The early Japanese are also said to have subsisted on hunting-gathering for an extended period of time because their natural environment was so rich they didn't need to take up farming in order to sustain substantial communities. So, it is very believable to me that you can have a 'town' that includes no farming, if there is enough fish, fowl, berries, roots, etc. to live on. And the Japanese didn't need to build mounds to keep above the water; their land is naturally hilly.
The Cucuteni Trypillia had cities and still subsisted at least partially on hunting and gathering. They did have farming and animal husbandry too, but they'd relocate their entire city periodically. Presumably for access to unexploited land.
nice concept, but I doubt it would stay in balance very long. humans like to make babies, and that means a growing population.... you can guess how that ends.
People think hunter-gatherers are primitives but this was never the case. Here in Turkey, we have the oldest known temple in the world. It is called Göbeklitepe and it was built by hunter-gatherers. Both Poverty Point and Göbeklitepe are the proof of human ingenuity. We gotta create stuff. Man, I love being human 😎
Gobeklitepe and other sites like it are truly shaking the precepts of archeology and anthropology, which had long presumed agriculture was a necessary prerequisite to the beginning of real culture and art. Personally, I suspect the sights are near areas where her migration was bottlenecked play places where herd migration was bottlenecked, leading to mass numbers of people probably meeting there to take advantage of the especially rich hunting. But I have only my own intuition as a source.
The truly fascinating part is the fact that people think it was like. Chimp man with danger stick discover fire then BAM we all farming and building pyramids.... uhhh someone had to find out that being sedentary doesn't work without agriculture. Personally I think we simply learned to farm, BECAUSE we were sedentary. The insane population boom created by the safety in numbers forced us to farm, otherwise we ate ourselves to death.
We tend to think of the lives of hunter-gatherers as "nasty, solitary, brutish and short," but that is only because in historic times, they have been forced into marginal environments. In a rich environment, food can be provided with very little expenditure of time and effort (much less than early agriculture). Plenty of scope for developing complex activities such as mound building.
One thing with stationary life is that humans will naturally make more humans. Easy to have a big population fast if food is there. Easy to exhaust food with a large population. Agriculture can be more sustainable with large populations. Other than that totally agree
The Nasty, Brutish, and short isn't about food supply. Rather other factors in relation to food supply, like wild animal attacks, broken bones and wounds due to traversing Wildlands, parasitic infection, and a lack of healthcare of these issues. I'd you become debilitated due to these issues, in order to save the group, you will be left behind if you cannot travel. If you break a leg, get a bad infection, or suffer severe wounds from an animal attack and cannot hunt/gather, the group will have to move on without you when the time comes. That's if you even lived without dying from infections, severe wounds, etc. Where in a sedentary society, you have people & ready food to look after you year round without needing to travel large distances like hunter gatherers do.
@@masstv9052 that is surprisingly very untrue. There are numerous cases of early human skeletons we have found where the person broke a bone and had it fully heal then went on to live years more. Early humans even had trepanning. Trepanning relieves pressure on the brain by punching a small hole in the skull. This surgery is still used today and has an extremely high success rate. While medical conditions may not have been the most sanitary. Medicine didn’t really understand sanitation until the industrial revolution.
I live near Poverty Point and have been there numerous times. As an amateur archaeologist I've found lots of poverty point type artifacts many miles away from the actual site, most of them being cooking ball's. Their influence in the surrounding parishes is evident, and shows just how many people it took to supply and feed such a large population.
Do you think it’s a trading center or a settlement I think it’s more likely a massive trade center where while selling rocks you fed yourself on fish but I’m no archeologist
"clay eating?" Hot clay balls, raked out of the fire pit, thrown into a stew pot will heat it up rapidly. Surprised the 19th century explorer did not consider that use.
@@IHateThisHandleSystem Some did; some didn't. Some were deeply in awe. Reading what was written in the 1700's, different people had different opinions.
@@prunabluepepper From 40 years of hunting south Mississippi not far from poverty point I have found zero evidence of clay cooking balls or heating stones. Not sure how they were doing it over here but no evidence of that?
Hey! I worked here for field school back in 2011 under Dr Ortmann. The most recent dig I remember was on mound c, where we managed to get a really good look at the stratigraphy. It seems that mound C was definitely a major fixture of the mound complex. Dozens (if not hundreds) of small fires had been set over the scope of the occupation, and then covered with thin layers of clay, implying a ritualistic purpose
This channel is everything I have ever wanted but am too mentally ill at the moment to make happen myself. I literally cannot thank you enough. There is so little North American archaeological/anthropological content on youtube and as somecome who holds it so near and dear to my heart... this is magical.
I hope you're feeling well these days Look to the mysteries of the universe for comfort in mental illness With all the love and curiosity of an explorer, rush headlong into the great mystery of life, through it's unlimited doorways and rabbit holes May you make peace with your mind
I don’t know if you’re in SsRi but they made everything much worse for me. Lost five years of my life because they made me much more depressed than I was before. It was a constant merry go round of adding and taking away medication. I got off of them and have never felt better. It’s like that heavy weight was lifted after about a month of being off. Luckily I never went down the Xanax road. I knew anything that made me forget large portions of the day couldn’t be good so I stopped them immediately after the first day. Anyway, good luck.
your videos are way too well-researched and high quality for their view count. I hope your channel takes off! I am an archaeology and linguistics student considering studying the Classic Maya and Zapotec civilizations for graduate school.
Thanks! You know, if you're a linguistics student interested in the Zapotec, you could work towards the decipherment of Zapotec writing. No one has deciphered their writing yet and we could learn a lot if someone did.
It is very difficult to believe that the bayou mentioned ran the same coarse 3 to 4 thousand years ago or even existed at all. The banks of the mississippi delta are not static.
It’s definitely our best guess. We’ve even found remains of Poverty Point docks along the Macon. The site also sits on higher ground than the other side of the water, where there’s a floodplain. We don’t see a lot of evidence for erosion on the western side of the Bayou.
@@LegaciesRetrieval Thats whats so fascinating to me. To think theirs a power greater then the devil that makes him hide in fear. Its clear the author of this world, is writing a masterpiece until the times comes to fulfill it all.
Thank you so much for your channel and also this video. I am an over-the-road truck driver. I go back and forth on I-20 all the time passed exit 153, signs for poverty point that I have wondered about but never investigated until... yesterday when I drove the truck and parked it at a little corner store a mile from the site and rode my bicycle all around paved paths and trails through the woods. Thank you so much for making me aware of this amazing place
I think it's possible that Poverty point was a meeting place for the tribes and chiefdoms of the south. It seems like it was a trade city, central to everywhere, right on the river, and lots of different artifacts can be found there. It would make sense that intertribal politics would be conducted in the plaza or something. The large and numerous ovens may be indicative of seasonal feasting, or feasting to commemorate or celebrate relations between neighbors. This isn't my area of expertise, so I'm not certain how much cultural overlap the natives of the south at this time had with the people of the early modern great lakes, but these sorts of meeting places (usually in the form of longhouses, up there) were extremely common, important, and showed a large degree of exchange and plenty between the polities of the area. I'm sure we all know about the Haudenosaunee and how they came to be.
The Entire Mississipian/Missourian Mound Culture was a vast Trading Network, with the Yankton guarding the Middle Missouri & the BlackFeet guarding the Headwaters Passes. The Caddo and the Natchez were representatives of the Annointed Ruling Class that were all but wioed out by Smallpox & other European Diseases brought in by DeSoto. "TAKE ME TO YOUR LEADER!"
I went there in middle school. The park guide demonstrated how to use an atlatl spear-thrower. The site is very large, but was obscured by trees and natural overgrowth.
Very nice presentation. These very old sites in North America are sorely underappreciated and known to few outside the ranks of archeology. Thanks for a well produced, informative video! New subscriber, hope to see much more!
I live in SE Louisiana and have always had a trip to Poverty Point on my Bucket List. A visit there has just moved up the list to the Top because of this excellent presentation. Thanks
Your "Sources and Bibliography" pages are quite impressive. Your scholarship is impeccable. Each of your videos have more information than a 3 semester unit college class. If you really aren't a college professor, then you have many people fooled. It's refreshing to find a YT Channel that assumes that the viewer actually has a brain.
I live along the San Joaquin river in central California, and have been researching the Yokut tribes that once lived on high ground along the river. They were hunter gatherers, but apparently they grew tobacco, and in a way, cultivated oak groves for acorns.
Fascinating! I live in the San Joaquin Valley too, and I learned frighteningly little about local NA presence through school... this is an inspiration to do some personal research!
Yes. If they cultivate oak and hickory groves, are they farming? Also, where I live, mosquitos affect every outdoor activity. I would build a mound to escape them.
The distinction between gatherer-hunter and agriculturalist is a false dichotomy that has been overturned time, time, and time again. Intensive agriculture or limiting one's national food economy to farming was a revolutionary change, but humanity has been farming or engaging in agriculture for millennia all over the world. From the three sisters of Haudenosaunee Country to the oceanside mariculture sites of Coast Salish Countries. The framing of agriculture vs. gathering/hunting is a harmful, colonial one intended for colonizers to justify the theft of these Indigenous countries because, as the colonialists put it, "they [the natives] are not doing anything productive with their lands, so we the good God-fearing Christians who farm-as opposed to those godless pagan heathens-must put the Lord's Earth to productive use" ... and then they made shitty, shitty laws about this and stole entire continent's worth of countries and fed the population lies about the natives like how they are/were primitive hunter-gatherers with no semblance of country or nationhood
It is generally thought that tobacco is a new world crop that reached Asia after Columbus. Analysis of preservatives found in Ancient Egyptian mummies reveals that tobacco was included.
This video was incredibly interesting. I had never heard of this place, speaking as a Brit, and I am so glad that I have now. Your attention to detail, and lack thereof where the details are missing, is highly engrossing. I'm very glad the algorithm decided to grace me with a link to one of your other videos. Please keep up the great work while I enjoy the rest of your back catalogue!
I don't hear it talked about much but the forests of the Southern US are incredibly fruitful. From March to November, there is almost always something in season there. And in the winter, there is plenty of game. Just the right latitude for rampant diversity and long growing seasons, but none of the problems that come with full-on tropical jungle conditions. I'm not sure a biome like it exists anywhere else on Earth. If you told me a civilization could exist there just on the bounty of the woods, I'd believe you. And I'd imagine a primitive people would have little incentive to do all the hard work of agriculture when the forests around them were so generous.
how much has the river's course changed in the centuries so why the mounts could be "randomly" placed. The areas definitely prone to flooding; there is much less today due to dams and levees. if there were buildings on them seems like it would be to keep them safe from flooding. And the circles are just a way to organize. I think there is an overlap/transition between hunter gatherers and farmers
Corn was still 2 inch cobs in Honduras at the time. Poverty Point predates farming in the United States by 2700 years or so. Farming did not arrive north of Rio grande until about 800-1000 ad.
