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Plum Island Eagle Sanctuary

The Plum Island Eagle Sanctuary (Plum Island) is a 52-acre island in the Illinois River owned by the Illinois Audubon Society.[1] It was purchased March 24, 2004, to act as a wildlife sanctuary,[1] to protect foraging habitat for wintering bald eagles.[2] It is close to Matthiessen State Park and adjacent to Starved Rock State Park.

History edit

Remains found on Plum Island date to around 2000 BC.[3] The large number of human remains of the island have led to it being called "Massacre Island"; another former name is Wooded Island.[4]

In 1950, the park acquired a state charter to use the island as an airstrip known as Starved Rock Airpark.[5] A cable car shuttled visitors from the park to the island, where they could go on a plane ride for a fee. Severe flooding destroyed the cable car infrastructure in 1970. Plane rides stopped being offered in 1975, with the airstrip finally closing just before 1980.[6]

When purchased in 2002, it had been slated by developers for development of fifty high-priced homes, and fully half of the island would have been bulldozed, destroying both bald eagle habitat and Native American burial sites.[7] Audubon Society and its supporters successfully prevented Plum Island from being developed into a resort area and upscale condominiums. The group of supporters who accomplished this was led by the Illinois Audubon Society with substantial support from Friends of Plum Island, Midwest SOARRING Foundation, Starved Rock Audubon Society, Eagle Nature Foundation, Save Our American Raptors, the Sierra Club of Illinois, and then Illinois Lt. Governor (later Governor) Pat Quinn.

Funds to purchase the island were provided by a grant from the Illinois Clean Energy Community Foundation. The Trust For Public Land also assisted with the purchase by negotiating with the developers and other legal aspects.

After acquiring the island, the Illinois Audubon Society gained the support of Living Lands and Waters, a river cleanup group led by Chad Pregracke. LL&W removed unsightly buildings and structures from the island during a month-long effort, hauling away the debris on their barge.

The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency provided a small grant to help fund removal of debris, old cabins and a boat from the island.[8]

The island is closed to the public, except for restoration activities.[9] The Illinois Audubon Society wanted to save the island for the eagles, to preserve the scenic view from Starved Rock, and to protect the Native American archaeological sites which are there.[9]

Eagle releases edit

The first release of rehabilitated eagles at the sanctuary occurred on November 12, 2011.[10][1] Two juvenile bald eagles were rescued on June 2, 2011, after their nest fell 85 feet in a windstorm at the Mooseheart facility near Batavia, Illinois. They were rescued and raised by the Flint Creek Wildlife Rehabilitation organization and were released back to the wild at Plum Island to blend with the current eagle population.[10][1]

Archaeological site edit

Plum Island Site
 
Locationon the Illinois River in LaSalle County, Illinois
Coordinates41°19′17″N 88°59′25″W / 41.32139°N 88.99028°W / 41.32139; -88.99028
Area3 acres
 
 
Location in Illinois
 
 
Location in United States

The Plum Island Site (Ls-2) is located in the Illinois River near Starved Rock, LaSalle County, Illinois, in the vicinity of the Hotel Plaza site and the Zimmerman site (aka Grand Village of the Illinois). It is a multi-component site representing prehistoric, Protohistoric and early Historic periods, with the main occupation being a late Prehistoric to early Historic component with Upper Mississippian affiliation.[11]

History of archaeological investigations edit

Excavations took place in 1930 under the auspices of the University of Illinois and overseen by Arthur Randolph Kelly. A total of 7,316 artifacts was collected, but the site report was not done until 1964 when Gloria Fenner of the University of Illinois did a Master's Thesis and followed it up with an article in the Illinois Archaeological Survey. Unfortunately, in the interim between excavation and the report, many of the artifacts were misplaced and some stratigraphic information was lost.[11]

Results of data analysis edit

Excavations at the site yielded prehistoric and Historic artifacts, pit features, burials, animal bone and plant remains.[11]

Several prehistoric and Historic components were identified at the site:[11]

  • Prehistoric Early Woodland Component – c. BC 1500 – BC 200; characterized by the earliest pottery made in the Great Lakes region; Marion Thick and Morton Incised
  • Prehistoric Middle Woodland Component – c. BC 200 – AD 500; characterized by Havana Ware and other types
  • Prehistoric to early Historic Upper Mississippian Component – c. AD 1500 – AD 1600s; characterized by Fisher and Langford Ware pottery and European trade goods
 
Features excavated at the Plum Island site

There were no house structures noted at the site. However, the entire site was honeycombed with pit features, totaling 470, some of them overlapping. Three types were recognized: refuse pits, firepits and "unidentified" or uncategorized. Up to fourteen burials were also excavated, with four of them having grave goods.[11]

