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chevrons.13 The stamping technique is the most popular in the Lamar phases and is continued
into the other phases as well. Karen Smith and Michael O’Brien, when speaking about the trend
of Swift Creek stamping, note that stamping techniques have a general trend over time “from
moderate stamping from the earliest vessels to clearly stamped to heavily stamped in the latest
vessel.”14 When looking at ceramic designs, then, it is suggested to look carefully at the
frequency of the style, whether or not it is clear, and applied with meaning. By using this method
of tracing style by examining the design method, tracking cultural influences is possible.
Looking at the similarities of the designs through the phases throughout the Creek Nation, it is
assumed that the tradition of origin can be Lamar based. Yet, there are some scholars who stress
the differences between Creek pottery types and Lamar pottery types stating that “Creek pottery
probably developed from the Coosa-Tallapoosa area.”15
The argument following the differences of Creek and Lamar pottery designs observes the
development of the brushing technique as well as some of the most notable designs. Brushing in
the Creek fashion usually involved brushing the outside of the pot with dry grass or reeds in
order to get a rough texture and was considered a “phenomenon post-1690.”16 On the
Chattahoochee River many recognizable brushed Creek pottery types can be seen like the
Walnut Roughened at the “Big Tallassee site on the Tallapoosa River in Alabama” and then can
be traced to even later phases like the Atasi phase 1550–1700.17 This persistence proves a type of
exchange or influence of some sort on early Creeks that surpassed the Lamar phase and
13. Chad O. Braley, “Historic Indian Period Archeology of the Georgia Coastal Plain,” 38.
14. Karen Y. Smith and Michael J. O’Brien, “Swift Creek Complicated Stamped Pottery &
Issues of Archaeological Classification,” The Missouri Archaeologist, Vol. 63 (2002). 63.
15. Marvin T. Smith, “Historic Period Indian Archaeology of Northern Georgia,” University
of Georgia Laboratory of Archaeology Series Report No. 30 Georgia Archaeological Research
Design Paper No. 7 (1992), 63.
16. Ibid, 64.
17. Ibid.
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