@@ralphdavis6052 They participated in non-monoculture farming, creating a kind of intiontional food forest as they went. This was better suited to getting the best of both. If you do this well you can really make food a simple matter in most places. It wasn't recognized openly because ya know colonialism but they described eden like forests full of good food that mysteriously vanished after the natives were killed or forced off.
The Mississippi river is still like 50 miles from this location. In fact thats probably why it was built there it was the place where the common flood plain stopped
I lived in Moundville Alabama for several years. Due to my Cherokee heritage and my tribe being in SC. I was granted free access to the archeological site. The annual festival was mostly Cherokee that participated. I got to actually see and be a part of one of the digs being done. As a very spiritual person I actually felt a connection and a sort of connection to the park. The Mississippians were similar to the Cherokee in farming with the 3 sisters of corn, beans and squash. There is a extensive trade with other mound cities by river navigation. You might enjoy a visit to Moundville. I found it very educational and interesting. I would love to see a video of your impressions on it and your relation to this mound site. I still keep some of my traditions and art forms alive with my tribe. I enjoy your videos and am in the process of watching them all.
Thank you for enlightening me on the wonderful nature of Poverty Point. It's truly a treasure that I did not realize was there. I look forward to visiting.
Channels like this one are just amazing. They provide quality work, great editing, and very interesting subjects that very honeslty most main stream TV would not even cover. I'm so glad I canceled my cable subscription.
Currently attending university in northeast Louisiana. Definitely gonna make a weekend trip to poverty point with some friends in the fall. I've heard a lot of my professors speak about it, especially my history professor who I had become friends with, and never realized how important and unique the site truly was.
@@AncientAmericas Farmers from the 1800s and more modern times leveled acres of Cahokia and ruined the site and no one knows the extent of the city now an what was lost
Idle speculation on my part, but considering the great flood lore that most early peoples possess, building a high mound as a safe place to escape too seems like a sound strategy.
@@hellwardenwot5148 I think you might be on to something there. No one would spend so much effort to prevent seasonal flooding. More likely memories of the YD boundary event made it more or a religious tradition.
@@michaelpacnw2419 I don't get why people think that the younger dryas or its end had anything to do with flood stories. There is no evidence of this being the case. These people lived near rivers that periodically flood. Of course they will have flood myths. No need to tie it all together to some event that took place over the course of generations thousands of years before these cultures existed.
Been watching a number of your videos and I really enjoy them!! You've done a very great job organizing and explaining the information you present, and I love the range of Pre-Columbian topics you cover. Places like Poverty Point are very fascinating to me, especially nowadays as more research is done on sedentary hunter-gatherer societies and how frequent there presence now seems to have been in prehistoric times (like the Calusa in Florida as an American example), even before the Holocene. Thank you for providing a great resource for everyone and sharing your love of archaeology :)
Mounds are usually built next to rivers which flood each year and provide transportation for friend and foe. Mounds would have been defensive sites against flooding and provide a view of the river to see any movement of people traveling on the river and traveling over land to your city. With waring tribes you need advance notice when an enemy is coming your way. High and dry land is the best place to set up your camp next to a river.
The idea of a city without farming sounds similar to the Gobekli Tete site in modern-day Turkey. I personally have always felt societies "before civilization" were more advanced than we assume, but owing to the nature of the archeological record, this has not been recognized.
The people of Poverty Point were far more advanced that we could possible imagine. Northeastern Louisiana was home to a vast number of indigenous people as well as the surrounding areas.
@@elizabethjansen2684 "Archeological record" isn't some sort of archive to be released, it's just a way of saying "what has been found so far and what can be found". Sometimes it's really hard to find things after such a long time because, you know, lots of things rot, for example. And sometimes it's hard to draw the correct conclusions when you're missing some links in the chain. We now know humans in the paleolithic were likely capable of creating some form of textiles only because of the happy accident that some of them also created pottery, which did survive and was found in Dolní Věstonice and Pavlov, and preserved imprints of said textiles. Once archeologists noticed that, they started looking, and noticed bones from other sites that show markings that were likely created by beating down weft yarns through a warp - a connection no one made without any other evidence of textiles. The textiles themselves did not survive that long, nor did any looms they might have had, because both were likely made of plant materials. Which means textile techniques may have been around for who knows how long all over the place, but we don't know for sure, because we have no surviving evidence. I honestly believe the internet and digitalisation of museum collections can speed up this process, because it makes it easier to make the connections between different finds showing evidence of the same thing. That's about as far as "releasing the archeological record" goes. Articles without lots of pictures don't always tell the whole story and may focus on one thing at the expense of others, but there's usually no malicious intent in it, it's just the nature of the beast. Especially since these fields are often underfunded and e.g. many museums can only afford a certain number of experts, in only certain fields. And of course if an ancient society functioned without writing, or used some form of communication and recording based on perishable materials, there's only so much archeology can find out about its workings. It's worth noting how many of our earliest evidences of advanced cultures come from areas where perishable materials have a chance to survive.
I believe that Thomas Jefferson thought that a great civilization existed in North America. I live in Ohio and have seen some amazing mounds including the serpent mound which is truly awesome.
It is little known that the largest mound (pyramid) on earth (so far discovered) is not on the banks of the Nile, but not far from the Aztec capital and now known as Mexico City.
Tepe was a meeting place for the clans. Like they show in Clan of the Cave Bear. They were well past cave dwelling, but it was an international swap meet. It’s how the native Indus grasses made their way to the rest of the world.
@@skaetur1 : Gobeklle Tepe is more specifically suspected to be a burial ground, though the relevant archaeology hasn't been done to confirm it yet. Somewhat similar locations in the same general area have been found to have clay-wrapped human skulls built into the walls, so it's suspected that the culture of the area performed "sky burial", and were attempting to in some sense represent the continuity from, or of, the people thus enshrined.
it's entirely plausible that both places may have been the result of tribute under the threat of destruction, tribute in the form of labor and resources. perhaps religious centers with a warrior elite that accumulated the area's wealth, or something even as simple as protection rackets. if you had enough trained and armed men to eliminate any neighboring group of people fairly easily you could definitely demand resources and labor from them. I rarely see this concept discussed for some reason despite it being equally plausible to any other hypothesis.
Kind of a fusion of Göbekli Tepe and Çatalhöyük almost with hunte gather built monumentation and permanent or semi-permanent housing. This site is definitely some food for thought on multiple levels.
Thank you👏🏻👏🏻 👏🏻 Two months ago on Time Team News they did a story on Poverty Point. They were doing a Resistivity Tomography Scan. One thing they are looking into are Mud Volcanoes. As a possible reason for the settlement to have taken place. Don't have the answers yet but keeping a lookout for updates.👍🏼
So happy the algorithm finally dished me up something on N. American archeology! I first read about this site in the historical fiction book "People of the Owl", by the Gears. It's so great to have found your channel. Just subbed in.
I'm more intrigued by this tidbit. Poverty Point is near several excellent clay deposits, they utilized it but seems to have exported the clay, or less likely, they exported the finished pottery.. lack of shards, firing kilns, or a actual pots seem to preclude the trade of pots. If they traded clay, they would have experience moving earth, have piles of overburden and mounds would make sense. Plus it would generate influence and wealth for the import of goods.
Could be it was a complete circular construct before the river changed course during a flood, and destroyed the other half. Looks like there was a landslide on that one side of the circle.
It would be interesting to take core samples and find out where the ancient river channel used to be. If it was a circle it would probably have run just to the side of it. I'm actually surprised no one has done that yet.
The site is on a ridge that is about 15-20 feet higher than all the land east of it which is all Mississippi river floodplain. The museum there mentions this and indicates could have all been shallow water east of it anciently with the Mississippi river much wider.
@@Jon316-y5u The Mississippi River meanders due to dropped silt forming sand bars that alters the current and by flooding that cuts new channels to and from ox bow lakes. The river can deposit 6 feet of sand inland during a single flood which also will block the flow of the small tributaries to the river. Their water will back up to flood the bottomlands until it gradually drains out thru the soil and by evaporation. The Caddo that lived in my area of East Texas built burial mounds in some bottomlands near a river that carried a lot of sand sediment. It would get left behind after the flood waters receded and make large sand bars along the river banks. They scooped up that sand for their mounds so the users of Poverty Point probably did the same on an annual basis to keep the bayou channels in place and to uncover productive soils that were farmed with the wild plants that the video mentioned.
Not sure if I should be celebrating the algorithm for bringing me to your fantastic work, or lamenting that it took the algorithm this long to bring your work to my feed. I look forward to working through your whole library!
I once had a book called Mysteries of the Past. Its first chapter was called Who Were The Mound Builders? It was about the mound builders of the Hopewell and Mississippian cultures.
Been to this site with my uncle who had a strong amateur knowledge of the archeology there. Your presentation was excellent & concise. Enjoyed it very much. Btw - I'll let you in on a secret that only people in Arkansas and Louisiana seem to know: "Ouachita" is pronounced, "Washitaw." (It's how we locals know who's not!)
@@laurahill9643 mosquito repellent is an absolute must if you plan on being outdoors in any natural setting for any period of time however short or long it may be. I’ve personally experienced attacks by swarming dense clouds of mosquitoes in natural environments. Late November through very early February is a better time to enjoy the natural Louisiana environments with fewer mosquitoes. After the very wet April and May we have experienced they will be very troublesome for some time to come.
I’ve come to realize all over the world the earliest human made sights are always built by nomadic hunter gatherers and it makes sense. That’s how civilization first evolved. Groups of nomadic people created sights to gather or make camp in their journeys,. Then as time went on and groups split off from groups, it became a community zone for all sorts of groups in the region. Like a giant base camp where everyone in the area come to meet. Eventually some of the groups started staying closer and closer to right on these sights because they had everything they needed close enough by and since many other nomads used these places it was a great place for trade. Eventually “trades” became popularized where you would go to these locations to get stuff your group didn’t know how/didn’t have the resources to make. Or to seek knowledge, medicine, share stories, etc. thus civilization as we know it was made.
I felt like the reveal about fishing abundance was burying the lede there! Every other example I knew of of "socially complex hunter gatherers" were dependent on stupidly good fishing too
Just found your vids - absolutely amazing! I was at Poverty Point in October of 2022 and the size is absolutely unbelievable especially considering it's millennia older than the other mounds in the upper Mississippi/GA that I'm more familiar with. Loving the channel man!
@@AncientAmericas The tragedy is that we believe we live in an unbounded system and don't recycle and reuse ALL the resources we use. Museums that are more interested in preserving artifacts than preserving the Earth and our species are shortsighted and contribute to our demise. Artifact collections should be replaced by information storage- Measure, document and preserve the information so it can be accessed by EVERYONE, not just museum visitors or wealthy collectors. Documenting ("understanding") the past does NOT help us in the future EXCEPT for things with practical application, or human behavior. Historical anthropologists being able to understand how or why ancient people lived as they did is not going to help humanity survive unless we have a post-apocalypse future where that knowledge is available to assist. Regarding large scale artifacts: Unlike species that depend on a local environment to survive, humans in general are very mobile and adaptable. We reshape everything around us to its limits. Archaeologists in general have found little physical of actual value that remains from previous millennia. Where a culture flourished, it endured and kept building. Where it didn't it moved on. Only people too poor or too ignorant to move stay where the environment keeps destroying their neighborhoods ( New Orleans, Des Plaines Illinois) and keep repeating things that failed. It's not hard to understand things like this ancient settlement being redeveloped into new things or surviving. We currently build large area structures that have applications that last only a short time (Olympic stadiums and World Fairs) then fall into disuse and are abandoned (Chicago, Knoxville). Sometimes their original reasons for construction produce unanticipated effects that require their elimination (Colorado River retention dams, over-development of the southwest and water shortages). The only reason the remains or archaic construction endure is their construction materials and locations. Flood plains, deserts and mountains surrounded by jungles discourage modern development.
