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Lake Jackson Mounds Archaeological State Park

Coordinates:30°30′00″N84°18′49″W / 30.50000°N 84.31361°W /30.50000; -84.31361
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Park in Tallahassee, Florida

Lake Jackson Mounds Archaeological State Park
Mound 2, the largest earthwork at the site
Map showing the location of Lake Jackson Mounds Archaeological State Park
Map showing the location of Lake Jackson Mounds Archaeological State Park
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Map showing the location of Lake Jackson Mounds Archaeological State Park
Map showing the location of Lake Jackson Mounds Archaeological State Park
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LocationLeon County, Florida,USA
Nearest cityTallahassee, Florida
Coordinates30°30′00″N84°18′49″W / 30.50000°N 84.31361°W /30.50000; -84.31361
EstablishedMay 6, 1971
Governing bodyFlorida Department of Environmental Protection

Lake Jackson Mounds Archaeological State Park (8LE1) is one of the most importantarchaeological sites inFlorida, the capital ofchiefdom and ceremonial center of theFort Walton Culture inhabited from 1050 to 1500. The complex originally included sevenearthwork mounds, a publicplaza and numerous individual village residences.

One of several major mound sites in theFlorida Panhandle, the park is located in northernTallahassee, on the south shore ofLake Jackson. The complex has been managed as aFlorida State Park since 1966. On May 6, 1971, the site was listed on theU.S.National Register of Historic Places as reference number 71000241.[1]

Fort Walton culture

[edit]

The site was built and occupied between 1000 and 1500 by people of theFort Walton culture, the southernmost expression of theMississippian culture. The scale of the site and the number and size of the mounds indicate that this was the site of a regionalchiefdom, and was thus a political and religious center.[2] After the abandonment of the Lake Jackson site the chiefdom seat was moved toAnhaica (rediscovered in 1987 byB. Calvin Jones and located withinDeSoto Site Historic State Park), where in 1539 it was visited by theHernando de Soto entrada, who knew the residents as the historicMuskogean-speakingApalachee people.[3] Other related Fort Walton sites are located atVelda Mound (also a park),Cayson Mound and Village Site andYon Mound and Village Site.

Site description

[edit]

When the site was abandoned it was a large complex (19.0 hectares or 47 acres[2]) that included sevenplatform mounds, six arranged near aplaza and a seventh (Mound 1) located 250 metres (820 ft) to the north.[4] The mounds were the result of skilled planning, knowledge of soils and organization of numerous laborers over the period of many years. The ceremonial plaza was a large flat area, constructed and leveled for this purpose, where ritual games and gatherings took place. The area around the mounds and plaza had several areas of heavy village habitation with individual residences, where artisans and workers lived. There were also communal agricultural fields in the surrounding countryside, where the people cultivatedmaize in the rich local soil, the major reason such a dense population and large site were possible.[5] Only a few of the mounds in the park have been systematicallyexcavated byarchaeologists.

The site itself is oriented on an east–west axis, oriented perpendicular to the north–south axis of the Meginnis Arm, a nearby extension of Lake Jackson. All of the mounds are laid out to reflect this alignment, although it is unclear if this is symbolic or merely the result of the lake arm's orientation.[2]

