Woodland Projectile Points
Woodland Projectile Points

The land that we refer to today as Jamestown Island has been in use by Indigenous Peoples for over 10,000 years. Archaeologists have divided this time into periods, to better understand changes over time and the development of human society. These defined time periods can be very different depending on location across the country and are based on broad observations about societal change. In this region, the Woodland Period dates to roughly 1100 BCE-1650 CE.

This information on this page does not include or pertain to small triangular points. While small triangular points are first manufactured during the Late Woodland period, they are also the point type in use by Virginia Indians in 1607. Because of their particular relevance to the site, they are highlighted on a separate page.  

Discounting small triangular points, there are almost 100 projectile points that date to the Woodland time period. Points that would have been used prior to the arrival of the English are mostly found in disturbed contexts. Those that are found in intact contexts date to the 17th century and are likely the result of colonists collecting points that they found during their time in Virginia. Examples of the types of Woodland period points found in Jamestown’s collection are detailed in the chart below.

Assigning a type to a projectile point is challenging. There is a lot of variation in points, even among specific type classifications. These artifacts were made by human hands, and as with many custom made products, different makers will have different skill levels, preferences, and choices to make during the manufacturing process. Point type classifications are partially subjective and some trickier individual points may be typed differently depending on the archaeologist identifying them. While the standard view of the body, as seen in the chart, is an important visual factor in classifying points, other views not shown (such as the cross-section) are equally vital. Additionally, characteristics that are difficult to portray visually and must be determined via tactile analysis, such as basal grinding, are an important consideration. Factors like use-wear and taphonomic processes (such as breakage and deposit conditions) highly impact the general form of individual points, and some degree of imagination to visualize what the point looked like before it was modified is occasionally required. These pages are not intended to be a guide for identifying projectile points, but to show the variety that have been recovered at Jamestown.

doublet buttons in the jamestown collection

PhotoPoint TypeTime Period and Date Range
(Virginia Specific)
Material Types in the Collection
(in order of quantity)
Fishtail-likeTransition to Early Woodland 1400 - 800 BCEQuartzite
CalvertEarly Woodland 1200 - 800 BCEQuartz
VernonEarly Woodland 1200 - 800 BCEQuartz
PiscatawayEarly Woodland 1200 - 600 BCEQuartzite
Quartz
BadinEarly Woodland 500 - 0 BCEQuartzite
Rhyolite
Quartz
RossvilleMiddle Woodland 500 BCE - 400 CEQuartzite
Quartz
PottsMiddle Woodland 500 - 1000 CEQuartzite
Quartz
Chert
YadkinMiddle Woodland 300 - 1300 CEQuartzite
Chert
Jasper
Quartz
Jack's Reef Corner-NotchedLate Middle Woodland 700 - 1300 CEJasper
Pentagonal(late) Middle to Late Woodland 700 - 1300 CEChert
Medium TriangleLate Woodland 1000 - 1350 CEQuartzite
Quartz
Hamilton IncurvateLate Woodland 1200 - 1700 CEChert