google-site-verification: google1c6a56b8b78b1d8d.html Adena Hopewell Mound Builders in the Ohio Valley: Indian burial mound
Showing posts with label Indian burial mound. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indian burial mound. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 10, 2020

Indian Burial Mound in Missouri

Indian Burial Mound in Missouri




   By Horace L. Mason, Corning, Missouri. The “Mound Builders” occupied and were numerous in this portion of the Missouri River Valley, latitude 40° 17' North, longitude, 95°24' West from Greenwich. Extensive mounds now exist. I have examined their contents to some extent and sent to the Smithsonian Institute specimens of pottery that I have taken out of them. The only indication of human remains were teeth in great numbers. They were so ancient that the bones were entirely decomposed. The pottery specimens were mostly spherical shaped pots, holding about one gallon, made of material, when freshly broken, resembling slate, and from one-fourth to one-third of an inch in thickness. The outside looked as though they had been subjected to the action of fire; as though used for cooking, having an eye to accommodate a bail, resembling much in form and shape the cast iron pot of the present day, used for cooking over the fireplace. Also, open dishes from two to three inches deep, and six to eight inches in diameter, and rudely ornamented while in a plastic state, and made of the same material as before described, and about one-fourth of an inch in thickness.
   One mound in this immediate vicinity, in a good state of preservation, from one hundred to one hundred and ten feet in diameter, and six to eight feet high, situated on the Missouri bottom prairie, originally about three-fourths of a mile from the run, and near two miles to the foot of the bluffs.\
   It was formed of the soil or alluvial deposit, like the bottomlands here, except a layer at the bottom about six inches in thickness, which was brought from the bluffs. It is easily distinguished from the soil on the bottom called geologically “loess or bluff formations,” a finely pulverized marl, almost as white as sand. It must have been prepared in some manner, as when reached by the spade. We could hardly cut through it; it broke in chunks like mortar. Stone implements are rarely found here. The few specimens I have seen are entirely different from specimens frequent and numerously found in Ohio.

Monday, August 17, 2015

One of Michigan and Midwest's Oldest Iroquois Burial Mounds is Nearly Destroyed by University Archaeologists.

One of Michigan's and Midwest's Oldest Iroquois Burial Mounds is Nearly Destroyed by University Archaeologists.




This may be one of oldest burial mounds in the Midwest that contained artifacts and burial types common to the Maritime Archaic Culture that dates as early as 6,000 B.C.
    In one of these mounds at Croton Dam in Newaygo County, the artifacts appear to be Archaic in origin that included a child’s burial with a dog by their side. In the History of Kalamazoo County, Michigan, 1880 the list of relics found in the county were found chisels, gouges, plumb-bobs, spearheads of stone and copper. All of which would be considered Maritime Archaic in origin.
     There were also artifacts found in southwest Michigan such as bone harpoons that have been associated with the Point Peninsula Iroquois,  dating Middle Woodland or sometime around 200 A.D. However, in a mound within the city of Grand Rapids was found a pop-eyed bird stone that is Meadowood Iroquois or Archaic in origin; which might be evidence that the ancient Iroquois occupied this region for thousands of years.