Jump to content

Mt. Rich Petroglyphs: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Remove parent category, already included via another category
Line 119: Line 119:
[[Category:Rock art in South America]]
[[Category:Rock art in South America]]
[[Category:Pre-Columbian archaeological sites]]
[[Category:Pre-Columbian archaeological sites]]
[[Category:History of Grenada]]

Revision as of 14:52, 15 January 2018

Mt. Rich Petroglyphs
Main stone at the Mt. Rich Petroglyphs
Located in the center-north of Grenada
Located in the center-north of Grenada
Shown within Grenada
LocationMt. Rich, St. Patrick Parish, Grenada
Coordinates12°11′36.28″N 61°38′34.47″W / 12.1934111°N 61.6429083°W / 12.1934111; -61.6429083
TypePetroglyph
History
PeriodsTroumassoid Period (AD 700-1650)
CulturesIndigenous peoples of the Caribbean
Site notes
OwnershipMixed public and private
Public accessYes

The Mt. Rich Petroglyphs are a series of pre-Columbian petroglyphs, set deep in a ravine along the Saint Patrick River in Mt. Rich, Grenada. The site consists of several boulders, the largest of which contains over 60 engravings.[1] Two "workstones" can also be found nearby, comprising six cupules.[2]

History

Given the diversity and sheer number of images (which may be well over 60),[1] some researchers have hypothesized they represent a palimpsest of drawings carved at different times. For instance, a study of the design elements in the Mt. Rich petroglyphs, as compared to others in the Lesser Antilles, found that the earliest images at Mt. Rich may have been carved as early as AD 500.[3] Ceramic data from a nearby archaeological site suggests they were carved slightly later, perhaps as early as AD 700.[4]

A Photo of the main stone, from Huckerby's 1921 book

The earliest historical reference to the Mt. Rich stones is a brief note dated 1845 in Simmond's Colonial Magazine, which describes "several hieroglyphical characters" carved on a stone below the Mount Rich sugar‐works.[5] In 1921, Thomas Huckerby, a Methodist minister that previously wrote an article on St. Vincent's petroglyphs,[6] published a small booklet about Grenada’s petroglyphs through the Museum of the American Indian in New York (now part of the Smithsonian).[7] The 1921 report contains photographs and discussion of the glyphs at Mt. Rich and two other sites near Victoria, Grenada. Since Huckerby, several researchers have mentioned the site in their reports.[8]

In 1986, Archaeologists Ann Cody and Thomas Banks recorded Mt. Rich in an inventory of the island's prehistoric sites.[9] They observed that the photographs in Huckerby did not match the current position of the main stone, leading them to hypothesize that the rock had rolled down the hill after Huckerby’s visit. Others have since noted that, given its association with the other petroglyphs and workstones in the river, the main stone likely just moved slightly out of position since Huckerby's photos, perhaps a result of people standing on top.[10]

Interpretation

One of workstones at the Mt. Rich Petroglyphs

While the original meaning of the Mt. Rich engravings can only be speculated, archaeologists have made several observations about rock art in the Caribbean, generally:[11]

  1. they always occur near water
  2. there are often "workstones" nearby
  3. some images occur on ceramics, but most do not
  4. there are three general categories: simple faces, elaborate faces, and geometric patterns
  5. the elaborate faces often have zoomorphic (animal-like) features

Most Caribbean archaeologists hold that petroglyphs were drawn by shamans, to denote places where ancestors would gather.[12] Like much of the New World, Amerindian groups in the Caribbean were animists, and sought to communicate with their ancestors. If petroglyphs are ritual spaces, then the nearby cupules (workstones) may be mortars upon which the shamans mixed hallucinogenic concoctions to connect with the ancestors before carving (or re-carving).[13]

Visiting

In 2014, a local youth group (MYCEDO) received a grant to renovate an old lookout building and turn Mt. Rich into a heritage attraction.[14] In 2018, they opened the building to visitors, offering information and a viewing platform for a small fee. The group also conducts tours of their village and the abandoned plantation estates nearby.[15]

The Mt. Rich Petroglyphs are part of the Ministry of Tourism's Petroglyph Path tour, which links several of Grenada's rock art sites.[16]

