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Holly Bluff site

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Archaeological site in Yazoo County, Mississippi, United States

Holly Bluff Site
22 YZ 557
An illustration of what the Holly Bluff Site may have looked like. ArtistHerb Roe
Holly Bluff site is located in Mississippi
Holly Bluff site
Shown within Mississippi
LocationHolly Bluff, MississippiYazoo County, MississippiUSA
RegionYazoo County, Mississippi
Coordinates32°48′50.77″N90°40′58.62″W / 32.8141028°N 90.6829500°W /32.8141028; -90.6829500
History
Founded800
Abandoned1500
PeriodsPlaquemine Mississippian
CulturesPlaquemine culture
Site notes
Excavation dates1908, 1928, 1936, 1949, 1958-1960
ArchaeologistsClarence Bloomfield Moore,Philip Phillips,James A. Ford,Paul Gebhard,Nick Zeigler in
Architecture
Architectural stylesplatform mound
Architectural detailsNumber of temples: 25
Holly Bluff Site
NRHP reference No.66000412
Significant dates
Added to NRHPOctober 15, 1966[1]
Designated NHLJuly 19, 1964[2]
Responsible body: Private

TheHolly Bluff Site (22 YZ 557), sometimes known as theLake George Site, and locally as "The Mound Place," is anarchaeological site that is atype site for the Lake George phase of the prehistoricPlaquemine culture period of the area. The site is on the southern margin of theMississippian cultural advance down theMississippi River and on the northern edge of that of theCole's Creek and Plaquemine cultures of the South."[2] The site was first excavated byClarence Bloomfield Moore in 1908 and tested byPhilip Phillips,Paul Gebhard andNick Zeigler in 1949.

It was declared aNational Historic Landmark in 1964.[2] The mounds are listed on theMississippi Mound Trail.[3]

Location

[edit]

One of the half dozen really big sites in the State ofMississippi, the Holly Bluff Site is located on the south bank of George Lake, or Lake George as it is sometimes known, a half mile east of its confluence with theSunflower River and a mile and a half southeast of the village ofHolly Bluff,Yazoo County. Today the site is bisected by acounty road and is used as a plantation headquarters but still clearly visible are the numerous large mounds and the remains of a surrounding wall.

Prehistoric timeline

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Early Mississippian influence on the Yazoo Basin area

The site's occupation begins with aJaketown Phase occupation evidenced by a scattering ofPoverty Point objects in the lowest levels of excavations. This is followed, after a hiatus evidenced by a complete lack ofTuscola Phase materials, by an earlyMarksville period component tentatively assigned an earlyAnderson Landing Phase that may have lasted into an early Issaquena times. The succeeding late 'Issaquena Phase andDeasonville Phases are virtually unrepresented at Holly Bluff. The site was again occupied from the lower half of theBaytown period up to the late prehistoric times. All phases of the local sequence from the Bayland on through theLake George Phase (1350–1500) (of which the site is thetype site for the Lower Yazoo Basin Plaquemine chronology) are abundantly documented. Materials of theCrippen Point Phase of the Late Coles Creek appear to be most widely spread, and it may have been at this time that the settlement attained its greatest size. In the final Lake George Phase additions were made to some of the mounds, especially Mound A, and the enclosing embankment was built, but the total area occupied was perhaps not as large as in the preceding period.[4]

Site description

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Mound A is almost the exact center of the site, a most unusual location for the dominant mound in ceremonial centers of the Coles Creek and Mississippi periods. In the case of centers theplaza is normally the central feature with the principal "temple mound" located on one side, usually but not always the west, its principal ramp giving access from the plaza on the east side of the mound. In the case of Holly Bluff there seems to have been two plazas to the east and west of the Mound A respectively.

Sampling evidence supports the theory that Mound A was originally part of a group (including mounds B, C, D, E, and F) surrounding the western plaza possibly as early as theBayland phase (but more likely theAden phase), and certainly established by theKings Crossing phase. Mound A may or may not have been the principal structure at this time. This plan may have carried on into the Crippen Point phase, but the evidence strongly suggests that either then or in the succeedingMayersville phase site reorientation took place. Mound A became the principal feature of an east plaza assemblage (with mounds F', G, G', H, U, and V) which remained the ritual center of the site throughout the remainder of its history.[5]

The twenty-five mounds that are now recognized range from barely noticeable rises to the massive Mound A, which is 55 feet (17 m) high and covers nearly two acres. It is believed that the lower rises were used as house substructures and repeatedly reconstructed. The larger mounds were most likely used for ceremonial purposes rather than residential. Until recent[when?] erosion, earthen ramps could be seen climbing to the summits of these large mounds. Seven of the mounds are situated along the bank of George Lake and six more are located within the embankment. The remaining twelve mounds are positioned around the two plazas situated to the east and west of Mound A. This design is unusual and extremely large for the area; the closest in size and layout is theWinterville site.[6]

The final major feature of the site is the earthen wall and the trench that surrounds it on three sides. In the earliest survey of the site, C. B. Moore reported that the wall was four to 6 feet (1.8 m) high and still reached this height although large sections have now been destroyed. It is likely that the ditch, which was filled with water from George Lake, supplied the dirt for the wall. The one side that was not protected by the wall was the lake side of the site, the lake bank creating a steep enough boundary on this northern side to provide protection.

