Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-767nl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-12T03:10:07.522Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Effigy Pipes, Diplomacy, and Myth: Exploring Interaction between St. Lawrence Iroquoians and Eastern Iroquois in New York State

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Anthony Wonderley*
Affiliation:
Oneida Indian Nation, Legal Department, 221 Union St., P.O. Box 662, Oneida, NY 13421-0662 (twonderley@oneida-nation.org)

Abstract

This article relates an archaeological “culture” of northern New York to the Eastern Iroquois nations through the evidence of ceramic smoking pipes that are about 500 years old. After categorizing the objects on the basis of distinctive but thematically related imagery, I observe that their distribution is suggestive of an interaction sphere linking the St. Lawrence Iroquoians of Jefferson County with the Mohawks, Oneidas, and Onondagas elsewhere in present Upstate New York. Later historic descriptions imply that these pipes were connected with diplomatic ritual conducted by male representatives of those communities. The resulting geographical occurrence might be the archaeological footprint of alliances antedating the famous League of the Iroquois. Bearing remarkably elaborate designs, these objects are among the most iconographically complex compositions preserved in the Northeast. All depict themes of emergence, and some may illustrate a more extensive myth asserting the common origins of several groups. Fragments of similar stories survive to this day and are among the oldest oral narratives documented among the Iroquois. My interpretations of both the behavioral/social correlates and the meaning(s) of these pipes derive from applications of the direct historical method, an approach tapping the unsurpassed richness of the Iroquoian ethnographic and historic record.

Résumé

Résumé

Este artículo relaciona una cultura arqueológica de la región norte de Nueva York a las naciones iroquesas de la región Este a través de la evidencia de pipas para fumar de cerámica de alrededor de 500 años de antigüedad. Luego de categorizar los objetos en base a imaginería distintiva pero relacionada temáticamente, observé que su distribución sugiere una esfera de interacción vinculando los Iroqueses de San Lorenzo (St. Lawrence Iroquoians) del Condado de Jefferson, con los Mohawks, Oneidas, y Onondagas en otras partes de la actual región norte de Nueva York. Descripciones históricas más recientes implican que estas pipas estaban relacionadas con rituales diplomáticos que sostenían los hombres representantes de esas comunidadas. El episodio geográfico resultante podría ser la huella arqueológica de alianzas que antecedieron a lafamosa Liga de los Iroqueses. Con diseños extraordinariamente elaborados, estos objetos están dentro de las composiciones iconográficamente más complejas preservadas en el Noreste. Todos representan temas de surgimiento y otros pueden ilustrar un mito más extenso validando el origen común de varios grupos. Fragmentos de historias similares sobreviven hasta estos días y están entre las narrativas más antiguas documentadas de los iroqueses. Mis interpretaciones de conceptos correlativos, social/conducta y el significado o significados de estas pipas, derivan de las aplicaciones del método histórico directo, un enfoque que deriva a la insuperable riqueza de la etnografía iroquesa y la recolección histórica.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 2005

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References Cited

Abel, Timothy J. 2001 The Clayton Cluster: Cultural Dynamics of a Late Prehistoric Village Sequence in the Upper St. Lawrence Valley. Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, State University of New York at Albany. University Microfilms, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Abel, Timothy J. 2002 Recent Research on the Saint Lawrence Iroquoians of Northern New York. Archaeology of Eastern North America 30:137154.Google Scholar
