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Native Americans
Charcoal/Iron Industry
Catoctin Iron Furnace
African American Influence
Whiskey Still Industry
Sawmill Industry
WPA and CCC
Presidential Retreat
Job Corps
National Register of Historic Places
Historic Preservation Activities
Museum Collection
Catoctin's Expanded Home Page
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Native Americans
Archeologist have found evidence of rhyolite quarry sites and base
camps related to hunting or kill sites in Catoctin Mountain Park.
The mountain's resources provided Native Americans with materials
for tools, animals for food and clothing, and a variety of nuts
and berries that were gathered as an additional food source.
Catoctin Mountain became an important source of rhyolite, a valued
material in making lithic tools, during the Archaic Period, 8,000
to 1,200 B.C., with the most active period during the Woodland Period,
1,200 B.C. to A.D. 1600. Between 200 A.D. to 900 A.D. Catoctin experienced
a very active period in stone quarrying and the production of lithic
tools. There were no year round residences in the area, temporary
base camps were used where a source of potable water was relatively
near a quarry site. Usually large rough "blanks" were taken from
the quarry site and finishing work was performed by the flint knappers
at the base camps.
Rhyolite tools have been found as far away as coastal Virginia
and New York. The closest source of rhyolity is a belt that runs
from Gettysburg, PA., through Catoctin, to Harpers Ferry, WV., indicating
that people traveled great distances to quarry stone and practiced
trade.
After 900 A.D. the quarrying of rhyolite in Catoctin abruptly ends.
At the same time, there is evidence that permanent, year round residences
begin to appear in the area, although there had been no evidence
discovered to indicate there were any year round residences in the
park.
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Rhyolite Flakes
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Rhyolite Point
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