Phases

[edit]
Diagram of mounds at site

During theLake Jackson I phase the site consisted of small village possibly with the beginnings of Mound 2 started. During theEarly Lake Jackson II phasethe population and the habitation areas of the site expanded greatly. Many of the areas that would later become mounds were village areas at this time, including the locations of Mounds 3 and 4, as well as areas north of Mounds 2 and 4. Mound 5 was begun and Mound 2 was started during this time. Mounds 3, 4, and 6 were probably not yet started. No evidence exists for occupation in the vicinity of Mound 6. A small area around Mound 5 continued to be occupied during early Lake Jackson II. The areas north of Mound 4 and between Mounds 2 and 4 show evidence of dense occupation during this time. During theLate Lake Jackson II phase, all 7 mounds had been started and most had seen numerous construction episodes. Mound 5 and Mound 6 were possibly finished, and Mounds 2, 3, and 4 were under way but had not had their final stages reached yet. The area to the south and west of Mound 4 and the area between Mounds 2 and 4 continues to be occupied. There is dense occupation north of Mound 2. In theLake Jackson III phase, the central part of the site is occupied more intensively especially around Mound 2 and spreading north. Mounds 4, 5, and 6 are completed before the beginning of the phase, and Mounds 2 and 3 are finished during the phase. After this point at about 1500, the site is virtually abandoned. There is occasional evidence that the site is still visited in the succeedingVelda phase (1500–1633), but very few artifacts or evidence of habitation from this time period have been found.[2]

Ceramic chronology

[edit]
Main article:Mississippian culture pottery

Archaeologists use changes in ceramic styles to determine timelines for sites and entire regions. The ceramics found at Lake Jackson have been reconstructed into the following sequences using these ceramic markers.

Site phaseDatesCeramic markers
Fort Jackson I1050 - 1150Fort Jackson incised, Wakulla Check Stamped,mica inclusions in clay paste, unaltered rims, few of the typical Mississippian vessel forms, motifs, or

appendages

Early Fort Jackson II1150 - 1250Wakulla Check Stamped, Carrabelle Punctatedvar MeGinnis, Fort Jackson incised, Cool Branch incised, Marsh Island incised, Lake Jackson incised, cob marked pottery, red filmed pottery, unaltered or folded rims, loop and strap handles, occasional mica inclusions, collared jars, other kinds of jars, carinated bowls, bottles, and beakers
Late Fort Jackson II1250 - 1400Fort Jackson incised, Cool Branch incised, Marsh Island incised, Lake Jackson incised, red filmed pottery, altered rims(notched, ticked or scalloped), loop and strap handles continue, with strap handles being more frequent than before, lugs make first appearance, occasional mica inclusions,
Fort Jackson III1400 -1500Fort Jackson incised continues but withoutvar Cayson and Englewood, no mica inclusions, carinated bowls, Fort Walton Incised, Marsh Island Incised or strap handles, Lake Jackson incised, red filmed pottery, altered rims(notched, ticked, scalloped and fluted) all continue with fluted becoming charasteristic

[2]

Mound 2

[edit]
Mound 2 at Lake Jackson Mounds Archaeological State Park

In the center of the complex is Mound 2, the largest and the best-preserved mound at the site, it measures 36 ft high and 272 ft by 312 ft at the base (11 m × 83 m × 95 m). Like all of the mounds at the site where an original shape can be determined, it is a simple truncated-pyramidalplatform mound. Very little excavation has taken place at this mound, so not much is known about the construction sequence or what structures may have been built upon it. There was limited work done on the mound in 1947 byJohn Griffin, in a salvage cleanup effort of a looters trench. He found a series of fill layers of black muck, various soil types, and caps of red clay, but as the cut was not through the entire mound or located near any structures he could not learn much about its construction sequence or definitive purpose. It was most likely the first mound started at the site, early in Fort Jackson's history. If it is similar to mounds at other sites, then it was the house platform of the ruler of the site, who was also possibly aparamount chief over many other sites.[2]

