Patterning in Death in a Late Prehistoric Village in Pennsylvania
- 20 January 1971
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Antiquity
- Vol. 36 (1) , 64-76
- https://doi.org/10.2307/278023
Abstract
At the Mohr site, a Shenks Ferry Village on the lower Susquehanna River, 98 burials were excavated. These exhibited various features which are ascribed to cultural demands: location in the village, position of body, grave goods, etc. One of these features was the alignment of the body with the head to the east in such a manner as to suggest that the exact alignment was a function of season of interment. This paper completes the record of the mortuary patterns at this site based upon a description of the total population of the dead. Earlier descriptions, based upon incomplete materials, were presented at the VIIth International Congress of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Sciences in Prague in 1966 (Gruber 1970) and at the American Anthropological Association Meeting in 1966. The position of these burials conforms to scant ethnographic data on the basis of which a putative cultural identification with the Shenks Ferry component and the southeastern Siouan groups is strengthened.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Feast of the Dead Among the Seventeenth Century Algonkians of the Upper Great Lakes1American Anthropologist, 1960
- Siouan Languages in the East1American Anthropologist, 1958
- SIOUAN TRIBES OF THE CAROLINAS AS KNOWN FROM CATAWBA, TUTELO, AND DOCUMENTARY SOURCES1American Anthropologist, 1935