It is important that archaeologists not only collect new data but also continue to reevaluate existing data critically. This is particularly important as the absolute quantity of archaeological data increases, technologies become more sophisticated, and interdisciplinary studies provide deeper and more nuanced understandings of the archaeological record and the people who created it. The history of the search for Middle Woodland maize in the interior midwestern United States provides an excellent example of this process.
At one time, maize agriculture was thought to have been an important component of Middle Woodland (ca. 300 BC–AD 400) subsistence, particularly for the Ohio Hopewell (Griffin Reference Griffin1960; Prufer Reference Prufer1964). This assumption was based on the cultural complexity evident in the archaeological record—in particular, the intricate earthworks and sophisticated material artifacts that signified extensive trade networks, group coordination, and a shared belief system. Clearly, Hopewell society could not have been maintained without an agricultural base, and that base must have been maize. Researchers have since come to realize that maize did not fuel the Hopewell economy while firmly establishing the existence of native crop plants recognized as the “Eastern Agricultural Complex” (Asch and Asch Reference Asch, Asch and Ford1985; Fritz Reference Fritz2019:29–43; Mueller Reference Mueller2017; Smith and Cowan Reference Smith, Cowan and Minnis2003; Yarnell Reference Yarnell and Ford1978), which formed the corpus of native agriculture for centuries before maize. The idea that maize was a significant Hopewellian dietary component was finally put to rest through skeletal isotope studies conducted on Middle Woodland populations, which provided no evidence of 13C enrichment (Bender et al. Reference Bender, Barreis and Steventon1981; van der Merwe and Vogel Reference van der Merwe and Vogel1978).
Although they now recognize that maize was not an important component of Middle Woodland diets, researchers are still parsing its earliest history in the interior Midwest. Here, we revisit the topic using a series of new accelerated mass spectrometry (AMS) dates and carbon isotope assays obtained on botanical remains from the Icehouse Bottom (40MR23) and Edwin Harness Mound sites (33RO22; Figure 1). Along with the maize record from the Holding site (11MS118), located in the American Bottom of Illinois, the Icehouse Bottom and Edwin Harness maize records have been frequently cited as evidence for initial (ca. 300 BC–AD 400) maize cultivation in the Eastern Woodlands (Chapman and Crites Reference Chapman and Crites1987; Riley et al. Reference Riley, Walz, Bareis, Fortier and Parker1994; Smart and Ford Reference Smart, Ford and Greber1983). These records have been supported by the identification of microremains, maize phytoliths, and starch grains, identified in pot residues from northeastern North America and dating to as early as 300 BC (cf. Albert et al. Reference Albert, Kooiman, Clark and Lovis2018; Boyd et al. Reference Boyd, Varney, Surette and Surette2008; Hart et al. Reference Hart, Brumbach and Lusteck2007, Reference Hart, Lovis and Katzenberg2021:Supplemental Table 2; St-Pierre and Thompson Reference St-Pierre and Thompson2015).
Recent reevaluation of the alleged maize from the Middle Woodland Holding site has shown that those samples—once thought to be among the oldest in Eastern North America—are either not maize or date to the later, Mississippian component at the site (Simon Reference Simon2017). Newly obtained AMS and carbon isotope assays on four samples from the Icehouse Bottom site located in Eastern Tennessee and two from the Edwin Harness site in south-central Ohio provide similar results: samples were either not maize or they dated to the late prehistoric (post-cal AD 1000). These new dates eliminate the Icehouse Bottom and Edwin Harness site specimens as the oldest maize macroremains identified in the Eastern Woodlands to date.
Reassessing Maize Records from the Icehouse Bottom and Edwin Harness Sites
The Edwin Harness mound site is located in Ross County, Ohio. It is part of the Ohio Hopewell Liberty earthworks, and it has been dated to between about cal AD 300 and cal AD 450 (Greber Reference Greber1983:89). The mound has been the subject of archaeological interest for well over a century, beginning with the work of Squier and Davis (Reference Squier and Davis1998 [1848]). Their limited excavations were followed by those of Frederick W. Putnam (Reference Putnam1885), Warren K. Moorehead (Reference Moorehead1897), and William C. Mills (Reference Mills1907). Mills conducted the most extensive excavations, leaving only the lower levels of the mound intact at a height of about 1.5 m.
In 1976, N'omi Greber initiated salvage excavations of the remnant mound. The most noteworthy discovery was a large, multiroom post structure—or “Big House.” Beneath this was an extensive clay floor that had numerous deposits of burned material and artifacts, and into which many pits and burials intruded. What appeared to be carbonized maize kernels were found in flotation samples recovered from one burned deposit (Feature 45) and one pit (Features 55/60; Greber Reference Greber1983:Table 5.3). Feature 45 consisted of a thin layer of charred and uncharred animal bones and associated artifacts (Greber Reference Greber1983:33). Feature 60 was a bundle burial found at the bottom of Feature 55, a substantial pit with dimensions of 3.0 × 2.6 m and a depth of 55 cm (Greber Reference Greber1983:25). The human remains were those of a female estimated to have been between 19 and 22 years at death (Greber Reference Greber1983:62). The flotation sample containing the fragments identified as maize were taken from the matrix surrounding the bundle burial (Greber Reference Greber1983:36).
The purported maize kernel fragments from Features 45 and 60 were submitted to Beta Analytic Inc. for AMS radiocarbon dating by Richard I. Ford (Reference Ford1987; Table 1). Based on these results, Ford (Reference Ford1987:10) concluded, “These dates affirm maize from a Hopewell site in Ohio.”
Note: Calibrated with the IntCal20 atmospheric curve (Reimer et al. Reference Reimer, Austin, Bard, Bayliss, Blackwell, Ramsey, Butzin, Cheng, Edwards, Friedrich, Grootes, Guilderson, Hajdas, Heaton, Hogg, Hughen, Kromer, Manning, Muscheler, Palmer, Pearson, van der Plicht, Reimer, Richards, Scott, Southon, Turney, Wacker, Adolphi, Büntgen, Capano, Fahrni, Fogtmann-Schulz, Friedrich, Köhler, Kudsk, Miyake, Olsen, Reinig, Sakamoto, Sookdeo and Talamo2020) using OxCal v.4.4.2 (Bronk Ramsey Reference Bronk Ramsey2009; Bronk Ramsey and Lee Reference Bronk Ramsey and Lee2013).
The Icehouse Bottom site was located on the first terrace of the Little Tennessee River in Monroe County, Tennessee (Figure 1). Salvage excavations were undertaken prior to the construction of Tellico Dam and inundation of the site. These efforts yielded cultural materials reflecting occupations during the Late Archaic, Middle Woodland, and Mississippian periods (Cridlebaugh Reference Cridlebaugh1981). The Middle Woodland component was readily distinguishable from the overlying plow zone at depths ranging from 6.1 cm to 36.3 cm below surface. Flotation samples from that context were analyzed by Andrea Brewer Shea, who identified 107 specimens of Zea mays, including 81 kernel fragments, 3 whole and 21 fragmented cupules, and 2 whole glumes distributed among 5 features and 37 midden contexts (Chapman and Crites Reference Chapman and Crites1987; Cridlebaugh Reference Cridlebaugh1981:174). Chapman and Crites (Reference Chapman and Crites1987:353) submitted one kernel fragment from Feature 609, a small pit located near the base of Stratum II (72 cm below surface), to Beta Analytic for an AMS date (Table 1). At the time, these finds were recognized as comprising “the most convincing early date for maize in the east” (Chapman and Crites Reference Chapman and Crites1987:353).
Methods of Analysis
Reevaluation of the Middle Woodland maize from both Icehouse Bottom and Edwin Harness was initiated in the spring of 2019. Samples from the Icehouse Bottom site, curated at the McClung Museum of Natural History and Culture in Knoxville, Tennessee, and from the Edwin Harness Mound site, curated at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, were supplied to the lead author. Although samples from each site had been previously dated using AMS technology, obtaining direct carbon isotope ratios on the samples themselves was not standard protocol at that time. Adjustments for enrichment were made using the identification supplied by the institution requesting that date. Consequently, although the dates were sound, secure identifications as maize based on δ13C values were not available.
Eight specimens from the Icehouse Bottom, two each from four different contexts, were selected and sent to the Illinois State Archaeological Survey (ISAS) by Kandace Hollenbach. Only specimens recovered below Level 2 of the Middle Woodland midden (Stratum II) were considered, given that Cridlebaugh (Reference Cridlebaugh1981:174) noted the possibility of inclusion of plow zone materials in Level 2. Two cupules (PB74) and one kernel fragment and cupule (PB12) were selected based on their clearly identifiable form and texture. Specimen PB74 derived from Level 3 of Unit 115R115, and PB12 from Level 3 of Unit 110R125. An additional two cupules (PB93) and two kernel fragments (PB52) were selected from two sealed feature contexts. Specimen PB93 derives from Feature 610, a small globular pit with fire-reddened edges originating in Level 7 of Unit 115R120. Specimen PB52 derives from Feature 597, a pit with limestone-tempered pottery first recognized in Level 8 of Unit 110R120/125 (Chapman Reference Chapman1977; Cridlebaugh Reference Cridlebaugh1981; Denny Reference Denny1977). Four of the eight samples—one from each specific context—were submitted for dating.
