inch in diameter. The surface is much decomposed; the spots which
have resisted corrosion are polished to the highest degree. The
inner surface is smooth, and retains a uniform calibre to within a
short distance of the reduced end, where it contracts, exhibiting
the circular striæ before noticed. A qualification of the remark
respecting the calibre is perhaps necessary: at a point one inch
and a half from the smaller end is an offset in the bore. Whether
this is the result of accident or design, it is not undertaken to
say; probably the former, as the feature has not been observed in
any others which have fallen under notice. As these tubes have been
regarded with considerable interest, it is deemed proper to note
every circumstance respecting them, even though not considered of
much importance by the investigators themselves.
[Illustration: Fig. 123.]
Fig. 123 represents a tube of somewhat different character.[144] It
is carved from a dark, compact steatite, and measures ten inches in
length by two inches in diameter at the larger, and one inch and a
third at the smaller end. The bore is proportioned to the diameter,
and is one and one tenth, and six tenths of an inch at the ends,
respectively. Upon one side, as if to serve the double purpose of
handle and ornament, is carved in high relief the figure of an owl,
attached with its back to the tube. This carving is remarkably bold
and spirited, and represents the bird with its claws contracted and
drawn up, and head and beak elevated as if in an [p226] attitude of
defence and defiance. The «action» is very fine, but is imperfectly
conveyed by the engraving. The implement weighs little less than
four pounds. It was found in a mound on the Catawba river, Chester
district, South Carolina.
[Illustration: Fig. 124.]
Fig. 124 is a tube of similar material with that last described.[145]
It is six inches long; its greatest and least diameters being one
inch and a quarter, and one inch and a half respectively, with a
proportionate bore. At a point about three inches from the larger
end, is an oval hole or «stop». It was found while ploughing, near
Marietta, Ohio.
It has been suggested that the last two articles were designed as
wind instruments. It is very certain that the skill of the present
day succeeds in producing very indifferent music from them. Either
the art of playing upon them has sadly deteriorated, or the musical
taste of the makers was not regulated by existing standards. It
has further been suggested that tubes of the character of those
first described were designed as auxiliary to the eye in making
distant observations.[146] If it were deemed necessary to attempt an
explanation of the probable purposes of every relic discovered, a
«conjecture», at least, might be based upon the peculiar mouth-pieces
which many of these tubes possess,—namely, that they were used
as «pipes» for smoking purposes. The furthest advance towards
designating their purposes, which it is here ventured to make, is to
class them amongst implements.[147] [p227]
There is another variety of tubes, which it may not be improper
to notice in this connection, though partaking rather of the
character of ornaments than implements. Fig. 125, No. 1, represents
one of these. It is in the form of a triangular prism, with sides
slightly concave and angles rounded. It is three inches in length
by one and three tenths in diameter at the ends, and is perforated
longitudinally; the bore is half an inch in diameter. It is of
the same variety of stone as the large tube first described, and
of similar workmanship. No. 2 is, however, the prevailing form of
articles of this description. It is a hollow cylinder, a little over
four inches in length, swelling gently from the ends to the centre,
where it measures an inch and a quarter in diameter; calibre, half an
inch; material as above. Both these articles are highly polished. It
is possible that they were worn as amulets, or as simple ornaments.
This notion is favored by the fact, that none have been discovered
which are not made of rare and beautiful stones.
[Illustration: Fig. 125.]
PIPES.—The mound-builders were inveterate smokers, if the great
number of pipes discovered in the mounds be admitted as evidence
of the fact. These constitute not only a numerous but a singularly
interesting class of remains. In their construction, the skill of the
makers seems to have been exhausted. Their general form, which may be
regarded as the «primitive» form of the implement, is well exhibited
in the accompanying sketch, Fig. 126. [p228]
[Illustration: Fig. 126.]
They are always carved from a single piece, and consist of a flat
curved base, of variable length and width, with the bowl rising
from the centre of the convex side. From one of the ends, and
communicating with the hollow of the bowl, is drilled a small hole,
which answers the purpose of a tube; the corresponding opposite
division being left for the manifest purpose of holding the implement
to the mouth. The specimen above represented is finely carved from
a beautiful variety of brown porphyry, granulated with variously
colored materials,—the whole much changed by the action of fire, and
somewhat resembling porcelain. It is intensely hard, and successfully
resists the edge of the finest tempered knife. The length of the
base is five inches, breadth of the same one inch and a quarter. The
bowl is one inch and a quarter high, slightly tapering upwards, but
flaring near the top. The hollow of the bowl is six tenths of an inch
in diameter. The perforation answering to the tube is one sixth of an
inch in diameter, which is about the usual size. This circumstance
places it beyond doubt that the mouth was applied directly to the
implement, without the intervention of a tube of wood or metal. It
will be observed that it is ornamented with cup-shaped holes, an
eighth of an inch broad and about the same depth. Seven of these are
placed in a circle upon each side of the bowl, which has a line of
them extending spirally around it.
