Page
Defining Attributes
Page is an early Late Woodland ware, characterized
by limestone temper and a cord-marked exterior surface, often with
an added strip or pseudo-collar around the rim. Decorative techniques
include cord-wrapped stick impressions or incising on the lip and
rim exterior, and rarely lugs or castellations.
Chronology
Stratigraphic sequences and radiometric dating
indicate that Page dates from ca. A.D. 900 – A.D. 1450.
Distribution
Page ceramics are found in the western Piedmont
region and west through the Great Valley, Ridge and Valley, and
Appalachian Plateau regions of Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia,
and Pennsylvania.
Description
Paste/Temper
The paste is fairly compact and not friable. The texture is medium-fine
to medium-coarse
and clayey. Exterior surface colors range from
buff to reddish-tan. This pottery has a Moh’s scale hardness of
2 – 2.5. The temper consists of crushed limestone or calcite that
varies from 1 mm – 2.5 mm thick, and makes up 25% of the paste.
Page sherds frequently have square or rectangular holes where the
tempering agent has leached out. A small percentage of sherds are
tempered with chert or other crushed rock. A number of the Page
sherds from the Friendsville site (18GA23) were tempered with crushed
hematite.
Surface Treatment
Exterior surfaces are cord-marked, or have smoothed-over cord impressions
that are oriented vertically or, less commonly, obliquely to the
body. Final Z-twist cordage impressions are found almost exclusively.
A small number of vessels exhibit fabric-impressions. Interior surfaces
are smoothed.
Decoration
Oblique slashes at the rim/vessel body juncture are the primary
decoration. A few rim sherds exhibit signs of criss-cross incising
or punctations.
Morphology
Page vessels are mainly coil-constructed, but hand-modeled vessels
have been found in rare instances. Vessel size ranges from small
to large, and vessels are conoidal, globular/rounded, or conoidal/globular
in shape. Lips vary from flat to slightly rounded. Rims range from
vertical to slightly flaring. Rim strips are added to some vessels
to form a pseudo-collar. Uncollared rims have thickened lips, which
are often folded over. Vessel wall thickness ranges from 6 mm –
8 mm.
Defined in the Literature
Page Cord-Marked was first defined from pottery sherds recovered
at the Keyser Farm site (44PA1), located half a mile from the South
Fork of the Shenandoah River between Luray and Front Royal at the
foot of Massanutten Mountain in Page County, Virginia (Manson et
al. 1944:402-405). Franklin (1979) defined the Mason Island type
in her M.A. thesis on the Mason Island site, 18MO13, in Montgomery
County, Maryland. Mason Island ware is identical to Page and this
site lies at the eastern edge of the Page ceramic distribution.
Stewart (1982:82) later noted that Page was also identical to the
Nolands Ferry ware described by Peck (1979) from the Monocacy River
region, and to the Radford Fabric/Net-Impressed ware described by
Evans (1955). Somerset Plateau (Pennsylvania) limestone-tempered
Monongahela wares represented at the Gnagey site are also very similar
to Page ceramics (George 1983).
Type Site
Keyser Farm (44PA1)
Maryland sites with
Page components
Nolands Ferry (18FR17)*, Mason Island (18MO13)*, Cresaptown
(18AG119), Barton (18AG3), Sang Run 918GA22)*, Friendsville (18GA23)*
* collections at MAC Lab
Radiocarbon
Dates |
Date |
Sample # |
Site |
Feature |
Reference |
920 + 60;
calibrated A.D. 1005 – 1250;
multiple
intercepts
at A.D. 1055, 1085, 1150 |
Beta-143409 |
Barton
(18AG3) |
Feature 63 |
Wall
2001 |
830 + 70 B.P.;
calibrated A.D. 1170 -1225;
intercept at A.D. 1225 |
Beta-87251 |
Barton
(18AG3) |
Feature 16 |
Wall
2001 |
900 + 50 B.P.;
calibrated A.D. 1020 – 1250;
intercept at A.D. 1160 |
Beta-143406 |
Barton
(18AG3) |
Feature 53 |
Wall
2001 |
830 + 60 B.P.;
calibrated A.D. 1040 –1290;
intercept at A.D. 1215 |
Beta-24721 |
Sang Run
(18GA22) |
Feature 11 |
Wall 1989 |
770 + 60;
calibrated A.D. 1170 – 1300;
intercept
at A.D. 1270 |
Beta- 24720 |
Sang Run
(18GA22) |
Feature 10 |
Wall
1989 |
950 + 45 B.P.;
uncalibrated |
SI-7024 |
Cresaptown
(18AG119) |
Feature 180 |
Wall
2001 |
915 + 70;
uncalibrated |
SI-7025 |
Cresaptown
(18AG119) |
Feature 259 |
Wall
2001 |
References
Egloff and Hodges
1989; Curry
and Kavanagh 1991; Franklin
1979; Geier
1985; George
1983; Manson
et al. 1944; Stewart
1982; Wall
1989, 2001 |