Indian Mounds

Indian Mounds were constructed by deliberately heaping soil, rock, or other materials (such as ash, shell, and the remains of burned buildings) onto natural land surfaces. In Arkansas and elsewhere in eastern North America, Native Americans built earthen mounds for ritual or burial purposes or as the location for important structures, but mound-building ceased shortly after European contact due to changes in religious and other cultural practices. Mississippian people in eastern Arkansas were using mounds when Spanish explorers arrived in 1541, and the Caddo in the Red River valley were still using mounds during the winter of 1691–92, when explorers from Mexico visited them. Most of the thousands of mounds built in Arkansas have been destroyed by modern development and vandalism, but several hundred remain. Today, they are recognized as important religious and cultural monuments.

The oldest mound in Arkansas, believed to be 3,500 years old, is in the southern part of the state. This mound, only recently recognized, belongs to the Archaic Tradition, a hunting and gathering lifeway that existed across North America for thousands of years. Archaic mounds are uncommon and are known in small numbers in the Lower Mississippi Valley. The Arkansas Archaic mound, known as the Lake Enterprise Mound, is similar to others in northeastern Louisiana, but its function is still largely unknown. At times, only a single Archaic mound was built at a site. However, groups of mounds forming a rough enclosure have also been found. The mounds are roughly dome-shaped and appear to contain little other than earthen fill. Their main purpose may have been as symbolic representations of Archaic religious beliefs and as places where rituals and other events that were important to the surrounding population were carried out. Mounds also serve as physical symbols of the claims that a group of people makes to control of a particular area or landscape.

Since Archaic people did not live in large or permanent communities, workers from dispersed family camps and small settlements would have gathered periodically to build and maintain mounds. These projects were probably supervised by local people with religious expertise or personal prestige, and they would have required a small amount of time or effort on the part of the workers.

The next clear expression of mound-building in Arkansas took place during the Woodland Period, from roughly 600 BC to about AD 1000, a time in which native people began experimenting with small-scale horticulture to supplement hunting and gathering. Early and Middle Woodland mounds were typically used as burial places. Small dome-shaped mounds in the Red River valley of southwest Arkansas and adjoining Louisiana and Texas held deposits of human remains, usually cremated, and small mementos or offerings. Some mounds were built over a crematory basin; subsequently, cremated remains were periodically interred in the mound or placed on it, and new soil was added to refurbish the surface and bury the deposits. In southwest Arkansas, these mounds were made by the Fourche Maline people, who were local Woodland populations. Mounds at the Helena Crossing Site in Phillips County held the remains of several people interred about 2,000 years ago in elaborate log-lined tombs, along with a variety of personal and ritual objects. This practice is related to Hopewell culture in the Midwest, and to Marksville culture in the lower Mississippi and Red River valleys.

Not all Woodland people built mounds, or were buried in them. The religious beliefs that lay behind mound burial, and the social rules that dictated who was buried in a mound and who was not, are still largely unknown. Since many mounds have been destroyed without study, some information about these cultures has already been lost. Mounds served as symbols of a group’s common heritage, however, and as monuments for a community’s claim to a territory or landscape.

Not all Woodland mounds were constructed for burial. Some people built earthen platforms with flat tops that were used for public activities of various kinds. Religious and political centers that served dispersed regional populations had both kinds of mounds. Toltec Mounds (Lonoke County), the center of the Plum Bayou culture in central Arkansas, is the largest such site. Over its 400-year history, at least nineteen mounds were constructed. Low platforms were locations for public feasts and other rituals; at least one mound was used for burial, while others served still-unknown purposes. Mounds were periodically refurbished or enlarged and eventually went out of use.

Woodland Period mound groups were not villages; people congregated at centers periodically for rituals and social activities and then dispersed to family camps and other small settlements, leaving perhaps a few caretakers behind as permanent residents. Indians in Arkansas did not begin to live in compact villages until they developed a farming lifestyle based on corn (maize), squash, and other domesticated plants, and with these changes in lifestyle came changes in mound construction and purpose.

These changes took place between AD 900 and 1100 and begin what is known as the Mississippian Tradition, which is characterized by elaborate societies with settled farming communities, large populations, social hierarchies, and rich material culture. Mounds were typically flat-topped earthen pyramids used as platforms for religious buildings, residences of leaders and priests, and locations for public rituals. In some societies, honored individuals were also buried in mounds. Some mounds in Arkansas were surrounded by compact towns, such as the Parkin Site in Cross County. Other mound groups, such as the prehistoric Caddo mound sites in southwest Arkansas, were centers for dispersed populations residing in nearby hamlets and small villages.