Allen, Kathleen M. S. 1992 Iroquois Ceramic Production: A Case Study of Household-Level Organization. In Ceramic Productionand Distribution: An Integrated Approach, edited by George, J. Bey III and Christopher, A. Pool, pp. 133154. Westview Press, Boulder.Google Scholar
Andrews, William 1716 Letter to the Society, October 11. Records of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, Letter Books, Series A, Vol. 12:239-243. London.Google Scholar
Bamann, Susan E. 1993 Settlement Nucleation in Mohawk Iroquois Prehistory:An Analysis of a Site Sequence in the Lower Otsquago Drainage of the Mohawk Valley. Unpublished Ph. D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, State University of New York at Albany.Google Scholar
Barbeau, C. Marius 1915 Huron and Wyandot Mythology. Canada Department of Mines, Geological Survey, Memoir 80, Anthropological Series 11. Ottawa.Google Scholar
Barbeau, C. Marius 1951 The Dragon Myth and Ritual Songs of the Iroquoians. Journal of the International Folk Music Council 3:81-85. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Barbeau, C. Marius 1952 The Old-World Dragon in America. In Indian Tribes of Aboriginal America: Selected Papers of the XXIXth International Congress of Americanists, edited by Sol, Tax, pp. 115122. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Barnouw, Victor 1977 Wisconsin Chippewa Myths and Tales and Their Relationto Chippewa Life. University of Wisconsin Press, Madison.Google Scholar
Beauchamp, William M. 1892 The Iroquois Trail, or, Foot-Prints of the Six Nations. H. C. Beauchamp, Fayetteville, New York.Google Scholar
Beauchamp, William M. 1898 Earthenware of the New York Aborigines. New York State Museum Bulletin 5(22). University of the State of New York, Albany.Google Scholar
Beauchamp, William M. ca. 1910 Antiquities of Onondaga. 10 vols. New York State Library, Albany.Google Scholar
Beauchamp, William M. 1922 Iroquois Folk Lore, Gathered from the Six Nations of New York. Onondaga Historical Association, Syracuse.Google Scholar
Boyce, Douglas W. 1973 A Glimpse of Iroquois Culture History through the Eyes of Joseph Brant and John Norton. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 117(4):286294.Google Scholar
Bradley, James W 1987 Evolution of the Onondaga Iroquois: Accommodating Change, 1500-1655. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse.Google Scholar
Bradley, James W 2001 Change and Survival among the Onondaga Iroquoissince 1500. In Societies in Eclipse: Archaeology of the Eastern Woodlands Indians, A. D. 1400-1700, edited by Brose, David S., Wesley Cowan, C., and Robert, C. Mainfort Jr. , pp. 2736. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D. C.Google Scholar
Brasser, Ted J. 1980 Self-Directed Pipe Effigies. Man in the Northeast 19:95104.Google Scholar
Brotherston, Gordon 1992 Book of the Fourth World: Reading the Native Americasthrough Their Literature. Cambridge University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Brown, Ian W. 1989 The Calumet Ceremony in the Southeast and Its Archaeological Manifestations. American Antiquity 54:311331.Google Scholar
Caldwell, Joseph R. 1964 Interaction Spheres in Prehistory. In Hopewellian Studies, edited by Joseph, R. Caldwell and Robert, L. Hall, pp. 133143. Scientific Paper 12. Illinois State Museum, Springfield.Google Scholar
Cantine, John, and Simeon De, Wittca. 1793 Report of a council held to purchase lands, undated (ca. November). Assembly Papers (Petitions, Correspondenceand Reports Relating to Indians, 1783-1831), Vol. 40:119-148. New York State Archives, Albany.Google Scholar
