I'm not referring to the term "Megwa" as bear, altho I understand in some native languages that's exactly what it means. My spelling of the word may be off, as I'm not fluent in Lenape language. I backtracked "Megwa" as one of the creation beings similar to a " Manitou" via a trip to the Renape Reserve in NJ.
As for the Lenape ceremonial societies I was thinking your reference to the Mediwak seemed more a derivitive of the Lenape creation being than the Annishabe term.
Being neither a historian, or scholar(SP) after reading the Red Record, and in my travels visiting those very facinating carvings at Judiculla rock, the one at Sanilac MI, and the rock at Kelly's Island I was a bit confused as how Lenape pictoglyphs could be present, but not within the replica of the Red Record.
Of Course I could be putting two and two together and getting six.
You seem to be doing your backtracking of history from "contact" back....I went the other route of using oral history and then tying it to historical events.
But seriously, it's not like I'm an expert or anything.
Hi Tberri -
It wasn't backtracking. Let me try to explain what came to me.
My project started out as a simple catalogue of impact events in the Americas to try and establish as accurately as possible the hazard to peoples' lives. Then I realized:
1) That most of the histories I was quoting were unavailable
2) That many of them had been dismissed as "myths" because they described impact events
3) That I had an incredibly powerful tool.
I used comet impacts to place the traditions (oral histories) in time and space, and then to lock them onto the archaeological record. Cusick's "Sketches of the Ancient History of the Six Nations" and his counts of the wampum were really key in this.
Re: Judaculi Rock, The Cherokee were describing Tsunihl'gul, the giants, actually the Andaste proper, as the carvers. The nearby soapstone bowls indicate the same.
If you turn the picture shown of it upside down, (so the farmer is upside down), it looks like it was not hands that were shown, but comets with multiple tails. Why this rock was chosen was probably because of the soapstone. Why the other markings were made, including The Great Turtle shown nearby, and the man with the elk horn staff, I do not know. They were probably later additions.
http://www.cs.unca.edu/nfsnc/rock_art/judaculla.htmlThe same kind of comet/hands may be seen at Sanilac, but these perhaps date from the 536 CE encounter with Comet Encke, and the subseqent game collapse caused by the climate effects of its dust veil. Note the bows and arrows(?).
Kell(e)y's Island - in the right place for Andaste.
One big problem with petrogyphs is later additions, and that seldom are any datable artifacts or other cultural remains found with them.
That said, minimally I think one can assert that these petroglyphs are not Lenape.
As far as Lenape origins goes, in my opinion like most Algonquin peoples they probably started as sea turtle hunters along what were before 10,900 BCE the balmy shores of today's British Columbia. mt DNA haplogroup A.
But as I have been wrong before, and I reserve the right to be wrong about this as well. It's simply the best estimate I can form now.
As for the Walam Olum, my offer of a trade with Oestreicher still stands, and I will still hold with those Lenape who hold that it contains a portion. I can not accept Oestreicher's denial of the earlier existence of Lenape medewak; their fate is of interest to me.
I also can not accept Oestreicher's reconstruction of Shawnee history, period.
Unfortunately I will miss being with the Lenape at the Anderson powwow this year, as I will be with Shawnee descendants in Ohio. I really enjoyed it there last year, particularly the social dances late at night. I am sure they will have a good powwow. I hope some day to visit their Allegheny Reservation.