The ancient people of the Hopewell culture
The ancient people of the Hopewell culture
Columbus (OH) Dispatch
Monday, June 23, 2014
Hopewell excavation near Chillicothe seeks evidence of a ‘woodhenge’
By Mary Beth Lane The Columbus Dispatch
CHILLICOTHE, Ohio — The ancient people of the Hopewell culture who built earthwork mounds in Ohio 1,600 to 2,000 years ago continue to give up their secrets.
The latest might be a “woodhenge,” a circular enclosure of wooden posts. Imagine Stonehenge, but with timber.
National Park Service archaeologists who are excavating a field at Hopewell Culture National Historical Park near Chillicothe believe they have found evidence of such a wooden-post circle.
It would have been built by the same civilization that constructed the earthwork mounds near Chillicothe, in Heath and Newark, and near Lebanon in southwestern Ohio.
More testing and analysis remain to be done before they can be certain. But the archaeologists believe that the stains of darker soil they are discovering in intervals several feet beneath a field are evidence of wood — long since rotted into the earth — that once made up the circular enclosure.
“I am very confident,” said park archaeologist Bret Ruby, who is leading the team excavating an area known as the Great Circle, “that those represent wooden posts.”
The excavation is taking place as Ohio leaders await word on whether the multilocation Hopewell Ceremonial Earthworks will win designation as a World Heritage site.
Recognition by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization would boost the profile of the Ohio earthworks, help to preserve and protect them and increase tourism, proponents say.
By some estimates, the current number of 35,000 visitors annually to the Hopewell Culture National Historical Park could increase to 10 times that if the Ohio earthwork collection is listed as a World Heritage site, said park Superintendent Dean Alexander.
Leading advocates for the designation include two former Ohio governors and their wives — Bob and Hope Taft and Ted and Frances Strickland — and professionals from the Ohio History Connection and the National Park Service. The group is to hold a community briefing in Chillicothe on July 1 to discuss the site nomination.
It is a lengthy undertaking, and a decision is not expected soon.
Meanwhile, Ruby leads a team that has been working since May 19 to excavate the Great Circle at the Hopewell Mound Group west of Chillicothe.
The Hopewell Mound Group is among five earthwork parks that make up the Hopewell Culture National Historical Park.
The Great Circle, which measures 375 feet in diameter, was identified as an area of archaeological interest by magnetic testing conducted several years ago. The testing showed “ anomalies,” or soil disturbances, that Ruby suspects are the remains of wooden posts. The dig is the next step in determining whether they are.
“Nobody has ever sought to figure out what this Great Circle was used for, when it was built. We knew it was here, but no one had done any excavation,” Ruby said.
“We are trying to tell a broader story about the Hopewell, what they might have been engaged in here and their daily life.”
Monday, June 23, 2014
Hopewell excavation near Chillicothe seeks evidence of a ‘woodhenge’
By Mary Beth Lane The Columbus Dispatch
CHILLICOTHE, Ohio — The ancient people of the Hopewell culture who built earthwork mounds in Ohio 1,600 to 2,000 years ago continue to give up their secrets.
The latest might be a “woodhenge,” a circular enclosure of wooden posts. Imagine Stonehenge, but with timber.
National Park Service archaeologists who are excavating a field at Hopewell Culture National Historical Park near Chillicothe believe they have found evidence of such a wooden-post circle.
It would have been built by the same civilization that constructed the earthwork mounds near Chillicothe, in Heath and Newark, and near Lebanon in southwestern Ohio.
More testing and analysis remain to be done before they can be certain. But the archaeologists believe that the stains of darker soil they are discovering in intervals several feet beneath a field are evidence of wood — long since rotted into the earth — that once made up the circular enclosure.
“I am very confident,” said park archaeologist Bret Ruby, who is leading the team excavating an area known as the Great Circle, “that those represent wooden posts.”
The excavation is taking place as Ohio leaders await word on whether the multilocation Hopewell Ceremonial Earthworks will win designation as a World Heritage site.
Recognition by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization would boost the profile of the Ohio earthworks, help to preserve and protect them and increase tourism, proponents say.
By some estimates, the current number of 35,000 visitors annually to the Hopewell Culture National Historical Park could increase to 10 times that if the Ohio earthwork collection is listed as a World Heritage site, said park Superintendent Dean Alexander.
Leading advocates for the designation include two former Ohio governors and their wives — Bob and Hope Taft and Ted and Frances Strickland — and professionals from the Ohio History Connection and the National Park Service. The group is to hold a community briefing in Chillicothe on July 1 to discuss the site nomination.
It is a lengthy undertaking, and a decision is not expected soon.
Meanwhile, Ruby leads a team that has been working since May 19 to excavate the Great Circle at the Hopewell Mound Group west of Chillicothe.
The Hopewell Mound Group is among five earthwork parks that make up the Hopewell Culture National Historical Park.
The Great Circle, which measures 375 feet in diameter, was identified as an area of archaeological interest by magnetic testing conducted several years ago. The testing showed “ anomalies,” or soil disturbances, that Ruby suspects are the remains of wooden posts. The dig is the next step in determining whether they are.
“Nobody has ever sought to figure out what this Great Circle was used for, when it was built. We knew it was here, but no one had done any excavation,” Ruby said.
“We are trying to tell a broader story about the Hopewell, what they might have been engaged in here and their daily life.”
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