Being born and raised in Louisiana I really appreciate you bringing attention to Poverty Point! I learned a lot from this video that I was ignorant to, and I lived 15 minutes from the site.
GREAT VIDEO. I AM A RETIRED PROFESSOR OF ARCHEOLOGY & ANCIENT HISTORY. Years ago, when a somewhat young Archaeologist, Poverty Point was my introduction Point. Spiro, Heavner, Cahokia and P.P. have been the basis for all the rest of my long years of research across the US. A humorous note - BCE gives me a chuckle every time I hear it. Political Correctness has never been my long suite. My Jewish colleagues and I have a good laugh. It is good to find humor!!!
I had never heard of this site! Now, it's a must see. I love that this culture was able to thrive off the land, as well as trade for all kinds of amazing objects. Life there must have been relatively comfortable for the times. Native cultures live with nature and respect the land. We need to respect them and their knowledge, which can likely help with the problems that "civilization" caused. This was very informative and engaging. Loved that journal selection..."clay eating indians"! Perhaps, he enjoyed a few mud pies as a child!😁 💜🌎🦋✌️😸
I'm surprised you didn't mention that the river has almost certainly been diverted over time into the site, and thus probably destroyed part of it. There are some high spots opposite the river that fall on the extended full circle of the rings. They're too heavily eroded to make out any details, but it's not implausible that they're indications that the full site was originally a complex of complete circles with a courtyard about twice as big as the extant one.
I did a little volunteer archaeology at Poverty Point 10 years ago and knew all the archaeologists there in those days. What you say here is pretty much what they told me then, which was just after they'd discovered that the mounds had been built so fast. There are 2 main differences I would like to point out. In those days, they had also just done a big GPR survey of the plaza and determined that it probably never was a big open space. It's completely covered with post holes forming dozens of rectangles and circles from small to huge, many of which overlap, and there's no apparent order to the arrangement. So, it appears that the "plaza" was actually home to a bunch of structures of varying purposes and the configuration changed quite a few times. This doesn't sound like a sacred space but like utilitarian. Maybe this was the marketplace or something. The other main difference was that they staff was trending away from the idea that the "plummets" were weights for fishing nets. First, they'd be hugely over-engineered for that purpose as any old rock would work for that. But more importantly, many if not most show a lot of abrasion and chafing around the circumference of their widest sections. This was making the staff think they were instead loom weights for making textiles. If so, textiles might be the missing trade good Poverty Point bought all its imported stone with, as the number of "plummets" would support industrial-scale production. Also, textiles would rot away and thus leave no trace where the stone came from. And the area is home to several plants whose fibers are suitable for this use. As to the imported stone, the really fascinating thing is that Poverty Point imported pretty much EVERY type accessible via rivers and coastal travel in the eastern half of the US. As each type of stone has different properties, they used each for its best purpose. Some types they used for war points, some for hunting points, some for axes, some for hoes, some for hammers, some for blades, and some for jewelry (along with copper from the Great Lakes), some for bowels, etc. This implies a lot of pre-existing knowledge on where to get the best rock for each job, and thus the pre-existence of huge trade networks, which Poverty Point was able to exploit on an industrial scale. Something I noticed while I was there is that the site has a superabundance of wild garlic and wild onion growing on it today. These plants are scattered in patches throughout the whole region but Poverty Point is literally swamped with them. When they mow the grass there, it'll make your eyes water. So I'm thinking the inhabitants were growing these in gardens to season their meals and they're still there today. But yes, Poverty Point is a huge enigma. It seems to have sprung up out of nothing within a generation or so and lasted a few centuries. Somebody was REALLY good at selling ideas--I wish I had that skill. The inhabitants must have known they had something special because they traveled the continent getting all their different rocks and saw nothing similar at all. And so perhaps they didn't trade, they just TOOK. After all, they had the manpower concentration to project power far afield had they so desired. Yet despite having contact with literally everybody in the eastern half of the US, their ideas don't seem to have rubbed off on anybody else. And after Poverty Point fell (likely due to exhausting the firewood available within easy transport distance), it was a few centuries before anything else came along, and that way up in the northeast with the Adena and Hopewell. But those DID spread everywhere. Speaking of which, you REALLY need to do a show on the Adena-Hopewell phenomenon.
You've taught me a lot I didn't know earlier. Thank you! That point about the post holes is very interesting. And rest assured that the adena and Hopewell will get episodes someday. I actually just went through southern Ohio recently and hit up a few adena and Hopewell sites. The interest is definitely there but they just need to wait for their turn.
@@AncientAmericas Adena might be called "Pre-Classic Hopewell" or Hopewell might be called "Classic Adena" as latter seems to have elaborated on the former. :) But the really amazing thing is how the core ideas of this complex (although with noticeable local variation) were taken up by pretty much everybody east of the Mississippi (and a few slightly west of it) in a pretty short timespan. Again, somebody was REALLY good at convincing the masses to adopt a new lifestyle/religion/culture/whatever, even better than the founder of Poverty Point, who only convinced his immediate neighbors. So. I'm eagerly looking forward to your presentation.
Such a site reminds me of rich, settled hunter-gatherer sites on rivers discussed in by Scott (and others), which adds easily planted and harvested wild plants to the diet. It's called "flood-retreat" or "decrue" or "recession" agriculture. Scott at p. 69:
Geaux Tigers indeed! And even the hunter-gatherers would recognize a good place to live. As you note there's fish and game, edible plants, berries are in the area as well, BUT no doubt they experienced periodic flooding. The risen areas would make sense as they could stay in place rather than having to abandon then resettle the area.
I just graduated from LSU and during a Louisiana history course the first lecture we learned about Poverty Point and Native Americans in Louisiana! Also, the "Indian Mounds" on campus sadly are only barely fenced off and children typically play on them during tailgates during football season.
This sounds so much like an American Çatalhöyük, right down to the proliferation of clay cooking balls in the site. Really interesting as both are early pre-agriculture cities. I'd love to see a comparison between the two.
Well worth looking into. The tendency to break history into eras does not account for the fact that people give up a successful way of living gradually thus we see transition in culture.
Europeans talk of woodhenges. You depicted something you said was a woodhenge but I recognized it: it was a Sun Dance ceremonial ground with the proper solar alignment and the stake in the center for the dancers to be tethered to and the posts all around carry lintels for brush to be laid on so the audience can have some shade. You see them all the time today.
I visited Poverty Point years ago and it's great to see a video focusing on this treasure. It was a lovely experience and the effort that has gone into the visitor center, exhibits, walking paths, self-guided tour materials, etc., was exemplary. I also found interesting the large borrow pits scattered around, used as a source of dirt needed to build the mounds.
Considering that you said Poverty Point seemed to be a tech hub, plus their apparent expertise in astronomy, geometry, and surveying, perhaps there was a high population of academics, building tools for other people and sharing their knowledge of the world to other societies; they could then have kept the excess materials, or made a profit, to keep their livelihoods going.
Your channel is incredible. Thank you so much for all of the research and hard work you do to put into these incredibly informative videos about Turtle Island 🙂
@@AncientAmericas I was stunned to find out the level of tech and culture they had. It's no wonder the colonies had such a problem with people "going native". When I went to school it they taught us the old "noble savage" BS...
Elevation helps keep Mosquitoes blowing too. I live in Mosquito Country and like camping on high ground. Sundown by Wet Low Ground is Hell you must experience to understand.
I wish I could give you an answer, but I can't. I assume he's referring to the cooking balls that the people of Poverty Point used for cooking but I'm not sure why he was under the impression that the locals ate them. The book that I got the quote from doesn't give any details about that statement either. Sorry.
It was common for northern indians to drop rocks heated in the fire, into bark containers of liquids in order to cook or boil the liquid. Maybe the natives in that area, lacking stones to heat their water, used baked clay balls heated in the fire, then dropped in the water? To someone unfamiliar with the process, it might appear they were cooking the clay, in order to eat it?
geaux tigers indeed. they've recently closed off the mounds on campus, but for years they let students and visitors walk all over the site. hard to imagine we'd treat the archaeological record of other societies the way we've treated indigenous Louisianians.
The mounds were not burial sites, so there is little evidence that the natives themselves did not walk all over them too. Many of the mounds of Mississippi were removed, and their contents used to elevate roadways. I'd rather my monument be one where hope is born, than bulldozed like the mounds of Mississippi were.
those raised rings and mounds are remarkable, it must have been an incredibly striking place when it was inhabited. even more impressive that it was one of the first ever such settlements on the whole continent maybe it is a little cliché to compare this to Göbekli Tepe, but the urban yet not agricultural characteristics, and the unique look of the place, does bring comparisons to mind.
That's exactly where I was thinking about for the same reasons when I was just watching. We've given hunter/gatherers far too little credit at what they can accomplish. People have a very hard time wrapping their modern heads around the fact that for all of human history, we've had the same brains. There’s absolutely nothing making us smarter than they were at birth, meaning they could figure things out like we do every day. In fact they might have been better at it in lots of instances!
I think the site might have originally been circular. using google earth you can see a distinct curved structure in a field across the creek and if you use the circle measure tool it matches up with the other side fairly well. also there is an oxbow lake to the east suggesting the creek flowed further to the east at some point and the current shape looks like it has been eroded to the west I would be curious to know if anyone has done any digging to the east side of the creek.
I think that they have. I might be remembering this incorrectly, but I think that there was a large cache of soapstone objects found on the other side of the river. Don't quote me on that though.
I agree, there is some anomalies across the river. They may be old riverbeds or dried up oxbow lakes though. They should use LIDAR and scan that forest to the north east. May be interesting what they find.
@@CryptidWalks LiDAR is the greatest modern tool invented in the evolution of archeology. Its value is incalculable in expediting the discovery of important finds worldwide.