Chapdelaine, Claude 1992 The Mandeville Site: A Small Iroquoian Village anda Large Smoking-Pipe Collection. In Proceedings of the 1989 Smoking Pipe Conference: Selected Papers, edited by Charles, F. Hayes III, Connie, Cox Bodner, and Martha, L. Sempowski, pp. 3140. Research Record 22. Rochester Museum and Science Center, Rochester.Google Scholar
Chapdelaine, Claude 2004 A Review of the Latest Developments in St. Lawrence Iroquoian Archaeology. In A Passion for the Past: Papersin Honour of James F Pendergast, edited by James, V. Wright and Jean-Luc, Pilon, pp. 6375. Mercury Series Archaeology Paper 164. Canadian Museum of Civilization, Hull.Google Scholar
Davis, Ogilvie H. 1972 Aboriginal Human Effigy Portrayal: Northeast. Ogilvie H. Davis, Salem, New York.Google Scholar
Drooker, Penelope Ballard 1997 The View from Madisonville: Protohistoric Western Fort Ancient Interaction Patterns. Memoirs No. 31. Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Drummond, Lee 1981 The Serpent's Children: Semiotics of Cultural Genesisin Arawak and Trobriand Myth. American Ethnologist 8:633660.Google Scholar
Dwight, Timothy 1822 Travels in New-England and New- York, Vol. 4. Timothy Dwight, New Haven.Google Scholar
Earle, Timothy 2004 Culture Matters in the Neolithic Transition and Emergence of Hierarchy in Thy, Denmark: Distinguished Lecture. American Anthropologist 106:111125.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Engelbrecht, William 1974 The Iroquois: Archaeological Patterning on the Tribal Level. World Archaeology 6(1):5265.Google Scholar
Engelbrecht, William 1985 New York Iroquois Political Development. In Culturesin Contact: The Impact of European Contacts on Native American Cultural Institutions, A. D. 1000-1800, edited by Fitzhugh, William W., pp. 163183. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D. C. Google Scholar
Engelbrecht, William 1995 The Case of the Disappearing Iroquois: Early Contact Period Superpower Politics. Northeast Anthropology 50:3559.Google Scholar
Engelbrecht, William 2003 Iroquoia: The Development of a Native World. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse.Google Scholar
Engelbrecht, William 2004 Northern New York Revisited. In A Passion for the Past: Papers in Honour of James F. Pendergast, edited by James, V. Wright and Jean-Luc, Pilon, pp. 125144. Mercury Series Archaeology Paper 164. Canadian Museum of Civilization, Hull.Google Scholar
Fenton, William N. 1940 Problems Arising from the Historic Northeastern Position of the Iroquois. In Essays in Historical Anthropology of North America, edited by Steward, Julian H., pp. 159251. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections 100. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C. Google Scholar
Fenton, William N. 1962 This Island, the World on the Turtle's Back. Journal of American Folklore 75:283300.Google Scholar
Fenton, William N. 1985 Rituals of Peace Making. In The History and Culture of Iroquois Diplomacy: An Interdisciplinary Guide to the Treaties of the Six Nations and Their League, edited by Francis, Jennings, William, N. Fenton, Mary, A. Druke, and David, R. Miller, pp. 127130. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse.Google Scholar
Fenton, William N. 1987 The False Faces of the Iroquois. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman.Google Scholar
Fenton, William N. 1991 [1953] The Iroquois Eagle Dance: An Offshoot of the Calumet Dance. Reprint. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse(originally published as Bulletin No. 156, Bureau of American Ethnology, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C).Google Scholar
Fenton, William N. 1998 The Great Law and the Longhouse: A Political History of the Iroquois Confederacy. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman.Google Scholar
