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Category: 32. Archaeology of Robeson County and other
pertinent areas
KNIC009. Knick, Stanley. Along
the Robeson Trail (column). Carolina Indian Voice 11 February
1999: 6.
Publication type: Newspaper article
This installment in a series on the context of
the Lumbee people deals with archaeological evidence found in Robeson County.
Studies conducted by Mathis and Gardner at the North Carolina Indian Cultural
Center site (1986) and through the Native American Resource Center (1988
and 1992) found prehistoric artifacts that probably originated outside
the region-- adjacent to artifacts of the type normally found in the region.
These unusual artifacts began appearing in the county during the archaic
period (6,000-8,000 years ago) and continued to appear through the archaeological
record. These items probably come from Virginia, Tennessee, Florida,
the mountains, or the piedmont, suggesting a longstanding pattern of cultural
interactions of various tribes in Robeson County. From this evidence
it is reasonable to believe that the core of the tribe which became the
Lumbee was joined by remnants of other tribes - probably people from all
three North Carolina language families (Eastern Siouan, Algonkian, and
Iroquoian).
This annotation was edited on: June 24, 2002
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