A study of the four stone quarries at Mount Kineo by Charles Willoughby (Harvard Peabody Museum) brought attention to the importance of the green-blue rhyolite for the manufacture of prehistoric stone implements [1]. The distinctive characteristics of Kineo-Traveler rhyolite makes for easy recognition in prehistoric sites in the upland and coastal regions of the northeast. Four flaked stone tools of cultures of various ages in the northeast are shown here [2]. A major hallmark of European arrival and presence in the region are the moderate number of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century iron trade axes. A fine example with four maker's marks, likely of French origin, is displayed [2d]. This example was found in about 1900 by Louis Oakes, while conducting a land survey east of lower Moosehead Lake.
1
Map showing location of Indian workshops near Mt. Kineo, Maine
In Charles C. Willoughby, Antiquities of the New England Indians (Peabody Museum, 1935)
Facsimile, 14.0 x 11.5 cm
Hamilton Collection
2a
Fluted biface, Brassua Lake
Kineo-Traveler rhyolite
ca. 11,000-10,000 B.P.
6.6 cm
Maine Archaeological Society Inc.
2b
Stemmed "Neville" biface, Sebago Lake
Kineo -Traveler rhyolite
ca. 8000-7000 B.P.
5.8 cm
Kennard Collection
2c
Notched biface, Brassua Lake (broken); Point pre-form, Brassua Lake
Kineo-Traveler rhyolite
ca. 3000 - 1500 B.P.
6.2 cm, 17.3 cm
Sherman-French Collection, USM
2d
French "marked" trade axe, Moosehead Lake region
Iron, seventeenth century
17.5 cm
Hamilton Collection
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