Where Did the Red Paint People Come From

The Mysterious "Red Paint People" of Ancient Labrador

By James R. Coffey

The "Red Paint People" of New England and the Atlantic Canadian coastal regions of North America were a pre-Columbian indigenous culture named for the large quantities of red ocher they typically buried with their dead. An otherwise unknown seafaring group, they began fishing and hunting along the coasts of North America at least 7,000 to 9,000 years ago.

A forgotten people's worldview of death

Red Paint People occupation

Red Paint People occupation

The so-called " Red Paint People " of New England and the Atlantic Canada regions of North America were a pre-Columbian indigenous culture named for the large quantities of red ochre they typically used in their mortuary practices.

Sometimes referred to as the Moorehead Burial Tradition after archaeologist Warren K. Moorehead who brought this mysterious culture to the attention of the scientific community, the Red Paint People hit their peak of cultural development between 3000 BCE and 1000 BCE--but have a history spanning thousands of years prior to this time.

Millennia before the Vikings

Artist rendition

Artist rendition

An otherwise unknown seafaring group that began fishing and hunting along the coasts and rivers of North America at least 7,000 to 9,000 years ago, these ancient Americans came to rival their European counterparts in sophisticated stone and bone tool-making and navigational skills, several millennia before the Vikings.

With some of their coastal sites showing evidence of year-round occupation, their diets included sea fish, anadromous fish, shellfish, meat, berries, acorns, nuts and roots, with regular hunting (probably by spearing) of swordfish obtained from the Gulf of Maine.

With a trading range known to have extended from Labrador to the New York side of Lake Champlain, the Red Paint People 's cultural influence is believed to have covered most of this geographic area, with their burial traditions believed to have influenced cultures from other regions.

While no pottery or metal tools have been found in sites associated with this culture, for unknown reasons these ancient sailors routinely covered both their dead and the grave goods they buried with them, with red ochre, making their burial habits more elaborate than any subsequent culture of the area. (Red ochre, or iron oxide, is known to have been used for purposes both spiritual and practical--as an honorific in burials and sites, and as protection from the sun and insects.)

Discovery

Harvesting red ocher

Harvesting red ocher

While the gravesites of the Red Paint People had been known as early as the 1840s, the first scientific examination didn't occur until 1892 when a Harvard professor made the first archaeological assessment, assisted by a man named Charles Willoughby. Willoughby subsequently exhibited a scale model of the dig site at the Chicago Columbian Exposition in 1893, which caught the attention of Warren Moorehead, who decided to further excavate. Moorehead subsequently found beautifully crafted stone artifacts (gouges or woodworking tools), fishing plummets, flaked stone knives and spearheads of ground slate.

Publishing his finds from 1912 to the 1920s in several prominent American archeological journals, Moorehead concluded that the Red Paint People were much older than other known groups of the area, and were in fact a totally different culture from that of the later Algonquin tribes---whom many had considered the progenitors of regional culture. His proposal of a "new" ancient culture was, however, consistently challenged, sparking a controversy based on his assessed of the red ocher deposits.

Although the sites, which were little more than rock deposits, were generally accepted as graves, they were so old that no bones were preserved, and some of the stone artifacts were badly decayed. The advent of the Carbon-14 dating process however, later proved that Moorehead was indeed correct, and that the burial sites dated to between 2,000 to 6,000 years ago, with the grave stones dating to 4,000 BCE. Thus, no known culture could have made them.

Hypothesis

Artist rendition

While an early hypothesis concluded that the Red Paint graves were the remains of a more advanced culture that had been wiped out by tidal waves lost credence due to lack of physical evidence, it lead to the suggestion that the Red Paint People may possibly have been the descendants of an even more ancient sailing people who once traded along these North Atlantic coasts and the Arctic Circle, island-hopping--perhaps in large skin boats--along a string of islands, now known to have existed when sea-level was lower, just as the last of the Wisconsin Glacier melted away.

This raises the question for many historians, "How early and for how long did people inhabit these coastal regions before the Atlantic submerged them around 8,500 years ago?"

References :
http://www.seacoastnh.com/history/prehistoric/redpaint.html
http://home.myfairpoint.net/espooner/id51.html
http://www.archaeology.org/0005/abstracts/letter.html

Where Did the Red Paint People Come From

Source: https://sites.google.com/a/rsu4.org/wabanaki-of-maine/red-paint-people/mysterious-red-paint-people

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