Mound 3

[edit]
A diagram showing the various components of mound construction

Located 50 metres (160 ft) across a plaza to the south of Mound 2 is Mound 3, the third-largest and third-tallest mound at the site. Mound 3 was used as a mortuary mound by its builders.[2] At the end of its construction, it was 5 m in height and 44 by 48 m at the base (16 ft × 144 ft × 157 ft).[6][better source needed] Based on radiocarbon dating done during excavations, the mound is known to have been constructed between 760 years and 475 yearsBefore Present (based on 1950 as present), or approximately between 1190 and 1475.[5] Below ground level of Mound 3, was a villagemidden showing residential occupation at this spot before the construction of the mound began. The first activity other than village occupation is a leveling of the location and pit dug and filled with 35 stone projectile points and burned organic material. This is covered over with a layer of clay and structure erected. This building may have been used for feasting rituals. After a period of time this structure was then burned and the first 48 centimetres (1.57 ft) of mound layer was erected over it. The first burial is included in this layer.[6][better source needed] The mound was built up in intervals, with new levels being added in stages. The bulk of the mound fill was a mixture of scraped up midden materials.[2] White sand from the lake shore was used as a first layer in each new episode, followed by mound fill and then a redclay from nearby hills was put on in a thin layer as a final cap. The pattern of deposits of fill demonstrated that the earth was intentionally brought to the site, in baskets as individual basket loads could be detected during excavations.[5]

Postholes found on the mound summit indicated that buildings with encirclingpalisades were erected on the flat top. The last structure erected on the summit measured 7.3 by 9.3 metres (24 by 31 ft) and was aligned in a north–south axis just like the mound itself. This rectangular structure is unusual forApalachee architecture, as most of their structures were round in shape. Archaeologists theorize this may be because of outside influences from other Mississippian centers where rectangular structures are common.[2] The period burning, new fill layer, cap, and structure cycle was repeated twelve times in the 250-year lifespan of the mound. Based on studies atCahokia (a very large mound center in Illinois)[5] and other Mississippian culture sites, scholars believe that structures were destroyed and the mounds "renewed" with new higher layers of fill and new colored clay caps.[7][8] The time span in between renewals at many sites suggests the average lifespan of a ruler and their death and replacement by a successor.[9]

The mounds location on private property outside the state owned park meant it was not protected as the mounds inside the park are and it was leveled for use asfill dirt in the winter of 1975–1976. Before it was dug awayB. Calvin Jones, an archaeologist with the State of Florida Bureau of Historic Sites and Properties, conducted asalvage operation.[5] He recovered 24 burials from Mound 3, with others known to have been lost in the destruction of the mound. Seven of the twelve levels that had been the top of the mound had graves dug into them. Graves dug into the other levels may have been lost as the mound was destroyed. The burials were in deep pits, some lined with split logs, but each grave was kept track of as none were dug down into previous graves. Before burial the bodies were wrapped in cloth and an embossed copper plate placed on their chest. They were then wrapped in leather and cane matting and placed into the prepared pit graves and split logs placed over them. This entire procedure of wrapping the body is reminiscent of "bundling", a practice used for sacred objects which has a long history among Native North Americans.[6][better source needed] A selection of othergrave goods have been found wrapped in the bundles. In the sequence from lower to higher levels (oldest to more recent), the grave goods became more elaborate. In the upper levels, the grave goods included many objects made ofcopper, beads made of shell andpearl, andpipes associated with ritual use oftobacco. Although most of the burials were of elite men, the graves included one woman (buried with the most elaboratefalcon dancer copper plate[10]) and a child of about eleven years of age, probably of the elite class. One of the bodies had beencremated. The bones of a dog were found on top of one of the clay levels that was an earlier top surface of the mound.[5]

Mounds 1, 4, 5, 6, and 7

[edit]

Mound 1 was partially excavated in the mid to late 1950s byCharles H. Fairbanks andHale G. Smith for the Department of Anthropology atFlorida State University. All information from the excavation except for a single photo and a partial list of artifacts found are currently missing and presumed lost.[2] Mound 1 is the only mound not currently located within the boundaries of the park and remains privately owned.[11]

Mound 4 was built between 1250 and 1400. It was started when a layer of white sand was laid down over a previous habitation area and covered with 60 centimetres (2.0 ft) of basket-loaded mound fill and covered with a red-clay cap. It had several more similar construction phases. A series of postholes were discovered at the summit by John Griffin in 1947, but due to time constraints with the work season he could not proceed any further.[2]

