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Archaeopedology at the Lake Monroe Outlet Midden (8VO53) The Site Setting Volusia County, FL is bordered on the east by the Atlantic Ocean and the west by the St. Johns River. The landscape is formed from a series of beach ridges and terraces that accumulated tens of thousands of years ago when sea level was higher than it is today. The western part of the county is covered by the deep sandy soils of the DeLand and Crescent City Ridges. Numerous large lakes also occur in the county, mostly on the western sand ridges. The central part of the county is flatter, with low pine and oak forests. East of this are the dunes and beaches of the Atlantic coast. The St. Johns River and its lakes and marshes provide a rich variety of habitats and animal resources that have sustained human populations for over 5000 years. Water from the chain of lakes (including Lake Monroe) that form the upper reaches of the St. Johns flows slowly northward to replenish the lower portion of the river that is, in essence, an extensive estuary. Before deforestation, diking, and ranching by humans began in the early 1900s, all but the northernmost 50 miles of the 200-mile-long river basin was freshwater marshes, swamps, and lakes.
It is on this ancient landscape that Archaic period people came to live ca. 5600 B.P. at the Lake Monroe Outlet Midden. Their short presence on the land has left an indelible signature of their activities. This study of the soils and landscape at the site has two objectives: 1) to compare modern area soils with the soils buried beneath the middens to better understand the environmental conditions and landforms present when the site was first inhabited and, 2) to evaluate the effects of human settlement on the soils in different activity areas to see how much these past inhabitants affected their environment. [Fig. 1] Studying archaeological soils adds a unique perspective to the interpretation of the site, and completes the reconstruction begun by the analyses of plant and animal remains and cultural materials. The soil chemical changes that always accompany human habitation are invisible to the eye, and the physical changes that past settlers may have made are buried beneath the soil we walk on today-hidden away from even the keenest observer. But these changes are a vital part of the site's story and sometimes turn out to be the most direct evidence of site features, layout, and overall size in places like Florida, where the warm climate and abundant rainfall degrade site materials over time.
Here I outline two very intriguing findings-one archaeological and one modern-that illustrate how we use soils studies to understand how humans alter their surroundings through time. Invisible Evidence
The colorful and oddly shaped subsurface horizons in the soils where the lithics workshop was found [Fig. 2] are naturally occurring and not unusual. They formed under the influence of a complex set of factors including ground water fluctuation (wetting and drying cycles), the chemical composition of the microscopic clay coatings on sand grains, and tree-root effects on the chemistry of the localized soils. The gaudy, contorted subhorizons were unexpected and surprising to see, but they were not formed by any unusual or catastrophic disruptions of the soil in that area. The interesting thing about these colorful soils is what is not in them. In fact, the unique finding of this study is the strong contrast between the enriched soils of the general midden areas and the very low levels of all chemical elements throughout the lithics workshop area. Most archaeological soils are enriched in elements like calcium (contributed by the breakdown of shell and bone from food animals) and phosphorus (from the bone and discarded soft tissue of animals). The larger the population that inhabited the site, or the longer they inhabited it, the higher the content of these soil elements. This study found that the lithics workshop was not only located physically apart from general living areas, but that the specialized production of lithic tools was not intermixed with other daily activities such as food preparation or storage. The differences between chemical signatures of the general midden areas and even the outlying units compared with the workshop are extraordinary: there is a kind of 'clean room' effect, as if no one were allowed to drop a single shell or bit of refuse in the vicinity of the workshop. Studies of other Florida Archaic sites have also found a negative correlation between chemical enrichment and lithic artifact counts, but those studies were limited by small test areas and the lack of any middens or other domestic features in the vicinity for comparison with the lithics features. For this reason, the Lake Monroe results are an especially valuable contribution to the effort to quantify the observation that lithic workshops are situated apart from household areas in Florida Archaic sites. Once these differences have been recorded for a number of sites and we can see patterns emerging, we can begin to unravel the "why?". Why was this activity so guarded from day-to-day activities? (Does it have to do with the rarity of lithic resources in Florida?) Is this pattern found at older sites? Younger sites? In cultural traditions outside of Florida?
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