In western and northcentral
Pennsylvania and eastern Ohio, fire clay deposits are found underlying coal
seams and date to the Carboniferous age. Fire clays have historically been an
important economic resource for the Commonwealth, most notably during the
industrial boom of the mid-19th and early 20th century. The
archaeological record also demonstrates Pennsylvania fire clays were a natural
resource exploited by Pre-Contact Native Americans as early as 6000 years ago, although
direct evidence of prehistoric quarry activities is lacking. Future trace
element studies from probable sources as compared with artifacts have potential
to shed further light on the movement of people, and the trade and exchange of
goods and ideas in the Upper Ohio drainage basin, Middle Atlantic and Northeast.
Map of Clay Sources in Northern
Appalachia, (Ries 1903)
|
Fire clay samples from Cambria, Clearfield and Fayette counties |
Fire clay is the common term for clays of high aluminum content, valued
since the industrial revolution and prior for their refractory properties, or
resistance to high temperatures. Objects made from fire clay will remain
structurally stable up to or above 3,000 ˚F. “Fire bricks” manufactured
from these clays are used in metal, ceramic and glass industries for lining
furnaces and kilns. Refractory clays are also used to create tools and utilitarian
vessels also subjected to high heat in metallurgy, pottery and glass-works,
such as crucibles
and saggers.
Harmony Brick Works furnace, Leetsdale (36AL480), (Sewell 2004) |
By the mid-1800s in Pennsylvania, plastic forms of
fireclay and non-plastic deposits, known as flint clays, were mined to produce
refractory materials for the iron, coal, ceramic and glass industries, and were
a key product that in tandem with the associated coal sources of the region
facilitated the burgeoning steel industry in Pittsburgh.
Fire brick,
manufactured by S. Barnes Company of Pittsburgh to line furnaces and kilns
at the Harmony Brick Works, a common
brick manufacturer, Leetsdale (36AL480), (Sewell 2004).
|
Table courtesy of (Ries 1903)
|
Long before the steel boom greatly
increased the demand for commercial-industrial refractory products, Native
Americans were exploiting fire clay deposits for their unique plastic, yet
stone-like properties. Raw sourced fire clays are easily hand polished to a
high luster. For this reason, it was a valued material used by a variety of prehistoric
cultural groups to make specialized ground stone tools such as bannerstones or atlatl
weights, smoking pipes, gorgets, pendants and other personal
adornments.
Gorget fragment and polished fire clay spalls surface collected from the Buffington site (36In15), Veigh collection |
Fire clay artifacts have been
found in archaeological contexts that range from the Late Archaic to Contact
Period, yet the most distinct and diagnostic artifact almost exclusively made
from fire clays are blocked-end tubular pipes. These pipes were produced and widely
traded in the Adena and to a lesser extent, the Middlesex/Meadowood interaction
spheres during the Early Woodland throughout the Ohio Valley, Middle Atlantic
and Northeast.
Blocked-End Tubular fire clay pipes from the Haldeman O’Connor Cache,
Shelly Island (36Yo3)
Rafferty (2004: 16) argues that the
uniformity of blocked-end tubular smoking pipes suggests they were traded widely from specific and
limited number of workshops. In contrast, the variability found in conical and
open-ended tube pipes, also widely dispersed during the Early Woodland, were
more likely products of local regional developments. While the well
documented fire clay sources, such as those found in Portsmouth, Ohio are
closer to the heartland of Adena culture in the Upper Ohio Valley, McConaughy
hypothesizes that trace element source studies may demonstrate bordering Cresap
phase communities of West Virginia and Pennsylvania, whose mortuary practices
and aspects of material culture show a vested interaction in Adena trade and
exchange networks, were potential suppliers of blocked-end tubular pipes. Pipes
found in various stages of early production in Warren, Forest,
Elk and Clarion counties may further indicate local fire clay quarry activities.
It is possible that local Cresap phase communities would have controlled access to these upper Allegheny
Valley fire clay sources, and the production and trade of this pipe variety facilitated
their interactions in these greater regional exchange networks (Mayer-Oakes
1955; McConanghy in press). Smith (1979) also notes that outcrops in Clearfield
County believed to be “used extensively for pipe and pendant-making by the
later Susquehannock inhabitants of the West Branch” of the Susquehanna River as
potential quarry sources in the Early Woodland.
Fire clay pipes and preforms (Mayer-Oakes 1955) |
Blocked-end tubular pipe distribution in the Susquehanna River Valley
(Smith 1979)
|
However, prehistoric fire clay
quarries have yet to be recorded in the Pennsylvania Archaeological Site Survey
(PASS). This may be largely due to the extensive mining of these resources in
the 19th and 20th centuries that have likely destroyed
most archaeological evidence of pre-industrial quarry use. Furthermore, fire clay
trace element sourcing studies have yet to be a priority in regional
archaeology research. Comprehensive comparative sourcing studies would be a possible
avenue for future study, (McConaughy in press), and provide direct evidence
that western and north central fire clay sources were also mined in prehistory.
We hope you’ve enjoyed our
overview of fire clay use through time. Mark your calendars for the 49th
Annual Middle Atlantic Archaeology Conference, March 21-24, 2019 in
Ocean City, Maryland. It is still possible to register online to attend through
March 8th.
References
Ries,
Heinrich
1903 The Clays of the United States
East of the Mississippi River. Department of the Interior, United States Geological Survey,
Professional Paper No. 11.
Mayer-Oakes,
William J.
1955 Prehistory
of the Upper Ohio Valley; An Introductory Archaeological Study.
Anthropological Series, No 2. Annuals of Carnegie Museum 34,
Pittsburgh.
McConaughy,
Mark A.
In
press Chapter 7, Early and Middle
Woodland in the Upper Ohio Drainage Basin. The
Archaeology of Native Americans in Pennsylvania Volume 1. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia.
Rafferty,
Sean M.
2004 “They Pass Their Lives in Smoke, and at
Death Fall into the Fire”: Smoking Pipes and Mortuary Ritual during the Early
Woodland Period. The Archaeology of
Tobacco Pipes in Eastern North America: Smoking and Culture. The University
of Tennesee Press, Knoxville.
Sewell,
Andrew R.
2004 Chapter 5 Phase III Archaeology Data
Recovery at the Historic Brickworks Component of 36AL480 in Leetsdale,
Allegheny County, Pennsylvania ER# 1999-2661-003-E. Submitted by Hardlines
Design Company, 4608 Indianola Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 43214. On file at The
State Museum of Pennsylvania, Section of Archaeology.
Smith,
Ira F. III
1979 Early Smoking Pipes in the Susquehanna
River Valley. Pennsylvania Archaeologist 49(4):9-23
Stewart,
R. Michael
1989 Trade and Exchange in Mid-Atlantic
Prehistory. Archaeology of Eastern North
America 17:47-78
For more information, visit PAarchaeology.state.pa.us or the Hall of Anthropology and Archaeology at The State Museum of Pennsylvania .
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