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The Construction, Use, and Abandonment of Angel Site Mound A Tracing the History of a Middle Mississippian Town Through Its Earthworks

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

G. William Monaghan
Affiliation:
Glenn A. Black Laboratory of Archaeology, Indiana University, 423 North Fess Ave, Bloomington, Indiana 47407 (Gmonagha@indiana.edu, Peebles@indiana.edu)
Christopher S. Peebles
Affiliation:
Glenn A. Black Laboratory of Archaeology, Indiana University, 423 North Fess Ave, Bloomington, Indiana 47407 (Gmonagha@indiana.edu, Peebles@indiana.edu)

Abstract

Mound A is the largest platform mound at the Angel site (12VG1), a Middle Mississippian town along the Ohio River in southwestern Indiana, and consists of an upper and lower platform joined by an offset conical peak. Solid-earth cores, geophysical data, and 14C ages indicate that mound construction began at 900 B.P. by stacking 10–15 cm-thick turf blocks two meters high at the junction of the upper-lower platform and that by 890 B.P. the upper platform was built to nearly its full 8m height. The dates from Mound A are among the earliest recorded from the site, which implies that earthwork construction coincided with the initial occupation of the site and was among the first construction tasks undertaken. Cultural features associated with a structure partly buried under the conical offset on the upper platform of Mound A yielded 14C ages of 750–520 B.P., which show that the upper platform surface was probably used throughout occupation. As also occurred on Mound F (the only other platform mound investigated at the site), the Mound A structure was destroyed and covered with a fresh layer of fill just before site abandonment. This final filling episode to cap the mounds may have been part of a "ceremonial closing" of the site. The youngest dates from the structures buried on Mounds A and F, as well as others across the site, suggest that the Angel site was essentially abandoned by 500 B.P., which also corresponds with the abandonment of Mississippian sites throughout the region.

Resumen

Resumen

"Mound A" es el más grande montículo de plataforma en el sitio de Angel (12VG1), una "Middle Mississippian" ciudad a lo largo del río Ohio en el suroeste de Indiana y consiste en una plataforma superior e inferior se unió a por un pico cónico. Núcleos de tierra sólida, datos geofísicos y las 14C edades indican que la construcción de montículo comenzó en 900 B.P. por apilamiento de 10–15 cm de espesor césped bloques de hierbados dos metros alto en el cruce de la plataforma superior-inferior y que por 890 B.P. la plataforma superior fue construido a casi su total 8 m de altura. Las fechas del "Mound A" están entre los primeros grabados desde el sitio, lo que implica esa construcción estadillos coincidió con la ocupación inicial del sitio y estaba entre las primeras tareas de construcción realizadas. Las características culturales asociadas con una estructura parcialmente enterrada bajo el desplazamiento cónico en la plataforma superior del "Mound A" dado las 14C edades de 750–520 B.P., que muestran que la superficie de la plataforma superior probablemente fue utilizada a lo largo de la ocupación. Como también ocurrió en el "MoundF" (sólo otra plataforma montículo investigado en el sitio), el montículo una estructura fue destruida y cubierta con una capa fresca de relleno justo antes de abandono del sitio. Este episodio final de llenado para colmo los montículos pudo haber sido parte de un "cierre de ceremonial" del sitio. Las fechas más joven de las estructuras enterradas en "Mounds A" y "F," así como a otros en todo el sitio, sugieren que el sitio de Angel esencialmente fue abandonado por 500 B.P., que también se corresponde con el abandono de sitios Mississippian en toda la región.

Type
Reports
Copyright
Copyright © Society for American Archaeology 2010

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