The Central Plains Village Tradition period (from A. D. 900 -1450) saw a rapid increase in population on the plains and, in one sense, was the culmination of the changes that began during the Plains Woodland period. Archaeologists estimate that there were more people in the region during the period than at any other time before or since. In other words, there were more people living on the plains than there are even now. About 5,000 archaeological sites have been discovered in Nebraska and fewer than 50 can be attributed to historic tribes, that is the tribes in Nebraska after 1750. Most of the sites were inhabited between 1000 A. D. and 1400 A. D. In addition, the Central Plains Tradition cultures perfected hunting with bows and arrows and farming with bone and stone tools. These people lived in thousands of small permanent farmstead settlements throughout the eastern two-thirds of Nebraska.
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Central Plains Tradition villages and farms usually overlooked streams and rivers.
Source - Nebraska Game and Parks Commission, Linda Meigs. |
But even though they carried on traditions that had begun with the Plains Woodland people, archaeologists are unsure whether the new culture migrated to the plains from the south or developed from the older one. The Central Plains Tradition culture is so distinctive that they cannot be associated with any earlier cultural group, whether that group was from other parts of North America or the local Plains Woodland groups.
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Bison shoulder blades were used as hoes
by the Central Plains Tradition farmers.
Later they were replaced by iron hoes (left)
that were more efficient and were popular
trade items during the later "historic period."
Source - Nebraska Game and Parks Commission. |
What set Central Plains Tradition people apart is that they were farmers who lived in centralized villages. They began to raise significant quantities of corn, beans, squash and other crops. An improved strain of corn produced food surpluses. Garden hoes were made from bison shoulder blades. The village farmers also developed better ways to store their produce. Archaeological exploration of Central Plains Tradition earth lodges have found bell-shaped underground pits that are thought to have stored corn.
Native American people still hunted and gathered wild plants, but their gardens became a much more important source of food. While they did hunt the bison, archaeologists disagree over the importance of the bison to the villagers. The plains during this time experienced frequent cool droughts, and the bison population seems to have been smaller than during the later Historic time period. Consequently, large bison herds were not always available. So, it is possible that the more intense use of small garden plots was a response to the thinning of wild game and wild plants.
As the gardens and first farms grew, so did the size of the villages. The successful cultivation of domesticated crops coincided with an increase in prehistoric Indian populations.
To house this increase in the number of people, the earth lodge was developed, a new type of dwelling that enabled these people to live in more permanent villages. The floor plan of a typical lodge was a square or a rectangle. They were framed with timbers and had an extended entrance way. They were covered with a mixture of branches, grass, and mud plaster. Pits for storage of food and tools were located below lodge floors. Sites were usually located along streams or rivers, like the Missouri and Republican, where suitable garden locations were available.
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Village Farmers made smoking pipes from stone and clay. The red pipe, found in Washington County,
represents a mythical horned serpent. Source - Nebraska Game and Parks Commission. |
Because agriculture provided enough food to support larger populations of semi-permanent village dwellers, more artifacts from this period have been found. The artifacts from Central Plains Tradition sites were made of stone, bone, and clay. They include pipes, bone fishhooks, bone beads, a deer jawbone corn sheller, and a host of others. Artifacts include a wide variety of pottery types. Vessels were globular, with rounded bottoms and decorated only on the rim areas. Vessels were not painted and most decoration consisted of geometric patterns of lines cut into the soft paste of the rims prior to firing. Also characteristic of this period are bow and arrow projectile points that are triangular, with hafting notches on the lower edge and sometimes on the bottom.
One of the most significant investigations of Central Plains Tradition has been conducted at the Patterson site located in a valley along the Platte River and is found on either side of Highway N-31 several miles south of Interstate 80. The Patterson site is an almost 1,000-year-old Indian village and represents a typical location for people of the Central Plains tradition as it was near water and an abundant supply of timber and wildlife. Small gardens were cultivated and wood was used for house construction, fuel, and for crafting tools, and weapons.
Populations increased, societies became more complex, and the people became more dependent on agriculture — this is a pattern that was common in many regions at that time. During this same general time period (A. D. 1100-1200), the Anasazi civilization in the Southwest was at its height, as was the Cahokia civilization near present-day St. Louis. The question of which occurred first — agricultural growth or population growth — is unclear, but the two factors were obviously related.
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