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b "Mt Rich Grenada (Caribbean)". Megalithic Portal. July 7, 2010. Retrieved 15 January 2018.
  2. ^ "Evaluation of Grenada's "Carib Stones" via the Rock Art Stability Index". Applie Geogaphy. August 2013. Retrieved 15 January 2018.
  3. ^ Jonsson Marquet 2009
  4. ^ Petitjean Roget 1981; Cody 1992; Hanna 2017
  5. ^ Antiquarian 1845
  6. ^ Huckerby 1914
  7. ^ Huckerby 1921
  8. ^ e.g., Bullen 1964; Petitjean Roget 1981; Dubelaar 1995
  9. ^ Cody and Banks 1986
  10. ^ Hanna 2017:162
  11. ^ Hayward and Cinquano 2009
  12. ^ Wild 2003
  13. ^ Pagan-Jimenez and Carlson 2014
  14. ^ NowGrenada 2014
  15. ^ http://www.mycedo.org
  16. ^ http://www.GrenadaArchaeology.com/PetroglyphPath

References

Antiquarian (1846), "Relics of the Charib Indians in the Island of Grenada," Simmond’s Colonial Magazine and Foreign Miscellany, January, v.VII.

Allen, Casey D., and Kaelin M. Groom (2013). "Evaluation of Grenada’s 'Carib Stones' via the Rock Art Stability Index," "Applied Geography", 42: 165–175. http://doi.org/10.1016/j.apgeog.2013.02.007

Bullen, Ripley P. (1964), The Archaeology of Grenada, West Indies, Contributions of the Florida State Museum: Social Sciences n. 11. University of Florida, Gainesville, FL.

Cody, Ann, and Thomas Banks (1986), "Archaeological Site Records", on file at the Grenada National Museum, St. George’s, Grenada.

Dubelaar, C. N (1995), "Grenada," in The petroglyphs of the Lesser Antilles, the Virgin Islands, and Trinidad, pp. 46–89. Natuurwetenschappelijke Studiekring voor het Caraïbisch Gebied, Amsterdam.

Hanna, Jonathan A. (2017), The Status of Grenada’s Prehistoric Sites: Report on the 2016 Survey and an Inventory of Known Sites, Botanical Gardens, Grenada. http://doi.org/10.18113/S1QG64

Hayward, Michele H, Lesley-Gail Atkinson, and Michael A Cinquino (2009), Rock Art of the Caribbean, University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.

Huckerby, Thomas (1914), "Petroglyphs of St Vincent, British West Indies," American Anthropologist, v.16(2): 238–244. http://doi.org/10.1525/aa.1914.16.2.02a00040

Huckerby, Thomas (1921), Petroglyphs of Grenada and a recently discovered petroglyph in St. Vincent, Indian Notes and Monographs v.1(3), Heye Foundation, Museum of the American Indian, New York.

Jessamy, Michael J, (2009), "Overview of Grenada’s Cultural Heritage," Appendix to The OECS Protected Areas and Associated Livelihoods (OPAAL) Project-Preparation of the System Plan for Protected Areas for Grenada. Environment and Sustainable Development Unit (ESDU) of the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS), Vancouver, BC. https://oas.org/dsd/IABIN/Component1/ReefFix/Grenada%20Feb25-26.09/Jessamy%20Overview%20of%20Grenada.pdf

Jonsson Marquet, Sofia (2009), "Contextual Analysis of the Lesser Antillean Windward Islands Petroglyphs", Rock Art of the Caribbean (Hayward, Atkinson, and Cinquino, eds), pp. 147–160. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.

NowGrenada (2014), "MAREP Conducts Training," 13-Nov-2014, http://www.nowgrenada.com/2014/11/marep-conducts-training/

Pagán-Jiménez, Jaime R., and Lisabeth Carlson (2014), "Recent archeobotanical findings of the hallucinogenic snuff Cohoba (Anadenanthera peregrina (L.) Speg.) in precolonial Puerto Rico," Latin American Antiquity, v.25(1): 101–116.

Petitjean Roget, Henry (1981), Archaeology in Grenada, Caribbean Conservation Association, Barbados.

Wild, Kenneth (2003), "Defining Petroglyphs from the Archeological Record," in Proceedings of the XXI International Congress for Caribbean Archaeology, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic.