Dighton Rock: Difference between revisions

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Dighton Rock (see also, ''the Dighton Writing Rock, the Assonet Monument'') is a petroglyphic boulder located in Massachusetts along the northwesternly corner of Assonet River<ref name ="delabarre">Delabarre, Edmund Burke
Dighton Rock (see also, ''the Dighton Writing Rock, the Assonet Monument'') is a petroglyphic boulder located in Massachusetts along the northwesternly corner of Assonet River<ref name ="delabarre">Delabarre, Edmund Burke
1928, Dighton Rock: A Study of the Written Rocks of New England. Walter Neale, New York.</ref> in an area that was orignally occupied by the indigenous Wôpanâak people. <ref name ="nat geo">National Geographic Society
1928, Dighton Rock: A Study of the Written Rocks of New England. Walter Neale, New York.</ref> in an area that was orignally occupied by the indigenous Wôpanâak people. <ref name ="nat geo">National Geographic Society
N.d. Resource Library. Electronic Document, https://www.nationalgeographic.org/photo/wampanoag-territory/, accessed October 31, 2019.</ref><ref name="delabarre" />[[Image:Dighton rock (nonslutty version).jpg|thumb|right|options|Dighton rock and its discoverer, Rev. John Danforth]]
N.d. Resource Library. Electronic Document, https://www.nationalgeographic.org/photo/wampanoag-territory/, accessed October 31, 2019.</ref><ref name="delabarre" /> Although modern archaeologists agree that the Dighton rock petroglyphs were probably inscribed by the indigenous people of the area, Dighton rock has been a source of controversy due to the assertions by [http://https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudoarchaeology pseudoarchaeologists] that it is evidence of pre-Columbian contact with indigenous nations in the Americas.<ref name ="feder">Feder, Kenneth L.
2010 Encyclopedia of Dubious Archaeology: From Atlantis To The Walam Olum. Greenwood, California.</ref>[[Image:Dighton rock (nonslutty version).jpg|thumb|right|options|Dighton rock and its discoverer, Rev. John Danforth]]
==What is Dighton Rock?==
==What is Dighton Rock?==
===Discovery===
===Discovery===

Revision as of 17:08, 1 November 2019

by Ayla Schwartz

Dighton Rock (see also, the Dighton Writing Rock, the Assonet Monument) is a petroglyphic boulder located in Massachusetts along the northwesternly corner of Assonet River[1] in an area that was orignally occupied by the indigenous Wôpanâak people. [2][1] Although modern archaeologists agree that the Dighton rock petroglyphs were probably inscribed by the indigenous people of the area, Dighton rock has been a source of controversy due to the assertions by pseudoarchaeologists that it is evidence of pre-Columbian contact with indigenous nations in the Americas.[3]

Dighton rock and its discoverer, Rev. John Danforth

What is Dighton Rock?

Discovery

Reception

Popular Press

Archaeological Community

Petroglyphs

Pseudoarchaeogical Narrative

Pre-Columbian Settlement of North America

An Archaeological Response

How the Archaeological Record Works

The Flaws and Inconsitancies in Pre-Columbian Contact "theories"

Dighton Rock as (bad) evidence

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Delabarre, Edmund Burke 1928, Dighton Rock: A Study of the Written Rocks of New England. Walter Neale, New York.
  2. National Geographic Society N.d. Resource Library. Electronic Document, https://www.nationalgeographic.org/photo/wampanoag-territory/, accessed October 31, 2019.
  3. Feder, Kenneth L. 2010 Encyclopedia of Dubious Archaeology: From Atlantis To The Walam Olum. Greenwood, California.