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Maritime Archaic information


The Maritime Archaic is a North American cultural complex of the Late Archaic along the coast of Newfoundland, the Canadian Maritimes and northern New England. The Maritime Archaic began in approximately 7000 BC and lasted until approximately 3500 BC, corresponding with the arrival of the Paleo-Eskimo groups who may have outcompeted the Maritime Archaic for resources[citation needed]. The culture consisted of sea-mammal hunters in the subarctic who used wooden boats. Maritime Archaic sites have been found as far south as Maine and as far north as Labrador. Their settlements included longhouses, and boat-topped temporary or seasonal houses. They engaged in long-distance trade, as shown by white chert from northern Labrador being found as far south as Maine.

The Maritime Archaic is one cultural complex among several of the Archaic stage for North American peoples. It had been long postulated that the most likely direct descendants of the Maritime Archaic culture were the Beothuk of Newfoundland. The latter, through susceptibility to Eurasian diseases, conflict with neighboring native groups,[1] and malnourishment after European persecution pushed them inland and away from the fish and marine mammals that had been a staple of their diet, succumbed to erosion of their population base, which was small to begin with, and disappeared in the 19th century as a distinct tribe.[2]

Archaeogenetic research in 2017 established, however, that the Maritime Archaic people had nothing genetically in common with the Inuit, nor with the Beothuk, who later inhabited the same area after the climatic conditions changed.[2] A study published in Current Biology compared the mitochondrial DNA of 74 individuals, 19 Beothuk, 53 Maritime Archaic, and two Paleo-Eskimo, and found that these populations were not at all related.[3]

Another significant Maritime Archaic find are the "Red Ochre Culture" burials throughout the Northeast United States (their attribution to MA is not generally accepted). They may represent the last phases of the Maritime Archaic, as they contain significant finds of white chert artifacts common to other Maritime Archaic sites, but may also represent a distinct people. This issue is currently debated among scholars.

If the hypothesis of the Red Ochre as the last state of the Maritime Archaic period is accepted, then the latter is best known from a mortuary site in Newfoundland at Port au Choix. This site revealed over 100 graves embellished with red ochre. The graves contained many elaborate artifacts, including barbed bone points; daggers of ivory, antler, or bone; toggling harpoons; shell-beaded clothing; and a burial suit made from more than 200 skins of the now-extinct great auk. These finds indicated a stratified society with trade and some level of social complexity.[4]

  1. ^ Marshall, Ingeborg (1997). History and Ethnography of the Beothuk. Canada: McGill-Queen's University Press. pp. 42–60. ISBN 9780773513907.
  2. ^ a b Semeniuk, Ivan (12 October 2017). "DNA deepens mystery of Newfoundland's lost Beothuk people". The Globe and Mail.
  3. ^ Duggan, Ana T.; Harris, Alison J. T.; Marciniak, Stephanie; Marshall, Ingeborg; Kuch, Melanie; Kitchen, Andrew; Renaud, Gabriel; Southon, John; Fuller, Ben; Young, Janet; Fiedel, Stuart; Golding, G. Brian; Grimes, Vaughan; Poinar, Hendrik (2017-10-23). "Genetic Discontinuity between the Maritime Archaic and Beothuk Populations in Newfoundland, Canada". Current Biology. 27 (20): 3149–3156.e11. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2017.08.053. ISSN 0960-9822.
  4. ^ Tuck, James A. (1994). Ancient people of Port au Choix : the excavation of an archaic indian cemetery in Newfoundland. Institute of Social and Economic Research, Memorial University of Newfoundland. ISBN 0919666124. OCLC 475709472.

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Maritime Archaic

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The Maritime Archaic is a North American cultural complex of the Late Archaic along the coast of Newfoundland, the Canadian Maritimes and northern New...

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Newfoundland and Labrador

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000 years ago. The Maritime Archaic period is best known from a mortuary site in Newfoundland at Port au Choix. The Maritime Archaic peoples were gradually...

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Great auk

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American cultures, both as a food source and as a symbolic item. Many Maritime Archaic people were buried with great auk bones. One burial discovered included...

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Prehistory of Newfoundland and Labrador

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northern Labrador southward around 4000 years ago, reducing the range of Maritime Archaic Indians. Possibility as a result of large scale die-off, return migration...

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Prehistory of the Canadian Maritimes

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tents remain, Maritime Archaic totems and religious amulets have been found, sourced from the sea. By 3500 years ago, Maritime Archaic people and technology...

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Red Paint People

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Atlantic Canada regions of North America, probably a subset of the Maritime Archaic cultural complex. They were named after their burials, which used large...

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Indigenous peoples in Canada

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with advanced long spears at about this time. The Maritime Archaic is one group of North America's Archaic culture of sea-mammal hunters in the subarctic...

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Beothuk

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JSTOR. Austin, S.J. (1984). "Maritime Archaic and Recent Indian evidence from Cape Cove Beach, Newfoundland". Maritime Archaic and Recent Indian Evidence...

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The Maritimes

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history journal covering Atlantic Canada Maritime Film Classification Board Maritime Quebec Maritime Archaic "Population and dwelling counts: Canada,...

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Ingalik Innu Inuit Iñupiat Karankawa Kawésqar Koyukon Lakota Makah Maritime Archaic Menominee Navajo (until the sixteenth century with the introduction...

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Tumulus

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as an early example of the burial traditions characteristic of the Maritime Archaic Community. Similar sites are located throughout this region, although...

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Iroquoian languages

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Glades Hohokam Hopewell List of Hopewell sites La Jolla Las Palmas Maritime Archaic Mississippian List of Mississippian sites Mogollon Monongahela Old...

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Twillingate

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inhabit the area were the Maritime Archaic, who occupied the area 3,500 years ago in roughly 1500 BC. The Maritime Archaic people were later supplanted...

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Port au Choix Archaeological Site

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variety of native people. Maritime Archaic Indians were the first people to occupy the island of Newfoundland. A Maritime Archaic Indian cemetery dates as...

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Orca

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"qwe'lhol'mechen" which means "our relations under the waves". The Maritime Archaic people of Newfoundland also had great respect for orcas, as evidenced...

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Cliff Palace

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Glades Hohokam Hopewell List of Hopewell sites La Jolla Las Palmas Maritime Archaic Mississippian List of Mississippian sites Mogollon Monongahela Old...

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Siouan languages

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Glades Hohokam Hopewell List of Hopewell sites La Jolla Las Palmas Maritime Archaic Mississippian List of Mississippian sites Mogollon Monongahela Old...

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Mayaimi

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Glades Hohokam Hopewell List of Hopewell sites La Jolla Las Palmas Maritime Archaic Mississippian List of Mississippian sites Mogollon Monongahela Old...

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Ochre

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also used yellow ochre to colour their hair. It was also used by the Maritime Archaic as evidenced by its discovery in the graves of over 100 individuals...

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Archaic Southwest

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smaller painted images, carved and painted in rocks, believed to be of archaic American Indian origin, were found in the early 20th century about 1.5...

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