:''For other uses of the term "mound builder", see
Mound builder (disambiguation).''
'Mound Builder' is a general term referring to the
Native North American peoples who constructed various styles of earthen
mounds for burial, residential, and ceremonial purposes. These included
Archaic, and
Woodland period, and
Mississippian period Pre-Columbian cultures dating from roughly 3000 BCE to the 1500s, and living in the
Great Lakes region, the
Ohio River region, and the
Mississippi River region.
The term "Mound Builder" was also applied to an imaginary race believed to have constructed these earthworks, because Euroamericans from the 16th-19th centuries generally thought that Native Americans did not build the mounds.
The namesake cultural trait of the Mound Builders was the building of
mounds and other
earthworks. These burial and ceremonial structures were typically flat-topped
pyramids or
platform mounds, flat-topped or rounded cones, elongated ridges, and sometimes a variety of other forms. The best known flat-topped pyramidal structure, which is also the largest pre-Columbian earthwork north of Mexico at over 100 feet tall, is
Monk's Mound at
Cahokia. Some
effigy mounds were made in unusual shapes, such as the outline of culturally significant animals. The most famous effigy mound,
Serpent Mound in southern Ohio, is 5 feet tall, 20 wide, over 1330 feet long, and shaped as a
serpent.
The Mound Builders included many different
tribal groups and
chiefdoms, probably involving a bewildering array of beliefs and unique cultures, united only by the shared architectural practice of mound construction. This practice, believed to be associated with a cosmology that had a cross-cultural appeal, may indicate common cultural antecedents. The first mound building is an early marker of incipient political and social complexity among the cultures in the Eastern United States.
The most complete reference for these earthworks is ''
Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley'', written by
Ephraim G. Squier, Edwin H. Davis and Samuel Morton. It was published by the
Smithsonian Institution in
1848. Since many of the features they documented have since been destroyed or diminished by farming and development, their surveys, sketches and descriptions are still used by modern archaeologists. All of their sites located in Kentucky came from the manuscripts of the deceased
C.S. Rafinesque. A smaller regional study in 1931 by author and archaeologist
Fred Dustin charted and examined the mounds and Ogemaw Earthworks near
Saginaw, Michigan. Archaeological survey and recording of mounds is an ongoing task.

Many engraved
conch shell artifacts, such as this one from a mound in Tennessee, have been found.
Eras
The Moundbuilding cultures can be divided into roughly three eras:
Archaic era
Poverty Point in what is now
Louisiana is a prominent example of early archaic Mound Builder construction (c. 2500 BCE - 1000 BCE). While earlier Archaic mound centers existed (see
Watson Brake), Poverty Point remains one of the best-known early examples.
Woodland period
Throughout the United States, the
Archaic period was followed by the
Woodland period (c. 1000 BCE - 1000). Some well-understood examples would be the
Adena culture of
Ohio and nearby states, and the subsequent
Hopewell culture known from
Illinois to Ohio and renowned for their geometric earthworks. The Adena and Hopewell were not, however, the only mound building peoples during this time period. There were contemporaneous mound building cultures throughout the Eastern United States.
Mississippian culture

Occupied between 1250 and 1600
C.E.,
Mississippi's Emerald Mound is the second-largest ceremonial earthwork in the United States.
Around 900-1000 CE the
Mississippian culture developed and spread through the Eastern United States, primarily along the river valleys. The location where the Mississippian culture is first clearly developed is located in Illinois, and is referred to today as
Cahokia.
The Moundbuilder Myth
Through the mid-1800s, Native Americans were generally not believed to have built the mounds of the eastern U.S.
A key work in the widespread recognition of the true origins of the mounds was the lengthy 1894 report of
Cyrus Thomas of the
Bureau of American Ethnology, which concluded that the prehistoric earthworks of the eastern United States were the work of Native Americans. A small number of people had earlier reached similar conclusions:
Thomas Jefferson, for example, excavated a mound and noted similarities between mound builder funeral practices, and the funeral practices of Native Americans in his time.
Several alternate explanations were forwarded as to the origins of the mound builders:
Benjamin Smith Barton proposed the theory that the mound builders were
Vikings who came to America and eventually disappeared. Other people believed that they were
Greeks,
Africans,
Chinese or assorted
Europeans. The
Ten Lost Tribes of
Israel were often given credit for the mounds by Euroamericans who embraced a
Biblical worldview. The ''
Book of Mormon'' (first published in 1830) claimed that Israelite groups (called the
Nephites,
Lamanites and
Jaredites) settled in the Americas and built magnificent cities (including large burial mounds), only to be later decimated by warfare. Reverend Landon West claimed that
Serpent Mound in Ohio was built by God. He believed that God built the mound himself and placed it in Eden, which apparently was in Ohio. Some people went as far as to attribute the mounds to mythical cultures:
Lafcadio Hearn suggested that the mounds were built by people from the lost continent of
Atlantis.
The removal of most Indians from the mound builder regions by the 1830s, by means of the
Trail of Tears, was partly justified by the theory that the Indians destroyed the mound builders. Because people thought that the mound builders were sometimes believed to be ancient Europeans, the removal of the Indians was justified in order to reclaim their land.