An interesting video. Just a couple of minor points of clarification. Wetland environments offer excellent preservation (for example, anerobic Danish bogs and the so called "Bog People"). Cycylical wetting and drying in acidic soils is lethal to organic preservation. Perhaps a model for understanding Poverty Point stone exists in the Western US. Ocean shell, over 2,500 years old, from Bodega Bay ~40 miles north of Golden Gate has been found 300+ miles east in central Nevada caves and rock shelters. The raw material was typically manufactured close to the coast and then traded eastward from tribe to tribe. I haven’t read the site reports but unless chipping detritus has been found at or near Poverty Point it was likely traded westward as blades, cores, or point blanks. Finally, evidence for cremations typically survive in the archaeological record. Creamations and hearts/fire pits have different physical characteristics and chemistry and they are rather easily distinguishable. Cremations with funerary offerings are not unusual and if cremations occurred at Poverty Point they'd likely have been found. It would appear that how (and where the dead) were treated is unclear. Oh, the highest population density north of the Valley of Mexico wax achieved by semi-sedentary hunter-gatherers in central California...around its Delta and wetlands. Before Americans destroyed it natural hydrology, the interior of California from Bakersfield 400 miles north to Red Bluff was a wetland. Most of the archaeological sites occur on natural mounds and levees that have since been leveled. Poverty Point is defintely a location that requires more investigatikn and far more publicity because North American Archaic hunter-gatherers are generally treated as the poor step children of the purportedly more advanced agrarian cultures. This is harcly an accurate characterization but it remains the popular myth.
I wonder if the segmented overall plan would perhaps be to provide structured residential areas for a group of different tribes. Perhaps five different groups held a conference and decided to cohabit, each tribe bringing specialised skills that would enhance and support the others. Fishing skills, building skills, farmers- a merging of technologies. A new orderly city was co-operatively built, where each group had an equal ‘wedge’, perhaps with the hierarchy rising towards the front- the chief dwelling at the tip, the progressively larger and lower classes behind, stratified by importance. In the centre was the plaza for public meetings, and the markets… and the giant poles outline the once great meeting lodge of the chiefs, where the council of tribes met and voted on key decisions.
I see the feathered serpent here with the rings representing the wings and the large mound representing the head of the serpent. Note that the smaller mounds near the river are equidistant from the path of the river so represent the winding body of the serpent. Those mound builders sure loved their effigies!
@@dalelane1948 nope, the clovis were long gone by that time. compare poverty point, less than 4000 years old, to the clovis culture that persisted 13000 to 11000 years ago.
Sounds like Poverty Point was a library in a pre-literate world. For reference, look at Lynne Kelly's work on the use of memory palaces in such cultures.
I do agree with you that building a mound, even a large mound, doesn’t take too much time, however, many of these mound remains are astronomically and mathematically precise, and this would take a massive amount of planning. I think that the evidence points to a conclusion that leans more to a civilization, rather than a hunter gatherer meeting location(s). Thoughts?
Hunter gatherers would have to rely on the stars & solstices for seasons to hunt & gather. Current Stone Age living people use the stars & sun for their hunting & gathering now.
Hmm Earthen crock pots with clay cooking balls in them could keep food simmered, and ready to eat until it is finished or spoils. You'd never have to rely on refrigeration and the food would last more than one meal.
We have just recently found large mounds and structures like Poverty Point in Claiborne, Parish Louisiana in North Louisiana not far from Poverty Point.
no way, there is no evidence of 'invasions' plaguing any communities in that era or the eras preceding or following it. Any cultures predating the Mississippians had very little conflict and no war. Invasions denote a competition for resources when resources are limited: a neighboring town invades your town because you had a good year for corn while the other town had a bad year and they take your resources. The evidence at Poverty Point shows that they gathered everything they needed, there weren't hoards of resources to raid and nor were there walls or fortifications to defend from invaders. The video says it quite well, this place is an apogee of hunter gatherer civilization. Its a 'would've could've' glimpse into the way North America could have been had things not changed environmentally and socially: a hunter gatherer city.
Holy shit, the awful colonial take */LIKED/* by the author of the video. Holy fuck... Learn a little about the history of Turtle Island before making terrible assumptions like constant invasions. And not some "noble savage" bullshit. The real histories will show how few invasions there [ever] were all the while going through the shitty, sometimes gorey, nasty stuff of history. What a shit take
Hello again! I am really enjoying your content. I simply don't know much about this topic and its really interesting. In regard to many of the comments below, I appreciate your patience! COVID isolation has many folks a bit bugged out! LOL! Thanks for the information! When I was a kid, my family visited Stonehenge and some of the French pre historic caves (before they were shut to the public). Carnac in Brittany (France) was also insanely cool! Cave of Forgotten Dreams is also a favorite! Not exactly relevant to your area of expertise, but, I generally avoid delineation. One of the fringe benefits of being an amateur! LOL! Thanks!
I live in Portland OR and know almost nothing about the folks who lived in the area before Euro's. I wish that wasn't the case! Do you have any UA-cam recommendations for this area in particular? Thanks again!
I've always thought that pre agriculture, large communities were possible around the world. If their economy was based on fishing and these sites might become trade centers for much smaller groups of more traditional hunter-gatherers.
If I’m not mistaken, the Calusa people of the Florida Everglades lived in rather large settlements without agriculture, but rather thriving mostly on their access to seafood.
I just went to poverty point and it was wonderful! I sat beside mound a and there were so many wildflowers it was all you could smell. There were dragonflies everywhere! And the birds were so loud. I think spring is the perfect time to visit. I used all my senses lol.
I love this video the mound builders were so prolific. I wonder if you have ever heard of Moundville down in Tuscaloosa AL it is a fascinating site and the artifacts recovered there including the hand with the eye and snake symbol is so interesting. I had an Archeological Class several years ago and the professor had helped dig their in the 70s and 80s. Had to write a paper on it it’s tucked into a meadow behind a old suburb of residential houses. But it’s next to the river and one has to wonder how beautiful it would have been to come upon it via canoe in ancient times. The Moundville site also contained a raised mound with a top structure like Poverty Point. I’m unsure if Moundville was built before or after but if this site is the original city it would be not so hard to assume it might have been the model for Moundville and other settlements like it. I still hope we haven’t found all the sites there. So much knowledge lost and so many great discoveries to look forward to in the future hopefully!
@@AncientAmericas it’s assumed they carried the dirt in baskets one load at a time the amount of man power must have been something. Did they find any animal based potter at Poverty Point? There was a lot at Moundville and one of that findings if I remember correctly was a massive shift from old less formal pottery styles to the new array of animal motifs in the jug, plates, pots found in the mounds. They have a nice little museum at the site if you ever get to visit. Well worth an afternoon trip.
@@jenniferbaker3207 the pottery at poverty point is really simple and doesn't have much design to it. It doesn't have any of the complexity that you see in later times.
Just an idea when it comes to what those clay owls could be. If you go and do some research maybe it could be a representation of the modern owl in Native American folklore/culture. It ranges from wisdom to death. Could it perhaps be something that has to do with warding off the evil spirits? Just a thought
My theory: Poverty Point is in the Mississippi River Delta and is prone to flooding. These large mounds were built to have a safe place to go during a flood. It’s very obvious and simple. The land in the Mississippi River Delta is extremely flat.
The early Japanese are also said to have subsisted on hunting-gathering for an extended period of time because their natural environment was so rich they didn't need to take up farming in order to sustain substantial communities. So, it is very believable to me that you can have a 'town' that includes no farming, if there is enough fish, fowl, berries, roots, etc. to live on. And the Japanese didn't need to build mounds to keep above the water; their land is naturally hilly.
The Cucuteni Trypillia had cities and still subsisted at least partially on hunting and gathering. They did have farming and animal husbandry too, but they'd relocate their entire city periodically. Presumably for access to unexploited land.
Just like today cities were surrounded by villages that actually did the hunting and gathering and brought to the city as a place to trade
nice concept, but I doubt it would stay in balance very long. humans like to make babies, and that means a growing population.... you can guess how that ends.
@@johnnynephrite6147 Usually large populations can become nomadic.
@@johnnynephrite6147 that also depends on natural resources, which were by all accounts abundant.
People think hunter-gatherers are primitives but this was never the case. Here in Turkey, we have the oldest known temple in the world. It is called Göbeklitepe and it was built by hunter-gatherers. Both Poverty Point and Göbeklitepe are the proof of human ingenuity. We gotta create stuff. Man, I love being human 😎
Love this reply!! 👏
Gobeklitepe and other sites like it are truly shaking the precepts of archeology and anthropology, which had long presumed agriculture was a necessary prerequisite to the beginning of real culture and art.
Personally, I suspect the sights are near areas where her migration was bottlenecked play places where herd migration was bottlenecked, leading to mass numbers of people probably meeting there to take advantage of the especially rich hunting. But I have only my own intuition as a source.
You have incredible history in your beautiful country 🙏 So old and artistic 🤓
The truly fascinating part is the fact that people think it was like. Chimp man with danger stick discover fire then BAM we all farming and building pyramids.... uhhh someone had to find out that being sedentary doesn't work without agriculture. Personally I think we simply learned to farm, BECAUSE we were sedentary. The insane population boom created by the safety in numbers forced us to farm, otherwise we ate ourselves to death.
I thought gobekli tepe was the site of Noah after the flood. ??
Uncomplicated might be a better euphemism than "easy" when describing mound building. Moving that much material is never easy
25 to 35 pounds in a tumpline bag not so heavy.
They've found basket marks at the Hopewell Mound in Ohio.
@@user-mp3eq6ir5b well, carry a few thousand of those and get back to me
@@quinndawsonosgood5261 that is 136 million baskets just in the one mound (176,000 dump truck loads)
It's not carrying that is the difficult work, it's the digging, the feeding, the time away from vital tasks and the organization that impresses me.
And the organization is interested...on site. But the trade area is enormous.
We tend to think of the lives of hunter-gatherers as "nasty, solitary, brutish and short," but that is only because in historic times, they have been forced into marginal environments. In a rich environment, food can be provided with very little expenditure of time and effort (much less than early agriculture). Plenty of scope for developing complex activities such as mound building.
Well said!
Good point.
One thing with stationary life is that humans will naturally make more humans. Easy to have a big population fast if food is there. Easy to exhaust food with a large population. Agriculture can be more sustainable with large populations. Other than that totally agree
The Nasty, Brutish, and short isn't about food supply. Rather other factors in relation to food supply, like wild animal attacks, broken bones and wounds due to traversing Wildlands, parasitic infection, and a lack of healthcare of these issues.
I'd you become debilitated due to these issues, in order to save the group, you will be left behind if you cannot travel.
If you break a leg, get a bad infection, or suffer severe wounds from an animal attack and cannot hunt/gather, the group will have to move on without you when the time comes.
That's if you even lived without dying from infections, severe wounds, etc.
Where in a sedentary society, you have people & ready food to look after you year round without needing to travel large distances like hunter gatherers do.
@@masstv9052 that is surprisingly very untrue. There are numerous cases of early human skeletons we have found where the person broke a bone and had it fully heal then went on to live years more.
Early humans even had trepanning. Trepanning relieves pressure on the brain by punching a small hole in the skull. This surgery is still used today and has an extremely high success rate.
While medical conditions may not have been the most sanitary. Medicine didn’t really understand sanitation until the industrial revolution.
I live near Poverty Point and have been there numerous times. As an amateur archaeologist I've found lots of poverty point type artifacts many miles away from the actual site, most of them being cooking ball's. Their influence in the surrounding parishes is evident, and shows just how many people it took to supply and feed such a large population.
Very cool!
