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Judi Lynn

(162,358 posts)
Sat Apr 13, 2019, 01:20 AM Apr 2019

Researchers interpret Cherokee inscriptions in Alabama cave

10-APR-2019
UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE

For the first time, a team of scholars and archaeologists has recorded and interpreted Cherokee inscriptions in Manitou Cave, Alabama. These inscriptions reveal evidence of secluded ceremonial activities at a time of crisis for the Cherokee, who were displaced from their ancestral lands and sent westward on the Trail of Tears in the 1830s.

"These are the first Cherokee inscriptions ever found in a cave context, and the first from a cave to be translated," said Jan Simek, president emeritus of the University of Tennessee System and Distinguished Professor of Science in UT's Department of Anthropology. Simek is a co-author of the study "Talking Stones: Cherokee Syllabary in Manitou Cave, Alabama," published recently in Antiquity. "They tell us about what the people who wrote on the walls were doing in the cave and provide a direct link to how some Native Americans viewed caves as sacred places."

The research team that worked to understand the nature and meaning of these historic inscriptions included scholars from the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, the United Keetoowah Band of Cherokees, and the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma as well as Euro-American archaeologists.

The researchers concentrated on two main groups of Cherokee inscriptions found in Manitou Cave, a popular tourist site near Fort Payne, Alabama. Until now, indigenous uses of the cave had been unrecorded, as typical archaeological evidence like artifacts or deposits have been removed during its time as a tourist attraction.

More:
https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2019-04/uota-ric041019.php

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Researchers interpret Cherokee inscriptions in Alabama cave (Original Post) Judi Lynn Apr 2019 OP
Mystery of Cherokee messages in Alabama cave finally unraveled centuries later (al.com) eppur_se_muova Apr 2019 #1
Thanks for the link. It's good to see the images of the writing. Judi Lynn Apr 2019 #2

Judi Lynn

(162,358 posts)
2. Thanks for the link. It's good to see the images of the writing.
Tue Apr 16, 2019, 09:41 PM
Apr 2019

So glad the writing managed to survive, and that it appears to be protected now from further defacing.

The intensity of the games also appeared in indigenous groups in the regions south of the border. Very interesting.

Nice to see the writing is as clear, still.

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