The refuse pits were thought to have first been storage pits that were converted into refuse pits once their contents began to sour. They contained animal bone, charcoal and artifacts.[11]

The firepits appear to correspond to what has ethnographically been described as "macoupin roasting pits" by the early French explorers Deliette and LaSalle and described from the Zimmerman site.[11][12] The macoupins are apparently tubers from a species of water lily, perhaps the American Lotus (Nelumbo lutea).[12] Tubers of Nelumbo lutea have been recovered from similar roasting pits at the Elam[13] and Schwerdt[14][15] sites on the Kalamazoo River in western Michigan; and tubers of the white water lily (Nymphaea tuberosa) have been recovered from roasting pits at the Griesmer site in northwestern Indiana.[16] This particular cooking technique may have been used prehistorically for several species of similar water lilies, or other similar root plants. No tubers were specifically recovered from the Plum Island site, however. This may be due to the fact that there was no systematic effort by the excavators to collect plant remains.

Human remains edit

Fourteen possible burials were investigated during the 1930 excavation. Several burials were found at depths of less than 1.5 feet (0.46 m), with at least two burials in pits between 3 feet (0.91 m) and 5.25 feet (1.60 m). The original field notes are described by Fenner as "confused". She proposes that 8 burials were excavated. In addition to these burials, Kelly notes the following in his 1930 field notes.

"Grim reminiscences of the destruction of the Illinois Indian town and the massacre of some of the inhabitants on the spot were uncovered in the first year of exploration, in the form of charred wood and unburied skeletons strewn about on the old site of the village just a few inches below the present surface of the plowed field."

Arthur Randolph Kelly, 1930 field notes[17]

No photographs or detailed descriptions of these remains were present in the assemblage of data from the 1930 excavation[11]

Animal remains edit

Remains from a wide variety of species were recovered from the site. The main species present were fish (especially channel catfish and freshwater drum), deer, elk, raccoon, beaver, dog, turtle, snails and fresh water mussels. In addition, bison, mink and bobcat were recovered in smaller amounts.[11] These remains were not modified into tools like the bone tools described in the Artifacts section below, and may be considered food remains or, in the case of the dog, the remains of ceremonial activities. Dog sacrifice and dog meat consumption was observed to have ceremonial and religious implications in early Native American tribes.[18][19]

Plant Remains edit

Plant remains were not systematically collected via the flotation technique as that did not become standard archaeological practice until the 1970s. The excavators did however recover maize in the form of kernels and corncobs. The maize was an earlier type than that found at the Zimmerman site.[11]

Pottery Artifacts edit

 
Fisher Trailed sherd
 
Langford Trailed sherds
 
Langford Trailed rim sherd
 
Langford Collared rim sherd

Archaeologists often find pottery to be a very useful tool in analyzing a prehistoric culture. It is usually very plentiful at a site and the details of manufacture and decoration are very sensitive indicators of time, space and culture.[20]

No whole or completely reconstructable vessels were found at the site. Therefore, the researchers looked primarily at rim sherds and distinctive body sherds to analyze the pottery.

Early Occupations edit

The Early and Middle Woodland periods are represented by a small scattering of pottery at Plum Island. The Early Woodland is represented by Marion Thick, the first pottery ever made in this part of North America, and traces of a few other early types. The Middle Woodland is represented by Havana Ware and Naples Ware, among others.[11] The Havana Culture was thought to be a local variant of the more prominent Middle Woodland cultures such as the Adena and Hopewell cultures of the Mississippi and Ohio River Valleys. Middle Woodland cultures are characterized by their large burial mounds, some of which are still visible today; as well as their distinctive pottery forms, ceremonial practices, agricultural activities, and widespread trade networks.[21]

Upper Mississippian Component edit

A total of 6,989 sherds were collected from the site, of which 6,838 were assigned to the Upper Mississippian component at Plum Island.[11]

Two types of pottery were found within this component; shell tempered Fisher ware and grit-tempered Langford ware (which is grit-tempered).[11]

Fisher Ware was first described at the Fisher Mound site in northeastern Illinois near the mouth of the Illinois River.[22][12][23] It has also been noted at the Anker[24] and Hoxie Farm[25] sites near Chicago, Illinois.