Bulk flotation samples from the Edwin Harness site curated at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History were sent to ISAS for assessment. All samples were scanned by ISAS lab personnel for the presence of maize. The only potential maize identified was from float 71A, taken from Feature 60—the burial that had yielded one of the original dated samples. Two fragments of possible maize kernels were removed from the flotation sample for dating purposes.
All items slated for AMS dating and carbon isotope assays were photographed under magnifications ranging from 6× to 32×. Samples were then submitted to the Isotope Dating Laboratory of the Illinois State Geological Survey (ISGS) at the University of Illinois for processing. Samples were converted to pure carbon, and δ13C ratios were obtained using a Carlo-Erba Elemental Analyzer attached to a Thermo Fisher Scientific Delta V Isotope Ratio Mass Spectrometer. Sealed samples were sent to the Accelerated Mass Spectrometer Laboratory at the University of California Irvine for counting. The results of these analyses were submitted to ISAS in July and December, 2019. All dates were calibrated to calendric age using OxCal v.4.4.2 (Bronk Ramsey Reference Bronk Ramsey2009; Bronk Ramsey and Lee Reference Bronk Ramsey and Lee2013; IntCal20 atmospheric curve [Reimer et al. Reference Reimer, Austin, Bard, Bayliss, Blackwell, Ramsey, Butzin, Cheng, Edwards, Friedrich, Grootes, Guilderson, Hajdas, Heaton, Hogg, Hughen, Kromer, Manning, Muscheler, Palmer, Pearson, van der Plicht, Reimer, Richards, Scott, Southon, Turney, Wacker, Adolphi, Büntgen, Capano, Fahrni, Fogtmann-Schulz, Friedrich, Köhler, Kudsk, Miyake, Olsen, Reinig, Sakamoto, Sookdeo and Talamo2020]).
Results
The results of these analyses are presented in Table 2 and Figure 2. Despite yielding good Middle Woodland dates, four of the samples—two from Icehouse Bottom and the two from Edwin Harness—produced δ13C ratios that fall within the range for C3 plants, nullifying their original identifications as maize. The Edwin Harness samples are curved and resemble kernels in texture, but they are quite small (Figures 3a and 3b). The Icehouse Bottom samples were maize-like in texture and form (Figure 4a alleged kernel, and Figure 4b alleged cupule), but in neither case were morphological indicators strong.
Note: Calibrated with the IntCal20 atmospheric curve (Reimer et al. Reference Reimer, Austin, Bard, Bayliss, Blackwell, Ramsey, Butzin, Cheng, Edwards, Friedrich, Grootes, Guilderson, Hajdas, Heaton, Hogg, Hughen, Kromer, Manning, Muscheler, Palmer, Pearson, van der Plicht, Reimer, Richards, Scott, Southon, Turney, Wacker, Adolphi, Büntgen, Capano, Fahrni, Fogtmann-Schulz, Friedrich, Köhler, Kudsk, Miyake, Olsen, Reinig, Sakamoto, Sookdeo and Talamo2020) using OxCal v.4.4.2 (Bronk Ramsey Reference Bronk Ramsey2009; Bronk Ramsey and Lee Reference Bronk Ramsey and Lee2013).
In contrast, the two additional samples from Icehouse Bottom provided δ13C assays that verified their identification as maize. These samples were larger than the other four, and even before assayed, they were identifiable as a probable cupule and kernel fragment (Figures 5a and 5b). In both cases, the dates returned indicated that each was associated with the Mississippian occupation at this site.
The Importance of Isotopic Confirmation for Maize Identification
In this study, small fragments originally identified as maize from the Icehouse Bottom and Edwin Harness sites were shown to be derived from C3 plants. Possibly, they are tuber fragments, although this cannot be confirmed at this time. Those fragments correctly identified as maize were shown to postdate AD 1000, and they are not Middle Woodland in age.
The non-maize materials from the Icehouse Bottom and Edwin Harness sites were morphologically similar to those reported from the Middle Woodland Holding site (Simon Reference Simon2017). The latter samples include small, shiny fragments thought to be kernels and porous-textured fragments that approximate cupule base bits. The results of these recent studies demonstrate that visual identification based on texture alone is insufficient for identifying small botanical fragments as maize.