[Illustration: Fig. 127.]
Fig. 127 is another pipe of a coarse-grained granite. It was not
found in the mounds, but was turned up by the plough, in the vicinity
of one of the large enclosures on the banks of Paint creek. It is
quite unlike those figured above in shape, and perhaps belonged to a
later race.
Such is the general form of these implements. The largest proportion
of those which have been found in the mounds, however, are of much
more elaborate workmanship. Their character has been briefly noticed
on a previous page. (See page 152.) They are sculptured into singular
devices—figures of the human head, and of various beasts, birds,
and reptiles. These figures are all executed in miniature, but
with a strict fidelity to nature. The attitudes of the animals are
characteristic; their very habits, in some cases, are indicated. Most
are worked in porphyry; and all display a truthfulness, delicacy, and
finish, which we are unprepared to look for, except among the remains
of a people considerably advanced in the arts. Some of them represent
animals peculiar to the lower latitudes. Indeed, so remarkable in
many respects are they regarded, in their bearing upon some of
the more important questions connected with American archæology,
particularly the migrations of the race of the mounds, that their
full consideration is reserved for another place. They will be
noticed at length, in connection with similar remains, under the more
appropriate head of “«Sculptures».”
Besides these varieties of pipes, numerous others are found, most
of which are probably referable to a comparatively recent era. They
differ in style from those found in the mounds, and are for the
greater part composed of steatites and other soft and easily worked
varieties of stone. Some are of large size, and are boldly [p229]
though not in general elegantly sculptured. They will also be
noticed under the same head with those last mentioned.
From the appearance of these relics it is fairly inferable that,
among the mound-builders as among the tribes of North American
Indians, the practice of smoking was very general if not universal.
The conjecture that it was also more or less interwoven with their
civil and religious observances, is not without its support. The use
of tobacco was known to nearly all the American nations, and the
pipe was their grand diplomatist. In making war and in concluding
peace it performed an important part. Their deliberations, domestic
as well as public, were conducted under its influences; and no
treaty was ever made unsignalized by the passage of the calumet.
The transfer of the pipe from the lips of one individual to those
of another was the token of amity and friendship, a gage of honor
with the chivalry of the forest which was seldom violated. In their
religious ceremonies it was also introduced, with various degrees of
solemnity. A substitute for tobacco was sometimes furnished in the
tender bark of the young willow; other substitutes were found among
the Northern tribes in the leaves and roots of various pungent herbs.
The custom extended to Mexico, where however it does not seem to have
been invested with any of those singular conventionalities observed
in the higher latitudes. It prevailed in South America and in the
Caribbean islands. The form of the Indian pipe of North America is
extremely variable, and very much the subject of individual taste.
Some are excessively rude, but most are formed with great labor from
the finest materials within reach. Along the Mississippi and among
the tribes to the westward of that river, the material most valued
for the purpose was, and still is, the red pipe-stone of the «Coteau
des Prairies», a beautiful mineral resembling steatite, easily worked
and capable of a high finish. The spot whence it is obtained, and
which is certainly one of the most interesting mineral localities
of the whole country, is regarded with superstitious veneration by
the Indians. It is esteemed to be under the special protection of
the Great Spirit, and is connected with many of their most singular
traditions. Until very recently it was the common resort of the
tribes, where animosities and rivalries were forgotten, and where the
most embittered foes met each other on terms of amity. In carving
pipes from this material they expended their utmost skill, and we
may regard them as the «chef d’œuvres» of modern Indian art. The
following engraving, Fig. 128, from originals, will exhibit their
predominant form, which it will be observed is radically different
from that of the mound pipes. The larger of the two was once the
favorite pipe of the eloquent KEOKUK, chief of the Sacs and Foxes,
whose name occupies a conspicuous place in the Indian history of the
North-west. These pipes were smoked with long tubes of wood, from
twenty inches to three feet in length, fantastically ornamented with
feathers and beads. [p230]
[Illustration: Fig. 128.]
The sculpture of these articles, which is sometimes attempted in
imitation of the human figure and of various animals, is often
tasteful. But they never display the nice observation, and true,
artistic appreciation and skill exhibited by those of the mounds,
notwithstanding their makers have all the advantages resulting from
steel implements for carving, and from the «suggestions» afforded
by European art. The only fair test of the relative degrees of
skill possessed by the two races would be in a comparison of the
remains of the mounds with the productions of the Indians before the
commencement of European intercourse. A comparison with the works of
the latter however, at any period, would not fail to exhibit in a
striking light the greatly superior skill of the ancient people.