This pottery is characterized by shell tempered, globular vessels with cordmarked surfaces and straight to excurved rim profile. Decoration, when present, consists of trailed or incised decoration forming arches and festoons, often combined with punctates. Notched lips and rim lugs are also common.[11][12][23]

Three types of Fisher ware were reported:[11]

  • Fisher Plain (106 sherds) – characterized by plain finish with no decoration
  • Fisher Cordmarked (160 sherds) – characterized by cordmarked finish with no decoration
  • Fisher Trailed (72 sherds) – characterized by incised and trailed lines, forming arches and festoons

Langford Ware was also first reported at the Fisher site, and has also been found at the nearby Zimmerman and Gentleman Farm sites. It is a grit-tempered ware usually with smoothed surface. Decoration, when present, consists of incised and trailed lines, punctates and finger impressions, combined to form arches and festoons. Rim profile is excurved and sometimes collared. Lugs and loop handles are present on some vessels and nodes are also sometimes present.[11][12][23]

The following types of Langford Ware were reported:[11]

  • Langford Plain (5,519 sherds) – smooth surface with no decoration
  • Langford Trailed (630 sherds) – decorated sherds
  • Langford Collared (44 sherds) – rims with collars present
  • Langford Noded (2 sherds) – vessels with row of nodes around shoulder
  • Langford Plain/Thick (61 sherds) – sherds >0.9mm thick

Other artifacts edit

Non-pottery artifacts recovered from the site included:[11]

  • 98 bone artifacts and pieces of worked bone including bone and antler beamers, counters, scrapers, awls, antler projectile points, a cut and incised fish gill cover, a harpoon, and many other specimens of worked bone that do not fit neatly into a recognizable category.
  • 82 chipped stone artifacts – including projectile points, scrapers (subdivided into variants based on manufacturing technique), knives and drills. Of the projectile points, the most numerous category of tools was the small triangular point, or Madison point.
  • 20 ground stone artifacts – including hammerstones, celts, grinding stones, a plummet, an axe and an adze fragment.
  • 5 European trade goods – including one bead, brass tinkling cones, an iron knife blade and a copper fragment.

The non-pottery artifacts found at an archaeological site can provide useful cultural context as well as a glimpse into the domestic tasks performed at a site; ceremonial or religious activities; recreational activities; and clothing or personal adornment.[26]

Some of the most prominent and diagnostic non-pottery artifacts are presented here in more detail:

Material Description Image Qty Function / use Comments / associations
Chipped stone Small triangular points (aka Madison point)   3 Hunting/fishing/warfare Also known as "arrowheads"; are thought to be arrow-tips for bows-and-arrows. The usage of the bow-and-arrow seems to have greatly increased after AD 1000, probably as a result of increased conflict.[21][27]
Bone Game counter   1 Entertainment function These have been found at Fisher, Huber, Langford and Oneota (especially Grand River focus and Lake Winnebago focus) sites and may have been used in a gambling game.[16] Gambling was noted to be a popular pastime among the early Native American tribes.[19][18]
Bone Harpoon   1 Fishing function Similar harpoons made of bone or antler have been recovered from other Upper Mississippian sites in the Midwest, including Fisher, Fifield and Oak Forest.[22][16][11][28][29]
Bone Beamer   1 Domestic function / de-hairing hides Commonly found at Upper Mississippian sites in northern Illinois.[16]

Significance edit

The Plum Island site reflects a series of occupations going back thousands of years, but the main occupation consists of a late prehistoric Upper Mississippian component. This component apparently lasts until the Protohistoric or early Historic period based on the European trade goods present at the site.[11]

No house structures were present at the site, but the presence of numerous pit features indicates intensive occupation took place, possibly to harvest and roast plants like macoupins in the fire pits. Very little bison bone was found in the food remains, possibly because bison were not present until after AD 1600 in most of Illinois.[11][23]