Mound 5, the smallest mound at the site, went through at least two phases of mound construction. It was built over a former village area but did not receive a coat of white sand before mound construction as did Mound 4. It seems to have been abandoned sometime during the Late Lake Jackson phase.[2]

Mound 6 was also built on top of an earlier habitation area, and was also given a layer of light-colored sand before the mound was started. Several layers were added over the years and evidence for habitations structures was found on the successive summits. Artifacts found in the mound date to 1250 to 1400, during the Late Lake Jackson II phase.[2]

Mound 7 has never been excavated and has almost nothing known about it. Its seriously degraded shape does not even permit its identification as a platform mound with certainty.[2]

  • Mound 1
    Mound 1
  • Mound 2
    Mound 2
  • Mound 2
    Mound 2
  • Mound 4
    Mound 4

Plazas

[edit]

The layout and arrangement of the mounds in the central area of the site suggests that there may have been two large plaza areas. Mounds 2, 3, 4, and 5 form a large rectangular shape that was mostly free of debris. Mounds 2, 3, 6, and 7 also form a rectangular shape that suggests it too was a plaza. Both plazas would have had Butler's Mill Creek (a small stream that once bisected these areas, but whose course was altered in historic times) running through it. Excavations have shown that a clean area between Mounds 2 and 4 was a plaza, but not enough work has been done at the rest of the site to confirm the larger dimension suggested by the first arrangement or the existence of a plaza at the second arrangement at all.[2]

Connection to the S.E.C.C.

[edit]
S.E.C.C. falcon dancer copper plate found in Mound 3
The "Elder Birdman" plate found in Mound 3
Main article:Southeastern Ceremonial Complex

Artifacts found at the Lake Jackson site includeplain and repoussé copper plates, copper headdress badges, engravedshell gorgets,[12] pearl beads, copper axes, and stone and ceramic pipes.[10] Many of these pieces hadmotifs representative of theSoutheastern Ceremonial Complex or SECC. Similar artifacts have been found at theSpiro site in Oklahoma, theMoundville site in Alabama andEtowah Mounds in northwestern Georgia. Stylistic analysis has shown that of the three, Lake Jackson had the closest ties with Etowah.[12] The burials found in Mound 3 were ranked into 3 levels: the elite who were buried with the most-elaborate copper items, pearl beads and shark-teeth-adorned clothing, the middle rank who were interred with stone axes or shell/bead necklaces, and the low-ranked who did not have any high-status grave goods. The iconography of the items also slowly changes with time, growing more complex and numerous and thought by archaeologists to be evidence of influences from other elite polities and the development of a full-fledged local warrior class. At least ten of the burials unearthed at the mound were of "elite war leaders".[10] The most elaborate embossed copper plate found in Mound C greatly resembles the two Rogan plates found in Mound C at the Etowah Site. The three plates are in the Classic Braden style associated with Cahokia, and it is generally thought that the plates were manufactured there before ending up at sites in the Southeast.[13][better source needed] The Lake Jackson plate depicts a winged dancing figure holding a ceremonial mace in one hand and a severed head in the other. The figure wears an elaborate headdress with anogee symbol and a bi-lobed arrow motif. Actual copper ogee plates used as headdress were found in burials at Etowah. These motifs are also found on sculptures and shell engravings from the Spiro site, such as theogee headdress-wearing "Resting Warrior or Big Boy statue".[10] The ogee is usually associated with underworld figures. The figure also appears to be wearing along-nosed god maskette (an object thought to be associated with ritual adoption[14] and also worn as ear-rings by the Resting Warrior[15]) and clothing which are all motifs associated with thefalcon dancer/warrior/chunkey player including the columnella pendant, large shell beads, bellows apron (scalp motif), and the long-waist sash.[10] This plate was one of 14 recovered from the mound, along with 11 copper axes, many copper headdress ornaments, a few polished-stonecelts, marine-shell drinking cups of the type historically used for theblack drink ritual, and pottery vessels and a few non-local materials such as mica, graphite pigment, red ocher andstone discoidals. All of the copper pieces came to Lake Jackson by way of the Etowah site which shows that the two sites had a long-running relationship, trading their specific local prestige products to each other. The Etowahans prized the whelk shells from the Gulf Coast for the making ofshell gorgets and ritual drinking cups and the Lake Jackson elites valued the prestigiousEtowah plates and other copper objects. This monopoly on the shell trade by the Etowahans lasted until the fall of the chiefdom in about 1375, after which the elite status goods used in burials in Mound 3 come from other locations, mostly the northern Georgia and eastern Tennessee area.[6][better source needed]