Besides topographical settings, the environment of the Lake George site was extremely favorable for occupation. In prehistoric times the rich soils and the varying ecologies supported a vast array of plant and animal species.[6] The natural levees created by deposits from the Mississippi were made of rich sandy and silty loams which allowed the common Southeastern deciduous hardwoods, such ashickory,elm,ash,cottonwood,maple,pecan,hackberry,honey locust,sycamore, and evengums andoaks, to flourish. The swamps surrounding the site supported an entirely different ecosystem includingalligators, small reptiles andaquatic plants.[6] The streams and rivers also provided fish, shellfish, and other aquatic fauna, which can be seen from excavations of shell middens and deposits of the site.[6] These waterways also provided a major form of communication. This abundant region was obviously utilized by many different peoples over the course of prehistory as Holly Bluff shows.

Excavations

[edit]

Looting, erosion and cultivation have extensively damaged the Holly Bluff Site over the years. This has caused some debate over the form and degree of some of the earthworks. Clarence B. Moore noted in 1908, following a visit, that some thirty rises and mounds, small and large, could be counted within the enclosure. Nine years later Calvin S. Brown visited and counted only twenty-five or so mounds within the wall.[6] In 1928 and again in 1936 James A. Ford recorded only twenty-two mounds. In a site report in January 1941,Jesse D. Jennings described twenty-seven mounds and some questionable rises.[6] C. B. Moore's original estimate is believed to most accurately reflect the situation; many of the smaller earthworks have been lost to recent and intense cultivation.

In January and February 1908,Clarence Bloomfield Moore received permission from the then owner Judge William Andrew Henry of Yazoo City to excavate the sites along theYazoo River and its tributary theSunflower River in his steamboat, The Gopher.[6] On his excavation Moore recorded eleven sites and partially excavated eight, including Holly Bluff: "with a large force to dig, including May who had been in our service before, we go directly to work on such mounds".[7] Moore commented on the physical appearance of the site: "Strewn over the enclosed area, among the mounds and on them…arechert pebbles; fragments of chert; bits of mussel shell; and small parts of earthenware vessels"[7] Most of the earthenware was undecorated, he recorded, and mostlyshell-tempered with some stone tempering which is common in the Yazoo-Sunflower region.[6] C. B. Moore's excavations produced various small artifacts including projectile points, apebble ax offossilized wood, a cherthammerstone, and azoomorphic effigy pipe ofshell-tempered pottery. He was disappointed, however, in finding nothing of great importance other than two disturbed burials in a mound on the lake front.[6] Moore's disappointment was evident in his failing to map the site and his statement, "it having become evident to us that our search was inadequately rewarded".[7]

Numerous other archaeologists with varying degrees of success followed up Moore's excavations. Each of the later excavations found an extremely different system of mounds. In the 1920s the site was damaged by the then-plantation owner Mr. Charles W. Perry who pastured cattle on the large mounds and cultivated the smaller mounds.[6] The cattle foraged the cover of the larger mounds and their trampling eroded much of the site, erasing the ramps described by Moore. In 1949Philip Phillips,Paul Gebhard andNick Zeigler began performing test excavations of the Holly Bluff Site. These were the first truly scientific excavations carried out at the site. The interpretations of the data provided the first reliable conclusions of the culture history.[6] These tests finally provided evidence that Holly Bluff had been occupied for approximately one millennium.[6] The conclusions proved that the site was an important phase of theColes Creek culture. From 1958 to 1960, "hundreds of skeletons were removed" from Mound C.[6]

See also

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References

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  1. ^"National Register Information System".National Register of Historic Places.National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
  2. ^abc"Holly Bluff Site".National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Archived fromthe original on June 5, 2011. RetrievedOctober 22, 2007.
  3. ^"Mississippi Mound Trail". Mississippi Department of Archives and History. Archived fromthe original on July 9, 2021. RetrievedJuly 13, 2021.
  4. ^Phillips, Philip (1970).Archaeological Survey in the Lower Yazoo Basin, Mississippi, 1949-1955.Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology. p. 278.
  5. ^Phillips, Philip (1970).Archaeological Survey in the Lower Yazoo Basin, Mississippi, 1949-1955.Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology. pp. 288–289.
  6. ^abcdefghijklmWilliams, Stephen;Brain, Jeffrey P.1983 Excavations at the Lake George Site Yazoo County Mississippi.Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology,Harvard University Press,Cambridge, Massachusetts. pp. 1958–1960.
  7. ^abcMoore, Clarence B. (1908).Certain Mounds of Arkansas and Mississippi. Reprint from Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 13. pp. 480–600.

External links

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