MOUND BUILDERS

in North American archaeology, name given to those people who built mounds in a large area from the Great Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico and from the Mississippi River to the Appalachian Mts. The greatest concentrations of mounds are found in the Mississippi and Ohio valleys. The term "Mound Builders" arose when the origin of the monuments was considered mysterious, most European Americans assuming that the Native Americans were too uncivilized for this accomplishment. In 1894, Cyrus Thompson of the Smithsonian Institution concluded that the Mound Builders were in fact the Native Americans. Clarence Moore, who excavated numerous mound sites in the South between 1892–1916, believed the southern Mound Builders were heavily influenced by the Mesoamerican civilizations, an idea now generally discounted.

Archaeological research indicates the mounds of North America were built over a long period of time by very different types of societies, ranging from mobile hunter-gatherers to sedentary farmers. The prehistoric mounds had a wide variety of forms and fulfilled a range of functions. Many served as burial mounds, individual or collective funerary monuments. Others were temple mounds, platforms for religious structures. Burial mounds were especially common during the Middle Woodland period (c.100 b.c.–a.d. 400), while temple mounds predominated during the Mississippian period (after a.d. 1000).

The earliest mounds in the United States have been found at Watson Brake near Monroe, La.; they were built in the late 4th millennium b.c. The purpose of these 11 mounds is unclear. Other mounds date to the 3d millennium b.c. The Archaic mound-building tradition culminated at the Poverty Point Site, in West Carroll Parish, La., between 1800 b.c. and 500 b.c. Six concentric ridges surround two large mounds, one of which reaches 65 ft (20 m) high.

During the Woodland period (c.500 b.c.–a.d. 1000), hunting and gathering was combined with a set of domesticated native agricultural plants (sunflower, goosefoot, erect knot weed, and may grass) to bring about increased population densities and a greater degree of sedentism throughout the Ohio and Mississippi valleys. The Middle Woodland period (c.200 b.c.–a.d. 400) saw the construction of elaborate earthworks from the Great Lakes to the Gulf Coast. Large, mainly dome-shaped mounds appeared throughout the Ohio and Tennessee river valleys, some in the form of animal effigies. In the Hopewell culture, centered in S Ohio and Illinois, earthen geometric enclosures defined areas ranging from 2.5 to 120 acres (1 to 50 hectares), and some mounds reached 65 ft (20 m) in height. Mica, ceramic, shell, pipestone, and other material were traded over a vast area, indicating the growth of a system of widely shared religious beliefs but not overall political unity. Analysis of mortuary remains suggests Middle and Late Woodland communities were characterized by a system of social rank: Particular kin groups are believed to have had high social prestige, differential access to rare commodities, and control over positions of political leadership. In the Late Woodland period (c.a.d. 400–1000), burial mounds decreased in frequency, and the elaborate burial goods of the Hopewell culture largely disappeared. However, there was probably no general decline in social complexity or population density at this time.

In the Mississippian period (after a.d. 1000), maize agriculture spread throughout the East. Populations expanded and became increasingly sedentary. At Cahokia Mounds (near East St. Louis, Ill.) the largest earthwork in North America was built, a temple mound measuring nearly 100 ft high (30 m) and 975 ft long (300 m). Many large ceremonial centers with temple mounds appeared throughout the South, especially in the Mississippi Valley. After 1200, a set of distinctive motifs spread throughout the Southeast, from Oklahoma to N Georgia, on a variety of media, including shell, ceramics, and pipestone. Also found in this region are elaborate ceremonial copper axes and gorgets and sheet copper plumes. This complex of distinct motifs is called the Southern Cult; it could reflect—along with the temple platforms—the existence of a regional religion shared by a large number of local cultures. Mississippian societies are thought to have been complex chiefdoms, the most hierarchical form of political organization to emerge in aboriginal North America.

See C. Thomas, Report on the Mound Explorations of the Bureau of Ethnology (1894, repr. 1985); R. Silverberg, Mound Builders of Ancient America (1968); W. Morgan, Prehistoric Architecture in the Eastern United States (1980); B. Fagan, Ancient North America (1991).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Mound Builders  - 3060 results

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MOUND BUILDERS OF ANCIENT AMERICA MOUND BUILDERS OF ANCIENT AMERICA The Archaeology of a Myth...WALT WHITMAN: With Antecedents 1860 For Tom Allen MOUND BUILDERS OF ANCIENT AMERICA I THE DISCOVERY OF THE MOUNDS The...
...Southern States--Antiquities. 2. Mound-builders--Southern States. 3. Southern...Silverberg pointed out in The Mound Builders , "Men in search of a myth will...Robert Silverberg, in The Mound Builders , calls the Hopewell "the Egyptians...
...previously appeared as The Iroquois as Mound Builders: Ephraim George Squier and the Archaeology...thropologists - Latin America - Biography. 4. Mound- builders - Ohio River Valley. 5. Mound-builders - Mississippi River Valley. 6. Ohio River...
...and eventually built a mound upon which they placed a temple. This pattern was clearly similar to the Mississippian mound builders to the west, and Coe saw Town Creek as the eastern frontier of this way of life. Unlike most sites with Mississippian-type...
...ETHNOLOGY BULLETIN 131 PEACHTREE MOUND AND VILLAGE SITE, CHEROKEE COUNTY NORTH...herewith a manuscript entitled "Peachtree Mound and Village Site, Cherokee County, North...13 Peachtree Mound 14 The...
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journal articles on: Mound Builders  - 69 results

