kiddrock33 said:
any info on the red paint people ? very important questions possibly connected to them. in massachusetts ny vt borders. kiddrock33
Hi Kiddrock, Here is what I found in one of my books,
In New England & the Maritime Provinces of Canada-The Archaic life-style had taken hold by 3000 B.C., & perhaps earlier.
Indian cemeteries have been found throughout the area, & these gravesites show that the people there had also developed carefully prescribed burial practices. of particular intrest are the Red Paint People, a name given them by 18th-century farmers because these ancient indians lined their burial pits with bright red hematite.
The most intresting Red Paint burial ground discovered so far is at Port au Choix, in northern Newfoundland- the northernmost penetration of the people who practiced the Red Paint rites. Here, on an abandoned beach a few yards above the present shore of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, the skeletons of 100 persons, buried 4,000 years ago, have survived in excellent condition. Judging by the remains, they were a robust group of people, quite similar in appearance to the Indians of New England during historic times.
The dead apparently were buried with the tools they valued most highly & might want to have in the next world. The graves contain axes, adzes, & gouges-heavy woodworking tools the Indians probably used to make dugout canoes. These fishermen & hunters also possesed firemaking kits of flintstone & pyrite, as well as a wide variety of tools & weapons of bone, stone, & antler. As findings aat the Port au Choix site indicate, the people also crafted bone & antler into combs, pins, & effigies.
By 1500 B.C. the Red Paint People were already in decline, & by 500 B.C.- for reasons that are not entirely clear- the old cult had largely faded.
Archaelogists believe that these Red Paint People were almost certainely among the ancestors of the Algonquin Indians who roamed the forests of the Northeast when the Europeans came to the new world.
Hope this was of some help, Fossis.........