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Arriving at Moosehead Lake shortly after the retreat of the glaciers,
approximately 11,000 years ago, Native Americans found Mt. Kineo. The
mountain became a spiritual center for Native American life. Its
distinctive volcanic rhyolite proved to be a valuable economic resource for
making stone tools, which have been found throughout New England and
the Maritimes. Mt. Kineo has therefore attracted archaeologists and
ethnographers for the last 150 years.
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A) Native American Use of Moosehead Resources
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A study of the four stone quarries at Mount Kineo by Charles Willoughby
(Harvard Peabody Museum) brought attention to the importance of the
green-blue rhyolite for the manufacture of prehistoric stone implements
[1]. The distinctive characteristics of Kineo-Traveler rhyolite
makes for easy recognition in prehistoric sites in the upland and coastal
regions of the northeast. Four flaked stone tools of cultures of various ages
in the northeast are shown here [2]. A major hallmark of
European arrival and presence in the region are the moderate number of
sixteenth- and seventeenth-century iron trade axes. A fine example with
four maker's marks, likely of French origin, is displayed [2d].
This example was found in about 1900 by Louis Oakes, while conducting a
land survey east of lower Moosehead Lake.
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1 Map showing location of Indian workshops near Mt.
Kineo, Maine In Charles C. Willoughby, Antiquities of the New England
Indians (Peabody Museum, 1935) Facsimile, 14.0 x 11.5
cm Hamilton Collection
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2a Fluted biface, Brassua Lake Kineo-Traveler
rhyolite ca. 11,000-10,000 B.P. 6.6 cm Maine Archaeological
Society Inc.
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2b Stemmed "Neville" biface, Sebago Lake Kineo
-Traveler rhyolite ca. 8000-7000 B.P. 5.8 cm Kennard
Collection
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2c Notched biface, Brassua Lake (broken); Point pre-form,
Brassua Lake Kineo-Traveler rhyolite ca. 3000 - 1500 B.P. 6.2
cm, 17.3 cm Sherman-French Collection, USM
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2d French "marked" trade axe, Moosehead Lake
region Iron, seventeenth century 17.5 cm Hamilton
Collection
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B) Penobscot Land, Southwest of Moosehead Lake
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Frank G. Speck of the University of Pennsylvania Museum began
researching and publishing on the Penobscot peoples in 1914. He was
trained as an ethnographer at Columbia University by Franz Boas. Using
oral traditions and historic documents, Speck defined families through
various attributes, such as mythic origin and established territory, and
mapped out their tribal territories [3].
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3a Frank G. Speck Map of Maine showing boundaries of
Penobscot tribal territory In Penobscot Man (Philadelphia: University
of Pennsylvania Press, 1940) Facsimile, 23.5 x 15.0 cm Hamilton
Collection
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3b Frank G. Speck [Key to the map of Family Tribal
Territories in Maine] In Penobscot Man (Philadelphia: University of
Pennsylvania Press, 1940) Hamilton Collection
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Osher Map Library and Smith Center for Cartographic
Education
University of Southern Maine
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