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Further Comments on Simple-Stamped Shell-Tempered Pottery*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 January 2017

Margaret C. Blaker*
Affiliation:
United States National Museum, Washington, D.C.

Extract

Harrington has called attention (American Antiquity, Vol. 13, No. 3, pp. 251-52, 1948) to pottery from Roanoke Island having shell temper and a simple-stamped surface, presumably a heretofore unknown combination. It may consequently be of some interest to note further the occurrence of such a type from a mixed Colonial and Indian midden at what is thought to have been the site of a Colonial trading post at Kecoughtan, near Hampton, Virginia (Joseph B. and Alvin W. Brittingham, Sr., The First Trading Post at Kicotan [Kecoughtan], Hampton, Virginia, Hampton, 1947). In 1945 this site, threatened by rapidly expanding housing developments in the area, was partially excavated by the Brittinghams, aided by a grant from the Mariner's Museum, Newport News, Virginia. The material recovered from the site has since been donated to the United States National Museum.

Type
Facts and Comments
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 1952

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Footnotes

*

Published by permission of the Secretary, Smithsonian Institution.

References

* Published by permission of the Secretary, Smithsonian Institution.