Platform mounds were refurbished periodically. Buildings were replaced, new soil was used to enlarge and re-shape the mound, and the function of the mound may have changed as well. Some centers had several mounds and were used for centuries. These centers were not just collections of mounds, however. The location and arrangement of mounds, and the processes by which they were built and refurbished, were all linked to the larger sphere of religious beliefs and rituals. Mounds and mound centers embody the fundamental beliefs and values of Mississippian cultures as well as serving as the centers for Mississippian life.

People elsewhere in Arkansas followed variations of Mississippian culture during this time. In southwest Arkansas, the Caddo tradition was one variant. Flat-topped earthen mounds were used as platforms for religious buildings. From time to time, the buildings were burned or dismantled, and the mounds were enlarged, entombing the ruins of the older buildings within. Caddo mound centers typically had one flat-topped mound and at least one dome-shaped mound that had been erected over the ruins of a special building that may have been the residence of the community leader or the site of special rituals. Conical mounds were sometimes also used as cemeteries for important families, although only a small number of Caddo were actually buried in mounds. Few people resided at Caddo mound centers. Most lived in family homesteads and small villages scattered across the countryside and congregated at the centers only for important events. Mounds were also constructed in the Arkansas Ozarks and in the Arkansas River Valley. These flat-topped pyramids encased the ruins of ritual buildings and also served as local political and religious centers for dispersed farming populations.

Hundreds of mounds have been lost to erosion, development, and vandalism in the last century, but many hundred remain. Every mound in Arkansas today is an important symbol of Arkansas’s Indian history.

For additional information:
Anderson, David G. and Kenneth E. Sassamon. “Early and Middle Holocene Periods, 9500-3750 BC.” In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 14, Southeast, edited by William C. Sturtevant and Raymond D. Fogelson. Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution, 2004.

Bowne, Eric E. Mound Sites of the Ancient South: A Guide to the Mississippian Chiefdoms. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2013.

Cox, Carolyn Stratton. “Luda, Kent, and the Indian Mounds.” Ouachita County Historical Quarterly 51 (Spring 2020): 10–17.

Early, Ann M. “Prehistory of the Western Interior After 500 BC.” In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 14, Southeast, edited by William C. Sturtevant and Raymond D. Fogelson. Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution, 2004

Ford, James A. “Hopewell Culture Burial Mounds Near Helena, Arkansas.” Anthropological Papers No. 50 (1). New York: American Museum of Natural History, 1963.

Higgins, Donald P., Jr., and Marvin D. Jeter. “A Prescient 1880 Study of ‘The Mound Builders of Arkansas.’” Arkansas Archeologist 50 (2010): 1–24.

Krause, Richard A. “Observations on the Excavation of a Mississippian Mound.” In Mounds, Embankments and Ceremonialism, edited by Robert C. Mainfort and Richard Walling. Research Series No. 46. Fayetteville: Arkansas Archeological Survey, 1996.

Lankford, George. “Ancient Neighbors: Mounds on Black and White Rivers.” Independence County Chronicle 61 (January 2020): 3–28.

Morse, Phyllis A. Parkin: The 1978–1979 Archeological Investigation of a Cross County, Arkansas, Site. Research Series No. 13. Fayetteville: Arkansas Archeological Survey, 1981.

Perino, Gregory. “The Cherry Valley Mound Group.” Central States Archaeological Journal 6 (April 1959): 45–49.

Rolingson, Martha A. Toltec Mounds and Plum Bayou Culture: Mound D Excavations. Research Series No. 54. Fayetteville: Arkansas Archeological Survey, 1998

———. “Prehistory of the Central Mississippi Valley and Ozarks after 500 BC.” In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 14, Southeast, edited by William C. Sturtevant and Raymond D. Fogelson. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution, 2004

Sabo, George III, and Ann M. Early. Human Adaptation in the Ozark and Ouachita Mountains. Research Series 31. Arkansas Archeological Survey, Fayetteville. 1990

Sassamon, Kenneth E. and David G. Anderson. “Late Holocene Period, 3750 to 650 BC.” In Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 14, Southeast, edited by William C. Sturtevant and Raymond D. Fogelson. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution, 2004

Schambach, Frank F. “Mounds, Embankments, and Ceremonialism in the Trans-Mississippi South.” In Mounds, Embankments, and Ceremonialism in the Midsouth, edited by Robert C. Mainfort and Richard Walling. Research Series No. 46. Fayetteville: Arkansas Archeological Survey, 1996.