Do you think it’s a trading center or a settlement I think it’s more likely a massive trade center where while selling rocks you fed yourself on fish but I’m no archeologist
Cooking balls are you sure that they aren't food for the clay eating indians?! Lol
@@ookdagook3047 Yummy, hot clay balls my favorite.
@@calthorp one you eat ur first hot clay ball your hooked.
"clay eating?"
Hot clay balls, raked out of the fire pit, thrown into a stew pot will heat it up rapidly. Surprised the 19th century explorer did not consider that use.
... They did. They used stones. They are called soup stones.
The 18th century (white) man often had a fairly tainted view of the achievements of native Americans.
@@IHateThisHandleSystem Some did; some didn't. Some were deeply in awe. Reading what was written in the 1700's, different people had different opinions.
@@friendlyone2706 Valid point. I edited my comment to say "often" so as not to imply that everyone was that way.
@@prunabluepepper From 40 years of hunting south Mississippi not far from poverty point I have found zero evidence of clay cooking balls or heating stones. Not sure how they were doing it over here but no evidence of that?
Hey! I worked here for field school back in 2011 under Dr Ortmann. The most recent dig I remember was on mound c, where we managed to get a really good look at the stratigraphy. It seems that mound C was definitely a major fixture of the mound complex. Dozens (if not hundreds) of small fires had been set over the scope of the occupation, and then covered with thin layers of clay, implying a ritualistic purpose
This channel is everything I have ever wanted but am too mentally ill at the moment to make happen myself. I literally cannot thank you enough. There is so little North American archaeological/anthropological content on youtube and as somecome who holds it so near and dear to my heart... this is magical.
Thank you! I'm glad you enjoy it. If you ever want to start up a channel, feel free to reach out to me and I'll help in any way I can!
I hope you're feeling well these days
Look to the mysteries of the universe for comfort in mental illness
With all the love and curiosity of an explorer, rush headlong into the great mystery of life, through it's unlimited doorways and rabbit holes
May you make peace with your mind
Are you really mentally ill?
I don’t know if you’re in SsRi but they made everything much worse for me. Lost five years of my life because they made me much more depressed than I was before. It was a constant merry go round of adding and taking away medication. I got off of them and have never felt better. It’s like that heavy weight was lifted after about a month of being off. Luckily I never went down the Xanax road. I knew anything that made me forget large portions of the day couldn’t be good so I stopped them immediately after the first day. Anyway, good luck.
Hope you're doing better ❤ You are capable of great things, one step at a time!
your videos are way too well-researched and high quality for their view count. I hope your channel takes off! I am an archaeology and linguistics student considering studying the Classic Maya and Zapotec civilizations for graduate school.
Thanks! You know, if you're a linguistics student interested in the Zapotec, you could work towards the decipherment of Zapotec writing. No one has deciphered their writing yet and we could learn a lot if someone did.
yooo aspiring graduate students in linguistics forthewin!
It is very difficult to believe that the bayou mentioned ran the same coarse 3 to 4 thousand years ago or even existed at all. The banks of the mississippi delta are not static.
Some posts have suggested that it was built as full circles instead of semi-circles.
It’s definitely our best guess. We’ve even found remains of Poverty Point docks along the Macon. The site also sits on higher ground than the other side of the water, where there’s a floodplain. We don’t see a lot of evidence for erosion on the western side of the Bayou.
The history books don't got the real history.
@@originsdecoded3508 They really don’t. I guess those that document history on tangible writing material can rewrite history however they want
@@LegaciesRetrieval Thats whats so fascinating to me. To think theirs a power greater then the devil that makes him hide in fear. Its clear the author of this world, is writing a masterpiece until the times comes to fulfill it all.
Thank you so much for your channel and also this video. I am an over-the-road truck driver. I go back and forth on I-20 all the time passed exit 153, signs for poverty point that I have wondered about but never investigated until... yesterday when I drove the truck and parked it at a little corner store a mile from the site and rode my bicycle all around paved paths and trails through the woods. Thank you so much for making me aware of this amazing place
You're most welcome! I'm glad you were able to visit the site!
I think it's possible that Poverty point was a meeting place for the tribes and chiefdoms of the south. It seems like it was a trade city, central to everywhere, right on the river, and lots of different artifacts can be found there. It would make sense that intertribal politics would be conducted in the plaza or something. The large and numerous ovens may be indicative of seasonal feasting, or feasting to commemorate or celebrate relations between neighbors. This isn't my area of expertise, so I'm not certain how much cultural overlap the natives of the south at this time had with the people of the early modern great lakes, but these sorts of meeting places (usually in the form of longhouses, up there) were extremely common, important, and showed a large degree of exchange and plenty between the polities of the area. I'm sure we all know about the Haudenosaunee and how they came to be.
Not all of us know that story. Older tribes are interesting.
The rivers were highways. People from all over the Mississippi catchment area could get there.
We 100% know that there were large Native American tribes and a tribe is a family. So yeah. Agree.
I would like to see someone do a video on the haudaneesaunee ( sorry about the spelling)... because I have never heard of them.......
@@zenolachance1181 That is the native word for what the French called the Iroquois confederation.
Actually visited Poverty Point - pretty cool museum there. The rock arrowheads and etc. came from as far away as Illinois.
Hopefully I'll get to visit it someday.
The Entire Mississipian/Missourian Mound Culture was a vast Trading Network, with the Yankton guarding the Middle Missouri & the BlackFeet guarding the Headwaters Passes.
The Caddo and the Natchez were representatives of the Annointed Ruling Class that were all but wioed out by Smallpox & other European Diseases brought in by DeSoto.
"TAKE ME TO YOUR LEADER!"
Amazing trade network.
I went there in middle school. The park guide demonstrated how to use an atlatl spear-thrower.
The site is very large, but was obscured by trees and natural overgrowth.
Copper from the upper Midwest too
Very nice presentation. These very old sites in North America are sorely underappreciated and known to few outside the ranks of archeology. Thanks for a well produced, informative video! New subscriber, hope to see much more!
Thank you!
I live in SE Louisiana and have always had a trip to Poverty Point on my Bucket List. A visit there has just moved up the list to the Top because of this excellent presentation. Thanks
You're welcome!
There's good fishing at the reservoir there too
@@Patson20 in Louisiana you don’t need to look very hard for good fishing spots. 👍🏻
@@Aswaguespack facts, easy to catch a ton of catfish there on the spawn
Your "Sources and Bibliography" pages are quite impressive.
Your scholarship is impeccable.
Each of your videos have more information than a 3 semester unit college class.
If you really aren't a college professor, then you have many people fooled.
It's refreshing to find a YT Channel that assumes that the viewer actually has a brain.
You flatter me but I thank you!
I live along the San Joaquin river in central California, and have been researching the Yokut tribes that once lived on high ground along the river. They were hunter gatherers, but apparently they grew tobacco, and in a way, cultivated oak groves for acorns.
Fascinating! I live in the San Joaquin Valley too, and I learned frighteningly little about local NA presence through school... this is an inspiration to do some personal research!
Yes. If they cultivate oak and hickory groves, are they farming? Also, where I live, mosquitos affect every outdoor activity. I would build a mound to escape them.
The distinction between gatherer-hunter and agriculturalist is a false dichotomy that has been overturned time, time, and time again. Intensive agriculture or limiting one's national food economy to farming was a revolutionary change, but humanity has been farming or engaging in agriculture for millennia all over the world. From the three sisters of Haudenosaunee Country to the oceanside mariculture sites of Coast Salish Countries.
The framing of agriculture vs. gathering/hunting is a harmful, colonial one intended for colonizers to justify the theft of these Indigenous countries because, as the colonialists put it, "they [the natives] are not doing anything productive with their lands, so we the good God-fearing Christians who farm-as opposed to those godless pagan heathens-must put the Lord's Earth to productive use" ... and then they made shitty, shitty laws about this and stole entire continent's worth of countries and fed the population lies about the natives like how they are/were primitive hunter-gatherers with no semblance of country or nationhood
@@danachos sadly for many non-native, that is the paradigmidic view they see native ppl through today.
It is generally thought that tobacco is a new world crop that reached Asia after Columbus. Analysis of preservatives found in Ancient Egyptian mummies reveals that tobacco was included.
This video was incredibly interesting. I had never heard of this place, speaking as a Brit, and I am so glad that I have now. Your attention to detail, and lack thereof where the details are missing, is highly engrossing. I'm very glad the algorithm decided to grace me with a link to one of your other videos. Please keep up the great work while I enjoy the rest of your back catalogue!
I don't hear it talked about much but the forests of the Southern US are incredibly fruitful. From March to November, there is almost always something in season there. And in the winter, there is plenty of game. Just the right latitude for rampant diversity and long growing seasons, but none of the problems that come with full-on tropical jungle conditions. I'm not sure a biome like it exists anywhere else on Earth. If you told me a civilization could exist there just on the bounty of the woods, I'd believe you. And I'd imagine a primitive people would have little incentive to do all the hard work of agriculture when the forests around them were so generous.
Right, and the American Chestnut was a widely used food source throughout the east until they were wiped out
@@cheryld.3616.. ditto the passenger pigeon
how much has the river's course changed in the centuries so why the mounts could be "randomly" placed. The areas definitely prone to flooding; there is much less today due to dams and levees. if there were buildings on them seems like it would be to keep them safe from flooding. And the circles are just a way to organize. I think there is an overlap/transition between hunter gatherers and farmers
Corn was still 2 inch cobs in Honduras at the time. Poverty Point predates farming in the United States by 2700 years or so. Farming did not arrive north of Rio grande until about 800-1000 ad.
@@ralphdavis6052 They participated in non-monoculture farming, creating a kind of intiontional food forest as they went. This was better suited to getting the best of both. If you do this well you can really make food a simple matter in most places. It wasn't recognized openly because ya know colonialism but they described eden like forests full of good food that mysteriously vanished after the natives were killed or forced off.
The Mississippi river is still like 50 miles from this location. In fact thats probably why it was built there it was the place where the common flood plain stopped
@@ralphdavis6052 I thought the people in the north grew other crops like squash or sunflowers earlier on than corn?
I lived in Moundville Alabama for several years. Due to my Cherokee heritage and my tribe being in SC. I was granted free access to the archeological site. The annual festival was mostly Cherokee that participated.
I got to actually see and be a part of one of the digs being done.
As a very spiritual person I actually felt a connection and a sort of connection to the park. The Mississippians were similar to the Cherokee in farming with the 3 sisters of corn, beans and squash. There is a extensive trade with other mound cities by river navigation.
You might enjoy a visit to Moundville. I found it very educational and interesting. I would love to see a video of your impressions on it and your relation to this mound site.
I still keep some of my traditions and art forms alive with my tribe. I enjoy your videos and am in the process of watching them all.
I’ve recently learned that the Creek and Cherokee are actually Mayan. Have you heard this, as well?
Thank you for enlightening me on the wonderful nature of Poverty Point. It's truly a treasure that I did not realize was there. I look forward to visiting.
