13,000?
– 9,500 years ago
Paleoindian Period
The Paleoindian tradition refers to the
earliest archaeological evidence for people
in the Northeast following the end of
the Ice Age. People inhabited a mixed
tundra-woodland environment, following
the retreat of massive glaciers that had
covered Maine and extended south to Cape
Cod. Elsewhere in North America, Paleoindian
hunting weapons have been found with the
remains of extinct Ice Age animals such
as mammoth, mastodon and giant bison.
The Paleoindian toolkit included finely
chipped spear points, scrapers for preparing
hides and working wood, and gravers for
incising bone and wood. Skilled flintknappers
made fluted points from colorful, fine-grained
rocks that were carried great distances
from their sources to the sites where
the tools are found. These fluted points
are the hallmark of the Paleoindian tradition.
| Fluted point, non-fluted
point and small fluted point |
|