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Archaeological Investigations at 9CH155: November 2008

Author(s)
Report Number
5063
Year of Publication
1994
County
Abstract

This report documents emergency archaeological data recovery and survey efforts performed in late 2008 at site 9CH155 on Ossabaw Island, Chatham County, Georgia. The project included salvage excavation of an eroding human mortuary feature (Burial 1), Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) survey of selected portions of the site, topographic mapping, and a minor surface collection from a rarely exposed mud flat in Newell Creek. Each of these phases was completed successfully and provided new information about the site that should prove helpful in its future management. Burial 1 was determined to be an Early Irene phase (ca. A.D. 1340, or Late Mississippian) cremation pit, or crematorium. The basal sections of this pit contained a small amount of human bone but most skeletal remains appear to have been removed for burial elsewhere. The surrounding soils contained midden with a variety of Late Archaic, Woodland, Mississippian, and Historic period (late 18th and early 19th century) artifacts. The GPR Survey focused on the areas along the bluff that are threatened by erosion and approximately 60 percent of the bluff that fronts the site on its western margin was surveyed. A section of the sites interior was also sampled by GPR survey. The GPR survey revealed many potential cultural features and other enigmatic radar anomalies. The radar reflections were ranked 1-5 by their priority of need for investigation and/or cultural management, with Priority 5 being the most urgent. Thirty-one Priority 5 radar anomalies were mapped and their locations tabulated. The topographic mapping of the site was limited and intended to provide enough mapping data for the proper location of the test unit surrounding Burial 1 and the GPR survey blocks. The surface collection of the mud flat was an opportunistic modification of the project plan. All ceramics and a representative sample of other artifact types were collected from the exposed mud flat. This small sample yielded important information about the mid-19t century plantation occupation.