Trubitt, Mary Beth, with Lucretia S. Kelly. Two Caddo Mounds Sites in Arkansas. Research Series No. 70. Fayetteville: Arkansas Archeological Survey, 2021.

Ann M. Early
Arkansas Archeological Survey

Comments

    I live in Center Grove, AR, about five miles east of Sheridan. I cleared the land where I had my house moved onto with chainsaw and machete twenty-three years ago and I noticed I have a small mound in front yard, a large one behind it, and a large one on the side of it. Never gave it much thought other than the house is on a deer trail I hunted before having the house. I have hunted many of the acres around my house and all of the land is primarily flat. That is, until I noticed at least one medium-sized tree goes up about six feet, turns horizontal a couple of feet, then goes straight up to the other tree tops. My father-in-law said Indians used to break over small trees to mark trails and they would grow up this way. About a quarter of a mile down the road a man from my church showed me a case of all the arrowheads he found while plowing up his field to plant. He told me about a couple of hundred yards away there is a natural grease pit where people used the grease for their carriages. Also, there is an old, apparently forgotten, cemetery in the woods a couple of hundred yards from my house. Some stones are too weathered to read but some date as far back as the mid-1800s.

    Marty Lepkosky Sheridan, AR

    I think that it is a dereliction of responsibility for people to withhold information or cover up sacred native sites as well as artifacts. It is truly horrible to keep the Native cultures and history silent, still! The government owes our people our true history to be told and taught. Growing up, I didn’t learn much except that we were murderers and we slaughtered innocent families everywhere we went. We also learned SOME about some Native Americans who became scouts for the army, or about trading, but not much more than that. If there is more out there to learn and discover, and RESPECT, I BELIEVE WE ARE OWED AT LEAST THAT MUCH!

    Kira Lanza DoverFoxcroft, ME

    In response to Steve Stout’s comment, I find it terrible that the man that owns that piece of property will not allow anybody to excavate or archaeologists and universities to examine what he has. I know it’s his land so he’s entitled to do what he wants with it, but I always thought that when there was anything that was found of an archaeological importance that the state had every right to go in and inspect it. I just find it very sad that he will not allow anybody to go on to his property.

    Donna Costa Rhode Island

    I work with Indian education, and I am a Lumbee Indian. I have been in Robeson County, North Carolina, for fifty-two years, in the Prospect community twenty-three years and Lumberton community/Pembroke twenty-nine years, and have been studying the Indian mounds online and in class with my students. It seems like the mounds in Arkansas and the one at Town Creek are almost the same, and it is near the Pee Dee river valley.

    Also, the Indians back then used the mounds for burial and for ceremonies, and it seems like there was not much difference in our Woodland Indians to the Arkansas Indians. We have some mounds right in Red Springs, North Carolina, but the man who owns them right near the old airplane field on Highway 710 will not let us see them.

    Ellen Hunt Bullard

    My parents owned property on West Baseline Road, in Little Rock, Arkansas, just one block west of Stagecoach Road. My daddy told us the small mound in our front yard was an Indian mound. Years later, my brother added a six inches to a foot or more soil to our whole front yard, but the mound is still above what he filled in. I was always curious if it really was an Indian mound. My mother lined the outer edge of the mound with quartz stones and planted flowers. I always felt the mound was special.

    Janice Turley Edwards

    Fourche River, Scott County, AR, 1976 On private land, the owner hired my father to excavate for a poultry house construction site. At the beginning, he stripped the topsoil back on the 400′ x 40′ area. It rained that night, and in the morning the ground was literally covered with arrowheads, scrapers, etc, and buckets of chips and broken pieces of chert, various colors of quartz, and other types of rock. I have dozens of examples to this day, but nothing compared to the collection the landowner picked up. There was also a round spot about 4 feet across that consisted of a much darker color of soil. My father suggested that it may have been a well, or perhaps a latrine. It appeared to be a location where a population lived and worked stone into various tools. I always wondered how common this is, and if the university would be interested.

    Steve Stout