State Park

[edit]

In May 1966, a T-shaped tract containing 11.5 acres (4.7 ha) was purchased by the State of Florida and designated theLake Jackson Mounds State Archaeological Site, to be administered by the then Florida Department of Natural Resources. At the time of this purchase, three-quarters of Mound 2 was in the park, all of Mound 4 was included in the park, and about half of Mound 5, with the remaining other mounds still privately owned.[2] Later more tracts were purchased and as of 2007, only Mound 1 remained outside the boundary of the park.[11] The large park has areas for such activities as trails forhiking and wooden tables forpicnicking.[16]

The Lake Jackson Mounds Archaeological State Park is recognized as part of theNative American Heritage Trail under the Florida Division of Historical Resources. There are also two trails available for hiking throughout the park.  The first one is a 0.75 mileinterpretive trail that gives a brief glimpse into the Florida Territorial Period (1820–1860).  The land was owned by Colonel Robert Butler as part of a larger estate.  The second trail is 2.2 miles and consists of a nature trail that meanders through the natural growth of native plants and trees.  Visitors on this trail may be able to see a grist mill from the 1800s while hiking.[17] TheFlorida State Parks website for Lake Jackson Mounds Archaeological State Park provides a great deal of information, including a downloadable map of the park. The park encompasses six out of seven of the known mounds, with two of the largest mounds visible to visitors who use the picnic tables. There is an interpretive exhibit aspect of the park that shares knowledge about the Native Americans who once occupied the site. This is located in the pavilion with the picnic tables.

Archaeological excavations have been ongoing at the park for many years. Any artifacts recovered during these excavations are property of the Florida Division of Historic Resources. They are housed in a storage facility that meets the requirements for curating artifacts under the36 CFR Part 79 under the Code of Federal Regulations for Section 106 compliance.[18] Artifacts recovered from various excavations at the park include pottery sherds, shells, flint and other stone tool fragments, burial objects made of copper, mica, and other materials. Vegetative artifacts were also located.[19]

Admission to the park is low, costing $3 per vehicle and is collected using the honor system. Pedestrians and visitors on bikes are charged only $2.[20] The park is open for visiting from 8:00am until sunset every day. There are many different activities available at the park, including birding, hiking, picnicking, and wildlife viewing. Guided tours are available and must be booked two weeks in advance for groups up to 50 visitors. There is parking available and restroom facilities onsite. Pets are allowed as long as they are kept on the leash.[17]

Endangered species

[edit]

The park is home to an endangered species of plant, theTrillium reliquum. It was discovered by hikers in February 2010. This species was previously thought to inhabit only parts of Alabama, Georgia and South Carolina. TheU.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is working to catalog the population.[citation needed]