Fenton, William N. 2002 The Little Water Medicine Society of the Senecas. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman.Google Scholar
Fenton, William N., and Kurath, Gertrude P. 1951 The Feast of the Dead, or Ghost Dance at Six Nations Reserve, Canada. In Symposium on Local Diversity in Iroquois Culture, edited by Fenton, William N., pp. 143165. Bulletin No. 149. Bureau of American Ethnology, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C. Google Scholar
Fenton, William N., and Elizabeth, L. Moore (editors and translators) 1974 Customs of the American Indians Compared with Customs of Primitive Times by Father Joseph François Lafitau, Vol. 1. Champlain Society, Toronto.Google Scholar
Fenton, William N., and Elizabeth, L. Moore (editors and translators) 1977 Customs of the American Indians Comparedwith Customs of Primitive Times by Father Joseph François Lafitau, Vol. 2. Champlain Society, Toronto.Google Scholar
Finlayson, William D. 1998 Iroquoian Peoples of the Land of Rocks and Water, A. D. 1000-1630: A Study in Settlement Archaeology. 4 vols. Special Publication 1, London Museum of Archaeology. London, Ontario.Google Scholar
Flannery, Kent V, and Marcus, Joyce 1996 Cognitive Archaeology. In Contemporary Archaeologyin Theory, edited by Robert, Preucel and Ian, Hodder, pp. 350363. Blackwell, Cambridge, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
Foster, Michael K. 1985 Another Look at the Function of Wampum in Iroquois-White Councils. In The History and Culture of Iroquois Diplomacy: An Interdisciplinary Guide to the Treaties of the Six Nations and Their League, edited by Francis, Jennings, William, N. Fenton, Mary, A. Druke, and David, R. Miller, pp. 99114. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse.Google Scholar
Funk, Robert E., and Kuhn, Robert D. 2003 Three Sixteenth-Century Mohawk Iroquois Village Sites. New York State Museum Bulletin 503. New York State Department of Education, Albany.Google Scholar
Hale, Horatio 1969 The Iroquois Book of Rites. AMS Press, New York.Google Scholar
Hall, Robert L. 1997 An Archaeology of the Soul: North American Indian Belief and Ritual. University of Illinois Press, Urbana.Google Scholar
Hamell, George R. 1979 Of Hockers, Diamonds and Hourglasses: Some Interpretations of Seneca Archaeological Art. Paper presentedat the Annual Conference on Iroquois Research, Albany.Google Scholar
Hamell, George R. 1998 Long-Tail: The Panther in Huron-Wyandot and Seneca Myth, Ritual, and Material Culture. In Icons of Power:Feline Symbolism in the Americas, edited by Nicholas, J. Saunders, pp. 258291. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Heckewelder, John 1991 History, Manners, and Customs of the Indian Nations Who Once Inhabited Pennsylvania and the Neighboring States. Ayer, Salem, New Hampshire.Google Scholar
Hewitt, J. N. B. 1918 Seneca Fiction, Legends, and Myths: Collected by Jeremiah Curtin and J. N. B. Hewitt. In Thirty-Second Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology tothe Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1910-1911, pp. 37819. Bureau of American Ethnology, Washington, D. C. Google Scholar
Hodder, Ian 1986 Reading the Past: Current Approaches to Interpretationin Archaeology. Cambridge University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Hosbach, Richard E. 1992 A Gyneco-Android Subset of Native Iroquoian El Rancho Pipes: A New Pipe Designation with the Philosophical Concept of Sexual Duality as Its Basic Motif. In Proceedings of the 1989 Smoking Pipe Conference:Selected Papers, edited by Charles, F. Hayes III, Connie, Cox Bodner, and Martha, L. Sempowski, pp. 8396. Research Record 22. Rochester Museum and Science Center, Rochester.Google Scholar
Hough, Franklin B. (Editor) 1861 Proceedings of the Commissioners of Indian Affairs, Appointed by Law for the Extinguishment of Indian Titlesin the State of New York. Munsell, Albany.Google Scholar
