Showing posts with label Mississippian Culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mississippian Culture. Show all posts

Friday, September 11, 2015

Ocmulgee National Monument

Stairs up the Great Temple Mound
photo from Wikimedia

Name: Ocmulgee National Monument
Tribe: Mississippian and Lamar cultures, Muscogee (Creek)
Location: 1207 Emory Highway, Macon, GA 31217
Type: National Park, prehistoric mounds, hiking trails, museum, events
Visiting Info: Open daily, 9am-5pm, Admission is free except for special events
Contact: Website, telephone 478-752-8257

The Ocmulgee National Monument, located on the Ocmulgee River in Macon, GA, preserves 702 acres of prehistoric mounds and other earthworks built on a site that has been inhabited by Native people for an estimated 17,000 years. The site came under the protection of the National Park Service in 1934 and was placed on the National Registry of Historic Places in 1966.

Although people have been living and hunting along the river since the last Ice Age, the seven mounds located in the park were built by the South Appalachian Mississippian people around 900 AD. The largest earthwork is the Great Temple Mound, which is 55 feet high and has a wooden stairway that visitors can climb to take in the view from the top. Nearby is the Lesser Temple Mound, and the park also includes a burial mound, other small ceremonial mounds, and defensive earthwork trenches.

Park Map via NPS

In addition to the mounds, the park includes six miles of hiking and biking trails, fishing and picnicking areas, and an 800 foot long boardwalk over wetlands. There is also a historic railroad bridge, some civil war era landmarks, the historic site of an English colonial trading post from 1690, and a reconstructed ceremonial earthlodge, the floor of which is the original one thousand year old floor of a Mississippian earthlodge.

Two more mounds and the remains of a palisade and village are located three miles away at the Lamar Mounds and Village Site. The Lamar culture developed after the decline of the Mississippian culture around 1300 AD. The Lamar site is part of the Ocmulgee National Monument park but is accessible only by a park ranger-guided tour and four mile roundtrip hike (call 478-752-8257 for details and reservations).

Ocmulgee Visitor Center
photo from ONMA

Inside the striking, terracotta and white art moderne Visitor Center, there is a gift shop and a small theater area presenting a short orientation film, "Mysteries of the Mounds." An archaeology museum displays thousands of artifacts from excavations that have taken place onsite. Other exhibits detail the history of the Ocmulgee River location, including the rise of the Muscogee (Creek) Confederacy from the descendants of the Lamar people whose culture and population was decimated by disease spread by Hernando de Soto's expedition in 1540.

photo from ONMA on Facebook

Two special events are held at the ONM each year, the Lantern Light Tours in March and the Ocmulgee Indian Celebration in September. The Ocmulgee Indian Celebration is the largest Native gathering in the Southeastern United States and represents all the tribal nations from the region through hundreds of craftspeople and music, dance, food, storytelling, and more.



Monday, June 15, 2015

Great Mound of Mound Bottom State Park

Mound Bottom from May's Mace Bluff
photo by Scantonio via Wikipedia

Name: Mound Bottom Archaeological Site, Harpeth River State Park
Tribe: Mississippian culture
Location: Highway 70, Kingston Springs, TN 37887
Type: Historic, Archaeological Site, State Park
Visiting Info: Harpeth River State Park is open year-round from 7am until 4:30pm in winter and 7pm in summer, guided hikes to Mound Bottom occur Sundays at 1pm, Oct-Dec, by reservation only.
Contact: Website, telephone 615-952-2099

The complex of 14 mounds, tombs, a plaza, earthwork fortifications, and houses that make up the Mound Bottom Archaeological Site were probably built between 950 and 1300 AD. The settlement was constructed in a bend of the Harpeth River in what is now central-western Tennessee by the Mississippian culture that proceeded the Muscogee Creek confederacy. The primary Great Mound is 25 feet tall with a ramp that once went from a central plaza up to its flat top. A community of hundreds of homes enclosed by an earthen wall topped by a wooden palisade surrounded the Great Mound. The settlement was a ceremonial gathering place and trade center for the Mississippian people.

Today the Mound Bottoms State Park and the nearby Mississippian petroglyph of a ceremonial mace at May's Mace Bluff are part of the Harpeth River State Park. The park is open daily year-round, but the Mound Bottom site and the petroglyph are only accessible through a guided tour. The guided hikes are provided by the Tennessee State Parks Department and are offered on Sunday afternoons in the fall by appointment only. Mound Bottom artifacts from a 1970's archaeological dig can be viewed at the Park Office at Montgomery Bell State Park.


Resources:
Mound Bottom on Wikipedia
Indian Country Today article, "Celebrate the Great Mound of Mound Bottom in Tennessee."
Harpeth River State Park and Mound Bottom on Tennessee History for Kids
Historic Mound Bottom on the Harpeth River Watershed Association website
Mound Bottom on the Native History Association website

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site

photo credit: Ira Block, National Geographic Creative

Name: Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site
Tribe: Pre-Columbian Mississippian Culture
Location: Collinsville, IL
Type: UNESCO World Heritage Site, National Historic Landmark, Museum
Visiting Info: Open year-round, Grounds: 8am - dusk, Interpretive Center: varies by season, Free admission with suggested donation of $2 - $15.
Contact: Website, telephone 618-257-3441

More than 1,000 years ago, a city of about 15,000 indigenous people rose up above the central plains near the Mississippi River. With over six square miles of mounds and temples, agricultural fields and homes, it was an urban hub of the vast trading network of the Mississippian people that lived on this land before European contact.

Archaeologists and historians call it Cahokia, and it was probably the largest and most influential Mississippian community. Today it is the most complex archaeological site north of the much more famous remains of the pre-Columbian empires of Mexico.

The Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site, located just to the east of St. Louis, contains 80 of the more than 120 original mounds, a central plaza for ceremonies and games, a reconstructed woodhenge, remains of stockades and palisades, and a copper workshop.

Painting by William R. Iseminger, from this Cahokia photo gallery

The Interpretive Center displays artifacts, an introductory video presentation, and a recreation of the original village. Exhibits aim to educate the public about the Mississippian culture and the archaeological work that is going on at the site.

Guided and self-guided tours of the mounds and trails are available.



Resources:
Aerial video of Cahokia from chickasaw.tv
IHPA Introductory Video
Mississippian Culture Wikipedia article
National Geographic web article May 19, 2015, "New Evidence May Solve Mystery of America's Huge Ancient City."