Visit our new beta site!

Mound Builders

From: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition  |  Date: 2008

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 BC-AD 400), while temple mounds predominated during the Mississippian period (after AD 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 BC The purpose of these 11 mounds is unclear. Other mounds date to the 3d millennium BC The Archaic mound-building tradition culminated at the Poverty Point Site, in West Carroll Parish, La., between 1800 BC and 500 BC Six concentric ridges surround two large mounds, one of which reaches 65 ft (20 m) high.

During the Woodland period (c.500 BC-AD 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 BC-AD 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.AD 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 AD 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.

Bibliography: 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); G. R. Milner, The Moundbuilders (2004).



Author not available, MOUND BUILDERS., The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008

Related articles from HighBeam Research:

Dig may shed light on mound-builders
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 10/8/2004; DON BEHM; 739 words; Dig may shed light on mound-builders Town of Burnett -- The veil of ... the identity of ancient effigy mound-builders in southeastern Wisconsin could ... year also could reveal whether mound-builders were ancestors of modern Ho-Chunk ...
THE MOUND BUILDERS AND THE IMAGINATION OF AMERICAN ANTIQUITY IN JEFFERSON, BARTRAM, AND CHATEAUBRIAND.(Thomas Jefferson, William Bartram, Francois-Rene Chateaubriand)
Early American Literature; 9/22/1998; SAYRE, GORDON M.; 10610 words; ... fortifications enclosing many acres each, and a variety of mounds, pyramids, and pits. The news was quickly taken up by Boston, Philadelphia, and New York periodicals. In the Columbian ... excavated by pioneers of American archeology, and the debate over the identity of the Mound Builders became both ...
REVISITING THE MOUND-BUILDER CONTROVERSY.(pre-Columbian North America)
History Today; 9/1/2001; Garlinghouse, Thomas S.; 3766 words; ... 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 ...
Two Home Builders Fined for Tree Loss in Flower Mound, Texas.
Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News; 10/5/1999; Okada, Bryon; 525 words; Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News Oct. 2 -- FLOWER MOUND, Texas -- Two home builders whom the town says are responsible for cutting down more than 300 trees have been assessed at least $1.7 million in fines and other ... and John Baker of Wellington Estates will be required to plant trees to compensate for ...
Mound builders. (earthworks in the eastern U.S.)
National Parks; 1/1/1993; Hedstrom, Elizabeth; 1764 words; ... ardently debated the identity of the Mound Builders. Some held that the mounds had ... LA 71237; (318) 926-5492. The Mound Builders About the time Poverty Point was ... 52146; (319) 873-3491. The Temple Mound Builders Around A.D. 700, a new civilization ...
AZTALAN STATE PARK CELEBRATES 75TH ANNIVERSARY STATE'S TOP ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE WAS THE HOME TO MOUND BUILDERS FROM 1000 TO 1300 A.D.(LOCAL/WISCONSIN)
Wisconsin State Journal (Madison, WI); 10/18/2003; 694 words; ... the course of a workday. Every time it happens, he said, he feels himself whisked back in time to a moment when the mound builders of Aztalan were in the midst of a regular day and smoke was rising from village fires and children were laughing and ...
'97 Parade of Homes Builder's calm amid chaos creates showcase home; Parade of Homes under way The Metropolitan Builders Association of Greater Milwaukee's 52nd Annual Parade of Homes began Saturday and runs through Sept. 14. The Parade features a dozen model homes in two subdivisions of preserved natural settings: Pewaukee's MeadowBrook Farms and Brookfield's Muirwood. MeadowBrook Farms: This subdivision, developed by Capital Associates Inc. in the Town of Pewaukee, features 45 single-family homesites with half-acre lots. Lot prices are $57,900 to $61,900; package prices range from about $250,000 to more than $350,000. The subdivision is one-half mile north of I-94 on Meadowbrook Road adjacent to the Willow Run Golf Course. Muirwood: Developed by Thomson Corp., this 62-lot subdivision is south of Capitol Drive on Brookfield Road in the City of Brookfield. One-third of the subdivision is set aside for wildlife preservation. Prices for the half- to two-thirds-acre lots range from $86,900 to $134,900; package prices are $450,000 to more than $750,000. Show hours are 3 to 8 p.m. weekdays and noon to 5 p.m. weekends and Labor Day. Ticket prices are $6 at parade sites; $5 in advance at area banks, Carpet Town, VerHalen, Cedarburg Lumber, J.C. Licht Co. and the Metropolitan Builders Association office, 6511 W. Blue Mound Road. Children under 12 are admitted free. For more information, call the MBA at 258-9850.
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 8/24/1997; KAREN HERZOG; 820 words; ... was less than two weeks from its debut in the Metropolitan Builders Association of Greater Milwaukee's 52nd annual Parade of Homes ... non-existent, and the yard stood starkly bare of landscaping. Some builders would have been in a frenzy, but Mary Schroeder, president ...
