No Stone Unturned: Lithic Resource Use in South Florida
No Stone Unturned: Lithic Resource Use in South Florida
No Stone Unturned: Lithic Resource Use in South Florida
Robert J. Austin
Alliance for Weedon Island Archaeological Research and Education, Inc. (AWIARE)
knappable raw materials.1 But exposed in stream beds and washed up on beaches are
limestone, dolostone, sandstone, and Pleistocene fossils, not to mention chert artifacts that
also got washed up or were left behind at ancestral sites on land. Native peoples exploited all
of these for a range of uses, from the mundane to the ritualistic. 2 Some of these materials
were fashioned into identifiable artifacts, but the vast majority were lightly used or display use-
related wear patterns that are difficult to see without magnification.3 Many display no visible
suggestive of intentional collection for some purpose. Examples include small pebbles and
waterworn rocks, ferrous rocks and concretions, pieces of coral, amorphous fragments of
sandstone or limestone, “tubes” or cylinders of limestone and coral, and fossils.4 These items
are often ignored or selectively collected by archaeologists and yet they are common at sites in
south Florida. Their potential uses can be inferred by use-wear analysis, historical accounts,
The ethnohistoric iterature is replete with references to small pebbles, fossil bones, and
unusual or colorful stones used by native peoples as talismans, charm stones, medicine stones,
or, in the case of pebbles,5 functional components of rattles or slings. In his Indians of the
Southeastern United States, John Swanton mentions the use of pebbles as pottery smoothers,
gaming stones, and counters (Swanton 1946:243, 549, 551-552), noting that a good smoothing
stone was treated with great care (Swanton 1946:549). Cabeza de Vaca’s chronicle of the 1528
Narvaez expedition mentions the use of slings by natives in the Pensacola and Mobile area
(Favata and Fernandez 1993:52; cf. Bandelier 1905:48). He also relates being asked to heal sick
1
natives. When he refused, he was told that even “the stones and other things that the fields
produce have powers” (Adorno and Pautz 2003:93). Since the Spanish were such great and
powerful men, surely they had greater powers than the rocks and could heal their sick.
6Adrienne Mayor, in her excellent book, Fossil Legends of the First Americans (2005),
documents knowledge of and use of fossil bones and shells by Native Americans throughout
North America. Fossils were considered powerful medicine used in rites and ceremonies, and
7Scattered throughout C.B. Moore’s reports on the many, many burial mounds he
excavated in Florida are references to waterworn pebbles, bits of unworked quartz, sandstone,
limestone, coral, and chert, “masses” of pebbles, shells, and fossil bones (in addition to sharks
teeth), fossilized wood, “smoothing stones,” and abraders or hones. These are sometimes
described as being near or in immediate association with burials. Occasionally they were found
Some specific examples include the Green Point Mound were 44 waterworn pebbles
were found together that Moore suggested were sling stones. Also in the mound, and situated
between two burials, were bits of sandstone, two rectangular pieces of fossilized wood, a
sandstone hone, fragments of chert, and a piece of shelly limestone resembling a deer antler
tine (Moore 1902:251). At the Yent Mound he recovered a turtle shell rattle containing
flattened bits of chert in association with a burial (1902:269). And from a Mound near
Anderson Point “bits of rock, pebble hammers, smoothing stones, broken bones, four bits of
Fulgar [shell], a pebble with a circular space worn in the side, and numerous pebbles” were
found together in a single deposit (1902:160). In an aside, Moore remarks that small pebbles,
2
round or cylindrical in shape and “seemingly too small for use as pebble hammers,” often are
found in mounds “lying together as though at one time deposited within a receptacle”
(1902:160-161).
The fact that these items were found together and in close association with human
interments is highly suggestive of intentional collection and deposition even if we don’t know
8Turning to south Florida, Karl Steinen (1982) reported several ground stone artifacts
from Fort Center -- hones, grinding stones, abraders – but my reanalysis of the site’s lithic
materials found many other stone items that were not reported or were only briefly mentioned
(Austin 1997, 2010). These include quartz pebbles,9 modified and unmodified pieces of
sandstone and limestone, a fragment of a fossil mammoth tooth (lower right), 10and this
11Limestone and sandstone fragments and flattened pebbles that may have been used
for grinding, abrading, and smoothing have also been identified at the Boca Raton Inlet Midden
(Endonino et al. 2009), Perico Island (Austin et al. 2018), Estero Island (Austin 2007), 8HN696
(SEARCH 2016), and Mt. Elizabeth (Austin 2008a). When identifying use wear on sandstone and
limestone, the experimental work of Jenny Adams (2014) has been crucial. 12Briefly, wear
resulting from abrasion and surface fatigue is the most common on artifacts I have analyzed.
These result in alteration of the surface topography of hard, granular stone. The loosened
grains become abrasive agents creating scratches and gouges on the tool’s contact surface.
