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Mastodons to Mississippians - Adventures in Nashville's Deep Past (Paperback)
Loot Price: R305
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Mastodons to Mississippians - Adventures in Nashville's Deep Past (Paperback)
Series: Truths, Lies, and Histories of Nashville
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List price R365
Loot Price R305
Discovery Miles 3 050
You Save R60 (16%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Was Nashville once home to a giant race of humans? No, but in 1845,
you could have paid a quarter to see the remains of one who
allegedly lived here before The Flood. That summer Middle Tennessee
well diggers had unearthed the skeleton of an American mastodon.
Before it went on display, it was modified and augmented with
wooden "bones" to make it look more like a human being and passed
off as an antediluvian giant. Then, like so many Nashvillians,
after a little success here, it went on tour and disappeared from
history. But this fake history of a race of Pre-Nashville Giants
isn't the only bad history of what, and who, was here before
Nashville. Sources written for schoolchildren and the public lead
us to believe that the first Euro-Americans arrived in Nashville to
find a pristine landscape inhabited only by the buffalo and
boundless nature, entirely untouched by human hands. Instead, the
roots of our city extend some 14,000 years before Illinois
lieutenant-governor-turned-fur-trader Timothy Demonbreun set foot
at Sulphur Dell. During the period between about AD 1000 and 1425,
a thriving Native American culture known to archaeologists as the
Middle Cumberland Mississipian lived along the Cumberland River and
its tributaries in today's Davidson County. Earthen mounds built to
hold the houses or burials of the upper class overlooked both banks
of the Cumberland near what is now downtown Nashville. Surrounding
densely packed village areas including family homes, cemeteries,
and public spaces stretched for several miles through Shelby
Bottoms, and the McFerrin Park, Bicentennial Mall, and Germantown
neighborhoods. Other villages were scattered across the Nashville
landscape, including in the modern neighborhoods of Richland,
Sylvan Park, Lipscomb, Duncan Wood, Centennial Park, Belle Meade,
White Bridge, and Cherokee Park. The book is the first effort by
legitimate archaeologists to articulate the history of what
happened here before Nashville happened.
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