Channels like this one are just amazing. They provide quality work, great editing, and very interesting subjects that very honeslty most main stream TV would not even cover. I'm so glad I canceled my cable subscription.
I live near the site but I’ve never been there. I’ll try to go once the weather gets better.
Better late than never!
I live there, how far from there do you live.
@@SuperChimcham Alexandria
@@DieselWeazel, oh. Yeah it’s pretty interesting.
@@SuperChimcham not really lol
This channel is a great discovery! I just watched the video on archaic copper use in the Great Lakes area. Subscribed.
Thank you! Welcome aboard!
Currently attending university in northeast Louisiana. Definitely gonna make a weekend trip to poverty point with some friends in the fall. I've heard a lot of my professors speak about it, especially my history professor who I had become friends with, and never realized how important and unique the site truly was.
LSU-M?
It was NLU when I graduated
America will really build highways through literally anything huh
Let me tell you a story about a place called Cahokia...
@@AncientAmericas 😂 they built a highway a few feet next to the mount
@@AncientAmericas Farmers from the 1800s and more modern times leveled acres of Cahokia and ruined the site and no one knows the extent of the city now an what was lost
Not just America, sadly.
Amazing what we took for granted, then and now.
Idle speculation on my part, but considering the great flood lore that most early peoples possess, building a high mound as a safe place to escape too seems like a sound strategy.
This is the most reasonable explanation.
Also makes sense why houses would be on raised platforms
@@melialialee5445 Agreed. The Younger Dryas event likely conditioned survivors to build mounds and raised living spaces.
@@hellwardenwot5148 I think you might be on to something there. No one would spend so much effort to prevent seasonal flooding. More likely memories of the YD boundary event made it more or a religious tradition.
@@michaelpacnw2419 I don't get why people think that the younger dryas or its end had anything to do with flood stories. There is no evidence of this being the case. These people lived near rivers that periodically flood. Of course they will have flood myths. No need to tie it all together to some event that took place over the course of generations thousands of years before these cultures existed.
Been watching a number of your videos and I really enjoy them!! You've done a very great job organizing and explaining the information you present, and I love the range of Pre-Columbian topics you cover. Places like Poverty Point are very fascinating to me, especially nowadays as more research is done on sedentary hunter-gatherer societies and how frequent there presence now seems to have been in prehistoric times (like the Calusa in Florida as an American example), even before the Holocene. Thank you for providing a great resource for everyone and sharing your love of archaeology :)
Thank you!
Mounds are usually built next to rivers which flood each year and provide transportation for friend and foe. Mounds would have been defensive sites against flooding and provide a view of the river to see any movement of people traveling on the river and traveling over land to your city. With waring tribes you need advance notice when an enemy is coming your way. High and dry land is the best place to set up your camp next to a river.
The idea of a city without farming sounds similar to the Gobekli Tete site in modern-day Turkey. I personally have always felt societies "before civilization" were more advanced than we assume, but owing to the nature of the archeological record, this has not been recognized.
Assuming that the records released are in fact the real thing.
That was my thought
That it was like Gobleki-Tepe
The people of Poverty Point were far more advanced that we could possible imagine. Northeastern Louisiana was home to a vast number of indigenous people as well as the surrounding areas.
@@elizabethjansen2684 "Archeological record" isn't some sort of archive to be released, it's just a way of saying "what has been found so far and what can be found". Sometimes it's really hard to find things after such a long time because, you know, lots of things rot, for example. And sometimes it's hard to draw the correct conclusions when you're missing some links in the chain. We now know humans in the paleolithic were likely capable of creating some form of textiles only because of the happy accident that some of them also created pottery, which did survive and was found in Dolní Věstonice and Pavlov, and preserved imprints of said textiles. Once archeologists noticed that, they started looking, and noticed bones from other sites that show markings that were likely created by beating down weft yarns through a warp - a connection no one made without any other evidence of textiles. The textiles themselves did not survive that long, nor did any looms they might have had, because both were likely made of plant materials. Which means textile techniques may have been around for who knows how long all over the place, but we don't know for sure, because we have no surviving evidence.
I honestly believe the internet and digitalisation of museum collections can speed up this process, because it makes it easier to make the connections between different finds showing evidence of the same thing. That's about as far as "releasing the archeological record" goes. Articles without lots of pictures don't always tell the whole story and may focus on one thing at the expense of others, but there's usually no malicious intent in it, it's just the nature of the beast. Especially since these fields are often underfunded and e.g. many museums can only afford a certain number of experts, in only certain fields.
And of course if an ancient society functioned without writing, or used some form of communication and recording based on perishable materials, there's only so much archeology can find out about its workings. It's worth noting how many of our earliest evidences of advanced cultures come from areas where perishable materials have a chance to survive.
Wonderful video! Subscribed and looking forward to more!
Thank you. Production is currently stopped due to technical issues but we'll be back up and running next month hopefully!
Great video! Thank you. Poverty Point WHS is a wonderfully intriguing site and well done for putting it in it's interesting wider context.
You're welcome! I'm glad you enjoyed it.
Great video, as always
Indeed it is!
Thank you! Glad you're enjoying them!
I believe that Thomas Jefferson thought that a great civilization existed in North America. I live in Ohio and have seen some amazing mounds including the serpent mound which is truly awesome.
Ohio has a lot of great sites!
There's another serpent mound in Isreal much much bigger but same otherwise
It is little known that the largest mound (pyramid) on earth (so far discovered) is not on the banks of the Nile, but not far from the Aztec capital and now known as Mexico City.
Built by “Hunter-gatherers... makes me think of Gobeklie Tepe in Turkey.
BTW --YOU DO THE BEST ANCIENT AMERICAN VIDEOS, BY FAR, BAR NONE!!!!!!!!!!
Tepe was a meeting place for the clans. Like they show in Clan of the Cave Bear. They were well past cave dwelling, but it was an international swap meet. It’s how the native Indus grasses made their way to the rest of the world.
Thank you!
@@skaetur1 : Gobeklle Tepe is more specifically suspected to be a burial ground, though the relevant archaeology hasn't been done to confirm it yet. Somewhat similar locations in the same general area have been found to have clay-wrapped human skulls built into the walls, so it's suspected that the culture of the area performed "sky burial", and were attempting to in some sense represent the continuity from, or of, the people thus enshrined.
it's entirely plausible that both places may have been the result of tribute under the threat of destruction, tribute in the form of labor and resources. perhaps religious centers with a warrior elite that accumulated the area's wealth, or something even as simple as protection rackets. if you had enough trained and armed men to eliminate any neighboring group of people fairly easily you could definitely demand resources and labor from them. I rarely see this concept discussed for some reason despite it being equally plausible to any other hypothesis.
Kind of a fusion of Göbekli Tepe and Çatalhöyük almost with hunte gather built monumentation and permanent or semi-permanent housing. This site is definitely some food for thought on multiple levels.
Thank you👏🏻👏🏻 👏🏻 Two months ago on Time Team News they did a story on Poverty Point. They were doing a Resistivity Tomography Scan. One thing they are looking into are Mud Volcanoes. As a possible reason for the settlement to
have taken place. Don't have the answers
yet but keeping a lookout for updates.👍🏼
Do not worry about making long videos as there is a lot of info and better to do it right than hurry through it.
I second this notion
Long videos is what I long to watch
@@neak9755 me too
So happy the algorithm finally dished me up something on N. American archeology! I first read about this site in the historical fiction book "People of the Owl", by the Gears. It's so great to have found your channel. Just subbed in.
Thank you!
I'm more intrigued by this tidbit.
Poverty Point is near several excellent clay deposits, they utilized it but seems to have exported the clay, or less likely, they exported the finished pottery.. lack of shards, firing kilns, or a actual pots seem to preclude the trade of pots.
If they traded clay, they would have experience moving earth, have piles of overburden and mounds would make sense. Plus it would generate influence and wealth for the import of goods.
Another excellent video, thank you.
Could be it was a complete circular construct before the river changed course during a flood, and destroyed the other half. Looks like there was a landslide on that one side of the circle.
It would be interesting to take core samples and find out where the ancient river channel used to be. If it was a circle it would probably have run just to the side of it. I'm actually surprised no one has done that yet.
The site is on a ridge that is about 15-20 feet higher than all the land east of it which is all Mississippi river floodplain. The museum there mentions this and indicates could have all been shallow water east of it anciently with the Mississippi river much wider.
@@Jon316-y5u The Mississippi River meanders due to dropped silt forming sand bars that alters the current and by flooding that cuts new channels to and from ox bow lakes. The river can deposit 6 feet of sand inland during a single flood which also will block the flow of the small tributaries to the river. Their water will back up to flood the bottomlands until it gradually drains out thru the soil and by evaporation. The Caddo that lived in my area of East Texas built burial mounds in some bottomlands near a river that carried a lot of sand sediment. It would get left behind after the flood waters receded and make large sand bars along the river banks. They scooped up that sand for their mounds so the users of Poverty Point probably did the same on an annual basis to keep the bayou channels in place and to uncover productive soils that were farmed with the wild plants that the video mentioned.
Not sure if I should be celebrating the algorithm for bringing me to your fantastic work, or lamenting that it took the algorithm this long to bring your work to my feed.
I look forward to working through your whole library!
Thank you!
Ditto
I once had a book called Mysteries of the Past. Its first chapter was called Who Were The Mound Builders? It was about the mound builders of the Hopewell and Mississippian cultures.
Been to this site with my uncle who had a strong amateur knowledge of the archeology there. Your presentation was excellent & concise. Enjoyed it very much. Btw - I'll let you in on a secret that only people in Arkansas and Louisiana seem to know: "Ouachita" is pronounced, "Washitaw." (It's how we locals know who's not!)
Thank you!
Mississippians know it too.👊
As someone from the region, Ouachita is pronounced "Wah-shih-tah" around there lol xD all your videos are amazing! thanks!
As you can tell, I've never been to Louisiana. I look forward to being hopelessly lost there someday getting fat on cajun food. But seriously, thanks!
Thanks for the video. Seems like there are a number of similarities to Chaco Canyon. Similar geometry in construction, trade hub etc.
You're welcome!
I recently moved to Louisiana. I haven’t been able to visit Poverty Point yet but I’m eager to!
I haven't been there either.
Welcome to Louisiana! Enjoy the cuisine 👍🏻
Bring bug spray when you go. Mosquitos there are no joke.
@@laurahill9643 mosquito repellent is an absolute must if you plan on being outdoors in any natural setting for any period of time however short or long it may be. I’ve personally experienced attacks by swarming dense clouds of mosquitoes in natural environments. Late November through very early February is a better time to enjoy the natural Louisiana environments with fewer mosquitoes. After the very wet April and May we have experienced they will be very troublesome for some time to come.
I would like to visit too. An archaeological wonder right here in and not too far.
Yo! You're doing such a good work. Your channel is so underrated you deserve so much more subscribers
Thank you!