Larger fragments retaining distinct morphological characteristics are less problematic, as demonstrated by reassessment of maize from western Illinois (Simon Reference Simon, Raviele and Lovis2014). However, in almost all our evaluations of Middle and early Late Woodland maize remains where identifications were confirmed, the samples returned dates much younger than suggested by context (Simon Reference Simon, Raviele and Lovis2014, Reference Simon2017). Clearly, for open-air sites in the eastern United States, context alone can be an inadequate measure of antiquity, particularly for sites with multiple components. Obviously, not every maize fragment recovered from the archaeobotanical record can be AMS dated. Maize recovered in association with Middle and even early Late Woodland contexts in the interior Midwest, however, should be considered suspect and, if possible, both dated and verified through isotopic analysis.
Recent studies have highlighted the fact that there are some terrestrial C4 plants native to the study area. These include Portulaca oleracea, a few forbs in the Amaranthaceae family (Amaranthus spp., Chenopodium spp., but not Chenopodium berlandieri), and some of the more common native prairie grasses. Portulaca in particular has been cited as a potential component of the diet for people living in temperate regions, possibly impacting carbon isotope values obtained from skeletal remains and in vessel residues (Reber et al. Reference Reber, Kelly, Boswell and Lane2020; Tankersley et al. Reference Tankersley, Conover and Lentz2016). Although a consideration for isotope studies, it is unlikely that the small seeds of these taxa would be mistaken for maize or identified as such in the archaeological record. In fact, as illustrated here and in earlier studies, morphologically ambiguous remains tend to produce δ13C ratios characteristic of C3 plants (Simon Reference Simon2017).
The Case for Middle Woodland Maize
Along with revised records for macroremains at the Holding site in Illinois (Simon Reference Simon2017), the Icehouse Bottom and Edwin Harness dates reported here cast further doubt on the model for gradually increasing maize use beginning in the Middle Woodland in the interior Midwest. Importantly, these records do not deny the occasional presence of maize at an early date; it is possible that people occasionally obtained seeds and tried to grow them. It does, however, suggest that any early attempts at sustained cultivation in this area were limited or unsuccessful. This is supported by a growing body of directly dated maize and skeletal isotope data from sites in Illinois centering on the American Bottom region (Emerson et al. Reference Emerson, Hedman, Simon, Fort and Witt2020; Reber Reference Reber, Staller, Tykot and Benz2006; Simon Reference Simon, Raviele and Lovis2014, Reference Simon2017). Aside from one maize fragment from the Edward Hoener site in western Illinois (cal AD 657–775; Simon Reference Simon, Raviele and Lovis2014), that work has failed to produce any materials with calibrated median ages predating AD 900.
The idea that maize was introduced at a later date than previously thought is not unprecedented (cf. Fritz Reference Fritz1994). Nor is the dismissal of Hopewellian period maize based on direct AMS dates, as reported for the Jasper Newman site in Illinois (Conard et al. Reference Conard, Asch, Asch, Elmore, Grove, Rubin, Brown, Wiant and Cook1984). In fact, there have been several high-profile cases where “the antiquity of a particular crop has been shortened . . . rather than lengthened” (Langlie et al. Reference Langlie, Mueller, Spengler and Fritz2014:1606) through use of direct radiocarbon dating. Although speaking more specifically to locations of plant domestications and the pace of plant domestication processes, this statement may also apply to crop introductions—in this case, maize in the interior Midwest.
Toward Reconciling Conflicting Records
The earliest evidence for the presence of maize in the Eastern Woodlands comes from maize phytoliths in food residues on ceramic vessels from the Vinnette site in New York State (Hart et al. Reference Hart, Brumbach and Lusteck2007). Residues dating to between approximately 300 BC and AD 600 containing maize microremains have also been reported from nine additional sites located in New York, Michigan, and Ontario (Hart et al. Reference Hart, Lovis and Katzenberg2021:Supplemental Table 2). No macroremains of that antiquity from the region have yet been identified, although directly dated samples from four sites are in the AD 700–900 range. Those records cannot be ignored or dismissed out of hand. We note, however, that these botanical samples have not been verified as maize through carbon isotopic analysis. The paucity of macroremains from pre-AD 700 contexts has raised the possibility that maize first entered Eastern North America in the form of ground kernels, traded in to the region on a limited basis (Langlie et al. Reference Langlie, Mueller, Spengler and Fritz2014:1609). This idea has also been presented by others as a means of explaining microremains from pre-AD 700 pot residues from sites in the northern Great Lakes region (Albert et al. Reference Albert, Kooiman, Clark and Lovis2018; Boyd et al. Reference Boyd, Varney, Surette and Surette2008:2551).
