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- W24735368 abstract "Evidence suggests that fiber-tempered pottery from the Ocmulgee Big Bend of the interior Coastal Plain in Georgia was technologically distinctive since it was used for directheat as opposed to indirect-heat cooking. It is proposed here that early pottery, accompanied by soapstone vessels, was adopted by people living in the interior Coastal Plain, away from areas of previous pottery concentrations, as the result of a shift in trading alliances coinciding with the growth of trading networks during the Late Archaic. Editor's Note: It is with sadness and regret that I report to our readers that Dr. Waggoner passed away on September 23, 2009, at the age of 38, as we were finalizing this issue of the journal. His close colleagues, John Chamblee (University of Georgia), Victor Thompson (Ohio State University), and Tom Pluckhahn (University of South Rorida), share with us the following synopsis of a promising career cut tragically short Jamie was a 1997 graduate of the History program at Georgia College (now Georgia College and State University). He finished his M.S. degree program at Horida State University in 2002, and completed his doctoral degree this year at the University of Florida under the direction of Ken Sassaman. His extensive fieldwork experience in Georgia included field schools under the direction of Mark Williams, assisting Jim Hatch with the excavations at the Marshall Site in the Oconee Valley, and co-directing surveys, excavations and collector surveys in the Chickasawhatchee and Ichawaynochaway Creek basins, where he recorded over 300 sites and greatly enhanced our understanding of Archaic period human exploitation of upland southeastern U.S. ecosystems. Jamie was also an infectiously cheerful and optimistic colleague and a generous and loyal friend. Over the years, he volunteered his time, energy, and talent working repeatedly with each of us: with Pluckhahn at Kolomoki, with Thompson on Sapelo Island and in Veracruz, Mexico, and with Chamblee in the Chickasawhatchee Swamp. He also participated in field projects on chinampas outside of Mexico City and on Bronze Age sites in Hungary. Jamie was also an avid long-distance cyclist, mountain-biker, and a talented craftsman. In his professional life, Jamie exemplified a commitment to local archaeology; however, he always strived to place his research within the broader scope of anthropology. In his personal life, Jamie represented the joyousness and collegiality for which we all strive. He will be greatly missed by his extensive community of colleagues, friends, and family. Fiber-tempered pottery was first used by the Late Archaic inhabitants of the Ocmulgee Big Bend region (Figure 1) in south-central Georgia roughly 3,500 years ago. Its relatively late appearance in the Ocmulgee region is noteworthy considering its close proximity to the cultural range of earlier Stallings, St. Simons, Thorn's Creek, and Orange fiber-tempered wares (Elliott and Sassaman 1995; Snow 1977). Recent findings also suggest that fiber-tempered pottery from the Ocmulgee Big Bend was distinctive technologically since it was used for direct- as opposed to indirect-heat cooking (Waggoner 2006). Based on stylistic and technological differences with other fiber-tempered pottery forms, I propose that early pottery, accompanied by soapstone vessels, was adopted by people living in the interior Coastal Plain, away from areas of earlier pottery concentrations, as the result of a shift in trading alliances with groups in the Piedmont. This shift was a likely consequence of constricting band territorial ranges and the expansion of long-distance trade during the Late Archaic. In this setting, trading alliances assumed an important role in maintaining intergroup relationships (Jefferies 1996, 1997; Sassaman et al. 1988). Participation in these alliances brought with it increasing external influences and ultimately resulted in the adoption of fibertempered pottery and soapstone vessels in areas where they had not been extensively used, such as the Ocmulgee Big Bend. …" @default.
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- W24735368 date "2009-12-01" @default.
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- W24735368 title "Fiber-Tempered Pottery, Soapstone Vessels, and Shifting Alliances in the Interior Coastal Plain of the Late Archaic Southeast" @default.
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