FLOOD PLAIN EVOLUTION, WETLAND DEVELOPMENT AND PLANT CULTIVATION IN THE SAGINAW BAY REGION OF MICHIGAN: EVIDENCE FOR CONTINUITY IN THE MANAGEMENT OF DOMESTICATED CUCURBITA PEPO FROM THE LATE ARCHAIC THROUGH MIDDLE WOODLAND PERIODS
Decades of geological and archaeological research at Late Archaic through Middle Woodland occupation sites along the Saginaw River near Saginaw, Michigan, reveals a complex floodplain stratigraphy of intercalated wetland, alluvial, lacustrine and cultural horizons. This record documents how changes in wetland resources and configuration effects human occupation, provides insights into the place of wild and domesticated plants in the floodplain ecology, and reveals how human usage of wetland settings and resources varied through time and cultural periods. Uncarbonized seeds of domesticated C. pepo were recovered at two different locales from natural (non-cultural) wetland deposits adjacent to archaeological sites and buried up to 3 m deep within the alluvial sequence. The sedimentological context for domesticated C. pepo seeds indicates they were deposited as flood detritus within the wetlands, suggesting that squash grew locally in tended or naturalized stands on or adjacent to the flood plain. Direct AMS dates on two seeds from two different locales are 2820+/-40 BP (Beta 150203) and 1830 +/- 40 BP (Beta 215173), uncalibrated, which indicate that the wetlands were long-lived and suggest a similar pattern of squash usage spanned the Late Archaic and Middle Woodland cultural periods. The age of a shallow, near-surface Middle Woodland pit overlying the deepest and oldest of the seeds indicates that at least 2 m of sediment buried part of the wetlands prior to 1.8 kyBP. The burial was probably related to increased alluviation during a post-2 kyBP transgression of Lake Huron, and may be climate-related.