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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Dr. Virginia Wimberley, assistant
professor of clothing, textiles and interior design in The
University of Alabama College
of Human Environmental Sciences, has analyzed textiles from
Native American burial grounds and recently presented her
research at the Midwest Archaeological Conference in Virginia.
Wimberley presented results from research conducted on aged
textiles found at Hopewell Indian Burial Grounds in Ohio at the
Hopewell Indian mounds and earthworks sites.
Wimberley worked as a part of an inter-institution research
team comprised of several metallurgists, a phlebotomist, an
artist who worked on copper, and Wimberley as a textile analyst.
The team, headed by archaeologist Dr. Christopher Carr from the
University of Arizona, researched and analyzed the artifacts
found at the burial grounds and at earthworks sites.
Wimberley began her initial research analyzing copper plates
found in mounds along the rivers of southwest Ohio during the
summer of 1997. She studied the artifacts, which date back to
200 B.C. and 200 A.D. to see which ones contained textiles.
During her research, Wimberly used a microscope to complete a
non-destructive analysis of the textiles found on the plates.
“I have spent many hours looking at fibers through a
microscope,” Wimberley said. “I look to see if I can
identify the fabric structure and I study the weave or twine
structure.”
“You have to put the pieces together like a jigsaw
puzzle,” Wimberley said. “The textiles that were found on
the plates were very sophisticated and they were of the high
tread count and two ply. There was also evidence of color being
used in some of the fibers.”
The report was finished during the 2001-2002 academic year.
Wimberley has since presented her findings at the SAA conference
in New Orleans in April 2001 and again in New York at the Museum
Conference this April. The research in its final phase was
delivered in a plenary session on recent research using the Ohio
Historical Society collections this October at the Midwest
Archaeological Conference in Columbus, Va.
Wimberley reported that she found unusual attributes of yarn
elements within the twined structures that occur repeatedly on
artifacts from the same site. The mixture of yarn features may
indicate multiple spinners supplying one textile creator with
necessary volume of yarns to create high thread count textiles
more rapidly for ceremonial purposes.
“Findings are important for they provide clues as to the
production since the yarns employed in the textiles have thick
and thin yarns plied together, which is unusual and also the
amount of twist per inch is so much tighter on some 2-ply yarns
than on others,” she said.
“Usually the twist would be consistent through the fabric
if the same person was spinning the yarn for the fabric and
there was no variation of fiber content. This may point to
multiple spinners providing yarn to produce ceremonial fabrics
that were needed in large quantities and quickly.”
Pictures of these artifacts can be seen on the third floor of
the Mary Harmon Bryant building at the University.
Wimberley has been a member of the UA faculty since 1992. She
teaches the history of costume and textile design, apparel
design by draping and advanced apparel design.
The UA College of Human Environmental Sciences was
established in 1917. The College is well known for its
comprehensive approach to higher education. Students seeking
degrees in professional service industries are well served by
its academic programs, classroom instruction, real-world
experience, and mentoring by seasoned faculty.
The College offers degree programs for careers in apparel and
textiles, athletic training, consumer sciences, early childhood
development, financial planning and counseling, food and
nutrition, family and consumer science education, health
studies, human development and family studies, and interior
design.
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