Jamieson, James Bruce 1990a The Archaeology of the St. Lawrence Iroquoians. In The Archaeology of Southern Ontario to A. D. 1650, edited by Chris, J. Ellis and Neal, Ferris, pp. 385404. Occasional Publication of the London Chapter, Ontario Archaeological Society No. 5. London.Google Scholar
Jamieson, James Bruce 1990b Trade and Warfare: The Disappearance of the Saint Lawrence Iroquoians. Man in the Northeast 39:7986.Google Scholar
Jennings, Francis 1984 The Ambiguous Iroquois Empire: The Covenant Chain Confederation of Indian Tribes with English Colonies from Its Beginnings to the Lancaster Treaty of 1744. W. W. Norton, New York.Google Scholar
Jennings, Francis, William N. Fenton, Mary A. Druke, and David R. Miller (editors), 1985 The History and Culture of Iroquois Diplomacy: An Interdisciplinary Guide to the Treaties of the Six Nationsand Their League. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse.Google Scholar
Judkins, Russell A. 1987 David Cusick's “Ancient History of the Six Nations”:A Neglected Classic. In Iroquois Studies: A Guide to Documentaryand Ethnographic Resources from Western New York and the Genesee Valley, edited by Russell, A. Judkins, pp. 2640. Department of Anthropology, State University of New York, Geneseo.Google Scholar
Kapches, Mima 2003 Invisible Women. Rotunda 35(3): 12-19. Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto.Google Scholar
Kearsley, Ronald Glenn 1997 Pinched-Face Human Effigy Pipes: The Social Mechanismsthat Conditioned Their Manufacture and Use in Seventeenth Century Iroquoia. M. A. thesis, Department of Anthropology, Trent University, Peterborough, Ontario. University Microfilms, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Kent, Barry C. 1984 Susquehanna's Indians. Anthropological Series 6. Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, Harrisburg.Google Scholar
Kinsey, W. Fred, III, 1989 Susquehannock Zoomorphic Images: Or Why the Seasons Changed. In New Approaches to Other Pasts, edited by Fred Kinsey, W. III and Roger, W. Moeller, pp. 7188. Archaeological Services, Bethlehem, Connecticut.Google Scholar
Klinck, Carl F, and James, J. Talman (editors) 1970 The Journal of Major John Norton, 1816. Champlain Society, Toronto.Google Scholar
Kuhn, Robert D. 1985 Trade and Exchange among the Mohawk-Iroquois: A Trace Element Analysis of Ceramic Smoking Pipes. Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, State University of New York at Albany. University Microfilms, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Kuhn, Robert D. 1994 A Comparison of Human Face Effigy Pipes from the St. Lawrence Iroquoian Roebuck Site and the Mohawk Otstungo Site Using Trace Element Analysis. Ottawa Archaeologist 21(2):39.Google Scholar
Kuhn, Robert D. 2004 Reconstructing Patterns of Interaction and Warfarebetween the Mohawk and Northern Iroquoians during the A. D. 1400-1700 Period. In A Passion for the Past: Papersin Honour of James F. Pendergast, edited by James, V. Wright and Jean-Luc, Pilon, pp. 145166. Mercury Series Archaeology Paper 164. Canadian Museum of Civilization, Hull.Google Scholar
Kuhn, Robert D., Funk, Robert E., and Pendergast, James F. 1993 The Evidence for a Saint Lawrence Iroquoian Presenceon Sixteenth-Century Mohawk Sites. Man in the Northeast 45:7786.Google Scholar
Kuhn, Robert D., and Sempowski, Martha L. 2001 A New Approach to Dating the League of the Iroquois. American Antiquity 66:301314.Google Scholar
Kurath, Gertrude Prokosch 1952 Matriarchal Dances of the Iroquois. In Indian Tribes of Aboriginal America: Selected Papers of the XXIXth International Congress of Americanists, edited by Sol, Tax, pp. 123130. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Lankford, George E. 1987 Native American Legends; Southeastern Legends:Tales from the Natchez, Caddo, Biloxi, Chickasaw, and Other Nations. August House, Little Rock.Google Scholar
