Toltec Mounds Archeological State Park
Illustrated overview of the site | |
Shown within Arkansas | |
Location | Scott, Arkansas, Lonoke County, Arkansas, USA |
---|---|
Region | Lonoke County, Arkansas |
Coordinates | 34°38′49″N 92°3′55″W / 34.64694°N 92.06528°W |
History | |
Founded | 600 CE |
Abandoned | 1050 CE |
Cultures | Plum Bayou culture |
Site notes | |
Architecture | |
Architectural styles | platform mounds, burial mounds, plazas |
Architectural details |
Number of monuments: |
Toltec Mounds Site | |
NRHP Reference # | 73000382 |
Significant dates | |
Added to NRHP | January 12, 1973[1] |
Designated NHL | June 2, 1978[2] |
Responsible body: State |
Toltec Mounds Archeological State Park (3 LN 42), also known as Knapp Mounds, Toltec Mounds Site or Toltec Mounds, is an archaeological site from the Late Woodland period in Arkansas that protects an 18-mound complex with the tallest surviving prehistoric mounds in Arkansas. The site is on the banks of Mound Lake, an oxbow lake of the Arkansas River. It was occupied by its original inhabitants from 600 to 1050 CE.[3] The site is designated as a National Historic Landmark.
Name
The identification of the site with the Toltec of Mexico was a 19th-century mistake. Mrs. Gilbert Knapp, owner of the land from 1857 to 1900, thought the Toltecs had built the mounds.
Investigations at the site by archaeologist Edward Palmer from the Smithsonian Institutions Bureau of American Ethnology in 1883 and by others since have proved that the indigenous ancestors of regional Native Americans had built these mounds and all other mounds within the present-day United States. They were part of mound building cultures that flourished from the Late Archaic period into the Protohistoric period.[3] They built earthwork mounds for religious, political and ceremonial purposes, connecting them to their cosmology.
Plum Bayou Culture
The people who built the mounds at the Toltec site had a culture distinct from other contemporary Native American groups in the Mississippi Valley. Archaeologists named theirs the Plum Bayou culture, after a local waterway. Plum Bayou sites are found throughout the White River and Arkansas River floodplains of central and eastern Arkansas, but are also found as far west as the eastern Ozark Mountains. Toltec is the largest site of the Plum Bayou culture. Their relationships with neighboring cultures such as the Coles Creek culture to the south and Fourche Maline culture to the southwest are still under investigation.[3] The people lived in permanent villages and hamlets throughout the countryside. They built sturdy houses, farmed, gathered wild plants, fished, and hunted.
Toltec Site
Mound groups, such as this one, were religious and social centers for people living in the surrounding countryside. The Toltec Mounds site had a small population, made up primarily of political and religious leaders of the community and their families. This center was occupied from about 600 to 1050 CE.
Located on the banks of an oxbow lake, the archaeological site once had an 8–10-foot-high (2.4–3.0 m) and 5,298-foot-long (1,615 m) earthen embankment and ditch on three sides. The other side was the lake, now called Mound Pond. Eighteen mounds were built inside the high curving 1 mile embankment, and two were originally 38 and 49 feet (12 and 15 m) high. Mounds were placed along the edges of two open areas (plazas) which were used for political, religious, and social activities attended by people from the vicinity. At least two mounds were used for feasting, as indicated by discarded food remains. Deer were a favorite food. Mound locations seem to have been planned using principles based on the alignment with important solar positions and standardized units of measurement. Most of the mounds were flat-topped platform mounds with buildings on them. Other Native Americans lived on the site in the 15th century, but they did not build the mounds.
The site was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1978.,[2][4]
Culture, phase and chronological table for the Toltec Mound Site
Period | Lower Yazoo Phase | Dates | Tensas/Natchez Phase | Toltec Phase | Dates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Historic | Russell | 1650 - 1750 CE | Tensas/Natchez | Quapaw ? | 1673 |
Plaquemine/Mississippian culture Late Plaquemine/Mississippian Middle Plaquemine/Mississippian Early Plaquemine/Mississippian |
Wasp Lake | 1400 - 1650 CE | Translyvania/Emerald | Quapaw ? | 1650 |
Lake George | 1300 - 1400 CE | Fitzhugh/Foster | - | - | |
Winterville | 1200 - 1300 CE | Routh/Anna | - | - | |
Transitional Coles Creek | Crippen Point | 1050 - 1200 CE | Preston/Gordon | - | - |
Coles Creek culture Late Coles Creek Middle Coles Creek Early Coles Creek |
Kings Crossing | 950 - 1050 CE | Balmoral | - | - |
Aden | 800 - 950 CE | Ballina | Steele Bend | 750 - 900 CE | |
Bayland | 600 - 800 CE | Sundown | Dortch Bend | 600 - 750 CE | |
Baytown culture Baytown 2 Baytown 1 |
Deasonville | 500 - 600 CE | Marsden | Dooley Bend | 400 - 600 CE |
Little Sunflower | 400 - 500 CE | Indian Bayou | - | - | |
Marksville culture Late Marksville Early Marksville |
Issaquena | 200 - 400 CE | Issaquena | - | - |
Anderson Landing | 0 - 200 CE | Point Lake/Grand Gulf | - | - | |
Tchefuncte culture | Tuscola | 400 BCE - 0 CE | Panther Lake | - | - |
Table taken from "Emerging Patterns of Plum Bayou Culture:Preliminary Investigations of the Toltec Mounds Research Project", by Martha Ann Rolingson, 1982.[3]
See also
References
- ↑ Staff (2007-01-23). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
- 1 2 "Toltec Mounds Site". National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. 2007-09-26.
- 1 2 3 4 Rolingson, Martha Ann (1982). Emerging Patterns of Plum Bayou Culture:Preliminary Investigations of the Toltec Mounds Research Project. Arkansas Archaeological Survey. ISBN 1-56349-042-0.
- ↑ "National Historic Landmark Nomination" (PDF). National Park Service. 1978-02-08.
External links
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