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Middle Woodland Mound Distribution and Ceremonialism in the Apalachicola Valley, Northwest FloridaFrashuer, Anya C. 14 April 2006 (has links)
University of South Florida field investigations in northwest Florida’s
Apalachicola Valley have resulted in the relocation of some lost mounds from the Middle
Woodland period (ca. A.D. 1 to 650) by trekking through the forest and consulting with
avocationals and collectors. This thesis project was triggered by a collector’s donation of
some Swift Creek pots and the attempt to relocate the mound from which they came. In
the 1970s, Gardner and Nidy recorded this site, named Poplar Springs Mound,
categorized as Middle Woodland due to its Swift Creek and Weeden Island pottery. The
donated collection contained pottery of the Swift Creek Complicated-Stamped series,
Weeden Island series, and a couple of anomalous Mississippian sherds. To see how this
mound fit in with other Middle Woodland mounds of the valley, it was necessary to
compile data for all of them and relocate as many mounds as possible through additional
survey. Artifact types from these mounds, such as pottery, shell, bone, and exotic
materials, and burial practices were tabulated and spatial distributions were plotted. The
mounds are distributed along the banks of the main navigable waterways of the
Apalachicola and Chipola Rivers, on smaller streams and along the Gulf Coast. Nearly all
have both Swift Creek and early Weeden Island ceramics, except for three with only
Swift Creek types and a single site with only Weeden Island types. The artifact
distributions show stone, bone, and shell tools clustering close to the coast and the main
waterways. This is also the case for exotic (nonlocal) raw materials and artifacts made
from these materials. Copper is distributed mainly along the coast, while other exotics
(i.e. mica, galena, hematite) are located along the coast and close to the main rivers. The
tabulation of these data, along with the documentation of the Poplar Springs Mound
collection, will help archaeologists to see the manifestation of Middle Woodland
ceremonial activity in the Apalachicola Valley.
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