Lankford, George E. 2004 World on a String: Some Cosmological Components of the Southeastern Ceremonial Complex. In Hero, Hawk, and Open Hand: American Indian Art of the Ancient Midwestand South, edited by Richard, F. Townsend and Robert, V. Sharp, pp. 207217. Art Institute of Chicago in association with Yale University Press, New Haven.Google Scholar
Lenig, Donald 1965 The Oak Hill Horizon and Its Relation to the Development of Five Nations Iroquois Culture. Researches and Transactions No. 15. New York State Archaeological Association, Buffalo.Google Scholar
Lounsbury, Floyd G. 1978 Iroquoian Languages. In Northeast, edited by Bruce, G. Trigger, pp. 334343. Handbook of North American Indians (general editor William, C. Sturtevant), Vol. 15. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C. Google Scholar
Lounsbury, Floyd G., and Bryan, Gick (editors and translators) 2000 The Oneida Creation Story: Demus Elm and Harvey Antone. Yorkshire Press, Columbia, South Carolina.Google Scholar
Malinowski, Bronislaw 1948 Myth in Primitive Psychology. In Magic, Science and Religion, and Other Essays, by Bronislaw, Malinowski, pp. 93148. Beacon, Boston.Google Scholar
Marcus, Joyce, and Rannery, Kent V. 1994 Ancient Zapotec Ritual and Religion: An Application of the Direct Historical Approach. In The Ancient Mind:Elements of Cognitive Archaeology, edited by Colin, Renfrewand Ezra B. W. Zubrow, pp. 5574. Cambridge University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Mathews, Zena Pearlstoneca. 1975 Zena Pearlstone Mathews Notes on Iroquoian Effigy Pipes. 7 boxes. A1996. 08, Anthropology Division, New York State Museum, Albany.Google Scholar
Mathews, Zena Pearlstoneca. 1976 Huron Pipes and Iroquoian Shamanism. Man in the Northeast 12:1531.Google Scholar
Mathews, Zena Pearlstoneca. 1980 Of Man and Beast: The Chronology of Effigy Pipesamong Ontario Iroquoians. Ethnohistory 27(4):295307.Google Scholar
Mathews, Zena Pearlstoneca. 1981 Janus and Other Multiple-Image Iroquoian Pipes. Ontario Archaeology 35:322.Google Scholar
Mathews, Zena Pearlstoneca. 1982 On Dreams and Journeys: Iroquoian Boat Pipes. American Indian Art Magazine 7(3):46-51, 80.Google Scholar
McCallum, James Dow (editor) 1932 The Letters of Eleazar Wheelock's Indians. Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire.Google Scholar
Noble, William C. 1979 Ontario Iroquois Effigy Pipes. Canadian Journal of Archaeology 3:6990.Google Scholar
Paper, Jordan 1992 The Iroquoian and Pan-Indian Sacred Pipes: Comparative Ritual and Symbolism. In Proceedings of the 1989Smoking Pipe Conference: Selected Papers, edited by Charles, F Hayes III, Connie, Cox Bodner, and Martha, L. Sempowski, pp. 163167. Research Record 22. Rochester Museum and Science Center, Rochester.Google Scholar
Parker, Arthur C. 1920 The Archaeological History of New York, pts. 1-2. New York State Museum Bulletin 235-238. University of the State of New York, Albany.Google Scholar
Pendergast, James F. 1962 The Crystal Rock Site: An Early Onondaga-Oneida Site in Eastern Ontario. Pennsylvania Archaeologist 32(1):2134.Google Scholar
Pendergast, James F. 1985 Huron-St. Lawrence Iroquois Relations in the Terminal Prehistoric Period. Ontario Archaeology 44:2339.Google Scholar
Pendergast, James F. 1990 Emerging Saint Lawrence Iroquoian Settlement Patterns. Man in the Northeast 40:1730.Google Scholar
Pendergast, James F. 1991 The St. Lawrence Iroquoians: Their Past, Present, and Immediate Future. New York State Archaeological Association Bulletin 102:4774.Google Scholar
Pendergast, James F. 1992 Some Notes on Ceramic Smoking Pipes from St. Lawrence Iroquoian Archaeological Sites. In Proceedings of the 1989 Smoking Pipe Conference: Selected Papers, edited by Charles, F. Hayes III, Connie, Cox Bodner, and Martha, L. Sempowski, pp. 5170. Research Record 22. Rochester Museum and Science Center, Rochester.Google Scholar