The trait list of Plum Island was compared to that of other sites in Illinois to gauge regional relationships in material culture. It was found that Plum Island shared 79% of traits with the Heally Component at the Zimmerman site; 75% with the Fisher Period B; and 67% with the Gentleman Farm site. The trait lists combined all attributes including pottery, other artifacts, features, plant remains and animal remains.[11]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Eaglets heading back into the wild Linda Girardi, (Chicago) Sun-Times Media. Publishing instance: The Naperville Sun, October 23, 2011 P17
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-07-13. Retrieved 2011-02-12.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  3. ^ Illinois Archaeological Survey (1 January 1963). "Reports on Illinois prehistory: I." University of Illinois – via Google Books.
  4. ^ Koller, Susan Shaver (2006). LaSalle County. Arcadia Publishing. p. 33. ISBN 0738541052. Retrieved February 21, 2019 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ Niemi, Ryan. "Starved Rock Airpark, IL". TopoQuest. Retrieved February 21, 2019.
  6. ^ Niemi, Ryan. "Abandoned & Little-Known Airfields: Northern Illinois". TopoQuest. Retrieved February 21, 2019.
  7. ^ http://www.illinois.gov/PressReleases/ShowPressRelease.cfm?SubjectID=1&RecNum=2875 Victory Rally to celebrate saving Plum Island from developers March 28, 2004 access date 2011-02-12
  8. ^ ILLINOIS EPA CONTRIBUTES FUNDING TO PLUM ISLAND CLEANUP EFFORTS, Illinois Environmental Protection Agency press release, October 15, 2004
  9. ^ a b "Plum Island Eagle Sanctuary". Illinois Audubon Society. Retrieved February 21, 2019.
  10. ^ a b Eaglets Rescued at Mooseheart Released at Starved Rock, Marie Wilson, (Chicago) Daily Herald. Publishing instance: The Daily Herald, November 13, 2011
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Fenner, Gloria J. (1963). Blumn, Elaine A. (ed.). The Plum Island Site, LaSalle County, Illinois. Urbana, Illinois: Illinois Archaeological Survey, Bulletin No. 4. pp. 1–105.
  12. ^ a b c d e Brown, James A., ed. (1961). The Zimmerman Site: A Report on Excavations at the Grand Village of Kaskaskia. Springfield, Illinois: Illinois State Museum, Report of Investigations No. 9.
  13. ^ DeRoo, Brian (1991). Flotation Data Sampling Strategies in Archaeobotanical Research: An Experiment at the Elam Site (20AE195), Allegan County, Michigan (Masters thesis). Kalamazoo: Western Michigan University. p. 23.
  14. ^ Cremin, William M. (1980). "The Schwerdt Site: A Fifteenth Century Fishing Station on the Lower Kalamazoo River, Southwest Michigan". The Wisconsin Archaeologist. 61: 280–292.
  15. ^ Cremin, William M. (1983). "Late Prehistoric Adaptive Strategies on the Northern Periphery of the Carolinian Biotic Province: A Case Study from Southwest Michigan". Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology. 8: 91–107.
  16. ^ a b c d Faulkner, Charles H. (1972). "The Late Prehistoric Occupation of Northwestern Indiana: A Study of the Upper Mississippi Cultures of the Kankakee Valley". Prehistory Research Series. V (1): 1–222.
  17. ^ Blue Book of the State of Illinois 1931-1932. Chicago: Illinois Secretary of State. 1932. p. 321.
  18. ^ a b Kinietz, W. Vernon (1940). The Indians of the Western Great Lakes 1615-1760 (1991 ed.). Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press.
  19. ^ a b Blair, Emma Helen (1911). The Indian Tribes of the Upper Mississippi Valley and Region of the Great Lakes (1996 ed.). Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press.
  20. ^ Shepard, Anna O. (1954). Ceramics for the Archaeologist. Washington, D.C.: Carnegie Institute of Washington, Publication 609.
  21. ^ a b Mason, Ronald J. (1981). Great Lakes Archaeology. New York, New York: Academic Press, Incl.
  22. ^ a b Griffin, James A. (1943). The Fort Ancient Aspect: Its Cultural and Chronological Position in Mississippi Valley Archaeology (1966 ed.). Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Museum of Anthropology.
  23. ^ a b c d Brown, Margaret Kimball (1975). The Zimmerman Site: Further Excavations at the Grand Village of the Kaskaskia. Springfield, Illinois: Illinois State Museum, Report of Investigations No. 32.
  24. ^ Bluhm, Elaine A.; Liss, Allen (1961). "Chapter IX: The Anker Site". In Bluhm, Elaine A. (ed.). Chicago Area Archaeology. Urbana, Illinois: Illinois Archaeological Survey, Bulletin No. 3.
  25. ^ Herold, Elaine Bluhm; O'Brien, Patricia J.; Wenner, David J. Jr. (1990). Brown, James A.; O'Brien, Patricia J. (eds.). Hoxie Farm and Huber: Two Upper Mississippian Archaeological Sites in Cook County, Illinois, IN At The Edge of Prehistory: Huber Phase Archaeology in the Chicago Area. Kampsville, Illinois: Center for American Archaeology.
  26. ^ Bettarel, Robert Louis; Smith, Hale G. (1973). The Moccasin Bluff Site and the Woodland Cultures of Southwest Michigan. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Museum of Anthropology, Anthropological Papers No. 49.
  27. ^ Lepper, Bradley T. (2005). Ohio Archaeology (4th ed.). Wilmington, Ohio: Orange Frazer Press.
  28. ^ Brown, James A. (1990). Brown, James A.; O'Brien, Patricia J. (eds.). The Oak Forest Site: Investigations into Oneota Subsistence-Settlement in the Cal-Sag Area of Cook County, Illinois, IN At the Edge of Prehistory: Huber Phase Archaeology in the Chicago Area. Kampsville, Illinois: Center for American Archaeology.
  29. ^ Bluhm, Elaine A.; Fenner, Gloria J. (1961). The Oak Forest Site, IN Chicago Area Archaeology. University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois: Illinois Archaeological Survey Bulletin No. 3.