Parade of Homes opens in Pewaukee, Brookfield President of Miller Homes keeps calm amid chaos, creates showcse home; 12 homes open doors in two subdivisions The Metropolitan Builders Association of Greater Milwaukee's 52nd Annual Parade of Homes began Saturday and runs through Sept. 14. The Parade features a dozen model homes in two subdivisions of preserved natural settings: Pewaukee's MeadowBrook Farms and Brookfield's Muirwood. MeadowBrook Farms: This subdivision, developed by Capital Associates Inc. in the Town of Pewaukee, features 45 single-family homesites with half- acre lots. Lot prices are $57,900 to $61,900; package prices range from about $250,000 to more than $350,000. The subdivision is one-half mile north of I-94 on Meadowbrook Road adjacent to the Willow Run Golf Course. Muirwood: Developed by Thomson Corp., this 62-lot subdivision is south of Capitol Drive on Brookfield Road in the City of Brookfield. One-third of the subdivision is set aside for wildlife preservation. Prices for the half- to two-thirds-acre lots range from $86,900 to $134,900; package prices are $450,000 to more than $750,000. Show hours are 3 to 8 p.m. weekdays and noon to 5 p.m. weekends and Labor Day. Ticket prices are $6 at parade sites; $5 in advance at area banks, Carpet Town, VerHalen, Cedarburg Lumber, J.C. Licht Co. and the Metropolitan Builders Association office, 6511 W. Blue Mound Road. Children under 12 are admitted free. For more information, call the MBA at 258-9850.
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 8/23/1997; KAREN HERZOG; 820 words; ... was less than two weeks from its debut in the Metropolitan Builders Association of Greater Milwaukee's 52nd annual Parade of Homes ... non-existent, and the yard stood starkly bare of landscaping. Some builders would have been in a frenzy, but Mary Schroeder, president ...
CONFIDENCE BUILDER ALICES FELT GOOD EVERY TIME PROUT HEADED TO MOUND
Evansville Courier & Press; 7/7/2002; TOM COLLINS, Courier & Press staff writer 464-7524 or collins@evansville.net; 641 words; ... with great optimism whenever their ace, Mitch Prout, was on the mound. "He was a competitor," said Alices coach Brandon Pfoff. "There ... and won the Class 3A state championship. "When he went to the mound, we knew we had a pretty good chance to win, and that's a pretty ...
Ancient mound builders get cultured. (complex culture of hunter-gatherers)
Science News; 9/20/1997; Bower, Bruce; 547 words; ... early age for Watson Brake. The Louisiana mound complex, first discovered more than 30 ... Saunders' group conducted excavations in each mound at Watson Brake and removed soil for closer ... bits indicates that construction of the mound began about 5,400 years ago and use of ...
Tardiness with a twist: A school's the late one; Construction snags, including a flunked inspection that surprised the builders, have meant an extra long summer for Mounds View High students.(NEWS)
Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN); 9/11/2001; Draper, Norman; 791 words; Byline: Norman Draper; Staff Writer RSEC: + Construction delays and a flunked inspection on a $60 million renovation project have given the 1,950 students of Mounds View High School an extra two weeks of summer vacation. And possibly more. That's meant scrambling by the school and Mounds View
Take that! Builder's [pounds sterling]15,000 revenge; 4 Tenant Anita Dovey leaves in silence 1 What goes up must come down: One of builder Nigel Gray's workmen attacks the porch with a sledgehammer 2 With one side nearly gone, the roof sags 3 Then it crashes on the mound of rubble.
The Daily Mail (London, England); 4/23/2008; 218 words; THIS is how a builder got his own back after a customer failed to payfor a conservatory and porch he built her at a cost of [pounds sterling]15,000. Nigel Gray sent in his workmen to demolish the porch with sledgehammers anddismantle and remove the conservatory. It took Mr Gray, 44, a week to do
THE MASTER'S CONFIDENCE-BUILDER; WITH ESCOBAR ON MOUND, TEAM FEELS IT CAN'T LOSE.(News)
Daily News (Los Angeles, CA); 4/9/1998; 408 words; Byline: Lee Barnathan Daily News Staff Writer It's cold and rainy, not a day made for baseball. But The Master's College pitcher Ruben ... an 8-0 record and a 1.54 ERA, thanks partly to the development of his changeup. Hans Gutknecht/Daily News
Projects Approved Before Moratorium Keep Flower Mound, Texas, Hopping.
Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News; 4/23/1999; Backover, Andrew; 826 words; Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News Apr. 24 -- FLOWER MOUND, Texas -- Three months after Flower Mound put the kibosh on new subdivision ... estimates. But developers, builders and real estate agents warily ... a builder based in Flower Mound. If we are looking at something ... concerns, but Sam ...
Flower Mound, Texas, Revises Plan to Manage Residential Growth.
The Dallas Morning News (Dallas, Texas) (via Knight-Ridder/Tribune Business News); 7/17/2002; 628 words; ... Fuller Jul. 17--FLOWER MOUND, Texas-In 1999, Flower Mound made headlines by adopting ... plan was criticized by builders as restrictive, cumbersome ... reducing the costs for builders. When the Town Council ... area in western Flower Mound that is largely open ... have dropped in Flower ...

