Vail site explained

Vail site
Location:Parkertown Township, Maine
Area:7.5acres
Added:January 23, 1980
Refnum:80000246
Increase:January 11, 1984
Increase Refnum:84001474

The Vail site is a prehistoric Native American archaeological site in the remote north of Oxford County, Maine. It is located along an ancient course of the Magalloway River in an area that is occasionally under the waters of the man-made Aziscohos Lake. The site was discovered in 1979, and has been the subject of several archaeological excavations since then. The site includes at least eight encampment areas (tent sites) and a significant kill zone where the Native Americans killed a large number of caribou.[1] A 1acres section of the site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980; this listing was enlarged to 7.5acres in 1984.

Description

Six of the eight tent sites excavated in 1980 exhibited significant evidence of tool work and a number of well-shaped stone projectile points. The other two tent sites were located closer to the ancient river channel, and may have been subject to flooding. These sites are estimated to have supported a population of 36 to 60 individuals, and are believed to have been occupied for only 8 to 10 years. They were laid out in an arc measuring about 110m (360feet) in length. Finds at these tent sites are closely correlated to finds at the kill site, which was located on the opposite shore of the ancient channel. The site is believed to have been occupied by Paleo-Indians about 13,000 years ago. The ten-year occupation period is consistent with the practices of Alaskan Natives in historic times, who would occupy camps for a similar time period, abandoning them when the caribou herd that traversed the area was depleted.[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Vail Habitation and Kill Site: Implications for Palaeo-American Behavior and Band Size. American Society of Amateur Archaeologists. 2014-09-04.