FOOTNOTES:
[133] The Spaniards entertained a strong dread of these weapons.
Their historians tell some wonderful stories of their efficiency, and
affirm that one stroke was sufficient to cut a man through the middle
or decapitate a horse. The form of this sword, which was called
«mahquahuitl» by the Mexicans, is represented in the accompanying
engraving (Fig. 101).
[Illustration: Fig. 101.]
[Illustration: Fig. 102.]
The Pacific islanders possess similar weapons, formed by inserting
rows of shark’s teeth on the opposite sides of a staff or sword
shaped piece of tough wood, and fastening the same with cords of
native grass. One of this kind from the Aleutian Islands is here
engraved (Fig 102).
[134] Lawson, in his account of the Carolina Indians, published in
1709, mentions having seen at an Indian town “very long arrows,
headed with «pieces of glass», which they had broken from bottles.
They were shaped neatly, like the head of a dart, but the way they
did it I can’t tell” (p. 58). It is probable that these arrows were
pointed with obsidian or quartz, which would be very liable to be
mistaken for glass. Fremont («Second Expedition», p. 267) observed
some Indians, of unusually fearless character, on the «Rio de los
Angelos» of Upper California, who possessed arrows “barbed with a
very clear, translucent stone, a species of opal, nearly as hard as a
diamond.”
[135] Wilkinson’s Egypt, vol. iii. p. 261.
[136] Clarke’s Travels, vol. iii p. 22.
[137] LOSKIEL says of the axes of the Delaware Indians: “Their
hatchets are wedges, made of hard stones, six or seven inches long,
sharpened at the edge, and attached to a wooden handle. They are not
used to fell trees, but only to peel them, and kill their enemies”
(p. 54). ADAIR, speaking of the Southern tribes, observes: “They
twisted two or three hickory slips, about two feet long, around the
notched head of the axe, and by means of this simple and obvious
invention they deadened the trees, by cutting through the bark, and
burned them when they became thoroughly dry” (p. 405).
[138] Presented by JOHN HALL, Esq., New York. Nos. 1 and 2 are in the
cabinet of JAMES MCBRIDE, Esq.
[139] In the cabinets of B. L. C. WAILES, Esq., Washington, Miss.;
and of Rev R. MORRIS, Mount Sylvan, in the same State.
[140] In the cabinet of JAMES MCBRIDE, Hamilton, Ohio.
[141] In the cabinet of ERASMUS GEST, Esq., and drawn by H. C.
GROSVENOR of Cincinnati.
[142] “The needles and thread they used formerly (and now at times)
were fish bones, or the horns or bones of deer rubbed sharp,
and deer’s sinews, and a sort of hemp that grows, among them
spontaneously.”—«Adair’s American Indians», p. 6.
Mr. Stevens found a similar implement with the skeleton, in one of
the ancient tombs near Ticul in Yucatan. “It was made of deer’s
horn, about two inches long, sharp at the point, with an eye at the
other end. The Indians of the vicinity still use needles of the same
material.”—«Travels in Yucatan», vol. i. p. 279.
[143] Rev. J. B. Finley (distinguished for his zealous efforts in
christianizing the Indian tribes of Ohio) states that, among the
tribes with which he was acquainted, stones identical with those
above described were much used in a popular game resembling the
modern game of “ten pins.” The form of the stones suggests the manner
in which they were held and thrown, or rather rolled. The concave
sides received the thumb and second finger, the forefinger clasping
the periphery. Adair, in his notice of the Southern Indians, gives
a minute and graphic account of a game somewhat analogous to that
described by Mr. Finley, in which stones of this description were
used. Du Pratz notices the same game, and fully explains the purpose
of the oblique-edged stones, Nos. 4 and 6 of the text. These, when
rolled, would describe a convolute figure. The lines on the stones,
resembling bird-tracks, were probably in some way connected with
“counting” the game.
“The warriors have another favorite game, called «Chungke»; which,
with propriety of language, may be called ‘running hard labor.’ They
have near their state house a square piece of ground well cleaned;
and fine sand is strewed over it, when requisite, to promote a
swifter motion to what they throw along its surface. Only one or
two on a side play at this ancient game. They have a stone about
«two fingers broad at the edge and two spans round»; each party has
a pole about eight feet long, smooth and tapering at each end, the
points flat. They set off abreast of each other, at six yards from
the edge of the playground; then one of them hurls the stone on its
edge, in as direct a line as he can, a considerable distance towards
the middle of the other end of the square; when they have run a few
yards, each darts his pole, anointed with bear’s grease, with a
proper force, as near as he can guess, in proportion to the motion
of the stone, that the end may lie close to the same;—when this is
the case the person counts two of the game, and in proportion to
the nearness of the poles to the mark, one is counted, unless by
measurement both are found to be an equal distance from the stone.
