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Passadumkeag, a Red Paint Cemetery, Thirty–Five Years After Moorehead

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 January 2017

Wendell S. Hadlock
Affiliation:
Robert Abbe Museum , Bar Harbor, Me.
Theodore Stern
Affiliation:
University of Pennsylvania , Philadelphia, Pa.

Extract

Present-day knowledge of the Red Paint burial complex in Maine rests chiefly upon the work of Willoughby and of Moorehead, done in the latter part of the last, and the first quarter of the present, century. Without doubt, the most extensive report on the subject is Moorehead's Archaeology of Maine, in which summary accounts of excavations at twelve Red Paint sites were set forth. Unfortunately, certain details pertaining to the burials were obscure. In particular, more data were desirable upon the character of the deposit—whether burial or ceremonial offering—as well as upon the indications of age. With the purpose of securing this information, the authors in June, 1947, undertook limited excavations on the Hathaway farm at Passadumkeag, Maine. Here Moorehead had excavated seventeen graves; without exhausting the possibilities, we were able to uncover seven more.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 1948

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References

Moorehead, W. K. 1913. “The Red-Paint People of Maine.” American Anthropologist, n.s., Vol. 15, pp. 3337. Lancaster, Pa.Google Scholar
Moorehead, W. K. 1922. A Report on the Archaeology of Maine. Andover, Mass.Google Scholar
Smith, Walter B. 1930. “The Lost Red Paint People of Maine.” Bulletin Lafayette National Park Museum, No. 2. Bar Harbor, Me.Google Scholar