Further reading edit

  • Gloria J. Fenner (1963), Elaine A. Bluhm (ed.), "The Plum Island Site, LaSalle County, Illinois", Reports on Illinois Prehistory I (Illinois Archaeological Survey, Bulletin 4): 1–105

External links edit

41°19′32″N 88°59′49″W / 41.32544°N 88.99698°W / 41.32544; -88.99698

plum, island, eagle, sanctuary, plum, island, acre, island, illinois, river, owned, illinois, audubon, society, purchased, march, 2004, wildlife, sanctuary, protect, foraging, habitat, wintering, bald, eagles, close, matthiessen, state, park, adjacent, starved. The Plum Island Eagle Sanctuary Plum Island is a 52 acre island in the Illinois River owned by the Illinois Audubon Society 1 It was purchased March 24 2004 to act as a wildlife sanctuary 1 to protect foraging habitat for wintering bald eagles 2 It is close to Matthiessen State Park and adjacent to Starved Rock State Park Contents 1 History 2 Eagle releases 3 Archaeological site 3 1 History of archaeological investigations 3 2 Results of data analysis 3 3 Human remains 3 4 Animal remains 3 5 Plant Remains 3 6 Pottery Artifacts 3 6 1 Early Occupations 3 6 2 Upper Mississippian Component 3 6 3 Other artifacts 4 Significance 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory editRemains found on Plum Island date to around 2000 BC 3 The large number of human remains of the island have led to it being called Massacre Island another former name is Wooded Island 4 In 1950 the park acquired a state charter to use the island as an airstrip known as Starved Rock Airpark 5 A cable car shuttled visitors from the park to the island where they could go on a plane ride for a fee Severe flooding destroyed the cable car infrastructure in 1970 Plane rides stopped being offered in 1975 with the airstrip finally closing just before 1980 6 When purchased in 2002 it had been slated by developers for development of fifty high priced homes and fully half of the island would have been bulldozed destroying both bald eagle habitat and Native American burial sites 7 Audubon Society and its supporters successfully prevented Plum Island from being developed into a resort area and upscale condominiums The group of supporters who accomplished this was led by the Illinois Audubon Society with substantial support from Friends of Plum Island Midwest SOARRING Foundation Starved Rock Audubon Society Eagle Nature Foundation Save Our American Raptors the Sierra Club of Illinois and then Illinois Lt Governor later Governor Pat Quinn Funds to purchase the island were provided by a grant from the Illinois Clean Energy Community Foundation The Trust For Public Land also assisted with the purchase by negotiating with the developers and other legal aspects After acquiring the island the Illinois Audubon Society gained the support of Living Lands and Waters a river cleanup group led by Chad Pregracke LL amp W removed unsightly buildings and structures from the island during a month long effort hauling away the debris on their barge The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency provided a small grant to help fund removal of debris old cabins and a boat from the island 8 The island is closed to the public except for restoration activities 9 The Illinois Audubon Society wanted to save the island for the eagles to preserve the scenic view from Starved Rock and to protect the Native American archaeological sites which are there 9 Eagle releases editThe first release of rehabilitated eagles at the sanctuary occurred on November 12 2011 10 1 Two juvenile bald eagles were rescued on June 2 2011 after their nest fell 85 feet in a windstorm at the Mooseheart facility near Batavia Illinois They were rescued and raised by the Flint Creek Wildlife Rehabilitation organization and were released back to the wild at Plum Island to blend with the current eagle population 10 1 Archaeological site editPlum Island Site nbsp Locationon the Illinois River in LaSalle County IllinoisCoordinates41 19 17 N 88 59 25 W 41 32139 N 88 99028 W 41 32139 88 99028Area3 acres nbsp nbsp Location in IllinoisShow map of Illinois nbsp nbsp Location in United StatesShow map of the United States The Plum Island Site Ls 2 is located in the Illinois River near Starved Rock LaSalle County Illinois in the vicinity of the Hotel Plaza site and the Zimmerman site aka Grand Village of the Illinois It is a multi component site representing prehistoric Protohistoric and early Historic periods with the main occupation being a late Prehistoric to early Historic component with Upper Mississippian affiliation 11 History of archaeological investigations edit Excavations took place in 1930 under the auspices of the University of Illinois and overseen by Arthur Randolph Kelly A total of 7 316 artifacts was collected but the site report was not done until 1964 when Gloria Fenner of the University of Illinois did a Master s Thesis and followed it up with an article in the Illinois Archaeological Survey Unfortunately in the interim between excavation and the report many of the artifacts were misplaced and some stratigraphic information was lost 11 Results of data analysis edit Excavations at the site yielded prehistoric and