See also

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^"NPS Focus NRHP search". National Park Service.Archived from the original on August 3, 2012. RetrievedApril 17, 2012.
  2. ^abcdefghijklmnopPayne, Claudine (1994)."5: The Lake Jackson Site: Portrait of a Mississippian capital village"(PDF).Mississippian capitals: An archaeological investigation of Precolumbian political structure (PhD dissertation). University of Florida. pp. 229–287.OCLC 33354967.
  3. ^Hudson, Charles M. (1997). "Winter 1539-1540".Knights of Spain, Warriors of the Sun.University of Georgia Press. pp. 120–128.
  4. ^Seinfeld, Daniel M.; Bigman, Daniel P.; Stauffer, John Grant; Nowak, Jesse C. (December 7, 2015)."MOUND BUILDING AT LAKE JACKSON (8LE1), TALLAHASSEE, FLORIDA: NEW INSIGHTS FROM GROUND PENETRATING RADAR".Southeastern Archaeology.34 (3):220–236.doi:10.1179/2168472315y.0000000012.ISSN 0734-578X – via ResearchGate.
  5. ^abcdefBrown, Robin C. (1994).Florida's First People: 12,000 Years of Human History. Sarasota, Florida: Pineapple Press, Inc. pp. 56–59.ISBN 978-1-56164-032-4.
  6. ^abcdLeDoux, Spencer C. (2009)."Chapter 4: The Lake Jackson Site"(PDF).Embodying the Sacred: Temporal Changes in the Cosmological Function of Art and Symbolism in the Mississippian Period, AD 1250-1400 (Undergraduate honors thesis). Texas State University–San Marcos.hdl:10877/3248.
  7. ^Young, Biloine; Melvin L. Fowler (2000).Cahokia: The Great Native American Metropolis.Urbana, Illinois:University of Illinois.ISBN 978-0-252-06821-8. Archived fromthe original on September 5, 2006. RetrievedOctober 6, 2009.
  8. ^Raymond Fogelson (September 20, 2004).Handbook of North American Indians : Southeast. Smithsonian Institution. p. 741.ISBN 978-0-16-072300-1.
  9. ^Porth, Steven.Raised ground, Razed structure: Ceramic chronology, occupation and chiefly authority on Mound P at Moundville(PDF) (MA thesis). University of Alabama. pp. 11–12.
  10. ^abcdePower, Susan C. (May 31, 2004).Early Art of the Southeastern Indians : Feathered Serpents & Winged Beings.University of Georgia Press. pp. 100–102.ISBN 978-0-8203-2501-9.lake jackson copper plates.
  11. ^abRochelle A. Marrinan; Nancy Marie White (2007)."Modeling Fort Walton Culture in Northwest Florida"(PDF).Southeastern Archaeology.26 (2–Winter): 305. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on April 3, 2013.
  12. ^abJones, B. Calvin (1982). "Southern Cult Manifestations at the Lake Jackson Site, Leon County, Florida : Salvage excavations of Mound 3".Midcontinent Journal of Archaeology.7 (1):3–44.JSTOR 20707879.
  13. ^Bolfing, Christopher (May 2010),The Paradigm of the Periphery in Native North America (Undergraduate honors thesis), Texas State University–San Marcos,hdl:10877/3288, archived fromthe original on March 4, 2012, retrievedOctober 24, 2010
  14. ^"Aztalan – Wisconsin's Middle Mississippian Outpost". Milwaukee Public Museum. Archived fromthe original on May 27, 2010. RetrievedJuly 30, 2010.
  15. ^"Mississippian World"(article). University of Texas at Austin. August 6, 2003. RetrievedJuly 13, 2010.
  16. ^"Florida State Parks : Lake Jackson Mounds Archaeological State Park". Archived fromthe original on April 17, 2012. RetrievedApril 17, 2012.
  17. ^ab"Experiences & Amenities | Florida State Parks".www.floridastateparks.org. RetrievedApril 24, 2023.
  18. ^"Federal Register :: Request Access".unblock.federalregister.gov. RetrievedApril 24, 2023.
  19. ^"Lake Jackson Mounds Archaeological Collections | Florida State Parks".www.floridastateparks.org. RetrievedApril 24, 2023.
  20. ^"Hours & Fees | Florida State Parks".www.floridastateparks.org. RetrievedApril 24, 2023.

References

[edit]
  • Brown, Robin C. (1994).Florida's First People: 12,000 Years of Human History. Sarasota, Florida: Pineapple Press, Inc.ISBN 978-1-56164-032-4.

External links

[edit]
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