Abstract

The timeframe of Indigenous settlements in Northeast North America in the 15th-17th centuries CE has until very recently been largely described in terms of European material culture and history. An independent chronology was usually absent. Radiocarbon dating has recently begun to change this conventional model radically. The challenge, if an alternative, independent timeframe and history is to be created, is to articulate a high-resolution chronology appropriate and comparable with the lived histories of the Indigenous village settlements of the period. Improving substantially on previous initial work, we report here high-resolution defined chronologies for the three most extensively excavated and iconic ancestral Kanienʼkehá꞉ka (Mohawk) village sites in New York (Smith-Pagerie, Klock and Garoga), and a fourth early historic Indigenous site, Brigg’s Run, and re-assess the wider chronology of the Mohawk River Valley in the mid-15th to earlier 17th centuries. This new chronology confirms initial suggestions from radiocarbon that a wholesale reappraisal of past assumptions is necessary, since our dates conflict completely with past dates and the previously presumed temporal order of these three iconic sites. In turn, a wider reassessment of northeastern North American early history and re-interpretation of Atlantic connectivities in the later 15th through early 17th centuries is required. Our new closely defined date ranges are achieved employing detailed archival analysis of excavation records to establish the contextual history for radiocarbon-dated samples from each site, tree-ring defined short time series from wood charcoal samples fitted against the radiocarbon calibration curve (‘wiggle-matching’), and Bayesian chronological modelling for each of the individual sites integrating all available prior knowledge and radiocarbon dating probabilities. We define (our preferred model) most likely (68.3% highest posterior density) village occupation ranges for Smith-Pagerie of ~1478–1498, Klock of ~1499–1521, Garoga of ~1550–1582, and Brigg’s Run of ~1619–1632.

Highlights

  • The 15th-17th century CE history of North America is primarily, and until recently almost exclusively, explained, dated, and viewed in terms of European exploration, interests, and subsequent invasion and settlement

  • To that end we investigated the archaeological excavation and laboratory records from these three sites in detail and obtained additional radiocarbon dates from them, including dating short tree ring sequences, to obtain terminus ante quem (TAQ), terminus ad quem, and/or terminus post quem (TPQ) dates for each of the sites and refine the Bayesian models

  • Using the Bayesian chronological modelling approach as implemented in the OxCal software [58,59,60, 91, 92], we integrated the calibrated radiocarbon probabilities within each overall site Phase with the constraints available from various contextual and stratigraphic relationships based on archaeological observations from the site and between and from the samples themselves: see Methods

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Summary

Introduction

The 15th-17th century CE history of North America is primarily, and until recently almost exclusively, explained, dated, and viewed in terms of European exploration, interests, and subsequent invasion and settlement (all dates in this paper CE). Florida (Spanish) from 1565, the failed (British) colony of Roanoke in North Carolina in 1585 and 1587, and the first settlements of Arcadia (French) in modern Nova Scotia from 1604, Jamestown (British) in modern Virginia from 1607 and Fort Nassau (Dutch) in New York from 1614 [1, 5, 9,10,11,12,13,14] This complex but very one-sided history has been described in terms of a European timeline and ingrained perspective [15]. There is an established but inherently ethnocentric narrative and timeframe

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