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unknow title (Introduction (assalamualaikum warahmatullahi wabarakatuh…
unknow title
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Slide one
- The Early Woodland subperiod, 1000–300 B.C., is marked by a continuation of many of the innovations that began during the preceding Late Archaic.
Slide two
- Ceramic cooking vessels, which were invented during the Late Archaic, became sturdier with the substitution of sand and grit temper for the vegetable fiber that had been used previously.
Slide three
- Pots were also more elaborately decorated, with surfaces bearing the impressions of fabric-wrapped or simple carved wooden paddles.
Slide four
- Settlements may have become somewhat more permanent during the Early Woodland sub period.
Slide five
- Excavations at a few sites have revealed evidence of relatively substantial structures that were generally circular to oval in form.
Slide six
- However, settlements from this time were generally small and may have been inhabited only on a seasonal basis.
Slide seven
- The largest villages probably housed no more than fifty people.
Slide eight
- The reliance on horticulture probably increased during the Early Woodland, although the archaeological evidence for this in Georgia is currently lacking.