Woodland Period - St. Johns Cultures (500 BC to 1500 AD)
Over time, the Archaic Indians living in Florida developed new technologies and ways of life. By 500 BC, NE Florida native cultures are called St. Johns peoples. The
Pelotes Island Nature Preserve native pottery was affected by Georgia styles and Florida styles. Up in Georgia, sand was used as a temper to harden the clay.
Sometimes pottery with both sand and fibers are found, demonstrating the slow shift to new
technology. The Florida style required the potter to use clay from fresh
water sources containing fresh-water sponges. The sponges minute skeletons, called
spicules, settle into the clay and provide a natural temper. Both of these tempering
methods, along with the coil manufacture allows a much lighter container to be formed. The
sand-tempered pottery is by nature gritty, whereas the sponge-spicule pottery is chalky
and soft enough to scratch with your fingernail. In north Florida, both are found from this period right up into the
European Contact Period (post 1500). On Pelotes and Pinders Islands, both are also found, but in much smaller
quantities than the earlier fiber-tempered wares. This could indicate less extensive
occupation in later times, or that the upper layers of the oyster middens were mined for
road fill, or that the more recent artifacts have been stolen because they are close to
the surface. Click here to see Sand-tempered and St. Johns
Chalky (sponge-spicule) pottery.
The tool kit of these Woodland Indians was
becoming complex. They utilized chert (poor quality local stone) to make projectile points
that were generally smaller than those made by earlier peoples. They had many specialized
tools, like awls, drills, knives, dart and spear points, needles, etc. These tools could
be made of chert, bone, antler, or shell. Shell became very important as a tool resource
during the late Archaic, and the trend continued into the Woodland period. Busycon (whelk) axes, bowls,
columellae (central twirl) jewelry, etc. are often found in north Florida. Several modified whelk shells, including an ax
head and a complete lightning whelk bowl have been found on Pinders Island. Click here to see some of
the Preserves native artifacts.
In lifestyle, these Indians have become much more complex, living in larger groups, and
probably living in one place most of the year. They may have been growing corn at this
point, but there is little hard evidence to prove this. Intense collection of marine
resources, wild plant materials, and land animals, especially deer, provided their
economic base. The dead are buried in mounds made of sand and oyster shells. Grave goods
have also been found in the mounds. Burials, and the addition of grave goods, suggest a
belief in the afterlife and an increase in ceremonialism. A few burials were primary,
buried immediately after death in a flexed or extended position. More often, the bodies
were processed before burial in a charnel house. After the skeletons were mostly clean,
the skull and long bones were interred in the mound in a bundle burial. Click here for more information about a
Woodland
burial site at the Preserve called Dent Mound
Provided by the Pelotes Island
Nature Preserve
http://pelotes.jea.com