Dalton tradition
The Dalton tradition is a Late Paleo-Indian and Early Archaic projectile point tradition. These points appeared in most of Southeast North America around 10,000–7,500 BC.
- "They are distinctive artifacts, having concave bases with "ears" that sometimes flare outward (Fagan 2005)." These tools not only served as points but also as saws and knives. They were often changed in form and function because the hunters would sharpen the points over and over and would eventually turn them into knives then chisels or scrapers. A variant on the Dalton point is the Hardaway point of North Carolina.
References
- Fagan, Brian. Ancient North America. Thames & Hudson Ltd: London. 2005
External links
- Dalton Tradition in No Carolina Archived 2007-06-25 at the Wayback Machine
- Site showing Dalton points
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- Periods
- Lithic
- Archaic
- Formative
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- Post-Classic
cultures
- Adena
- Alachua
- Ancient Beringian
- Ancestral Pueblo (Anasazi)
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sites
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- Bastian
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remains
- Aridoamerica
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- Container Revolution
- Eastern Agricultural Complex
- Eden point
- Effigy mound
- Falcon dancer
- Folsom point
- Green Corn Ceremony
- Horned Serpent
- Kiva
- Medicine wheel
- Metallurgy
- Mi'kmaq hieroglyphic writing
- Mound Builders
- N.A.G.P.R.A.
- Norse colonization of North America
- Oasisamerica
- Piasa
- Projectile point
- Southeastern Ceremonial Complex
- Stickball
- Three Sisters agriculture
- Thunderbird
- Transoceanic contact
- Underwater panther
- Water glyphs
- Related
- Genetic history
- Pre-Columbian era