Historic artifacts pit features burials animal bone and plant remains 11 Several prehistoric and Historic components were identified at the site 11 Prehistoric Early Woodland Component c BC 1500 BC 200 characterized by the earliest pottery made in the Great Lakes region Marion Thick and Morton Incised Prehistoric Middle Woodland Component c BC 200 AD 500 characterized by Havana Ware and other types Prehistoric to early Historic Upper Mississippian Component c AD 1500 AD 1600s characterized by Fisher and Langford Ware pottery and European trade goods nbsp Features excavated at the Plum Island site There were no house structures noted at the site However the entire site was honeycombed with pit features totaling 470 some of them overlapping Three types were recognized refuse pits firepits and unidentified or uncategorized Up to fourteen burials were also excavated with four of them having grave goods 11 The refuse pits were thought to have first been storage pits that were converted into refuse pits once their contents began to sour They contained animal bone charcoal and artifacts 11 The firepits appear to correspond to what has ethnographically been described as macoupin roasting pits by the early French explorers Deliette and LaSalle and described from the Zimmerman site 11 12 The macoupins are apparently tubers from a species of water lily perhaps the American Lotus Nelumbo lutea 12 Tubers of Nelumbo lutea have been recovered from similar roasting pits at the Elam 13 and Schwerdt 14 15 sites on the Kalamazoo River in western Michigan and tubers of the white water lily Nymphaea tuberosa have been recovered from roasting pits at the Griesmer site in northwestern Indiana 16 This particular cooking technique may have been used prehistorically for several species of similar water lilies or other similar root plants No tubers were specifically recovered from the Plum Island site however This may be due to the fact that there was no systematic effort by the excavators to collect plant remains Human remains edit Fourteen possible burials were investigated during the 1930 excavation Several burials were found at depths of less than 1 5 feet 0 46 m with at least two burials in pits between 3 feet 0 91 m and 5 25 feet 1 60 m The original field notes are described by Fenner as confused She proposes that 8 burials were excavated In addition to these burials Kelly notes the following in his 1930 field notes Grim reminiscences of the destruction of the Illinois Indian town and the massacre of some of the inhabitants on the spot were uncovered in the first year of exploration in the form of charred wood and unburied skeletons strewn about on the old site of the village just a few inches below the present surface of the plowed field Arthur Randolph Kelly 1930 field notes 17 No photographs or detailed descriptions of these remains were present in the assemblage of data from the 1930 excavation 11 Animal remains edit Remains from a wide variety of species were recovered from the site The main species present were fish especially channel catfish and freshwater drum deer elk raccoon beaver dog turtle snails and fresh water mussels In addition bison mink and bobcat were recovered in smaller amounts 11 These remains were not modified into tools like the bone tools described in the Artifacts section below and may be considered food remains or in the case of the dog the remains of ceremonial activities Dog sacrifice and dog meat consumption was observed to have ceremonial and religious implications in early Native American tribes 18 19 Plant Remains edit Plant remains were not systematically collected via the flotation technique as that did not become standard archaeological practice until the 1970s The excavators did however recover maize in the form of kernels and corncobs The maize was an earlier type than that found at the Zimmerman site 11 Pottery Artifacts edit nbsp Fisher Trailed sherd nbsp Langford Trailed sherds nbsp Langford Trailed rim sherd nbsp Langford Collared rim sherd Archaeologists often find pottery to be a very useful tool in analyzing a prehistoric culture It is usually very plentiful at a site and the details of manufacture and decoration are very sensitive indicators of time space and culture 20 No whole or completely reconstructable vessels were found at the site Therefore the researchers looked primarily at rim sherds and distinctive body sherds to analyze the pottery Early Occupations edit The Early and Middle Woodland periods are represented by a small scattering of pottery at Plum Island The Early Woodland is represented by Marion Thick the first pottery ever made in this part of North America and traces of a few other early types The Middle Woodland is represented by Havana Ware and Naples Ware among others 11 The Havana Culture was thought to be a local variant of the more prominent Middle Woodland cultures such as the Adena and Hopewell cultures of the Mississippi and Ohio River Valleys Middle Woodland cultures are characterized by their large burial mounds some of which are still visible today as well as their distinctive pottery forms ceremonial practices agricultural activities and