Go to Ferry Farm home page Unearthing the Past
at Ferry Farm
Early Man
10,000-6,800 BC

Hunters & Gatherers
6,800-1,500 BC

Woodland Indians
1,500 BC-1,500 AD
Virginia Frontier
1695-1725
Impact of a New Town
1728
George Washington
1738-1772
The Civil War
1861-1865
Recovery & Roots of Preservation - 1872-1932 Preservation
1932-1996

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Hunters and Gatherers - 6,800 BC to 1,500 BC
During this period, bands of hunter/gatherers frequently camped at Ferry Farm, exploiting a rich variety of animals and plants for food. These groups would camp along the Rappahannock River, hunting deer and other small game, fishing, and collecting shellfish, plants, and nuts. Such diversity in food sources required these groups to expand the types of tools they used. Stone tools were initially manufactured by chipping stones into distinct forms. As time went by, pecking, grinding, and polishing became new techniques for making tools.

Archaic Indians
Spear points Awl
Stone knife Spatial clustering of spear points
Stone Axe  
Grooved Axe  
Quartz Scraper  
Interpretive painting of Archaic Indians by Martin Pate, Newnan, GA www.pateart.com
Image courtesy Southeast Archeological Center, National Park Service.