Research Archeologist Studies Prehistoric Textiles at U of A Museum

Elizabeth Horton takes a very small fiber sample from an Ozark bluff shelter textile for further analysis later.
Laurel Lamb

Elizabeth Horton takes a very small fiber sample from an Ozark bluff shelter textile for further analysis later.

Elizabeth Horton, research archeologist for the Arkansas Archeological Survey's Toltec Mounds Research Station, visited the University of Arkansas Museum last week. The purpose of her visit was to study Ozark Plateau bluff shelter textiles, basketry, and other perishables from the museum's collections in order to gain more insight into prehistoric weaving traditions and plant domestication in the region.

Materials found in bluff shelters are a highlight of the University Museum's archeology collection. Bluff shelters are rock overhangs that prehistoric and historic people utilized. The sites are considered sacred to the inhabitants' modern-day ancestors, including the Osage and Caddo Nations. Such sites are also significant for archeologists because their dry microclimates preserve fragile artifacts, such as textiles and plant food remains, incredibly well.

During her research visit, Horton studied the weaving patterns of various plant fiber bags and baskets that date back hundreds of years. Textile weaving is an art, full of subtle details and techniques. Certain rivercane basket patterns that she studies in archeological materials have been passed down through generations and can still be seen in Southeastern Native American weaving today. Small fiber samples from the bags were taken for further analysis once back at the Toltec Mounds Research Station to learn more about the plant materials that were used in the weaving process.

Plant domestication is also at the forefront of Horton's research. Collaborating with the Arkansas Archeological Survey's coordinating office and the university's MicroCT Imaging Consortium for Research and Outreach, the museum pulled and prepared a well-preserved Edens Bluff bag full of plant seeds for a 3D scan and CT scan. Over 1,900 years old, the bag is very fragile. With these scans, the bag can be examined in more detail on the computer without damaging the original. The bag can also be reproduced through the Arkansas Archeological Survey's 3D printer. The seeds within the bag belong to the plant, Chenopodium berlandieri subsup jonesianum, or goosefoot, domesticated in eastern North America over 4,000 years ago. Some people may be familiar with a relative of this now extinct plant's because it frequently ends up on our dinner plates today — quinoa.

Horton (Ph.D., Washington University in St. Louis, 2011) is the Archeological Survey's research station archeologist for Toltec Mounds Archeological State Park and research assistant professor of anthropology, University of Arkansas. She came to the Archeological Survey in 2010 as a postdoctoral researcher at the coordinating office, and began the position at the Toltec Mounds research station in July 2011. Horton's doctoral research focused on Pre-Columbian fabric technology and plant fiber use in the Southeast, and Arkansas in particular, using assemblages from the University of Arkansas Museum Collections. Her specialization in paleoethnobotany brings much-needed skills to the Toltec station and to the entire Survey organization.

About the University of Arkansas Museum: The University Museum develops and maintains extensive collections totaling 7 million objects in the fields of archeology, ethnography, geology, history, and zoology. The collections are available for exhibition, research, classroom use, tours, and loans. It is an part of the J. William Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences and seeks to serve the campus, the community, and research scholars. 

Contacts

Laurel Lamb, curator
University of Arkansas Museum
479-575-4730, lalamb@uark.edu

Headlines

Four Students Named Goldwater Scholars; Two Earn Udall Honorable Mentions

Four U of A students have received the prestigious Goldwater Scholarship, an award for top students in mathematics, science, and engineering.

Cross-Campus Collaboration Culminates in New Outdoor Geological Installation

Grand opening event to celebrate the new GeoLab installation at the U of A’s Gearhart Hall courtyard is set for May 3. The installation will be open to the public year-round.

First Students to Use Online Degree to Hone Nursing Leadership, Elevate Patient Care

Hanna Baxendale and Wendi Kimbrell will begin coursework in the Doctor of Nursing Practice-Executive Master of Business Administration program offered by the Eleanor Mann School of Nursing and Walton College.

Join the Office for Sustainability on a Final Cruise to Campus

Cruise to Campus Wednesdays have fostered a gathering space for individuals interested in biking to campus. Drop by the Old Main Lawn from 7:30-10 a.m. Wednesday for coffee, something to eat and conversation.

Fay Jones School Student Ambassador Program Gives Voice to Design Students

The student ambassador program at the Fay Jones School of Architecture and Design is built to connect top design students with their school, its alumni, its future students and others inside and outside the school.

News Daily