In mid-20th century archaeology, the
Middle Woodland period in Ontario was conceived of as being divided geographically into three regional complexes: the Couture in the far southwest, the
Point Peninsula in south-central and eastern Ontario, and the Saugeen in much of the rest of southwestern Ontario. David Marvyn Stothers, who originally conceptualized the
Princess Point complex as an
archeological culture, argued in a 1973 article that it and the Saugeen were unrelated. However, with continued discoveries and understanding of the period, the idea of distinct, separate complexes has been eroded, especially with the discovery of greater local variability in
material culture. Therefore, scholars such as Neal Ferris and Michael Spence have proposed abandonment of the framework altogether, or relegation of the terms to purely geographic use, with their replacement by more localized complexes. ==Hopewell Interaction Sphere==