Madison
Defining Attributes
The Madison is a small, thin, triangular point with a straight or slightly concave base.
Chronology
The Madison point dates to the Late Woodland period. Justice (1987) suggests a date range of 800 AD to the beginning of the Contact period, but he notes that this range can vary geographically. In Maryland, Steponaitis (1980) places the Madison between 1250 and 1600 AD. Ritchie (1971) states that the Madison began to replace the Levanna point in New York around 1350 AD. Three radiocarbon-dated features containing small triangular points at the Hughes site (18MO1) in Montgomery County, Maryland, produced a suggested occupation range of 1340 to 1490 AD (roughly 1300-1450 AD in calendar years) (Jirikowic 1999).
» Similar Archaic Period triangular points
Description
Blade
The blade is most commonly an isosceles triangle, although some are equilateral. It is usually thin and fairly flat in cross section. The edges are generally straight, but slightly excurvate or incurvate examples occur.
Haft Element
The base is either straight or slightly concave, or very rarely convex. Basal grinding sometimes is present.
Size
Lengths range from 19 to 60 mm, with an average of around 30 mm. Widths range from 18 to 34 mm, an average of around 22 mm. Studies of Madison points in the Northeast report thicknesses ranging from 2 to 5 mm, with most between 3 and 4 mm, but a sample of 50 points from the middle Potomac Valley had a mean thickness of 5.13 mm (Hranicky 2002).
Technique of Manufacture
Finely chipped with pressure flaking.
Material
In a sample of 507 Madison points from the lower Patuxent drainage, Steponaitis (1980) reported that 71% were quartz, followed by quartzite (13%), chert (12%), rhyolite (3%), and jasper (1%). In the area surrounding Zekiah Swamp on the lower Potomac, Wanser (1982) found that 81% of 26 Madison points were quartz, with lesser amounts of quartzite, rhyolite, and chert. In the Monocacy River drainage, 88% of 338 Madison points were quartz, with 9% rhyolite, 2% chert, and less than 1% of quartzite, argillite, and chalcedony (Kavanagh 1982). Rhyolite, chert, quartzite, and quartz are used for Madison points in the middle Potomac River Valley (Hranicky 2002). At the Hughes site in Montgomery County, 94% of 602 triangular points (all types) were quartz, with the rest chert, rhyolite, and chalcedony (Jirikowic 1999). In the Hagerstown Valley, over half of the triangular points were rhyolite, followed by lesser amounts of chert, jasper, quartz, and quartzite (Stewart 1980). In Delaware, triangular points are most commonly made from quartz, jasper, and chert (Custer 1996).
Discussion
The Madison is an arrowhead that is found nearly everywhere east of the Mississippi River, and similar points are found in the West (Justice 1987). The Madison point is morphologically similar to other triangular points, like the earlier Hamilton from Tennessee (Kneberg 1956) or the later Caraway from North Carolina (Coe 1964).
As a general rule of thumb in Maryland, Late Woodland period isosceles points can be classified as Madison, large equilateral points as Levanna, and small equilaterals as Potomac. However, the published type descriptions for all three show considerable morphological overlap. As a result of this, and given also the potential modification of triangular points through resharpening, the assignment of type names and dates to individual specimens can be problematic. Some researchers prefer to combine all the Late Woodland triangular points into one type (cf. Custer 1996; Wall et al. 1996).
Defined in Literature
The Madison point was named by Edward G. Scully in 1951 for specimens found in Madison County, Illinois. Scully first called it the Mississippi Triangular point, but then changed the name to Madison. Ritchie (1961, revised 1971) further discussed and popularized the type name.
References
1964 The Formative Cultures of the Carolina Piedmont. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 54(5). Philadelphia.
1996 A Guide to Prehistoric Arrowheads and Spear Points of Delaware. Center for Archaeological Research, University of Delaware, Newark.
2002 Lithic Technology in the Middle Potomac River Valley of Maryland and Virginia. Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, New York.
1999 Final Report on the 1990, 1991, and 1994 Excavations at the Hughes Site (18MO1). Report prepared by the American University Potomac River Archaeology Survey, Washington, DC.
1987 Stone Age Spear and Arrow Points of the Midcontinental and Eastern United States: A Modern Survey and Reference. Indiana University Press, Bloomington.
1982 Archeological Resources of the Monocacy River Region, Frederick and Carroll Counties, Maryland: Final Report. Maryland Geological Survey, Division of Archeology, File Report 164.
1956 Some Important Projectile Point Types Found in the Tennessee Area. Tennessee Archaeologist 12(1):17-27.
1971 A Typology and Nomenclature for New York Projectile Points. New York State Museum and Science Service Bulletin 384. Albany.
1951 Some Central Mississippi Valley Projectile Point Types. Mimeographed paper, Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
1980 A Survey of Artifact Collections from the Patuxent River Drainage, Maryland. Maryland Historical Trust Monograph Series 1. Maryland Historical Trust and Maryland Department of Natural Resources, Annapolis, MD.
1980 Prehistoric Settlement and Subsistence Patterns and the Testing of Predictive Site Location Models in the Great Valley of Maryland. Ph.D. dissertation, Catholic University of America.
1996 The Lithic Technology of the Trenton Complex. Trenton Complex Archaeology Report 13. The Cultural Resource Group, Louis Berger & Associates, East Orange, N J. Prepared for the New Jersey Department of Transportation.
1982 A Survey of Artifact Collections from Central Southern Maryland. Maryland Historical Trust Manuscript Series 23. Maryland Historical Trust and Maryland Department of Natural Resources, Annapolis.