See all results from premium newspaper and magazine articles, images, maps and more at HighBeam Research.

Related articles from newspapers, magazines and other sources:

Indian Mounds of Wisconsin.(Robert A. Birmingham and Leslie E. Eisenberg)
Michigan Historical Review; 3/22/2002; Thomas, Kathleen M. W.; 725 words;
Indians created first major urban centers.(North American Culture)(prehistoric settlement Cahokia Mounds, Collinsville, Illinois)
USA Today (Magazine); 4/1/2005; 770 words;
USA: HEALY TIBBITTS AWARDED CONTRACT TO RECAPITALIZE BRAVO WHARF AT NAVAL BASE.(Healy Tibbitts Builders Inc.)(Brief Article)
IPR Strategic Business Information Database; 7/30/2003; 203 words;
Human architects are taking inspiration from the planet's master builders--animals; termite towers: African termite (Macrotermes michaelseni). (Animal Architechs).
Science World; 9/13/2002; Costello, Emily; 396 words;
Awesome animal homes.(Science)
Weekly Reader, Edition 2 (including Science Spin); 12/5/2003; 999 words;
2005 Custom Home Pacesetter Awards.
Custom Home; 11/1/2005; Drueding, Meghan Ensor, Leslie Snider, Bruce D.; 4663 words;
"A common feeling": regional identity and historical consciousness in the old northwest, 1820-1860.
Michigan Historical Review; 3/22/2003; Barnhart, Terry A.; 13485 words;
The Gorno-Altay region: a view.(World Views: New Writing About Nature)
The Literary Review; 6/22/1996; Rasputin, Valentin G. Winchell, Margaret Mikkelson, Gerald; 20566 words;
Bridge over muddled waters. (Bay Area baseball rivals San Francisco Giants and Oakland Athletics) (includes article on the poor fan support of the two teams)
The Sporting News; 5/6/1996; Kreidler, Mark; 3137 words;
The Road to Castle Mount: The Science Fiction of Robert Silverberg.(Review)
Utopian Studies; 1/1/2001; Ruddick, Nicholas; 1110 words;
Browse by alphabet: