Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hunter-gatherers stopped here

- LAURINDA JOENKS

It was the end of the Ice Age, some 10,500 years ago, when groups of hunters and gatherers stopped in what would become Fayettevil­le. These early people came to quarry materials to make stone tools, says Pritam Chowdhury, the project field director.

Archaeolog­ists from Flat Earth Archeology in Cabot excavated from October to March a site which soon will be covered by Rupple Road. They will speak about the project to the members of the Ko-ko-ci Chapter of the Arkansas Archeologi­cal Society at

7 p.m. May 8 in the Arkansas Archeologi­cal Survey building in Fayettevil­le.

“We did not find much evidence that it was a long-term habitat, such as buildings or hearths,” Chowdhury says. “It was a short-term camp. They came to quarry the local ‘chert’ gravels and cobbles available at the site.”

The site was low in the valley along Hamestring Creek, close to the flood plain which often changed the course of the stream.

During that time period in history, the area was experienci­ng major fluctuatio­ns in climate — from extreme heat to extreme cold, heavy rains to drought, Chowdhury says. “Things were probably harsh on the people because things were changing.” The artifacts recovered in Fayettevil­le generally date back to the Middle to Late Archaic period, 6,000 to 1,000 years ago, Chowdhury says. But they also recovered some early 20th century pieces — like nails and glassware — that probably were “trash” from agricultur­al activities on the site in the 1930s. Most of the artifacts recovered have not been cataloged, Chowdhury says. He estimated the 25 or so archaeolog­ists and technician­s collected “tens of thousands” of pieces from about a quarter acre of land. All will be curated by the Arkansas Archeologi­cal Survey in Fayettevil­le.

“I think we got the majority of them,” Chowdhury continued. “It’s impossible to expect to get 100 percent of them.”

He says they did collect enough artifacts to answer a lot of their research

questions. “The core conclusion was that the area was very attractive for hunter-gatherers for over 10,000 years. It was a source for stone tool resources and a short-term camp,” Chowdhury says. “I think we found some important informatio­n for the people of Fayettevil­le.

“There were so many exciting finds, each one so special,” adds Chowdhury, who says he still feels excited and humbled when he’s holding something that hasn’t been held for so long.

He spoke of a point developed by the Calf Creek culture, whose people traveled around the Ozarks and surroundin­g regions approximat­ely 7,500 to 4,000 years ago. “They had a unique way of making stone points with a deep inset notch,” he says. “No other group made a flint knap like that in North America.”

And one piece of charcoal submitted for accelerate­d mass spectromet­er dating was shown to be 3,180 years old, plus or minus 30 years, Chowdhury says. He hopes other pieces can be submitted and returned from different eras.

Archaeolog­ists also hope bone pieces recovered can reveal what these earliest Americans ate.

The archaeolog­ists found artifacts as deep as 5 feet below the ground surface, but these probably weren’t where they were

left, says creek and were created the Chowdhury the found churned as deeper flooding the in land root the artifacts says. of subsoil, cracks dried. the He When decided the city to of expand Fayettevil­le Rupple Road, funding from the Arkansas Department of Transporta­tion required archeologi­cal and environmen­tal studies before the project was finalized. In 2014, a field shovel test revealed a large archeologi­cal deposit. Test excavation­s in 2015 revealed the sight was intact and significan­t. When it was determined the road could not be

moved, the full excavation was planned, Chowdhury explains.

 ?? Courtesy photo ?? When the city of Fayettevil­le decided to expand Rupple Road, initial tests revealed a significan­t archeologi­cal site. Flat Earth Archeologi­sts worked from October to March to fully excavate about a quarter mile of land along Hamestring Creek.
Courtesy photo When the city of Fayettevil­le decided to expand Rupple Road, initial tests revealed a significan­t archeologi­cal site. Flat Earth Archeologi­sts worked from October to March to fully excavate about a quarter mile of land along Hamestring Creek.
 ?? Courtesy photo ?? Archaeolog­ists work at an excavation site in Fayettevil­le, where artifacts from the late Ice Age were uncovered. Early conclusion­s reveal that people of hunter-gatherer cultures came to the site to quarry resources for stone tools.
Courtesy photo Archaeolog­ists work at an excavation site in Fayettevil­le, where artifacts from the late Ice Age were uncovered. Early conclusion­s reveal that people of hunter-gatherer cultures came to the site to quarry resources for stone tools.
 ?? Courtesy photo ?? Archeologi­sts recovered “tens of thousands” of artifacts during a recent excavation in Fayettevil­le, the bulk of which date back to the Middle to Late Archaic period, 6,000 to 1,000 years ago. Hunter-gatherers came to the area to quarry resources for...
Courtesy photo Archeologi­sts recovered “tens of thousands” of artifacts during a recent excavation in Fayettevil­le, the bulk of which date back to the Middle to Late Archaic period, 6,000 to 1,000 years ago. Hunter-gatherers came to the area to quarry resources for...

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