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POVERTY POINT Earthworks

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Bianca
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« on: August 10, 2009, 06:59:10 pm »









                   Poverty Point excavation comes to conclusion under guidance of ULM leader




                      Poverty Point excavation concludes with guidance from ULM professor







University News Service
• August 9, 2009

  A major archaeological excavation at Poverty Point State Historic Site recently concluded, under the leadership and guidance of Diana Greenlee, station archaeologist and adjunct assistant professor in the department of geosciences at the University of Louisiana at Monroe.



Greenlee, collections manager Alisha Wright and ULM students were joined by colleagues from Mississippi State University for the summer excavation.

The dig represented the first excavations conducted by a ULM archaeological field school at Poverty Point in more than a decade and provided the public an interesting, first-hand look at working scientists seeking clues about the Native Americans who occupied the site close to 3,500 years ago.

The primary goal of the excavation was to study enigmatic buried circles identified using special instruments that detect slight variations in the soil's magnetic field.

The circles, which range from 20 to 60 meters in diameter, are located in the central plaza, previously believed to be empty community space for the prehistoric people who lived there. The archaeologists chose to excavate and compare parts of four different circles.

Greenlee said she realizes that visitors to Poverty Point State Historic Site may be a bit underwhelmed by the site, but emphasized how magnificent the cultural achievements of the prehistoric culture really were and how each exploration of the site is ripe with possibility.

"Just when you think you have some things figured out, you realize that you don't have a clue," she said. This site is just so complex."

Everybody involved considered the excavations a success, Greenlee said.

"We were able to establish that the different magnetic characteristics of the circles in the plaza correspond to different kinds of constructions," she said.

One of the circles has been dated and is the same age as the major occupation of the site.

"We now have sufficient samples to determine how old the rest of the circles are," Greenlee said.

Although the fieldwork is complete, analysis of the artifacts and sediments will continue for many months. Greenlee anticipates that future field efforts will expand upon this summer's work to understand the functions of the circles.

The archaeological site at Poverty Point is the largest, most complicated earthwork of its age in North America. People who relied on a hunting-gathering-fishing way of life moved more than 750,000 cubic meters of dirt in its construction, all without benefit of beasts of burden.



http://www.thenewsstar.com/article/20090809/LIFESTYLE/908090304
« Last Edit: August 10, 2009, 07:02:14 pm by Bianca » Report Spam   Logged

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