Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-mp689 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-24T08:54:25.822Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

2.33 - The Great Plains and Mississippi Valley

from VI. - The Americas

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2014

Linea Sundstrom
Affiliation:
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Timothy R. Pauketat
Affiliation:
University of Illinois, Urbana
Colin Renfrew
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Get access

Summary

Environment

The Great Plains and Mississippi Valley encompass most of eastern North America, from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico, including the Ohio River drainage, the Appalachians, and the Missouri River Basin. This vast area encompasses significant geomorphological, biotic and climatic diversity. Much of the midcontinent had been glaciated, characterised today by level to gently rolling topography. Uplifts and more heavily dissected regions make up the lands south of the Ohio and Missouri Rivers, and heavily weathered hills characterise the coastal plains along the Gulf coast (Map 2.33.1).

The Mississippi Valley is typical of much of eastern North America. It is a land primarily of temperate deciduous forest, with limited areas of prairie in the Midwest and coniferous forests in the south and Appalachian Mountains to the east. For such reasons, the Mississippi Valley and eastern North America south of the Great Lakes are commonly referred to as the Eastern Woodlands. Low-lying lands, especially floodplain areas of the Mississippi River, were rich in biotic resources, and prone to flooding. Upland areas were less rich, but were home to large game mammals such as elk and whitetail deer. For periods each year, great flocks comprising millions of migratory birds – ducks, geese, cranes, swans – used the Mississippi River and its tributaries as a flyway, moving from nesting grounds in Canada and the upper Mississippi Valley south to the Gulf coast and beyond.