Pendergast, James F. 1996 High Precision Calibration of the Radiocarbon Time Scale: CALIB 3. 0. 3 (Method “A”) in a St. Lawrence Iroquoian Context. New York State Archaeological Association Bulletin 111-112:3562.Google Scholar
Pendergast, James F. 1999 The Ottawa River Algonquin Bands in a St. Lawrence Iroquoian Context. Canadian Journal of Archaeology 23:63136.Google Scholar
Pendergast, James E, and Trigger, Bruce G. 1972 Cartier's Hochelaga and the Dawson Site. McGill-Queen's University Press, Montreal.Google Scholar
Peterson, James B., Crock, John G., Cowie, Ellen R., Boisvert, Richard A., Toney, Joshua R., and Mandel, Geoffrey 2004 St. Lawrence Iroquoians in Northern New England:Pendergast was “Right” and More. In A Passion for the Past: Papers in Honour of James F. Pendergast, edited by James, V. Wright and Jean-Luc, Pilon, pp. 87123. Mercury Series Archaeology Paper 164. Canadian Museum of Civilization, Hull.Google Scholar
Pratt, Peter Paul 1976 Archaeology of the Oneida Iroquois, Vol. 1. Occasional Publications in Northeastern Anthropology 1. George's Mills, New Hampshire.Google Scholar
Preucel, Robert, and Hodder, Ian 1996 Material Symbols. In Contemporary Archaeology in Theory, edited by Robert, Preucel and Ian, Hodder, pp. 299307. Blackwell, Oxford.Google Scholar
Ramsden, Peter G. 1990a The Hurons: Archaeology and Culture History. In The Archaeology of Southern Ontario to A. D. 1650, edited by Chris, J. Ellis and Neal, Ferris, pp. 361384. Occasional Publication of the London Chapter, Ontario Archaeological Society No. 5. London.Google Scholar
Ramsden, Peter G. 1990b Saint Lawrence Iroquoians in the Upper Trent River Valley. Man in the Northeast 39:8795.Google Scholar
Ray, Keith 1987 Material Metaphor, Social Interaction and Historical Reconstruction: Exploring Patterns of Association and Symbolism in the Igbo-Ukwu Corpus. In The Archaeology of Contextual Meanings, edited by Ian, Hodder, pp. 6677. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Renfrew, Colin 1986 Introduction: Peer Polity Interaction and Sociopolitical Change. In Peer Polity Interaction and Sociopolitical Change, edited by Colin, Renfrew and John, F. Cherry, pp. 118. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Ritchie, William A. 1980 The Archaeology of New York State. 2d rev. ed. Harbor Hill Books, Harrison, New York.Google Scholar
Ritchie, William A., and Funk, Robert E. 1973 Aboriginal Settlement Patterns in the Northeast. Memoir 20, New York State Museum and Science Service. University of the State of New York, Albany.Google Scholar
Robertson, David A., and Williamson, Ronald F. 1998 The Archaeology of the Parsons Site: Summary and Conclusions. Ontario Archaeology 65-66:146150.Google Scholar
Rooth, Anna Birgitta 1957 Creation Myths of North America. Anthropos 52:497508.Google Scholar
Rutsch, Edward S. 1973 Smoking Technology of the Aborigines of the Iroquois Area of New York State. Fairleigh Dickenson University Press, Rutherford, New Jersey.Google Scholar
Schoolcraft, Henry Rowe 1975 [1846] Notes on the Iroquois: Or, Contributions to the Statistics, Aboriginal History, Antiquities and General Ethnology of Western New-York. Krauss Reprint, Millwood, New York.Google Scholar
Seaver, James E. 1990 A Narrative of the Life of Mrs. Mary Jemison… Carefully Taken from Her Own Words, Nov. 29th, 1823. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse.Google Scholar
Sempowski, Martha L. 2004 Spiritual Transformation as Reflected in Late Prehistoric Human Effigy Pipes from Western New York. In A Passion for the Past: Papers in Honour of James F. Pendergast, edited by James, V. Wright and Jean-Luc, Pilon, pp. 263281. Mercury Series Archaeology Paper 164. Canadian Museum of Civilization, Hull.Google Scholar
