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Dr. Randolph Daniel shows a repeatedly sharpened spear point
ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE PUTS ECU
An archaeological site near Greenville and beside a little known
tributary of the Tar River is producing a hot trail in an East
Carolina University researcher's hunt for the first North Carolinians.
The location, known as the Barber Creek Site, was discovered
about 20 years ago, but has sat idle until late this spring when
an the ECU Archaeology Summer Field School began excavations.
Dr. Randolph Daniel Jr., an ECU assistant professor of anthropology,
calls it a rare "stratified site," perhaps the first
one of its kind in the eastern part of the state, that has already
produced evidence of human occupation dating back to 9,000 years
ago.
He said he knows of only two other stratified sites in the state
-- both in the piedmont area.
Daniel is directing the field school team of about a dozen graduate
and undergraduate students. Over the past three weeks, the students
have cleared the area and begun to dig square pits into the earth.
Each shovel of dirt is carefully sifted for artifacts.
"What we've found indicates that there have been two major
occupations here," said Daniel. They occurred in the early
Woodland Period of 3,000 years ago and in the early Archaic Period
of 9,000 years ago.
Near the tops of the freshly dug pits there is about a foot of
soil darkened by roots and decaying vegetation. At about 12-inches
below the surface the students have recovered numerous pieces
of pottery, animal bone and stone tools going back 3,000 years.
Digging deeper into the pits -- two feet and more -- and carefully
sifting through yellow sand they have turned up stone tools that
are much older.
Daniel believes the projectile points and stone scrapers found
at the deeper levels are thousands of years old. One spear point,
recovered at the site, shows evidence of having been repeatedly
sharpened and had possibly reached a stage where it had outlived
its usefulness.
The older stones were of a kind that occur naturally in the Piedmont
region of the state rather than in eastern North Carolina. A
scraper found in the pit may have come from as far away as Morrow
Mountain near Albemarle in Stanley County.
"It indicates that there was movement of people during these
periods," said Daniel. He said the Barber Creek Site was
an intensive operation or there were repeated visits by hunters
and gatherers.
It is important and valuable today because it is an area that
has never been plowed for agriculture or used for construction.
The archaeological materials are embedded in layers of undisturbed
earth that can be literally measured in time.
Located east of Greenville on the Tar River's south side, the
property is owned by the Greenville Utilities Commission. The
utilities department has been cooperative and supportive with
the search project.
Daniel said additional research at the location might provide
useful information for geologists trying to understand more about
major weather occurrences and flooding.
The heavy rains that followed Hurricane Floyd in 1999 flooded
the entire property. At the site where the archaeology team is
working, the water was as much as nine feet above the surface
and well above the normal flood plain.
"If sand is indicative of floods, the site might tell geologists
some things about flooding on the Tar River," said Daniel.
He said that the written records go back only about 100 years,
but the layers of sand in the pits go back thousands of years. They might hold information that could determine whether last
year's flood could be called a "100-year flood," a "500-
year flood" or an even rarer occurrence.
Over the next couple of week, Daniel and his team plan to sift
through at least five additional pits for artifacts and clues
about the early people. It's possible, he said, that the site
contains artifacts as old as 12,000 years.
"There is old dirt here and there is the potential to find
the earliest North Carolinians," he said.
gat/6-9-00 Contact: Dr. Randy Daniel, ECU Archaeology Research Laboratory, 252 328-6905 or 328-1075. His E-mail address is danieli@mail.ecu.edu.
Publication Photos Taken at the Site
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