Greetings...
Yes, F.M.'s visit, along with a metallurgist colleague, was quite productive and a lot of fun. In addition to their observations of my own material, their comments and suggestions on the iron and glass artifacts from Dave Gillilan's finds were most helpful. (For the current status of the Gillilan project - fun reading for you "Club" fans - see
http://www.daysknob.com/DG.htm .) Of course iron objects are a subject dear to Charlie Hatchett's heart, and rightly so; his little magnetic bird figures look quite genuine to me, and almost certainly very old.
Beagle, yes, I am roughly a three-hour rather circuitous drive from the Great Serpent Mound, but if you have the time and inclination, you are most welcome to visit; just let me know when/if you want to do this. When you are at the Serpent, you should also visit the fairly close mound complex by Chillicothe. That whole area is full of earthworks from around two thousand years ago. And in that vicinity you should see Spruce Hill, a very large walled Hopewell (and probably earlier) hilltop site. I toured that place a few weeks ago when the Arc of Appalachia Preserve System folks were enlisting support for rescuing the place from sale to loggers and real estate developers. (See
http://www.highlandssanctuary.org/Hopew ... cehill.htm .) It's interesting that a large quantity of apparently iron slag has appeared at that site and others nearby, including the Gillilan artifact cache. I was informed that while the Ohio archaeological establishment is highly supportive of preserving and excavating Spruce Hill, they are vehemently opposed to even the suggestion of prehistoric iron smelting. Predictably, there has long been "hyperdiffusionist" speculation that the smelting was done by Viking explorers, and I sure am not going to bite on that one. From the context of Dave Gillilan's material five feet down in undisturbed terrain, and those artifacts' distinctly Native American morphological hallmarks, it looks to me like they were manufactured by native inhabitants generally in the Late Archaic to Early Woodland time frame. Fun stuff!
Regards, Alan
http://www.daysknob.com