Ohio History Journal

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SOME POPULAR ERRORS IN REGARD TO MOUND

SOME POPULAR ERRORS IN REGARD TO MOUND

BUILDERS AND INDIANS.

 

THE   erroneous ideas of persons, otherwise well in-

formed, concerning archaeological matters would amaze

one who could attain to any considerable knowledge of

the science without previously becoming familiar to some

extent with the many absurd theories and notions pro-

mulgated by authors ignorant of their subject and writing

only to strike the popular mind and pocket. The tend-

ency of most of these works-and the exceptions are not

to be found among those of greatest fame and widest cir-

culation-is to indulge in sentiment without much regard

to facts; to appeal to the reader's emotions instead of to

his reason; to induce a state of melancholy over the

mournful and mysterious disappearance of a numerous

and interesting people, instead of furnishing any informa-

tion about them; to adroitly rehash old matter and pre-

sent it in a new and attractive form, thereby gaining for

the compiler the reputation of being a great and learned

man.

It may seem harsh thus to characterize them, but a milder

phraseology scarcely seems admissible; even allowing full

honesty of purpose, the rhapsodies of ill-informed enthusiasts

are as harmful as the deliberate misstatements of intentional

deceivers; and one can not resist a feeling of indignation

that the wide-spread desire for accurate information on

a most interesting subject is met and perforce satisfied

with such trash as forms the bulk of our archaeological

literature.

Since the time of Squier and Davis, who more than

forty years ago published the results of what purported to

be a careful and critical survey and examination of mounds

and other remains in the Scioto Valley, there have

forced themselves upon public attention hosts of writ-

ers, who, knowing nothing but what they had read,

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