In this manner the players will keep moving most of the day at half
speed, under the violent heat of the sun, staking their silver
ornaments; their nose, finger, and ear rings; their breast, arm, and
wrist plates; and all their wearing apparel, except that which barely
covers their middle. «All the American Indians» are much addicted
to this game, which appears to be a task of stupid drudgery; it
seems, however, to be of early origin, when their forefathers used
diversions as simple as their manners. (The hurling stones they use
at present were, from time immemorial, rubbed smooth on the rocks,
and with prodigious labor; they are kept with the strictest religious
care from one generation to another, and are exempt from being buried
with the dead.) They belong to the town where they are used, and are
carefully preserved.”—«Adair’s History of American Indians», p. 402.
“The warriors practise a diversion which they call the «game of the
pole», at which only two play at a time. Each pole is about eight
feet long, resembling a Roman f, and the game consists in rolling a
flat round stone, about three inches in diameter and one inch thick,
«with the edges somewhat sloping», and throwing the pole in such a
manner that when the stone rests, the pole may be at or near it. Both
antagonists throw their pole at the same time, and he whose pole
is nearest the stone counts one, and has the right of rolling the
stone.”—«Du Pratz», «History of Louisiana», 1720, p. 366.
Mr. Breckenridge (Views of Louisiana, p. 256) mentions a game popular
among the Arikara, (Riccarees,) played with a «ring of stone». Lewis
and Clarke also mention a game common among the Mandans, similar to
the one above described, and which was also played with «rings of
stone». Mr. Catlin, (vol. i. p. 132) both describes and illustrates
the game, which, among the Mandans as well as among the Creeks, was
denominated “Tchung-kee.”
Discoidal stones analogous, if not identical, with these, have been
found in abundance in Chili. “In the plains and upon the mountains,”
says Molina, “are to be seen a great number of flat circular stones,
of five or six inches in diameter, with a hole through the middle.
These stones, which are either granite or porphyry, have doubtless
received this form by artificial means, and I am induced to believe
that they were the clubs or maces of the ancient Chilians, and that
the holes were perforated to receive the handles.”—«Molina», vol i.
p. 56.
[144] In the possession of J. VAN CLEVE, Esq., of Dayton, Ohio.
[145] In the cabinet of Dr. S. P. HILDRETH, Marietta, Ohio.
[146] Several tubes, of very much the same character with those here
referred to, have been found in the vicinity of the Grave creek
mound. Mr. SCHOOLCRAFT describes them as made out of a compact, blue
and white mottled steatite, measuring from eight to twelve inches in
length, by one inch and four tenths in diameter, and having a bore
of four fifths of an inch, diminishing at one end to one fifth of an
inch. Our author observes:
“By placing the eye at the diminished point, the extraneous light
is shut from the pupil, and distant objects more clearly discerned.
The effect is telescopic, and is the same which is known to be
produced by directing the sight towards the heavens from the bottom
of a well,—an object which we now understand to have been secured
by the Aztec and Maya races in their astronomical observations, by
constructing tubular chambers. The quality of the stone, like most of
the magnesian species, is soft enough to be cut with a knife. It is
evident that the circular lines observed in the calibre were produced
by boring. The circular striæ of this process are plainly apparent. I
learned by inquiry, that a quarry or locality of this species of rock
exists on the banks of Grave creek, some four or five miles above the
mound. This establishes the fact, that they were made here and not
brought from a distance. The degree of skill evinced by these curious
instruments is superior to that observed in the pipe-carvings and
other evidences of North American Indian sculpture.”—«Observations
on the Grave creek Mound, Transactions of American Ethnological
Society», vol. i. p. 406.
[147] According to Vanegas, the “medicine men” of the Californian
tribes of Indians, in their operations for the cure of diseases,
sometimes used tubes of stone. The operation in which they were used,
was a kind of cautery.
“One mode was very remarkable, and the good effect it sometimes
produced heightened the reputation of the physician. They applied
to the suffering part of the patient’s body the «chacuaco», a
tube formed out of a very hard black stone; and through this they
sometimes sucked and at other times blew, but both as hard as
they were able, supposing that the disease was either exhaled or
dispersed. Sometimes the tube was filled with «cimarron» or wild
tobacco lighted, and here they either sucked in or blew down the
smoke, according to the physician’s directions, and this powerful
caustic sometimes, without any other remedy, has been known entirely
to remove the disorder.”—«Vanegas’ California», vol. i. p. 97.
[p231]
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