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2014

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Adair, M. J. 1998. Prehistoric Agriculture in the Central Plains. University of Kansas Publications in Anthropology 16: Lawrence.
Alex, R. A. 1981. The Village Cultures of the Lower James Valley, South Dakota. Department of Anthropology, University of Wisconsin: Madison.
Alt, S. M. (ed.) 2010. Ancient Complexities: New Perspectives in Precolumbian North America. University of Utah Press: Salt Lake City.
Anderson, D. G., Maasch, K. A. & Sandweiss, D. H. (eds.) 2007. Climate Change and Cultural Dynamics: A Global Perspective on Mid-Holocene Transitions. Elsevier: London.
Anderson, D. G. & Mainfort, R. C. (eds.) 2002. The Woodland Southeast. University of Alabama Press: Tuscaloosa.
Anfinson, S. F. 1982. The prehistoric archaeology of the Prairie Lakes region. Journal of the North Dakota Archaeological Association 1: 65–90.Google Scholar
Bamforth, D. B. 1988. Ecology and Human Organization on the Great Plains. Plenum: New York.
Baugh, T. G. & Ericson, J. E. (eds.) 1994. Prehistoric Exchange Systems in North America. Plenum: New York.
Benn, D. W., Bettis, E. A. I. & Mallam, R. C. 1993. Cultural transformations in the Keller and Bluff Top Mounds, pp. 53–74 in (Tiffany, J. A., ed.) Prehistory and Human Ecology of the Western Prairies and Northern Plains. Plains Anthropologist Memoir 27: Lincoln, NE.
Blakeslee, D. J. 1993. Modeling the abandonment of the Central Plains: radiocarbon dates and the origin of the Initial Coalescent, pp. 199–214 in (Tiffany, J. A., ed.) Prehistory and Human Ecology of the Western Prairies and Northern Plains. Plains Anthropologist Memoir 27: Lincoln, NE.
Blitz, J. H. & Lorenz, K. G. 2006. The Chattahoochee Chiefdoms. University of Alabama Press: Tuscaloosa.
Carr, C. 2005. The tripartite ceremonial alliance among Scioto Hopewellian communities and the question of social ranking, pp. 258–338 in (Carr, C. & Case, D. T., eds.) Gathering Hopewell: Society, Ritual, and Ritual Interaction. Kluwer: New York.
Carr, C. & Case, D. T. 2005. The gathering of Hopewell, pp. 19–50 in (Carr, C. & Case, D. T., eds.) Gathering Hopewell: Society, Ritual, and Ritual Interaction. Kluwer: New York.
Cobb, C. R. & Garrow, P. H. 1996. Woodstock culture and the question of Mississippian emergence. American Antiquity 61: 21–37.Google Scholar
Cobb, C. R. & King, A. 2005. Re-inventing Mississippian Tradition at Etowah, Georgia. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 12: 167–92.Google Scholar
Drass, R. R. 1998. The Southern Plains villagers, pp. 415–55 in (Wood, W. R., ed.) Archaeology on the Great Plains. University Press of Kansas: Lawrence.
Emerson, T. E., McElrath, D. L. & Fortier, A. C. (eds.) 2000. Late Woodland Societies: Tradition and Transformation across the Midcontinent. University of Nebraska Press: Lincoln.
Farnsworth, K. B. & Emerson, T. E. (eds.) 1986. Early Woodland Archaeology. Center for American Archaeology Press: Kampsville, IL.
Fowler, M. L., Rose, J., Vander Leest, B. & Ahler, S. R. 1999. The Mound 72 Area: Dedicated and Sacred Space in Early Cahokia. Illinois State Museum, Reports of Investigations, no. 54: Springfield.
Frison, G. C. 1991. Prehistoric Hunters of the High Plains. Academic Press: San Diego, CA.
Frison, G. C. 1998. The Northwestern and Northern Plains Archaic, pp. 140–72 in (Wood, W. R., ed.) Archaeology on the Great Plains. University Press of Kansas: Lawrence.
Gibbon, G. E. 1993. The Middle Missouri Tradition in Minnesota: a review, pp. 169–87 in (Tiffany, J. A., ed.) Prehistory and Human Ecology of the Western Prairies and Northern Plains. Plains Anthropologist Memoir 27: Lincoln, NE.
Hall, R. L. 1997. An Archaeology of the Soul: Native American Indian Belief and Ritual. University of Illinois Press: Urbana.
Hanson, J. R. 1998. The late High Plains hunters, pp. 456–80 in (Wood, W. R., ed.) Archaeology on the Great Plains. University Press of Kansas: Lawrence.
Henning, D. R. 1998. The Oneota Tradition, pp. 345–414 in (Wood, W. R., ed.) Archaeology on the Great Plains. University Press of Kansas: Lawrence.