The differences between maize records are clearly geographical, with microbotanical records from the Northeast providing a much older and deeper timeline. The mechanisms for introduction and adaptation in that region have been summarized by Hart and Lovis (Reference Hart and Lovis2013; see also Hart Reference Hart1999, Reference Hart, Raviele and Lovis2014). This model highlights the genetic and social complexities involved in the process and relies on a series of founder events coupled with plant adaptations to local environments within the framework of human population management. This resulted in a “gradual dispersal of highly productive landraces of Northern Flint, adapted to local conditions” (Hart and Lovis Reference Hart and Lovis2013:182). Although this may very well reflect maize histories in the Northeast, it does not apply to the interior Midwest, based on the macrobotanical record.
One of the key components for understanding the variability in maize histories lies in assessing the timing of genetic changes necessary before a tropical plant could flourish in the temperate Eastern Woodlands. Several decades ago, Gayle Fritz (Reference Fritz1994) noted that tropical maize adapted to conditions on the Colorado Plateau would likely also survive in latitudes to the east. This adaptation required a suppression of photoperiodism, which controls flowering time in tropical races (Adams Reference Adams, Ingram and Hunt2015:17–18). It was absolutely necessary for plants to survive and produce seeds under conditions of day length and short growing seasons that characterize temperate Eastern North America. Ancient DNA studies on desiccated remains from sites in the Southwest are contributing to our understanding of this transition as well as other important changes, including production of floury kernels with appropriate pasting qualities that permit production of fine flour (da Fonseca et al. Reference da Fonseca, Smith, Wales, Cappellini, Skoglund, Fumagalli, Samaniego, Carøe, Ávila-Arcos, Hufnagel, Korneliussen, Vieira, Jakobsson, Arriaza, Willerslev, Nielsen, Hufford, Albrechtsen, Ross-Ibarra and Gilbert2015). Ancient DNA from maize recovered from the Turkey Pen site in southeast Utah and dated to about 1,900 years ago (mean calibrated dates 1864 ± 11 and 1882 ± 8 RCYBP [Swarts et al. Reference Swarts, Grutaker, Benz, Blake, Bukowski, Holland, Kruse-Peeples, Lepak, Prim, Romay, Ross-Ibarra, Sanchez-Gonzalez, Schmidt, Schuenemann, Krause, Matson, Weigel, Buckler and Burbano2017:513]) suggests that plants were only marginally adapted to this latitude in terms of flowering time by this date (Swarts et al. Reference Swarts, Grutaker, Benz, Blake, Bukowski, Holland, Kruse-Peeples, Lepak, Prim, Romay, Ross-Ibarra, Sanchez-Gonzalez, Schmidt, Schuenemann, Krause, Matson, Weigel, Buckler and Burbano2017). If this is broadly applicable to maize in general, it has important implications for understanding maize histories in regions well outside the plant's natural range.
Concluding Remarks
The results presented here substantiate what has long been recognized. For the interior Midwest, the incorporation of maize agriculture into the subsistence economy postdates approximately AD 900 at the very earliest (Fritz Reference Fritz1994; see Fritz [Reference Fritz2019] for summary). Furthermore, we have no evidence for even its presence, much less widespread cultivation, in this region from any earlier than approximately AD 700. We recognize that there is no reason that maize histories across the Eastern Woodlands have to follow the same timetable, but we reiterate that, regardless of its ultimate significance, clearly Native Americans thrived for millennia prior to the introduction of maize.
Acknowledgments
The lead author would like to thank her colleagues, past and present, from the Illinois State Archaeological Survey (ISAS), University of Illinois, for their help and support. In particular, I would like to thank Dr. Thomas Emerson, Director Emeritus, for his unfailing support of my ongoing project investigating the antiquity of maize in the Eastern Woodlands. Mary King, ISAS Research Archaeologist, scanned the Edwin Harness samples for additional maize fragments (none were found). Mathew Fort, ISAS and ISGS, processed the samples and created Table 1 and Figure 2 for publication. Figure 1 was created by John Lambert, ISAS, for my 2019 Plains Conference presentation. Four of the AMS dates reported in this article were funded by ISAS, initiated under the direction of Dr. Emerson and completed under the direction of current director Dr. Timothy Pauketat. Two additional dates were funded by the Department of Anthropology, University of Tennessee. I would also like to thank my coauthors, Dr. Kandace Hollenbach and Dr. Brian Redmond, for agreeing to take on this project and submit old samples for reevaluation. Without their help, this study could not have been conducted. We also thank Dr. Jeff Chapman and Dr. Tim Baumann at the McClung Museum of Natural History and Culture at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, for their guidance in selecting Icehouse Bottom samples.
Data Availability Statement
Data available upon request from Illinois State Archaeological Survey, 23 Stadium Drive, University of Illinois, Champaign, Illinois 61820.