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...of the myth of a lost race of "Mound-Builders" who had not been Indians native...demolition of the "lost race of Mound-Builders" myth, actually believed in a...similar usages among the mound-builders we owe many of the fragments found...
...of the Beni. (See figure 1.) Mound Builders The Llanos de Mojos is about...than 18 meters. Because the mound builders made and used a large quantity...1999. In a sense, the ancient mound builders made a habitat for the growth...
...the idea that the North American mound builders may have been Toltecs, at least...the Smithsonian, to take up the mound builders problem. He reluctantly did so...answered the question of who the mound builders were. Thomas concluded that they...
...convinced of the equation of the mound builders with the American Indians. For...answered the question, "`Who were the mound-builders? We answer unhesitatingly, Indians...founded. To make his case that the mound builders and the American Indians were...
...archaeological work on the so-called Mound Builders of North America is relatively...specialized audiences. After his Mound Builders work, Squier served as a diplomat...useful to those who teach on the Mound Builders arguments, even in introductory...
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magazine articles on: Mound Builders  - 45 results

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...copies. Priest envisioned the Mound-builders as a white, warrior race who had...Mathews Behemoth: A Legend of the Mound-builders, which appeared in 1839, was largely...concluded that the demise of the Mound-builders was brought about by the villainous...
...in a pit a kilometer from the artificial mound on the outskirts of modern Xian. Previous...another army of figures but left empty. The mound itself has not yet been opened and a decision...many decades. Even without entering the mound--of which Sima Qian offers a dramatic description...
...Point in northeastern Louisiana, the mound builders, as they came to be called, created...central Ohio River valley. Ceremonial mound building, stone carving, and increased...120 mounds. At the center is Monks Mound, the largest prehistoric earthen...
...were from the people known as the Mound Builders, who had vanished mysteriously...Forecasting problems plagued the builders of the cascades. How would such...what the ancient Indians, the Mound Builders, would think if they could take...
...identity of the mysterious Midwestern Mound Builders. But there were undercurrents...proving that the Indians and the Mound Builders were descendants of ancient Jews...bridge. And the sophisticated Mound Builders of the Midwest had arrived years...
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newspaper articles on: Mound Builders  - 27 results

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...Millionaire Farmer Dumps Hundreds of Tonnes of Builders Waste Next to Equestrian Centre...reveal. Padraig Thornton has a massive mound of rubble piled almost 40ft high beside...and found that Mr Thornton had split the mound into two in a bid to hide it. The judge...
...determined the way of life of the people who have lived there. The earliest known inhabitants were pre-Columbian mound builders, apparently attracted by the climate and plentiful fish and game. American Indian influence is evident in the geographical...
...Fair from 7:30 to 11 a.m. To register, see mortonarb.org/fallcolor5K. Indian mounds: Learn about ancient Illinois mound builders and explore the earthworks at Winfield Mounds during "Indian Mounds and Earthworks of Illinois," a two-day class on...
...Fair from 7:30 to 11 a.m. To register, see mortonarb.org/fallcolor5K. Indian mounds: Learn about ancient Illinois mound builders and explore the earthworks at Winfield Mounds during "Indian Mounds and Earthworks of Illinois," a two-day class Oct...
...Smith WHEN Charles Reading moved to his new home eight years ago, the garden was little more than a mound of broken bricks. Today the builders rubble has gone, and the pocket-sized wilderness has been transformed into a flowering paradise...
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encyclopedia articles on: Mound Builders  - 17 results

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MOUND BUILDERS in North American archaeology, name...Mississippi and Ohio valleys. The term "Mound Builders" arose when the origin of the monuments...Smithsonian Institution concluded that the Mound Builders were in fact the Native Americans. Clarence...
...those of North America, ascribed to a people known as Mound Builders . Sometimes the term is also applied to heaps of community refuse, as in shell mound . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University...
...American archaeologist and journalist, b. Bethlehem, Albany co., N.Y. He is noted for his study of the prehistoric Mound Builders of the Mississippi and Ohio valleys. His works include Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley (1848) and...
...processed in the city. Circleville was laid out in 1810 within the remains of a circular fort allegedly erected by mound builders. Its growth was spurred by the building of the Ohio and Erie Canal. ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia...
...The round barrow or stupa of Asia is usually a shrine for relics of the Buddha. See megalithic monuments and Mound Builders . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University...
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