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Published byRayna Jewett Modified over 9 years ago
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Watson Brake and Poverty Point: Early Moundbuilding Cultures of Eastern North America
Watson Brake, LA 4000 BC Poverty Point, LA BC
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*Early Woodland (800-200 BC) – Adena
Middle Woodland (200 BC – AD 400) - Hopewell
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heartland (epicenter) was in Ohio but extended over vast area
Adena & Hopwell heartland (epicenter) was in Ohio but extended over vast area of eastern NA Adena and Hopewell societies had broad trade relations, Including: Copper (Great Lakes) Mica (S. Appalachians) Chert (Midwest) Obsidian (Wyoming) Shell (S. Atlantic & Gulf Coast) Followed by Late Woodland complex Societies, notably Mississippian cultures after AD 1000, a period of rising chiefdoms
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House structure at Crigler Mound (Ohio Valley)
Adena effigy pipe House structure at Crigler Mound (Ohio Valley)
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Adena Mound
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Wooden burial structure
in Adena earthen mound
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Blocked-end tobacco smoking pipes (Shamanism)
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Hopewell was highly complex socially with elaborate mounds and
Middle Woodland (200 BC to AD 400), associated with the Hopewell complex. Hopewell was highly complex socially with elaborate mounds and enclosures (exclusive), lavish burials, and finely crafted artifacts, often of exotic materials, in mounds but not settlements Hopewell (epicenter in Ohio), like Adena, had diverse mounds, including circles, squares, and other shapes, as well as fortress-like enclosures, Great serpent mound, Ohio, 700 BC-AD 200
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Newark Earthworks
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Hopewell's special burial treatment
with fine objects and mound structures, focused on adults and men, but included women and children Low inter-group hostilities are suggested during the Hopewell era by relatively few skeletal injuries Hopewell Mounds
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Animal effigy platform pipes
Human skull rattles Animal effigy platform pipes
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During Late Woodland inter-group relations worsened, as reflected in
reduced long-distance trade, violent deaths, increased small arrowheads and in some areas iconography Late Woodland Fort Ancient Culture in the Ohio Valley (AD )
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Mississippian cultures in Midwest & SE, after AD 1000,
Late Woodland Mississippian cultures in Midwest & SE, after AD 1000, represent a period of rising chiefdoms, the highest expression of social complexity in North America
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Cahokia at AD 1100
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Cahokia Cahokia Mounds site occupied between AD 800 and The “Golden Age” occurred from AD 1000 and 1275, at which time the site had a population of 20,000 to 30,000 (estimates range from under 15,000 to over 40,000). Over 100 mounds, included platform (flat-topped) temple mounds, conical mounds, and ridgetop mounds, such as the mound 72, which contained spectacular remains associated with elite individuals
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Mound 72 held an important position by its orientation and alignment with various other mounds.
Many of 272 burials in mound were sacrificial offerings and placed there as either extended or bundle burials. Two very high status burials in mound 72, the “beaded burials” are located in base of mound; one individual was buried under a layer of over 20,000 beads and one individual on top of the beads. These beads were laid out in a design of a bird similar to other Mississippian art work.
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“litter-burials,” dated to AD 1000
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Burial pit with 53 females estimated between 15 to 30 years
Burial pit with 53 females estimated between 15 to 30 years. Other burial feature with four males missing their heads and hands.
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Arrowhead caches from Mound 72
Primary mound 1, burial in feature 102 Primary mound 1, burial in feature 102 (413 points) Arrowhead caches from Mound 72 Primary mound 2 (451 points)
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Mississippian artifacts
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Many of the most elaborate Mississippian artifacts, often dating from AD , are collectively called the Southern Cult or Southeastern ceremonial complex, including artifacts suggesting an aggressive ideology and warrior iconography, including motifs such as warriors, severed heads, axes, maces, and other weapons (again suggesting that inter-group relations involved more tension in Late Woodland than early Middle Woodland (Hopewell) times)
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Anasazi or “Ancestral Pueblo”
Pueblo I AD 750 to 900 Dispersed household settlement pattern in most areas, but in the San Juan River valley (SW Colorado & SE Utah) aggregates of multiple households herald the formation of relatively permanent villages Pit houses evolved into special round subterranean ceremonial chambers (kivas) Pueblo II: AD The Chaco Phenomenon Great houses were constructed in San Juan valley, where large quantities of water and sediment were available for farming Pueblo Bonito major spiritual center Emulation of great house architecture at numerous smaller outlying communities, who would journey to Chaco for major ceremonial events Pueblo III - A.D to 1300 Dramatic changes in architecture, including end of major building in Chaco Canyon Political and social influence shifted to areas north of Chaco Pueblo IV - Post A.D. 1300 Abandonment of Colorado Plateau, which many attribute to a severe drought ( ); many sites abandoned & many geographical regions saw an enormous loss of population Removal of some population to the Rio Grande Valley in central New Mexico as well as to the mesas of north central Arizona
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Chaco Canyon (AD ) Pueblo Bonito
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Chaco Canyon Great Houses
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Pueblo Bonito, largest of the great houses in
Chaco Canyon (AD ) Major spiritual center
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A.D. A.D. 1085 A.D.
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Great Kiva at Pueblo Bonito
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Casas Grandes (Hohokam, Mexico)
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The greatest cause of declines in Native North America (throughout the Americas) was highly contagious, fever producing diseases
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