Hofman, J. L. & Graham, R. W. 1998. The Paleo-Indian cultures of the Great Plains, pp. 87–139 in (Wood, W. R., ed.) Archaeology on the Great Plains. University Press of Kansas: Lawrence.
Johnson, A. M. & Johnson, A. E. 1998. The Plains Woodland, pp. 201–34 in (Wood, W. R., ed.) Archaeology on the Great Plains. University Press of Kansas: Lawrence.
Johnson, E. 1973. The Avilla Complex. Minnesota Historical Society, Minnesota Prehistoric Archaeology Series 9: St. Paul.
Kehoe, A. B. 2005. Wind jewels and paddling gods: the Mississippian Southeast in the Postclassic Mesoamerican world, pp. 260–80 in (White, N. M., ed.) Gulf Coast Archaeology: The Southeastern United States and Mexico. University Press of Florida: Gainesville.
Keyes, C. R. 1927. Prehistoric man in Iowa. Palimpsest 8: 215–29.Google Scholar
Kidder, T. R. 2010. Hunter-gatherer ritual and complexity: new evidence from Poverty Point, Louisiana, pp. 32–51 in (Alt, S. M., ed.) Ancient Complexities: New Perspectives in Pre-Columbian North America. University of Utah Press: Salt Lake City.
Koldehoff, B. & Walthall, J. A. 2009. Dalton and the Early Holocene midcontinent: setting the stage, pp. 137–51 in (Emerson, T. E., McElrath, D. L. & Fortier, A. C., eds.) Archaic Societies: Diversity and Complexity across the Midcontinent. State University of New York Press: Albany.
Larson, M. L. 1997. Housepits and mobile hunter-gatherers: a consideration of the Wyoming evidence. Plains Anthropologist 42: 353–69.Google Scholar
Lehmer, D. J. 1971. Introduction to Middle Missouri Archeology. National Park Service Anthropological Paper 1: Washington, DC.
Lensink, S. C. 1993. Episodic climatic events and Mill Creek culture change: an alternative explanation, pp. 189–97 in (Tiffany, J. A., ed.) Prehistory and Human Ecology of the Western Prairies and Northern Plains. Plains Anthropologist Memoir 27: Lincoln, NE.
Lepper, B. T. 2004. The Newark earthworks: monumental geometry and astronomy at a Hopewellian pilgrimage center, pp. 73–81 in (Townsend, R. F. & Sharp, R. V., eds.) Hero, Hawk, and Open Hand: American Indian Art of the Ancient Midwest and South. Art Institute of Chicago and Yale University Press: New Haven, CT.
Ludwickson, J., Gundersen, J. N. & Johnson, C. 1993. Select exotic artifacts from Cattle Oiler (39ST224): a Middle Missouri Tradition site in Central South Dakota, pp. 151–68 in (Tiffany, J. A., ed.) Prehistory and Human Ecology of the Western Prairies and Northern Plains. Plains Anthropologist Memoir 27: Lincoln, NE.
McElrath, D. L. & Emerson, T. E. 2012. Reenvisioning Eastern Woodlands Archaic origins, pp. 448–59 in (T. R. Pauketat, ed.) The Oxford Handbook of North American Archaeology. Oxford University Press: Oxford.Google Scholar
Milanich, J. T., Cordell, A. S., Knight, V. J., Jr., Kohler, T. A. & Sigler-Lavelle, B. J. 1984. McKeithen Weeden Island: The Culture of Northern Florida 200–900. Academic Press: Orlando, FL.
Millar, J. F. V., Epp, H., Foster, T. W. & Adams, G. 1972. The South Saskatchewan archaeological project. Napao 3: 14–21.Google Scholar
Nassaney, M. S. 2001. The historical-processual development of Late Woodland societies, pp. 157–73 in (Pauketat, T. R., ed.) The Archaeology of Traditions: History and Agency Before and After Columbus. University Press of Florida: Gainesville.
Neuman, R. W. 1975. The Sonota Complex and Associated Sites on the Northern Great Plains. Nebraska State Historical Society Publications in Anthropology 6: Lincoln.
Pauketat, T. R. 2004. Ancient Cahokia and the Mississippians. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge.
Pauketat, T. R. 2007. Chiefdoms and Other Archaeological Delusions. AltaMira Press: Walnut Creek, CA.
Pauketat, T. R. 2010. Of leaders and legacies in Native North America, pp. 169–92 in (Kanter, J., Vaughn, K. & Eerkins, J., eds.) The Evolution of Leadership and Complexity. School for Advanced Research Press: Santa Fe, NM.
Pauketat, T. R. & Alt, S. M. 2003. Mounds, memory, and contested Mississippian history, pp. 151–79 in (Van Dyke, R. M. & Alcock, S. E., eds.) Archaeologies of Memory. Blackwell: Oxford.
