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Southern Ovate type bannerstone
Title:
Southern Ovate type bannerstone
Date:
6000 - 1000 BCE
Culture:
Native American
Period:
Archaic (Native American)
Category:
archaeology
Type:
bannerstone
Subject:
bannerstones
Materials:
Plaster cast of an original diorite stone
Dimensions:
12.6 x 10.6 cm
Current site:
Washington, DC, Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History
Description:
This is a cast of a now lost bannerstone originally excavated along with seven other bannerstones by A. E. Douglass in 1871. Published in “A Find of Ceremonial Axes in a Florida Mound,” The American Antiquarian (1882): 100-109; and in Bruce John Piatek, “The Tomoka Mound Complex in Northeastern Florida,” Southeastern Archaeology Winter (1994) 109-118. All eight bannerstones were loaned to the NMNH on December 4th 1881 and retuned to Douglass on March 13th, 1882. Only three of the eight casts were entered into the NMNH collection. Florida is written on the cast that is chipped in a few places revealing the plaster beneath the painted surface. Diorite is written in the manuscript. This bannerstone is very similar to AMNH D/142. The diameter of the perforation of this stone is smaller and there is no dark brown band 1.6 cm from the edge, a detail the cast makers would most likely have included had this been a cast of D/142.
Rights:
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License. Images may be downloaded and used freely for teaching and personal use. Include the credit line “© Anna Blume, 2019, Courtesy of the National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution” along with the object’s Catalog Number. Publishing of images is permitted with additional permission from the NMNH. For additional publishing questions, contact bannerstone@fitnyc.edu
Additional views:
A61058
Identifier:
A61058d1
Contributor:
Anna Blume
Collection:
FIT Bannerstone Project
Record created:
Nov. 8, 2019
Last modified:
Dec. 16, 2019
Collection Memberships
Collection | Visible |
---|---|
FIT Bannerstone Project | yes |
©2019 Fashion Institute of Technology | Innovative Technology and Digital Production (ITDP) & Gladys Marcus Library | All Rights Reserved.
FITDIL is based on Madison Digital Image Database (MDID3) and hosted by vrcHost.
FITDIL is based on Madison Digital Image Database (MDID3) and hosted by vrcHost.