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Geomorphic setting and stratigraphy of Cotiga Mound,Mingo County,West Virginia
Authors:D. L. Cremeens  D. B. Landers  S. R. Frankenberg
Affiliation:1. GAI Consultants, Inc., 570 Beatty Road, Monroeville, Pennsylvania 15146-1300;2. Anthropology Department, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee 37966-0720
Abstract:Cotiga Mound, a 2100-year-old Woodland burial mound, was constructed on a mid-Holocene terrace along the Tug Fork of the Big Sandy River. The terrace is the only stable, level landscape in the area. The intact nature of the terrace soil horizons indicated that little if any of the mound materials were taken from the terrace surface in the immediate vicinity of the mound. The mound was constructed of silty material and contained basket-loading macrofabric and a rock ring of sandstone fragments. Seismic fan refraction indirectly indicated the center of the rock ring, while ground-penetrating radar (GPR) did not detect the rock ring. A stratigraphic cross section, based on particle-size analysis, indicates that the mound consisted of 10 lithologic layers. The uppermost layer resulted from faunal disturbance. The remaining nine layers represented construction episodes; the upper four extending across large expanses of the mound in caplike fashion, and the lower five representing more specific inner-mound localized construction. Particle-size analysis quantitatively substantiates field observations of mound stratigraphy and highlights subtle changes in materials used for construction. This approach provides a basis for quantitative comparisons with other mounds and earthworks by delineating stratigraphic details associated with episodes of construction and the ceremonial implications of the episodes. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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