The Bat Creek inscription
The
Bat Creek inscription is an inscription carved on
a stone found in a Native American
burial mound in Loudon
County
, in the U.S. state of Tennessee
, in 1889. The inscription consists of
characters loosely resembling the
Cherokee
alphabet invented by
Sequoyah in the early
1800s.
In the early 1970s, the inscription became a source of controversy
when linguist
Cyrus Gordon argued it
was actually a
Paleo-Hebrew
inscription, and thus provided evidence of
Pre-Columbian trans-oceanic
contact.
However, University of Tennessee
archaeologists and other experts reject Gordon's
assertion, arguing instead that the inscription is a fraud typical
of late-19th century archaeological hoaxes.
The stone was initially found in
1889 by a
burial mound survey team led by
John
W. Emmert of the
Smithsonian
Institution
. The mound was located at the confluence of
the Little Tennessee
River
and Bat Creek, a few miles north of modern Vonore
. The
mound had been leveled by the time University of Tennessee
archaeologists conducted salvage excavations in the area in the
1970s.
Geographic and historical context
The Little
Tennessee River enters Tennessee from the Appalachian
Mountains
to the south and flows northward for just over
before emptying into the Tennessee
River near Lenoir City
. The completion of Tellico Dam
at the mouth of the Little Tennessee in 1979
created a reservoir that spans the lower of the river. Bat
Creek empties into the southwest bank of the Little Tennessee
upstream from the mouth of the river. While much of the original
confluence of Bat Creek and the Little Tennessee was submerged by
the lake, the mound in which the Bat Creek Stone was found was
located above the reservoir's operating levels.
The lower Little Tennessee Valley is one of the richest
archaeological regions in the southeastern United States. In the
1880s, the Smithsonian Institution team led by Emmert conducted
several excavations in the valley, uncovering artifacts and burials
related to valley's 18th-century
Overhill Cherokee inhabitants and
prehistoric inhabitants. The Tellico Archaeological Project,
conducted by the University of Tennessee Department of Anthropology
in the late 1960s and 1970s in anticipation of the reservoir's
construction, investigated over two dozen sites and uncovered
evidence of substantial habitation in the valley during the
Archaic (8000-1000
B.C.),
Woodland (1000 B.C. - 1000
A.D.),
Mississippian (900-1600
A.D.), and
Cherokee (c. 1600-1838) periods.
The
expedition of Hernando De
Soto likely visited a village at the mouth of the river in 1540
and the expedition of Juan
Pardo probably visited two villages further upstream (near
modern Chilhowee
Dam
) in 1567.
The Bat Creek site, designated 40LD24, is a multiphase site with
evidence of occupation as early as the Archaic period. According to
Emmert, the site consisted of one large mound (Mound 1) on the east
bank of the creek and two smaller mounds (Mound 2 and Mound 3) on
the west bank. Mound 1— which had a diameter of and a height of —
was located on the first terrace above the river, and is thus now
submerged by the reservoir. Mound 2, which had a diameter of and
height of , and Mound 3, which had a diameter of and height of ,
were both located higher up, on the second terrace. According to
Emmert's notes, the Bat Creek Stone was found in Mound 3. The stone
consists of "ferruginous siltstone", and measures long and wide.
The inscription consists of at least eight characters, seven of
which are in a single row, and one located above or below
(depending on which way the stone is turned) the main
inscription.
Archaeological excavations
John Emmert located the mounds in the 1880s, and excavated all
three. He concluded that Mound 1 was little more than a shell
deposit. Emmert recorded eight burials in Mound 2—one of which
included metal "buckles" and a metal button. Excavations of Mound 3
revealed nine skeletons, seven of which were laid out in a row with
their heads facing north, and two more skeletons laid out nearby,
one with its head facing north and the other with its head facing
south. The Bat Creek Stone was found under the skull of the
south-facing skeleton. Along with the stone were two "copper"
bracelets (later determined to be brass) and "polished wood"
(possibly
earspools).
Radiocarbon dating of the wood spools
returned a date of 32-769 A.D. (i.e., the middle to late Woodland
period).