Continued movement between the two surfaces causes grain surfaces to collapse and become
crushed resulting in cracks, pits, and step fractures that create an appearance similar to frosted
3
glass. Finally, extensive movement and pressure results in rounding and flattening of
constituent grains. In extreme cases the grains may become level with the surrounding
interstitial matrix. Surface polish may also be visible on stones that have been used as pottery
Five pieces of limestone and sandstone that I identified as possible abraders and
grinding stones based on use wear were analyzed by Brian Kooyman from the University of
Calgary. All five contained either starch grains or plant phytoliths and two also contain non-
human hair (Theresa Schober, personal communication, 2018). This specimen had starch grains
embedded in its surface. These results are preliminary and additional analysis to identify
Cutting and scraping tools are sometimes made of fossil bone, micritic limestone, and
hard dolostone. 13At the Cutler Ridge site, a fairly substantial assemblage of non-chert artifacts
and flaking debris was identified (Austin 2008b; Dunbar 1988; Masson 1987). These are made
primarily from limestone and include celts, grinding stones, scrapers, cores, and flaking debris.
Several hafted bifaces and scrapers are made from micritic limestone, a hard, microcrystalline
sedimentary rock that visually resembles chert and can fracture conchoidally but will react to
dilute HCL identifying it as an unsilicified carbonate rock. Hard pieces of dolomite can be
similarly worked. While both materials flake relatively easily, they don’t hold an edge for very
long and would be considered inferior tool-stones if silicified material was available. 14In
addition to Cutler Ridge, flakes of micritic limestone and hard dolostone have been recovered
from the Pineland site (Austin 2013), Fort Center (Austin 1997), the Wedgworth Midden (Austin
2014), Perico Island (Austin et al. 2018), and the Brickell Point Midden (Austin 2004).
4
Fossil bones, including artifacts and waste flakes, are relatively common at south Florida
sites, particularly on the southwest coast. Waste flakes are often misidentified as chert or, if
identified as fossil bone, put in the faunal category. 15At Pineland, I identified 46 pieces of
unmodified fossil bone in the lithic collection, but Rob Patton (2013), who analyzed the faunal
collection, identified an additional 8 flakes and 4 very well-made artifacts. Flakes and cores of
fossil bone have also been identified at Perico Island and Fort Center, and this beautiful
pendant of fossil bone on the right is from the Yat Kitischee site on Tampa Bay.
Fossil bone is less than ideal as a tool stone. It is very hard and brittle, which makes
these artifacts all the more amazing to me. 16My own experiments in flaking fossil bone show
that it can be done relatively easily, but it is wasteful in that a lot of unusable, angular waste is
produced, hinge and step-terminated scarring are typical, and cores quickly become exhausted.
Like unsilicified limestone, it was an ancillary material, used only when better material was
unavailable.
17
I want to turn now to Big Mound Key, a Manasota, Weeden Island, and Safety Harbor
shellworks located in southwest Florida near Charlotte Harbour. I analyzed a large collection of
lithics collected by George Luer and his team during several years of survey and excavation
(Austin 2016; Luer 2007, 2014). Fortunately, all stone material was collected, whether it was
considered modified or not, providing a robust and relatively unbiased sample. Big Mound Key
is important because it is completely anthropogenic with geological coring showing that it rests
on a base of sand, mud, and shell (Upchurch et al. 1992). Non-chert stone is not part of the
natural geological substrate and consequently all stone contained in the site’s shell mounds,
middens, and pit features was collected by humans from materials washed up on the island,
5
from mainland beaches, rivers, or streams, or they were acquired through some type of
exchange. Big Mound Key thus serves as an important case study in the procurement, use, and
18Among the 1225 pieces of stone, limestone and sandstone are the most abundant,
followed by chert, fossil bone, and ferrous concretions. Limestone and isolated deposits of
sandstone are locally available within the Tamiami, Fort Thompson, and Caloosahatchee
formations with known outcrops along Alligator Creek, Shell Creek (DuBar 1958, 1962; Puri and
Vernon 1964) and the pre-channelized Caloosahatchee River (Heilprin 1887). Fossil bone and
sharks teeth are commonly found along southwest Florida beaches as well as in the Peace
River, which cuts through the Bone Valley Formation, well known for its marine and vertebrate
fossils (McFadden 1997). Ferrous concretions result from the reduction and oxidation of iron
compounds in acidic soils after saturation with water and subsequent drying (Grunwald n.d.;
Vasilas et al. 2010). They may also be precipitated in shell middens, although this is less
Chert constitutes only about 3% of the assemblage, which is no surprise given the
distance to the nearest chert outcrops in Tampa Bay and the Middle Peace River Valley. Most
Only 139 specimens were identified as modified or possibly modified, or about 11%.
This includes all but one of the 42 pieces of chert. There were also 188 pieces of fire-cracked
19Chert was used in tasks requiring a sharp cutting edge that could be refurbished when
it became dull through resharpening -- projectile points, flake knives and scrapers, and
6
perforating tools. Chert also was used in hammering tasks. 20 Fossil bone was used primarily to
produce flakes suitable for cutting or scraping and occasionally for net mesh gauges or pressure
flakers. Limestone and sandstone were used for tasks for which shell and chert were not
suited, specifically, 21plummets or sinkers, anchors, 22grinding and abrading tools and
23hammers. 24Waste debris – flakes and cores – of chert, fossil bone, and limestone – also was
common.
