| Location | Elbert County, Georgia, |
|---|---|
| Region | Elbert County, Georgia |
| Coordinates | 34°4′50.66″N82°39′50.29″W / 34.0807389°N 82.6639694°W /34.0807389; -82.6639694 |
| History | |
| Founded | 1200 CE |
| Abandoned | 1500 CE |
| Cultures | South Appalachian Mississippian culture |
| Architecture | |
| Architectural styles | platform mound |
TheBeaverdam Creek Archaeological Site, (9 EB 85), is anarchaeological site located on a floodplain of Beaverdam Creek inElbert County, Georgia approximately 0.8 km from the creek's confluence with theSavannah River, and is currently inundated by theRichard B. Russell Lake. The site consisted of aplatform mound and an associated village site.
Beaverdam Creek is thought to have been the center of aMississippian culture simple chiefdom with a small resident population. The primary period of mound construction and village occupation dated to the regional Savannah period of the Middle Mississippian period, specifically 1200–1300CE, with the site's abandonment occurring sometime after 1300.[1] The mound was 1.5 metres (4.9 ft) high, and its base measured 25 metres (82 ft) by 25 metres (82 ft). The village boundaries were delineated as 15,000 square meters.[2]

The mound construction stages show a growing complexity in social structure and hierarchy at the site. Beginning as a midden 15–20 cm thick, the mound developed through a succession of twoearthlodge structures, a possible flooding event, and four subsequent mound building stages. The earthlodges were superimposed square structures surrounded by significantly high earthen embankments. The interment of a high-status individual, known as Burial 2, occurred prior to the construction of the second earthlodge and after the partial dismantling of the first. These structures were covered by a layer of water-lain sand that is interpreted as a possible flooding event. Following this, four separate platform-mound building events were recorded by Hally and Rudolph. The mounds were topped by free-standing structures of possible political/ceremonial importance. During Mound Stage 2 a 2.25 metres (7.4 ft) wide ramp was added; it appeared to have steps.[2]
There were 46 burials (16 adult females, 15 adult males, 13 children and 3 of indeterminate sex) excavated by Hally and Rudolph that exhibit marked differentiation of social status. Burial 2 was replete withgrave goods. The inclusion of children into mound mortuary has been interpreted as evidence forascribed status, and is considered a marker of increased hierarchical differentiation.[3] Burial 2 grave goods included more than 7,000 mussel shell beads and a copper headpiece andear spools.[4]
The well-preserved food remains excavated from village midden provides for a detailing of a diversified and generalized subsistence strategy rather that a more focal strategy employed by the inhabitants. The remains included resources from the upland and bottomland forest, river shoals, and agricultural practices on the fertile floodplain, and includedmaize, squash, sumpweed, sunflower, maypops, grapes, persimmons, acorns, hickory nuts, grass seeds and greens as floral resources, as well, as faunal resources such as deer, rabbits, squirrels, raccoons, beaver, turkey and riverine foods including turtle, catfish, gar, sucker and bass.[2]
The excavations conducted at Beaverdam Creek have helped to clarify two important categories of study in Mississippian-periodchiefdoms; namely, how a chiefdom is quantified and what subsistence strategies were employed by a chiefdom once it has been quantified. Researchers argue that the exchange of earthlodges for structures atop platform mounds, coupled with Burial 2 and the inclusion of children, demonstrate the emergence of the site as a stratified chiefdom.[1] The floral and faunal evidence indicate a highly diversified subsistence strategy.
The Richard B. Russell Dam constructed on the Savannah River inundated site 9EB85 as the filling of the Richard B. Russell Reservoir began in October 1983.