In 1967, the
Tennessee Valley
Authority announced plans to build Tellico Dam, and asked the
University of Tennessee Department of Anthropology to conduct
salvage excavations in the Little Tennessee Valley. Litigation and
environmental concerns stalled the dam's completion until 1979,
allowing extensive excavations at multiple sites throughout the
valley. Emmert's "Mound 1" of the Bat Creek Site was excavated in
1975. Investigators concluded that the mound was a "platform" mound
typical of the Mississippian period. Pre-Mississippian artifacts
dating to the Archaic and Woodland periods were also found. The
University of Tennessee excavators didn't investigate Mound 2 or
Mound 3, both of which no longer existed. Neither the University of
Tennessee's excavation of the Bat Creek Site nor any other
excavations in the Little Tennessee Valley uncovered any evidence
that would indicate Pre-Columbian contact with Old World
civilizations.
Analysis and debate
Cyrus Thomas of the Smithsonian Institution initially cataloged the
Bat Creek Stone inscription as a
Cherokee
inscription. Since the Cherokee scholar
Sequoyah did not invent the Cherokee alphabet until
around 1820, a Cherokee inscription could not have been made before
this period. The report showed the stone turned so that the
detached 8th character was below the main inscription.
The Bat Creek Stone received scant attention (even in Thomas' later
publications) until the 1960s when ethnologist Joseph Mahan,
puzzled by Thomas' conclusion that the inscription was Cherokee,
sent a photograph of the inscription to Cyrus H.
Gordon— a professor of
Mediterranean Studies at Brandeis University
and a well-known proponent of Pre-Columbian
transatlantic contact theories. Gordon published a series of
articles in the early 1970s arguing that the first five characters
and the last character in the inscription— when turned so that the
detached 8th character is
above the main inscription
(Chicago lawyer and author Henriette Mertz had previously suggested
the stone as it appeared in Thomas' report was upside down)— are
actually a version of Paleo-Hebrew text used in the 1st century
B.C. and the 1st century A.D. Gordon suggested that the characters
spelled out "for the Jews" or "for Judaea." His findings were
published in
Newsweek and in newspapers across the nation,
sparking a renewed interest in the inscription.
In 1979, University of Iowa archaeologist Marshall McKusick
published an article rejecting Gordon's interpretation of the
inscription as Paleo-Hebrew. McKusick argued that the inscription
actually bore similarities to an early version of Sequoyah's
alphabet that was occasionally used before the standard, or
"Worcester" version of the alphabet was published in 1827. Like
Thomas, however, McKusick made no attempt to interpret the
inscription.
Revival of the Bat Creek Stone debate
In 1988, J. Huston McCulloch, an economics professor at Ohio State
University, in the
Tennessee Anthropologist an article
supporting Gordon's interpretation of the Bat Creek inscription as
Paleo-Hebrew. McCulloch compared each characters in the Bat Creek
inscription with certain known Paleo-Hebrew letters. Using a scale
of "Good", "Fair", "Conceivable", and "Impossible" to describe the
quality of the matches, McCulloch determined the matches between
the Bat Creek Stone characters and various letters of Paleo-Hebrew
to be (from left to right, with the stone turned so that the
detached eighth character is on the bottom) "Fair", "Fair", "Good",
"Good", "Good", "Fair", "Conceivable", and "Fair". Using the early
("Foster") version of the Cherokee alphabet mentioned by McKusick,
McCulloch determined matches of "Fair", "Fair", "Fair",
"Impossible", "Fair", "Conceivable", "Good", and "Impossible". A
similar analysis using the Worcester version of Cherokee fared no
better. The best version of Cherokee fared no better in McCulloch's
analysis than
English, an alphabet
that all parties agreed was not used in the inscription.
McCulloch pointed out that the brass bracelets found along with the
stone had the same ratio of lead to zinc as bracelets manufactured
throughout the
Roman Empire in the 1st
century A.D. McCulloch also points to historical evidence that
Judaea had a capable navy before A.B. 68, and notes the widely
accepted research of Charles Hudson that shows that the first two
major post-Columbian expeditions to the southeastern United
States—those of De Soto (1540) and Pardo (1567)—ended up in the
Little Tennessee Valley at some point. McCulloch stated that the
radiocarbon date of the wooden objects "rules out" a post-Columbian
date of the associated artifacts, including the Bat Creek
Stone.
