Ancient Earthen Enclosures of the Eastern Woodlands

Edited by Robert Mainfort and Lynne Sullivan


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Early speculation about the pre-Columbian earthen enclosures of the eastern United States attributed them to ancient races of moundbuilders; 19th-century scholars assumed that prehistoric Amerindians used the sites strictly for ceremonial or defensive purposes. This collection will revolutionize the way archaeologists approach the study of enclosures: it clearly illustrates the difficulties in interpreting these sites, showing that their builders had widely diverse purposes. The authors draw on new data to present the full range of issues involved in enclosure research--from "dirt archaeology" to the theoretical.

Contents:

Explaining Earthen Enclosures, by Robert C. Mainfort, Jr., and Lynne P. Sullivan

Broken Circles, Owl Monsters, and Black Earth Midden: Separating Sacred and Secular at Poverty Point, by Jon L. Gibson

Prehistoric Enclosures in Louisiana and the Marksville Site, by Dennis Jones and Carl Kuttruff

Defining Space: An Overview of the Pinson Mounds Enclosure, by Robert L. Thunen

Boundaries, Resistance, and Control: Enclosing the Hilltops in Middle Woodland Ohio, by Robert V. Riordan

Architectural Grammar Rules at the Fort Ancient Hilltop Enclosure, by Robert P. Connolly

The Archaeology of the Newark Earthworks, by Bradley T. Lepper

Is the Newark Circle-Octagon the Ohio Hopewell "Rosetta Stone"? A Question of Archaeological Interpretation, by A. Martin Byers

Defensive or Sacred? An Early Late Woodland Enclosure in Northeast Ohio, by Stephanie J. Belovich

The Socioeconomic Role of Late Woodland Enclosures in Northern Lower Michigan, by Claire McHale Milner and John M. O'Shea

Fortified Village or Mortuary Site? Exploring the Use of the Ripley Site, by Sarah W. Neusius, Lynne P. Sullivan, Phillip D. Neusius, and Claire McHale Milner

Robert C. Mainfort, Jr., is sponsored research administrator of the Arkansas Archeological Survey, and associate professor of anthropology at the University of Arkansas. He is the coeditor of Societies in Eclipse and Mounds, Embankments, and Ceremonialism in the Midsouth.

Lynne P. Sullivan is curator of anthropology and associate scientist in archaeology for the New York State Museum in Albany. She is the editor of The Prehistory of the Chickamauga Basin and Reanalyzing the Ripley Site: Earthworks and Late Prehistory on the Lake Erie Plain.

Florida Museum of Natural History: Ripley P. Bullen Series

1998. 336 pp. 6 X 9.

56 figures, 18 maps, 13 tables, bibliography, index.

ISBN 0-8130-1592-8 

     Cloth, $55.00s

ISBN 0-8130-1857-9 

     Paper, $29.95s


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"The volume is seminal pedagogically, thought-provoking, and presents compelling data and reinterpretations necessitating reassessments of assumed site functions, symbolism, construction, and socioeconomic parameters." -- Journal of Middle Atlantic Archaeology

 

"Some of the earliest archaeology conducted on the North American continent focused on earthen enclosure sites, yet ironically, in many ways such enclosures remain poorly understood to this day. Here is an insightful volume that takes a major step towards a more subtle comprehension of the purpose and uses, both sacred and secular, of earthwork sites spanning three millenia of Eastern Woodlands prehistory."--Vernon James Knight, University of Alabama