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Jon Gibson confronts the intriguing mystery of Poverty Point, the
ruins of a large prehistoric Indian settlement that was home to one
of the most fascinating ancient cultures in eastern North America.
The 3,500-year-old site in northeastern Louisiana is known for its
large, elaborate earthworks - a series of concentric,
crescent-shaped dirt rings and bird-shaped mounds. With its
imposing 25-mile core, it is one of the largest archaic
constructions on American soil. It's also one of the most puzzling
- perplexing questions haunt Poverty Point, and archaeologists
still speculate about life and culture at the site, its age, how it
was created, and if it was at the forefront of an emerging complex
society. Gibson's engaging, well-illustrated account of Poverty
Point brings to life one of the oldest earthworks of its size in
the Western Hemisphere, the hub of a massive exchange network among
native American peoples reaching a third of the way across the
present-day United States.
Drawing on over fifty years of research and study, archaeologist
Jon L. Gibson comes to well-founded yet bold conclusions about the
Archaic mounds in the Lower Mississippi Valley and the peoples who
made them. Examining topics ranging from the architectural
incorporation of cosmic cycles and standard measures to traditional
native myths and magical beliefs, Archaic Earthworks of the Lower
Mississippi Valley is the definitive study of the history and ethos
of a much-debated era.
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