Criticism of McCulloch
In 1991, archaeologists Robert Mainfort and Mary Kwas published a
response to McCulloch in the
Tennessee Anthropologist.
They denied assertions that the Bat Creek Stone was of
pre-Columbian Old World origin, stating that such assertions were
the work of "cult archaeologists." Mainfort and Kwas pointed out
that fraudulent stone inscriptions purporting to show evidence of
such contact—such as the Kensington Stone and the Davenport
Tablets—were not uncommon, especially in the late 19th century.
They took particular issue with Cyrus Gordon, whom they went so far
as to call a "rogue professor" desperate for evidence to support
his theories of pre-Columbian transatlantic contact.
Mainfort
and Kwas consulted Paleo-Hebrew expert Frank Moore Cross of
Harvard
University
, who contradicted Gordon's assertion that the
inscription was Paleo-Hebrew. Cross stated that only two
letters of the entire inscription could conceivably be considered
Paleo-Hebrew of the period in question (1st century B.C. to 1st
century A.D.). Cross also said Gordon's reading of the inscription
("for the Jews") was based on the
Aramaic
alphabet rather than Paleo-Hebrew.
Mainfort and Kwas agreed that the zinc composition of the brass
bracelets was similar to that used in the 1st-century Mediterranean
region, but showed that this particular zinc composition was used
in the manufacture of brass bracelets in England in the 17th and
18th centuries. They also argued that the radiocarbon date of the
associated wooden objects was not conclusive, and pointed out the
possibility of contamination by groundwater. Mainfort and Kwas
suggested that Emmert planted the stone (with his own attempt at an
inscription) to amplify his own credibility, because he recently
had been fired and rehired by the Smithsonian. Cyrus Thomas had
been working on a pet theory that stated that the builders of
prehistoric mounds in America were ancestors of the Cherokee, and
Mainfort and Kwas suggest Emmert planted the stone with this in
mind (i.e., a Cherokee-esque inscription in a pre-Cherokee tomb).
They also presented evidence showing Thomas may have doubted the
stone's authenticity.
Continued debate
McCulloch responded to the criticisms of Mainfort and Kwas in an
article published in the
Tennessee Anthropologist in 1993.
McCulloch pointed out errors in Cross's analysis, and cited certain
examples in recent research of Paleo-Hebrew letters resembling the
characters on the Bat Creek Stone. McCulloch disagreed that the
type of brass bracelets (i.e., wrought and C-shaped) found at the
Bat Creek site was common at archaeological sites in North America,
and faulted Mainfort and Kwas for not providing a specific
example.
In its July–August 1993 issue, the
Biblical Archaeology Review
featured the Bat Creek Stone debate with two articles—one by
McCulloch, who elaborated on his previous arguments presented in
the
Tennessee Anthropologist, the other by P. Kyle
McCarter, Jr., a professor of Near Eastern Studies at Johns Hopkins
University, who concurred with Cross's assessment stating that the
characters on the Bat Creek Stone were not Paleo-Hebrew. McCarter
suggested that, while the stone's characters looked similar to
Paleo-Hebrew letters—especially to the "untrained eye"—, certain
subtle details in the stone's characters "do not correspond to
their proposed paleo-Hebrew prototypes closely enough to be
considered authentic".
Recent commentary
In 2004, Mainfort and Kwas published an article in
American
Antiquity showing an inscription in an 1870 Masonic reference
book that bore striking similarities to the Bat Creek inscription.
The Masonic inscription was an artist's impression of how "Holy to
Yahweh" might have appeared in Paleo-Hebrew. Mainfort and Kwas
suggested that Emmert probably based the Bat Creek inscription on
this earlier Masonic inscription. The following year, McCulloch (in
an article published on his website) noted that while there were
similarities between the two inscriptions, they weren't exact
matches, and that there was evidence that inscriptions similar to
the Masonic inscriptions occurred in ancient times.
The Bat Creek Stone remains the property of the Smithsonian
Institution, but is currently on loan indefinitely to the
University of Tennessee. The stone is currently on display at the
Frank H. McClung Museum in Knoxville,
Tennessee
.
See also
References
- Jefferson Chapman, Tellico Archaeology: 12,000 Years of
Native American History (Norris, Tenn.: Tennessee Valley
Authority, 1985).
- Charles Hudson, The Juan Pardo Expeditions: Explorations of
the Carolinas and Tennessee, 1566-1568 (Tuscaloosa, Ala.:
University of Alabama Press, 2005), 106-107, e.g.
- Robert Mainfort and Mary Kwas, "The Bat Creek Stone: Judeans in
Tennessee?" The Bat Creek Stone (Tennessee Anthropological
Association, Miscellaneous Paper No. 15, 1992), 3. Originally
published in Tennessee Anthropologist 16, no. 1 (Spring
1991).
- Cyrus Thomas, 12th Annual Report, Bureau of American
Ethnology, 391-393. Cited in Charles Faulkner (ed.), The Bat
Creek Stone (Tennessee Anthropological Society, Miscellaneous
Paper No. 15, 1992).
- Mainfort and Kwas, 3.
- Thomas, 391-393.
- J. Huston McCulloch, "The Bat Creek Inscription: Cherokee or
Hebrew?" The Bat Creek Stone (Tennessee Anthropological
Association, Miscellaneous Paper No. 15, 1992), 103-108. Originally
published in Tennessee Anthropologist 13, no. 2 (Fall
1988).
- Chapman, 97-103.
- McCulloch, 81-82.
- Mainfort and Kwas, 5-6.
- McCulloch, 82-83.
- McCulloch, 83-99.
- McCulloch, 99-101.
- McCulloch, 108.
- Mainfort and Kwas, 1-3.
- Mainfort and Kwas, 5-7.
- Mainfort and Kwas, 7-14.
- Robert Mainfort and Mary Kwas, " The Bat Creek
Stone: A Final Statement." Tennessee Anthropologist
18, no. 2 (Fall of 1993).
- J. Huston McCulloch, "The Bat Creek Stone: A Reply to Mainfort
and Kwas". Tennessee Anthropologist 18, no. 1.
- Robert Mainfort and Mary Kwas, " The Bat Creek
Stone: A Final Statement". Retrieved: 5 June 2008.
- Mainfort & Kwas "The Bat Creek Stone Revisited: A Fraud
Exposed" American Antiquity 69.4 (Oct 2004): p761
- J. Huston McCulloch, " The Bat Creek Stone." December of 2005. Retrieved: 5
June 2008.
Sources
- Faulker, Charles H. The Bat Creek Stone. Tennessee
Anthropological Association, Miscellaneous Paper No. 15, 1992.
- Gordon, Cyrus H. Before Columbus: Links Between the Old
World and Ancient America. New York: Crown Publishers,
1971.
- Griffin, James B., D.J. Meltzer, B.D. Smith, and W.C.
Sturtevant. American Antiquity, 1988. "A Mammoth Fraud in
Science."
- Mainfort, Robert C., Jr. and Mary L. Kwas. Tennessee
Anthropologist, 1991. "The Bat Creek Stone: Judeans in
Tennessee?"
- Mainfort, Robert C., Jr. and Mary L. Kwas. Tennessee
Anthropologist, 1993. "The Bat Creek Fraud: A Final Statement"
- McCarter, P. Kyle, Jr. Biblical Archaeology Review, 1993.
"Let's be Serious About the Bat Creek Stone."
- McCulloch, J. Huston. Biblical Archaeology Review, July-August,
1993. "Did Judean Refugees Escape to Tennessee?"
- McCulloch, J. Huston. Tennessee Anthropologist, 1988. "The Bat
Creek Inscription: Cherokee or Hebrew?"
- McCulloch, J. Huston. Tennessee Anthropologist, 1993. "The Bat
Creek Stone: A Reply to Mainfort and Kwas."
- McKusick, Marshall. Biblical Archaeologist, 1979. "Canaanites
in America: A New Scripture in Stone?"
- McNeil, William F. Visitors to Ancient America: The
Evidence for European and Asian Presence in America Prior to
Columbus. McFarland, 2005. ISBN 0786419172
- Schroedl, Gerald F. Archaeological Investigations at the
Harrison Branch and Bat Creek Sites. University of Tennessee,
Department of Anthropology, Report of Investigations No. 10,
1975.
- Thomas, Cyrus H. Twelfth Annual Report of the Bureau of
American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution
1890-91, 1894. "Report on the Mound Explorations of the Bureau
of Ethnology." Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C.
External links