Pauketat, T. R. & Loren, D. D. 2005. Alternative histories and North American archaeology, pp. 1–29 in (Pauketat, T. R. & Loren, D. D., eds.) North American Archaeology. Blackwell: Oxford.
Randall, A. R. & Sassaman, K. E. 2010. Emergent complexities during the Archaic Period in Northeast Florida, pp. 8–31 in (Alt, S. M., ed.) Ancient Complexities: New Perspectives in Pre-Columbian North America. University of Utah Press: Salt Lake City.
Reeves, B. O. K. 1983. Culture Change in the Northern Plains 1000 bc – 1000. Archaeological Survey of Alberta Occasional Paper 20: Edmonton.
Sassaman, K. E. 1995. The social contradictions of traditional and innovative cooking technologies in the prehistoric American Southeast, pp. 223–40 in (Barnett, W. K. & Hoopes, J. W., eds.) The Emergence of Pottery: Technology and Innovation in Ancient Societies. Smithsonian Institution Press: Washington, DC.
Sassaman, K. E. 2004. Complex hunter-gatherers in evolution and history: a North American perspective. Journal of Archaeological Research 12: 227–80.Google Scholar
Sassaman, K. E. 2005. Poverty Point as structure, event, process. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 12: 335–64.Google Scholar
Sassaman, K. E. 2010. The Eastern Archaic: Historicized. AltaMira Press: Lanham, MD.
Simon, M. L. 2009. A regional and chronological synthesis of Archaic Period plant use in the midcontinent, pp. 81–114 in (Emerson, T. E., McElrath, D. L. & Fortier, A. C., eds.) Archaic Societies: Diversity and Complexity across the Midcontinent. State University of New York Press: Albany.
Squier, E. G. & Davis, E. G. 1848. Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley. Smithsonian Institution Contributions to Knowledge, vol. 1: Washington, DC.
Steinacher, T. L. & Carlson, G. F. 1998. The Central Plains Tradition, pp. 235–68 in (Wood, W. R., ed.) Archaeology on the Great Plains. University Press of Kansas: Lawrence.
Syms, E. L. 1977. Cultural Ecology and Ecological Dynamics of the Ceramic Period in Southwestern Manitoba. Plains Anthropologist Memoir 12: Lincoln, NE.
Tiffany, J. A. 1983. An overview of the Middle Missouri Tradition, pp. 87–108 in (Gibbon, G. E., ed.) Prairie Archaeology. University of Minnesota Publications in Anthropology 3: Minneapolis.
Tiffany, J. A. 1991. Modeling Mill Creek-Mississippian interaction, pp. 319–47 in (Stoltman, J. B., ed.) New Perspectives on Cahokia: Views from the Periphery. Prehistory Press: Madison, WI.
Toom, D. L. 1992. Radiocarbon dating of the Western Initial Middle Missouri variant: some new dates and a critical review of old dates. Plains Anthropologist 37: 115–28.Google Scholar
Vehik, S. C. 1984. The Woodland occupations, pp. 175–97 in (Bell, R. E., ed.) Prehistory of Oklahoma. Academic Press: Orlando, FL.
Watrall, C. L. 1974. Subsistence pattern change at the Cambria Site: a review and hypothesis, pp. 138–42 in (Johnson, E., ed.) Aspects of Upper Great Lakes Archaeology. Minnesota Historical Society, Minnesota Prehistoric Archaeology Series 11: St. Paul.
Wedel, W. R. 1961. Prehistoric Man on the Great Plains. University of Oklahoma Press: Norman.
Weinstein, R. A. (ed.) 2005. Lake Providence: A Terminal Coles Creek Culture Mound Center, East Carroll Parish, Louisiana. Coastal Environments: Baton Rouge, LA.
Wiant, M. D., Farnsworth, K. B. & Hajic, E. R. 2009. The Archaic Period in the Lower Illinois River Basin, pp. 229–86 in (Emerson, T. E., McElrath, D. L. & Fortier, A. C., eds.) Archaic Societies: Diversity and Complexity across the Midcontinent. State University of New York Press: Albany.
Winham, R. P. & Calabrese, F. A. 1998. The Middle Missouri Tradition, pp. 269–307 in (Wood, W. R., ed.) Archaeology on the Great Plains. University Press of Kansas: Lawrence.
Wood, W. R. 1998. Introduction, pp. 1–15 in (Wood, W. R., ed.) Archaeology on the Great Plains. University Press of Kansas: Lawrence.
Zimmerman, L. J. 1985. Peoples of Prehistoric South Dakota. University of Nebraska Press: Lincoln.

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×