Sempowski, Martha L., and Saunders, Lorraine P. 2003 [2001] Dutch Hollow and Factory Hollow: The Advent of Dutch Trade among the Seneca, pts. 1-3. Research Record 24. Rochester Museum and Science Center, Rochester.Google Scholar
Skinner, Alanson 1921 Notes on Iroquois Archaeology. Indian Notes and Monographs. Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation, New York.Google Scholar
Snow, Dean R. 1994 The Iroquois. Blackwell, Oxford.Google Scholar
Snow, Dean R. 1995a Mohawk Valley Archaeology: The Collections. Institute for Archaeological Studies, State University of New York, Albany.Google Scholar
Snow, Dean R. 1995b Mohawk Valley Archaeology: The Sites. Institute for Archaeological Studies, State University of New York, Albany.Google Scholar
Snow, Dean R. 2001 Evolution of the Mohawk Iroquois. In Societies in Eclipse: Archaeology of the Eastern Woodlands Indians, A. D. 1400-1700, edited by Brose, David S., Wesley Cowan, C., and Robert, C. Mainfort Jr., pp. 1925. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D. C. Google Scholar
Springer, James Warren 1981 An Ethnohistoric Study of the Smoking Complex in Eastern North America. Ethnohistory 28(3):217235.Google Scholar
Reuben Gold (editor), Thwaites 1896 -1901 The Jesuit Relations and Allied Documents. 73 vols. Burrows Brothers, Cleveland.Google Scholar
Tooker, Elisabeth 1978 The League of the Iroquois: Its History, Politics, and Ritual. In Northeast, edited by Trigger, Bruce G., pp. 418441. Handbook of North American Indians (general editor William, C. Sturtevant), Vol. 15. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C. Google Scholar
Trigger, Bruce G. 2001 The Liberation of Wendake. Ontario Archaeology 72:314.Google Scholar
Tuck, James A. 1971 Onondaga Iroquois Prehistory: A Study in Settlement Archaeology. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse.Google Scholar
Urton, Gary 1990 The History of a Myth: Pacariqtambo and the Origin of the Inkas. University of Texas Press, Austin.Google Scholar
von Gernet, Alexander D. 1992 Hallucinogens and the Origins of the Iroquoian Pipe/Tobacco/Smoking Complex. In Proceedings of the Smoking Pipe Conference: Selected Papers, edited by Charles, F. Hayes III, Connie, Cox Bodner, and Martha, L. Sempowski, pp. 171185. Research Record 22. Rochester Museum and Science Center, Rochester.Google Scholar
Weber, J. Cynthia 1971 Types and Attributes in Iroquois Pipes. Man in the Northeast 2:5165.Google Scholar
Wheeler-Voegelin, Erminie, and Remedios W. Moore, 1957 The Emergence Myth in Native North America. In Studies in Folklore: In Honor of Distinguished Service Professor Stith Thompson, edited by Richmond, W. Edson, pp. 6691. Indiana University Press, Bloomington.Google Scholar
Wintemberg, W. J. 1936 Roebuck Prehistoric Village Site, Grenville County, Ontario. Canada Department of Mines, National Museum of Canada, Bulletin 83, Anthropological Series 19. Ottawa.Google Scholar
Wonderley, Anthony 2001 The Iroquois Creation Story over Time. Northeast Anthropology 62:116.Google Scholar
Wonderley, Anthony 2002 Oneida Ceramic Effigies: A Question of Meaning. Northeast Anthropology 63:2348.Google Scholar
Wonderley, Anthony 2004 Oneida Iroquois Folklore, Myth, and History: New York Oral Narrativefrom the Notes of H. E. Allen and Others. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse.Google Scholar
Wright, James V. 1990 Archaeology of Southern Ontario to A. D. 1650:ACritique. In The Archaeology of Southern Ontario to A. D. 1650, edited by Chris, J. Ellis and Neal, Ferris, pp. 493502. Occasional Publication of the London Chapter, Ontario Archaeological Society No. 5. London.Google Scholar
Wrong, George M. (Editor) 1939 The Long Journey to the Country of the Hurons by Father Gabriel Sagard. Translated by Langton, H. H.. Champlain Society, Toronto.Google Scholar