I’ve come to realize all over the world the earliest human made sights are always built by nomadic hunter gatherers and it makes sense. That’s how civilization first evolved. Groups of nomadic people created sights to gather or make camp in their journeys,. Then as time went on and groups split off from groups, it became a community zone for all sorts of groups in the region. Like a giant base camp where everyone in the area come to meet. Eventually some of the groups started staying closer and closer to right on these sights because they had everything they needed close enough by and since many other nomads used these places it was a great place for trade. Eventually “trades” became popularized where you would go to these locations to get stuff your group didn’t know how/didn’t have the resources to make. Or to seek knowledge, medicine, share stories, etc. thus civilization as we know it was made.
I believe large food sources contribute to the gathering idea
I felt like the reveal about fishing abundance was burying the lede there! Every other example I knew of of "socially complex hunter gatherers" were dependent on stupidly good fishing too
If you mean Ouachita River, that's pronounced WASH-a-taw. It's from the French where OU is like a W. Stress on the first syllable.
Macon is also pronounced May-son
In the Ouachita Mtns were Lead deposits. Perhaps that early explorer was looking too far to the South.
Just found your vids - absolutely amazing! I was at Poverty Point in October of 2022 and the size is absolutely unbelievable especially considering it's millennia older than the other mounds in the upper Mississippi/GA that I'm more familiar with. Loving the channel man!
Thank you!
Wish l could recall where in the south it was. A temple center was leveled for a Sam's Club mid 1990s. Sad.
It's a tragically frequent occurrence.
@@AncientAmericas The tragedy is that we believe we live in an unbounded system and don't recycle and reuse ALL the resources we use. Museums that are more interested in preserving artifacts than preserving the Earth and our species are shortsighted and contribute to our demise. Artifact collections should be replaced by information storage- Measure, document and preserve the information so it can be accessed by EVERYONE, not just museum visitors or wealthy collectors.
Documenting ("understanding") the past does NOT help us in the future EXCEPT for things with practical application, or human behavior. Historical anthropologists being able to understand how or why ancient people lived as they did is not going to help humanity survive unless we have a post-apocalypse future where that knowledge is available to assist.
Regarding large scale artifacts:
Unlike species that depend on a local environment to survive, humans in general are very mobile and adaptable. We reshape everything around us to its limits.
Archaeologists in general have found little physical of actual value that remains from previous millennia. Where a culture flourished, it endured and kept building. Where it didn't it moved on. Only people too poor or too ignorant to move stay where the environment keeps destroying their neighborhoods ( New Orleans, Des Plaines Illinois) and keep repeating things that failed.
It's not hard to understand things like this ancient settlement being redeveloped into new things or surviving. We currently build large area structures that have applications that last only a short time (Olympic stadiums and World Fairs) then fall into disuse and are abandoned (Chicago, Knoxville). Sometimes their original reasons for construction produce unanticipated effects that require their elimination (Colorado River retention dams, over-development of the southwest and water shortages).
The only reason the remains or archaic construction endure is their construction materials and locations. Flood plains, deserts and mountains surrounded by jungles discourage modern development.
Being born and raised in Louisiana I really appreciate you bringing attention to Poverty Point! I learned a lot from this video that I was ignorant to, and I lived 15 minutes from the site.
Pay it a visit sometime and stay safe out there.
GREAT VIDEO.
I AM A RETIRED PROFESSOR OF ARCHEOLOGY & ANCIENT HISTORY.
Years ago, when a somewhat young Archaeologist, Poverty Point was my introduction Point. Spiro, Heavner, Cahokia and P.P. have been the basis for all the rest of my long years of research across the US.
A humorous note - BCE gives me a chuckle every time I hear it. Political Correctness has never been my long suite. My Jewish colleagues and I have a good laugh. It is good to find humor!!!
A very high compliment! Thank you!
I fear that in the future some will think that the full name of the Savior is "Jesus Common Era".
I had never heard of this site! Now, it's a must see. I love that this culture was able to thrive off the land, as well as trade for all kinds of amazing objects. Life there must have been relatively comfortable for the times.
Native cultures live with nature and respect the land. We need to respect them and their knowledge, which can likely help with the problems that "civilization" caused.
This was very informative and engaging. Loved that journal selection..."clay eating indians"! Perhaps, he enjoyed a few mud pies as a child!😁
💜🌎🦋✌️😸
I'm surprised you didn't mention that the river has almost certainly been diverted over time into the site, and thus probably destroyed part of it. There are some high spots opposite the river that fall on the extended full circle of the rings. They're too heavily eroded to make out any details, but it's not implausible that they're indications that the full site was originally a complex of complete circles with a courtyard about twice as big as the extant one.
I did a little volunteer archaeology at Poverty Point 10 years ago and knew all the archaeologists there in those days. What you say here is pretty much what they told me then, which was just after they'd discovered that the mounds had been built so fast. There are 2 main differences I would like to point out. In those days, they had also just done a big GPR survey of the plaza and determined that it probably never was a big open space. It's completely covered with post holes forming dozens of rectangles and circles from small to huge, many of which overlap, and there's no apparent order to the arrangement. So, it appears that the "plaza" was actually home to a bunch of structures of varying purposes and the configuration changed quite a few times. This doesn't sound like a sacred space but like utilitarian. Maybe this was the marketplace or something.
The other main difference was that they staff was trending away from the idea that the "plummets" were weights for fishing nets. First, they'd be hugely over-engineered for that purpose as any old rock would work for that. But more importantly, many if not most show a lot of abrasion and chafing around the circumference of their widest sections. This was making the staff think they were instead loom weights for making textiles. If so, textiles might be the missing trade good Poverty Point bought all its imported stone with, as the number of "plummets" would support industrial-scale production. Also, textiles would rot away and thus leave no trace where the stone came from. And the area is home to several plants whose fibers are suitable for this use.
As to the imported stone, the really fascinating thing is that Poverty Point imported pretty much EVERY type accessible via rivers and coastal travel in the eastern half of the US. As each type of stone has different properties, they used each for its best purpose. Some types they used for war points, some for hunting points, some for axes, some for hoes, some for hammers, some for blades, and some for jewelry (along with copper from the Great Lakes), some for bowels, etc. This implies a lot of pre-existing knowledge on where to get the best rock for each job, and thus the pre-existence of huge trade networks, which Poverty Point was able to exploit on an industrial scale.
Something I noticed while I was there is that the site has a superabundance of wild garlic and wild onion growing on it today. These plants are scattered in patches throughout the whole region but Poverty Point is literally swamped with them. When they mow the grass there, it'll make your eyes water. So I'm thinking the inhabitants were growing these in gardens to season their meals and they're still there today.
But yes, Poverty Point is a huge enigma. It seems to have sprung up out of nothing within a generation or so and lasted a few centuries. Somebody was REALLY good at selling ideas--I wish I had that skill. The inhabitants must have known they had something special because they traveled the continent getting all their different rocks and saw nothing similar at all. And so perhaps they didn't trade, they just TOOK. After all, they had the manpower concentration to project power far afield had they so desired. Yet despite having contact with literally everybody in the eastern half of the US, their ideas don't seem to have rubbed off on anybody else. And after Poverty Point fell (likely due to exhausting the firewood available within easy transport distance), it was a few centuries before anything else came along, and that way up in the northeast with the Adena and Hopewell. But those DID spread everywhere.
Speaking of which, you REALLY need to do a show on the Adena-Hopewell phenomenon.
You've taught me a lot I didn't know earlier. Thank you! That point about the post holes is very interesting. And rest assured that the adena and Hopewell will get episodes someday. I actually just went through southern Ohio recently and hit up a few adena and Hopewell sites. The interest is definitely there but they just need to wait for their turn.
@@AncientAmericas Adena might be called "Pre-Classic Hopewell" or Hopewell might be called "Classic Adena" as latter seems to have elaborated on the former. :) But the really amazing thing is how the core ideas of this complex (although with noticeable local variation) were taken up by pretty much everybody east of the Mississippi (and a few slightly west of it) in a pretty short timespan. Again, somebody was REALLY good at convincing the masses to adopt a new lifestyle/religion/culture/whatever, even better than the founder of Poverty Point, who only convinced his immediate neighbors. So. I'm eagerly looking forward to your presentation.
Such a site reminds me of rich, settled hunter-gatherer sites on rivers discussed in by Scott (and others), which adds easily planted and harvested wild plants to the diet. It's called "flood-retreat" or "decrue" or "recession" agriculture. Scott at p. 69:
A very good observation. What's the title of that book?
Another wonderful glimpse into prehistoric North America. Thank you for these fascinating videos.
Thank you!
Geaux Tigers indeed! And even the hunter-gatherers would recognize a good place to live. As you note there's fish and game, edible plants, berries are in the area as well, BUT no doubt they experienced periodic flooding. The risen areas would make sense as they could stay in place rather than having to abandon then resettle the area.
I just graduated from LSU and during a Louisiana history course the first lecture we learned about Poverty Point and Native Americans in Louisiana!
Also, the "Indian Mounds" on campus sadly are only barely fenced off and children typically play on them during tailgates during football season.
This sounds so much like an American Çatalhöyük, right down to the proliferation of clay cooking balls in the site. Really interesting as both are early pre-agriculture cities. I'd love to see a comparison between the two.
Well worth looking into. The tendency to break history into eras does not account for the fact that people give up a successful way of living gradually thus we see transition in culture.
Europeans talk of woodhenges. You depicted something you said was a woodhenge but I recognized it: it was a Sun Dance ceremonial ground with the proper solar alignment and the stake in the center for the dancers to be tethered to and the posts all around carry lintels for brush to be laid on so the audience can have some shade. You see them all the time today.
I visited Poverty Point years ago and it's great to see a video focusing on this treasure. It was a lovely experience and the effort that has gone into the visitor center, exhibits, walking paths, self-guided tour materials, etc., was exemplary. I also found interesting the large borrow pits scattered around, used as a source of dirt needed to build the mounds.
Fascinating.Thank you for all you work to create this informative video. Great job!
Thank you!
Considering that you said Poverty Point seemed to be a tech hub, plus their apparent expertise in astronomy, geometry, and surveying, perhaps there was a high population of academics, building tools for other people and sharing their knowledge of the world to other societies; they could then have kept the excess materials, or made a profit, to keep their livelihoods going.
Your channel is incredible. Thank you so much for all of the research and hard work you do to put into these incredibly informative videos about Turtle Island 🙂
Thank you!
Related reading:
1491 by Charles Mann
Excellent read about the pre-Columbus Americas.
Ha! I actually have that on my bookshelf! It is an excellent read.
@@AncientAmericas I was stunned to find out the level of tech and culture they had. It's no wonder the colonies had such a problem with people "going native". When I went to school it they taught us the old "noble savage" BS...
Elevation helps keep Mosquitoes blowing too.
I live in Mosquito Country and like camping on high ground. Sundown by Wet Low Ground is Hell you must experience to understand.
Can anyone explain to me what the hell Walters was talking about with the 'eating clay balls' thing? I have the impression I'm missing something.
I wish I could give you an answer, but I can't. I assume he's referring to the cooking balls that the people of Poverty Point used for cooking but I'm not sure why he was under the impression that the locals ate them. The book that I got the quote from doesn't give any details about that statement either. Sorry.