25Unmodified pieces of stone may have been collected and stockpiled for future use as
abraders, anchors, weights, cooking and heating stones, or to help support structural elements.
The various water rounded rocks and fossils, unusual pieces of stone, coral, and small pebbles
may have been collected as curios, personal charmstones, or to be used as powerful medicine
26There is a reasonable likelihood that the ferrous oxide concretions, and perhaps
stones with ferrous oxide surface accumulations, were purposefully gathered and processed for
red pigment. Experiments demonstrate that these materials can be processed easily and made
into a fine powder, i.e., into ochre. 27Ceramic sherds with ochre on their interior surfaces have
been found at Bayshore Homes, Perico Island, and Big Mound Key. I hope to be able to use
instrumental analyses to test these residues and compare the results to samples of ochre
prepared from local ferrous rocks as well as ochre from outside of Florida to test this idea.
The importance of stone to the inhabitants of Big Mound Key exceeds that of utilitarian
function, however. When one considers the various behaviors that can be inferred from
artifacts, the raw materials used to make them, and their functions, a myriad of relationships
7
emerges: 28knowledge of the natural landscape; the modes of transportation necessary to
travel to and from source areas; the political relationships and alliances that provided access to
non-local resources and allowed direct procurement or exchange to occur; the use of stone to
procure, manufacture, or modify other raw materials; to procure, process, and cook plants and
animals for food; to make the tools necessary to fish, hunt, and obtain other raw materials; use
in rituals or to prepare other materials for rituals, ceremonies, and special functions; and finally
the decisions that all societies have to make regarding where and how to dispose of its refuse.
To greater and lesser degrees, all of these behaviors (and others too numerous to
mention) are dependent on things for their realization and, conversely, things are dependent
on humans for their existence and maintenance when they break or fail to operate as expected.
Ian Hodder (2012) defines this dialectic as one of entanglement arguing that the degree to
cultural change.
The extent to which stone was entangled with other materials, actions, and behaviors at
Big Mound Key is diagrammed in this figure. The messiness of this “tanglegram” illustrates how
enmeshed stone was with other material things and the activities they facilitated. Nodes in the
diagram, having greater or lesser numbers of arrows pointing to and from them, indicate how
intensively they are linked to other material items as well as the activities and social
relationships that shaped and directed their use. The social relationships operated at different
scales beginning with the household and encompassing the larger community, the regional
To take just one example, making a stone tool requires knowledge of the surrounding
8
landscape and particularly the locales where suitable stone is likely to be exposed or the best
collecting areas along a beach. A specific piece of stone may be manufactured into a useful
implement using other tools, or it may be used as is, such as a pebble to smooth the surface of
a clay pot. The arrows connecting natural stone to tools and then to pots indicate that the pot
is dependent on the stone for its existence. Similarly, the pebble smoother exists because of its
find water worn pebbles of the appropriate size. The pot may be used for cooking and so has a
dependency relationship with various foodstuffs, which in turn require certain tools for capture
or collection, processing, storage, and eating. The pot also depends on clay for its existence.
Collection of clay, foodstuffs, and fuel wood requires knowledge of the landscape where these
resources are found and the tools necessary to procure and process them. Eventually the
pebble smoother, pot, food remains, and hearth ashes will be discarded either in refuse pits or
in a midden, so the midden and refuse pit are dependent on these other items for their
existence and the discarded materials have a dependency relationship with the midden and
refuse pits in that these provide socially accepted areas for the discard of refuse.
The tanglegram could be extended to include many other relations, but I include this
limited version here to provide an indication of the degree to which stone was enmeshed
within a wide range of dependency relationships. 29The number of links pointing to and from
tools illustrates the importance of this node to others in the tanglegram, as well as the larger
economic and social environment. The interactions between nodes are what define the
dependencies between humans and things (Hodder 2012:18). If for some reason there was a
decrease in the availability of stone for ground stone implements, or a decrease in access to
9
clay for pottery making, these changes would have considerable effects on other parts of the
economic and social system as the links between the nodes are cut. Without tools made of
durable materials many other tools could not be made, used, or repaired, and the activities
In the end, it’s not my goal to argue how important stone was to prehistoric peoples,
but instead to highlight the relationships between material culture and behavior, relationships
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South Florida Sites in Relation
to Chert Quarry Clusters
Bayshore Homes
Perico Island
Estero Island
Fort Center
Boca Raton Inlet Midden
Perico Island
Pineland
Bayshore Homes
Estero Island
Fort Center
Fort Center
Fort Center
Mt. Elizabeth 8HN696
Pineland
600
500
Frequencies
400 Modified
Fire-cracked
Unmodified
300
200
100
Lithic Materials