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Minguannan
Defining Attributes
Minguannan is a Late Woodland ware, characterized
by sand, quartz, or grit temper, cord-marked or fabric-impressed
exterior surfaces, and broad line, incised direct cord and
pseudo cord decorations. Defined types include Minguannan
Plain, Minguannan Compound Decorated, Minguannan Incised,
and Minguannan Corded.
Chronology
Stratigraphic sequence dating indicates
that Minguannan dates from ca. A.D. 1200 – A.D. 1650 and is
contemporary with Shenks Ferry and Townsend wares in Delaware.
Distribution
Minguannan is found throughout northern
Delaware, southeastern Pennsylvania, and the Piedmont and
Coastal Plain region of northern Maryland at the head of the
Chesapeake Bay.
Description
Paste/Temper
The paste is variable and the temper consists of crushed grit,
sand or quartz. No comprehensive descriptions of the paste
are found in the published literature.
Surface Treatment
Exterior surfaces are commonly smoothed, but smoothed-over
cord-marked, and smoothed-over fabric-impression examples
have been found. Interior surfaces are smoothed.
Decoration
Many Minguannan vessels show some form of decoration, and
four distinct types have been identified. Custer (1984:149)
notes that decorations found on the Minguannan vessels are
similar to, but slightly more complex than, Townsend designs.
All decorations appear on the exterior below the lip of the
rim.
Minguannan Plain has no decoration other
than cord-wrapped stick impressions on the lip. Minguannan
Incised is predominantly decorated with broad-line incising
and occasional narrow-line incising. Griffith and Custer (1985:11)
note six variations based on decoration:
1. Discrete horizontal and oblique lines;
2. Horizontal bands surmounting single, discrete lines;
3. Horizontal bands surmounting any combination of two or
more discrete lines of any type;
4. Horizontal bands surmounting complex geometric shapes (zig-zags,
squares, or triangles);
5. Square, horizontal, oblique, or vertical lines;
6. Horizontal bands with overlying embellishments.
Minguannan Corded decorations consist of
pseudo cord-impressions and to a lesser extent direct cord
impressions. Designs range from direct cord-impressed bands
to complex geometric designs such as squares, triangles, and
zigzags. Minguannan Compound Decorated designs are made with
either incised lines or cord-impressions in horizontal bands
that surmount any combination of two or more discrete lines.
Morphology
Minguannan ware is coil-constructed with paddle malleation.
Vessel shape is conoidal with perpendicular, everted, or inverted
rims. Vessel wall thickness ranges from 4.5 mm – 9 mm.
Defined in the
Literature
The name Minguannan comes from the Minguannan site (36CH3)
located in Southern Chester County, Pennsylvania, that was
first excavated by Elwood Wilkins (1978) and the Archaeological
Society of Delaware. Griffith and Custer (1985) later refined
the definition of Minguannan based on decoration. Griffith
also notes that design motifs used to decorate Minguannan
vessels are remarkably similar to those used on Rappahannock
Incised vessels in Delaware. Minguannan pottery has been identified
on several Maryland sites in the upper reaches of the Chesapeake
Bay, in Cecil and Harford Counties, but is not a major ware
in this area.
Type Site
Minguannan (36CH3)
Radiocarbon Dates
None in Maryland.
References
Custer 1984;
Griffith
and Custer 1985; Wilkins
1978
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