Poverty Point
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Poverty Point National Monument | |
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IUCN Category V (Protected Landscape/Seascape) | |
Location: | Louisiana, USA |
Nearest city: | Epps, LA |
Coordinates: | |
Area: | 911 (3.68 km²) |
Established: | October 31, 1988 |
Governing body: | State of Louisiana National Park Service |
Poverty Point, known for its mound construction, is an archaeological site in northeastern Louisiana (near the town of Epps), overlooking the Mississippi River flood plain. The name derives from the Poverty Point plantation, which included the site's land in modern times. It was constructed c. 1730 BC–1350 BC by American Indians of the archaic Poverty Point culture that inhabited the Mississippi Delta at that time, and continued to develop further in the centuries to come.The earthen structures were built and enlarged for centuries, with the site reaching its final form at about 1000 BC. It is referred to by some as the first true city of North America, although the population is unlikely to have exceeded 2000 individuals at any time.
The site is a wide, 400 acre (1.6 km²) plaza consisting of six concentric earthen ridges. The ridges may have originally been six feet high. Aisles intersected the ridges, leading directly from the center to the perimeter. Unique in the configuration of its earthen structures — notably concentric, semi-elliptical ridges of great size — it had no equal in grandeur in its day. "Clearly an earth-moving project of this magnitude and sophistication, no matter how protracted over time, required not only a large pool of labor, but also formal orchestration...geometric patterning among Archaic mounds, including those of Poverty Point, is an archaeological fact whose significance lies not so much in the labor needed to erect them, but in the ideas needed to conceive of them" (Sassaman, p.92-93).
Poverty Point also contains a diverse archaeological record. "Raw materials imported from as far away as the Great Lakes and the Appalachians, while impressive in volume and diversity, were often used to make mundane items: soapstone for cooking vessels; granite, basalt, and greenstone for celts; hematite and magnetite for plummets; and various cherts for projectiles and cutting tools... coupled with the ubiquitous baked clay objects, hearths, pits, and midden accumulation, the inventory of subsistence technology strongly suggests that Poverty Point was a place of residence" (Sassaman, p.92). At its height, a permanent population of several thousand people lived on Poverty Point's curving ridges.Living in a non-agricultural culture, the population subsisted on wild foods, such as acorns, hickory nuts, fish, turtles, and deer.
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[edit] Stewardship
Poverty Point is owned and maintained by the State of Louisiana, designated as Poverty Point State Historic Site. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on October 15, 1966 and designated a National Historic Landmark on April 15, 1970. Due to its significance, there were discussions between the state and the federal governments in the 1980s to transfer ownership of Poverty Point. On October 31, 1988, Congress authorized the creation of Poverty Point National Monument in anticipation of a land donation from the state. However, Louisiana has not yet acted to transfer the site to the National Park Service, and currently has no plans to do so. As of 2006, there are no federal facilities at Poverty Point, yet the site is counted among the 390 units of the National Park System.
[edit] References
- Sassaman, Kenneth (2005). "Structure and Practice in the Archaic Southeast." In North American Archaeology, ed. Timothy R. Pauketat and Diana Dipaolo Loren. Malden: Blackwell Publishing Ltd., 79-107.
- An Overview of Poverty Point from the Louisiana state government
[edit] External links
- Poverty Point State Historic Site
- Poverty Point National Monument (National Park Service)
- Poverty Point Earthworks: Evolutionary Milestones of the Americas video presentation by The Archaeology Channel
- Poverty Point: A Terminal Archaic Culture of the Lower Mississippi Valley by Jon L. Gibson, (1996)
[edit] See also
Protected Areas of Louisiana Department of Culture, Recreation & Tourism and Department of Agriculture & Forestry |
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State Parks | Bayou Segnette | Chemin-A-Haut | Chicot | Cypremort Point | Rairview-Riverside | Fontainebleau | Grand Isle | Jimmie Davis | Lake Bistineau | Lake Bruin | Lake Claiborne | Lake D-Arbonne | Lake Fausse Pointe | North Toledo Bend | Poverty Point Reservoir | St. Bernard | Sam Houston Jones | South Toledo Bend | Tickfaw |
State Historic Sites | Audubon | Centenary | Fort Jesup | Fort Jackson | Fort Pike | Fort St. Jean Baptiste | Locust Grove | Longfellow-Evangeline | Los Adeas | Mansfield | Marksville | Plaquemine Lock | Port Hudson | Poverty Point | Rebel State | Rosedale Plantation | Winter Quarters |
State Preservation Areas | Louisiana State Arboretum |
State Forests | Alexander | Indian Creek |
National Parks and Forests | Cane River Creole | Jean Lafitte | New Orleans Jazz | Poverty Point |
Categories: IUCN Category V | Archaeological cultures | Archaeological sites in the United States | Archaeology of the Americas | History of Louisiana | Louisiana state parks | Mound builders | National Monuments of the United States | National Historic Landmarks of the United States | Registered Historic Places in Louisiana | West Carroll Parish, Louisiana