widespread trade networks 21 Upper Mississippian Component edit A total of 6 989 sherds were collected from the site of which 6 838 were assigned to the Upper Mississippian component at Plum Island 11 Two types of pottery were found within this component shell tempered Fisher ware and grit tempered Langford ware which is grit tempered 11 Fisher Ware was first described at the Fisher Mound site in northeastern Illinois near the mouth of the Illinois River 22 12 23 It has also been noted at the Anker 24 and Hoxie Farm 25 sites near Chicago Illinois This pottery is characterized by shell tempered globular vessels with cordmarked surfaces and straight to excurved rim profile Decoration when present consists of trailed or incised decoration forming arches and festoons often combined with punctates Notched lips and rim lugs are also common 11 12 23 Three types of Fisher ware were reported 11 Fisher Plain 106 sherds characterized by plain finish with no decoration Fisher Cordmarked 160 sherds characterized by cordmarked finish with no decoration Fisher Trailed 72 sherds characterized by incised and trailed lines forming arches and festoons Langford Ware was also first reported at the Fisher site and has also been found at the nearby Zimmerman and Gentleman Farm sites It is a grit tempered ware usually with smoothed surface Decoration when present consists of incised and trailed lines punctates and finger impressions combined to form arches and festoons Rim profile is excurved and sometimes collared Lugs and loop handles are present on some vessels and nodes are also sometimes present 11 12 23 The following types of Langford Ware were reported 11 Langford Plain 5 519 sherds smooth surface with no decoration Langford Trailed 630 sherds decorated sherds Langford Collared 44 sherds rims with collars present Langford Noded 2 sherds vessels with row of nodes around shoulder Langford Plain Thick 61 sherds sherds gt 0 9mm thick Other artifacts edit Non pottery artifacts recovered from the site included 11 98 bone artifacts and pieces of worked bone including bone and antler beamers counters scrapers awls antler projectile points a cut and incised fish gill cover a harpoon and many other specimens of worked bone that do not fit neatly into a recognizable category 82 chipped stone artifacts including projectile points scrapers subdivided into variants based on manufacturing technique knives and drills Of the projectile points the most numerous category of tools was the small triangular point or Madison point 20 ground stone artifacts including hammerstones celts grinding stones a plummet an axe and an adze fragment 5 European trade goods including one bead brass tinkling cones an iron knife blade and a copper fragment The non pottery artifacts found at an archaeological site can provide useful cultural context as well as a glimpse into the domestic tasks performed at a site ceremonial or religious activities recreational activities and clothing or personal adornment 26 Some of the most prominent and diagnostic non pottery artifacts are presented here in more detail Material Description Image Qty Function use Comments associations Chipped stone Small triangular points aka Madison point nbsp 3 Hunting fishing warfare Also known as arrowheads are thought to be arrow tips for bows and arrows The usage of the bow and arrow seems to have greatly increased after AD 1000 probably as a result of increased conflict 21 27 Bone Game counter nbsp 1 Entertainment function These have been found at Fisher Huber Langford and Oneota especially Grand River focus and Lake Winnebago focus sites and may have been used in a gambling game 16 Gambling was noted to be a popular pastime among the early Native American tribes 19 18 Bone Harpoon nbsp 1 Fishing function Similar harpoons made of bone or antler have been recovered from other Upper Mississippian sites in the Midwest including Fisher Fifield and Oak Forest 22 16 11 28 29 Bone Beamer nbsp 1 Domestic function de hairing hides Commonly found at Upper Mississippian sites in northern Illinois 16 Significance editThe Plum Island site reflects a series of occupations going back thousands of years but the main occupation consists of a late prehistoric Upper Mississippian component This component apparently lasts until the Protohistoric or early Historic period based on the European trade goods present at the site 11 No house structures were present at the site but the presence of numerous pit features indicates intensive occupation took place possibly to harvest and roast plants like macoupins in the fire pits Very little bison bone was found in the food remains possibly because bison were not present until after AD 1600 in most of Illinois 11 23 The trait list of Plum Island was compared to that of other sites in Illinois to gauge regional relationships in material culture It was found that Plum Island shared 79 of traits with the Heally Component at the Zimmerman site 75 with the Fisher Period B and 67 with the Gentleman Farm site The trait lists combined all attributes including pottery other artifacts features plant remains and animal remains 11 References edit a b c d Eaglets