The mound builder myth was not just a simple hoax, but a misinterpretation of real data from valid sources. The myth was widely accepted by scholars and laymen. Reference to this alleged race appears in the poem "The Prairies" (1832) by
William Cullen Bryant [1] The widespread acceptance of the myth was based on a number of factors.
One was the belief the American Indians were simple beings that could not have constructed such magnificent earthworks and artifacts. The stone, metal, and clay artifacts were thought to be too complex for the primitive Indians to make. However, in the American Southeast, Northeast, and Midwest, there were numerous Indian cultures that were sedentary and participated in agriculture. Numerous Indian towns even had walls surrounding them for defense. If they were capable of this type of construction, building mounds should have been no more difficult. People who believed that the Indians were not responsible for the earthworks also used the argument that they could have not built them because they were
nomadic peoples who followed their food. In this view, they could not have devoted the time and effort to construct mounds and other time-consuming projects.
When Europeans first arrived in America they never witnessed the American Indians building mounds; and when asked about the mounds, most of the Indians did not know anything about them. Yet there were numerous written accounts about the Indians' construction of the mounds by Europeans. One detailed account was by
Garcilaso de la Vega, who wrote about how they built the mounds and the temples that were placed on top of the mounds. There were even French expeditions that stayed with Indian societies who built mounds.
People also claimed that the Indians were not the mound builders because the mounds and related artifacts were older than the Indian culture itself.
Caleb Atwater's misunderstanding of
stratigraphy led him to believe that the mound builders were a much older civilization than the Indians. In his book, ''Antiquities Discovered in the Western States'' (1820), Atwater claims that Indian remains are always found right beneath the surface of the earth. Since the artifacts associated with the mound builders are found fairly deep in the ground, Atwater argued that they must be from a different group of people. The discovery of metal artifacts further convinced people that the mound builders were not Native Americans because the Indians were not known to engage in metallurgy. This was another ignorant perception that was based on the assumption that all Indian cultures are similar. Some artifacts that were found in relation to the mounds were inscribed with symbols. The Europeans did not know of any Indian cultures that had a writing system, so they assumed it was another group who created them.
Hoaxes
Several hoaxes were designed to reenforce the Moundbuilder Myth.
In 1860, David Wyrick discovered the “
Keystone tablet”, containing
Hebrew language inscriptions written on it in Newark, Ohio. Soon after, he found the “
Newark Decalogue Stone" nearby, also claimed to contain Hebrew. It was later discovered that a Reverend John W. McCarty created these "
Newark Holy Stones" and put them in a place where Wyrick would find them.
Another hoax related to the mound builder myth was the discovery of the Davenport tablets by Reverend Jacob Gass. These also bore inscriptions on them that later were found to be fake.
The
Walam Olum hoax had considerable influence in the mound builder myth.
Constantine Samuel Rafinesque published in 1836 his translation of a text he claimed had been written in pictographs on wooden tablets. This text explained the origin of the
Lenape Indians in Asia, told of their passage over the Bering Strait, and narrated their subsequent migration across the North American continent. This “Walam Olum” tells of battles with native peoples already in America before the Lenape arrived. It was assumed by others that these original people were the mound builders, and that the Lenape Indians overthrew them and destroyed their culture. David Oestreicher later branded Rafinesque's story a hoax, arguing that the Walam Olum glyphs derive from Chinese,
Egyptian, and
Mayan alphabets. Meanwhile, the belief that the Native Americans destroyed the mound builder culture had earned widespread acceptance.
The
Kinderhook Plates ("discovered" in 1843) were another hoax planted in Native American mounds.
Other groups that have developed myths about the moundbuilders are certain sects affiliated with the Black nationalist Moorish Science philosophy. They argue that the moundbuilders were an ancient advanced Black civilization that developed the legendary continents of Atlantis and Mu as well as ancient Egypt and Mesoamerica.
Like other moundbuilder myths, they posit that the American Indians were too uncivilized and unable to develop cities and the technology necessary for building these mounds.
See also
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Tumulus, Mounds (or barrows) of Europe and Asia
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Southwestern College (Kansas) School mascot: The "Moundbuilders"
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Grave Creek Mound
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Criel Mound
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Roods Landing Site
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Petroforms
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Mound
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Town Creek Indian Mound
Placemarks
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Ancient Monuments Placemarks KMZ file links.
References
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1. http://www.4literature.net/William_Cullen_Bryant/Prairies/ Bryant, William Cullen, “The Praries” (1832)
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Thomas, Cyrus. Report on the mound explorations of the Bureau of Ethnology. Pp. 3-730. Twelfth annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1890-91, by J. W. Powell, Director. XLVIII+742 pp., 42 pls., 344 figs. 1894.
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Feder, Kenneth L.. ‘’Frauds, Myths, and Mysteries: Science and Pseudoscience in Archaeology’’. 5th ed. New York: McGraw Hill, 2006.
External links
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Lost Race Myth
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LostWorlds.org | An Interactive Museum of the American Indian
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LenaweeHistory.com | Mound Builders section, The Western Historical Society 1909, reprint.
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Artist Hideout, Art of the Ancients
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