heading back into the wild Linda Girardi Chicago Sun Times Media Publishing instance The Naperville Sun October 23 2011 P17 Eagle Habitat on Illinois River Protected Archived from the original on 2007 07 13 Retrieved 2011 02 12 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Illinois Archaeological Survey 1 January 1963 Reports on Illinois prehistory I University of Illinois via Google Books Koller Susan Shaver 2006 LaSalle County Arcadia Publishing p 33 ISBN 0738541052 Retrieved February 21 2019 via Google Books Niemi Ryan Starved Rock Airpark IL TopoQuest Retrieved February 21 2019 Niemi Ryan Abandoned amp Little Known Airfields Northern Illinois TopoQuest Retrieved February 21 2019 http www illinois gov PressReleases ShowPressRelease cfm SubjectID 1 amp RecNum 2875 Victory Rally to celebrate saving Plum Island from developers March 28 2004 access date 2011 02 12 ILLINOIS EPA CONTRIBUTES FUNDING TO PLUM ISLAND CLEANUP EFFORTS Illinois Environmental Protection Agency press release October 15 2004 a b Plum Island Eagle Sanctuary Illinois Audubon Society Retrieved February 21 2019 a b Eaglets Rescued at Mooseheart Released at Starved Rock Marie Wilson Chicago Daily Herald Publishing instance The Daily Herald November 13 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Fenner Gloria J 1963 Blumn Elaine A ed The Plum Island Site LaSalle County Illinois Urbana Illinois Illinois Archaeological Survey Bulletin No 4 pp 1 105 a b c d e Brown James A ed 1961 The Zimmerman Site A Report on Excavations at the Grand Village of Kaskaskia Springfield Illinois Illinois State Museum Report of Investigations No 9 DeRoo Brian 1991 Flotation Data Sampling Strategies in Archaeobotanical Research An Experiment at the Elam Site 20AE195 Allegan County Michigan Masters thesis Kalamazoo Western Michigan University p 23 Cremin William M 1980 The Schwerdt Site A Fifteenth Century Fishing Station on the Lower Kalamazoo River Southwest Michigan The Wisconsin Archaeologist 61 280 292 Cremin William M 1983 Late Prehistoric Adaptive Strategies on the Northern Periphery of the Carolinian Biotic Province A Case Study from Southwest Michigan Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 8 91 107 a b c d Faulkner Charles H 1972 The Late Prehistoric Occupation of Northwestern Indiana A Study of the Upper Mississippi Cultures of the Kankakee Valley Prehistory Research Series V 1 1 222 Blue Book of the State of Illinois 1931 1932 Chicago Illinois Secretary of State 1932 p 321 a b Kinietz W Vernon 1940 The Indians of the Western Great Lakes 1615 1760 1991 ed Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Press a b Blair Emma Helen 1911 The Indian Tribes of the Upper Mississippi Valley and Region of the Great Lakes 1996 ed Lincoln Nebraska University of Nebraska Press Shepard Anna O 1954 Ceramics for the Archaeologist Washington D C Carnegie Institute of Washington Publication 609 a b Mason Ronald J 1981 Great Lakes Archaeology New York New York Academic Press Incl a b Griffin James A 1943 The Fort Ancient Aspect Its Cultural and Chronological Position in Mississippi Valley Archaeology 1966 ed Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Museum of Anthropology a b c d Brown Margaret Kimball 1975 The Zimmerman Site Further Excavations at the Grand Village of the Kaskaskia Springfield Illinois Illinois State Museum Report of Investigations No 32 Bluhm Elaine A Liss Allen 1961 Chapter IX The Anker Site In Bluhm Elaine A ed Chicago Area Archaeology Urbana Illinois Illinois Archaeological Survey Bulletin No 3 Herold Elaine Bluhm O Brien Patricia J Wenner David J Jr 1990 Brown James A O Brien Patricia J eds Hoxie Farm and Huber Two Upper Mississippian Archaeological Sites in Cook County Illinois IN At The Edge of Prehistory Huber Phase Archaeology in the Chicago Area Kampsville Illinois Center for American Archaeology Bettarel Robert Louis Smith Hale G 1973 The Moccasin Bluff Site and the Woodland Cultures of Southwest Michigan Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Museum of Anthropology Anthropological Papers No 49 Lepper Bradley T 2005 Ohio Archaeology 4th ed Wilmington Ohio Orange Frazer Press Brown James A 1990 Brown James A O Brien Patricia J eds The Oak Forest Site Investigations into Oneota Subsistence Settlement in the Cal Sag Area of Cook County Illinois IN At the Edge of Prehistory Huber Phase Archaeology in the Chicago Area Kampsville Illinois Center for American Archaeology Bluhm Elaine A Fenner Gloria J 1961 The Oak Forest Site IN Chicago Area Archaeology University of Illinois Urbana Illinois Illinois Archaeological Survey Bulletin No 3 Further reading editGloria J Fenner 1963 Elaine A Bluhm ed The Plum Island Site LaSalle County Illinois Reports on Illinois Prehistory I Illinois Archaeological Survey Bulletin 4 1 105External links editIllinois Audubon Society http www illinoisaudubon org LANDCONSERVATION PlumIsland html 41 19 32 N 88 59 49 W 41 32544 N 88 99698 W 41 32544 88 99698 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Plum Island Eagle Sanctuary amp oldid 1216030982, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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