It was common for northern indians to drop rocks heated in the fire, into bark containers of liquids in order to cook or boil the liquid. Maybe the natives in that area, lacking stones to heat their water, used baked clay balls heated in the fire, then dropped in the water? To someone unfamiliar with the process, it might appear they were cooking the clay, in order to eat it?
@John Barber typical
@John Barber piss off boy
I scrolled so far down to find this comment. Why he thought they were eating clay is beyond me.😂🤣
As a kid I lived about 10 miles from Poverty Point. I never realized it was such a unique spot!
geaux tigers indeed. they've recently closed off the mounds on campus, but for years they let students and visitors walk all over the site. hard to imagine we'd treat the archaeological record of other societies the way we've treated indigenous Louisianians.
The mounds were not burial sites, so there is little evidence that the natives themselves did not walk all over them too. Many of the mounds of Mississippi were removed, and their contents used to elevate roadways. I'd rather my monument be one where hope is born, than bulldozed like the mounds of Mississippi were.
those raised rings and mounds are remarkable, it must have been an incredibly striking place when it was inhabited. even more impressive that it was one of the first ever such settlements on the whole continent
maybe it is a little cliché to compare this to Göbekli Tepe, but the urban yet not agricultural characteristics, and the unique look of the place, does bring comparisons to mind.
I think a comparison between the two is not out of the question. I had it on my mind when I first learned about Poverty Point.
That's exactly where I was thinking about for the same reasons when I was just watching. We've given hunter/gatherers far too little credit at what they can accomplish. People have a very hard time wrapping their modern heads around the fact that for all of human history, we've had the same brains. There’s absolutely nothing making us smarter than they were at birth, meaning they could figure things out like we do every day. In fact they might have been better at it in lots of instances!
@@ArtisticlyAlexis...if our ancestors were stupid we wouldn't be here
I think the site might have originally been circular. using google earth you can see a distinct curved structure in a field across the creek and if you use the circle measure tool it matches up with the other side fairly well. also there is an oxbow lake to the east suggesting the creek flowed further to the east at some point and the current shape looks like it has been eroded to the west I would be curious to know if anyone has done any digging to the east side of the creek.
I think that they have. I might be remembering this incorrectly, but I think that there was a large cache of soapstone objects found on the other side of the river. Don't quote me on that though.
I agree, there is some anomalies across the river. They may be old riverbeds or dried up oxbow lakes though. They should use LIDAR and scan that forest to the north east. May be interesting what they find.
@@CryptidWalks LiDAR is the greatest modern tool invented in the evolution of archeology. Its value is incalculable in expediting the discovery of important finds worldwide.
@@Aswaguespack ...the laser was considered to be an invention with no practical purpose..
2:05 Clay balls the size of walnuts sound like ammunition for slingshots.
Possibly, there's no other evidence of violence at the site.
An interesting video. Just a couple of minor points of clarification. Wetland environments offer excellent preservation (for example, anerobic Danish bogs and the so called "Bog People"). Cycylical wetting and drying in acidic soils is lethal to organic preservation. Perhaps a model for understanding Poverty Point stone exists in the Western US. Ocean shell, over 2,500 years old, from Bodega Bay ~40 miles north of Golden Gate has been found 300+ miles east in central Nevada caves and rock shelters. The raw material was typically manufactured close to the coast and then traded eastward from tribe to tribe. I haven’t read the site reports but unless chipping detritus has been found at or near Poverty Point it was likely traded westward as blades, cores, or point blanks. Finally, evidence for cremations typically survive in the archaeological record. Creamations and hearts/fire pits have different physical characteristics and chemistry and they are rather easily distinguishable. Cremations with funerary offerings are not unusual and if cremations occurred at Poverty Point they'd likely have been found. It would appear that how (and where the dead) were treated is unclear. Oh, the highest population density north of the Valley of Mexico wax achieved by semi-sedentary hunter-gatherers in central California...around its Delta and wetlands. Before Americans destroyed it natural hydrology, the interior of California from Bakersfield 400 miles north to Red Bluff was a wetland. Most of the archaeological sites occur on natural mounds and levees that have since been leveled. Poverty Point is defintely a location that requires more investigatikn and far more publicity because North American Archaic hunter-gatherers are generally treated as the poor step children of the purportedly more advanced agrarian cultures. This is harcly an accurate characterization but it remains the popular myth.
Can you suggest some densely populated California delta sites for me to read about?
I wonder if the segmented overall plan would perhaps be to provide structured residential areas for a group of different tribes.
Perhaps five different groups held a conference and decided to cohabit, each tribe bringing specialised skills that would enhance and support the others. Fishing skills, building skills, farmers- a merging of technologies.
A new orderly city was co-operatively built, where each group had an equal ‘wedge’, perhaps with the hierarchy rising towards the front- the chief dwelling at the tip, the progressively larger and lower classes behind, stratified by importance.
In the centre was the plaza for public meetings, and the markets… and the giant poles outline the once great meeting lodge of the chiefs, where the council of tribes met and voted on key decisions.
you were not lying when you said i would enjoy this episode.
Glad you enjoyed it!
@@AncientAmericas obup
fantastic presentation of this amazing site - Thank you for this
You're welcome!
I see the feathered serpent here with the rings representing the wings and the large mound representing the head of the serpent. Note that the smaller mounds near the river are equidistant from the path of the river so represent the winding body of the serpent. Those mound builders sure loved their effigies!
Apparently remains of a processional way connecting 'Mound E' (Ball court mound) have been discovered.
Were the mound builders actually pre-Clovis?
@@dalelane1948 do you really expect to get the true answer to that in the flippin UA-cam comment section??
@@roscoe4092 "It could happen". 🤓🍻
@@dalelane1948 nope, the clovis were long gone by that time. compare poverty point, less than 4000 years old, to the clovis culture that persisted 13000 to 11000 years ago.
Sounds like Poverty Point was a library in a pre-literate world. For reference, look at Lynne Kelly's work on the use of memory palaces in such cultures.
I do agree with you that building a mound, even a large mound, doesn’t take too much time, however, many of these mound remains are astronomically and mathematically precise, and this would take a massive amount of planning. I think that the evidence points to a conclusion that leans more to a civilization, rather than a hunter gatherer meeting location(s). Thoughts?
Hunter gatherers would have to rely on the stars & solstices for seasons to hunt & gather. Current Stone Age living people use the stars & sun for their hunting & gathering now.
Thank you for this presentation. I live in Louisiana, and I have never been to poverty point, and only found out about it a few years ago.
Check it out sometime! I hear its a great place to visit.
Hmm Earthen crock pots with clay cooking balls in them could keep food simmered, and ready to eat until it is finished or spoils. You'd never have to rely on refrigeration and the food would last more than one meal.
We have just recently found large mounds and structures like Poverty Point in Claiborne, Parish Louisiana in North Louisiana not far from Poverty Point.
That's awesome! Is there a name for the site that I could look up?
The simplest explanation is often the best...they needed a place to go when the frequent floods or invasions plagued the area
no way, there is no evidence of 'invasions' plaguing any communities in that era or the eras preceding or following it. Any cultures predating the Mississippians had very little conflict and no war. Invasions denote a competition for resources when resources are limited: a neighboring town invades your town because you had a good year for corn while the other town had a bad year and they take your resources. The evidence at Poverty Point shows that they gathered everything they needed, there weren't hoards of resources to raid and nor were there walls or fortifications to defend from invaders. The video says it quite well, this place is an apogee of hunter gatherer civilization. Its a 'would've could've' glimpse into the way North America could have been had things not changed environmentally and socially: a hunter gatherer city.
Holy shit, the awful colonial take */LIKED/* by the author of the video. Holy fuck...
Learn a little about the history of Turtle Island before making terrible assumptions like constant invasions. And not some "noble savage" bullshit. The real histories will show how few invasions there [ever] were all the while going through the shitty, sometimes gorey, nasty stuff of history. What a shit take
Hello again! I am really enjoying your content. I simply don't know much about this topic and its really interesting. In regard to many of the comments below, I appreciate your patience! COVID isolation has many folks a bit bugged out! LOL! Thanks for the information! When I was a kid, my family visited Stonehenge and some of the French pre historic caves (before they were shut to the public). Carnac in Brittany (France) was also insanely cool! Cave of Forgotten Dreams is also a favorite! Not exactly relevant to your area of expertise, but, I generally avoid delineation. One of the fringe benefits of being an amateur! LOL! Thanks!
I live in Portland OR and know almost nothing about the folks who lived in the area before Euro's. I wish that wasn't the case! Do you have any UA-cam recommendations for this area in particular? Thanks again!
I've always thought that pre agriculture, large communities were possible around the world. If their economy was based on fishing and these sites might become trade centers for much smaller groups of more traditional hunter-gatherers.
If I’m not mistaken, the Calusa people of the Florida Everglades lived in rather large settlements without agriculture, but rather thriving mostly on their access to seafood.
You know what? I really like your content! I’m hooked.
Thank you! Your content looks pretty cool too. I love Hades and have probably sunk more time into that game than is healthy.
Poverty Point? More like a Poverty of Pottery Point, amirite?
Ba-dum-tiss.
I just went to poverty point and it was wonderful! I sat beside mound a and there were so many wildflowers it was all you could smell. There were dragonflies everywhere! And the birds were so loud. I think spring is the perfect time to visit. I used all my senses lol.
More likely was how they delt with flooding verse's having to move out every spring.
The Dutch of the ancient Americas
I love this video the mound builders were so prolific. I wonder if you have ever heard of Moundville down in Tuscaloosa AL it is a fascinating site and the artifacts recovered there including the hand with the eye and snake symbol is so interesting. I had an Archeological Class several years ago and the professor had helped dig their in the 70s and 80s. Had to write a paper on it it’s tucked into a meadow behind a old suburb of residential houses. But it’s next to the river and one has to wonder how beautiful it would have been to come upon it via canoe in ancient times. The Moundville site also contained a raised mound with a top structure like Poverty Point. I’m unsure if Moundville was built before or after but if this site is the original city it would be not so hard to assume it might have been the model for Moundville and other settlements like it. I still hope we haven’t found all the sites there. So much knowledge lost and so many great discoveries to look forward to in the future hopefully!
Thank you! And yes, I know of moundsville. It's a cool site from what I've read.
@@AncientAmericas it’s assumed they carried the dirt in baskets one load at a time the amount of man power must have been something. Did they find any animal based potter at Poverty Point? There was a lot at Moundville and one of that findings if I remember correctly was a massive shift from old less formal pottery styles to the new array of animal motifs in the jug, plates, pots found in the mounds. They have a nice little museum at the site if you ever get to visit. Well worth an afternoon trip.
@@jenniferbaker3207 the pottery at poverty point is really simple and doesn't have much design to it. It doesn't have any of the complexity that you see in later times.
Just an idea when it comes to what those clay owls could be. If you go and do some research maybe it could be a representation of the modern owl in Native American folklore/culture. It ranges from wisdom to death. Could it perhaps be something that has to do with warding off the evil spirits? Just a thought
Red jasper 🦉
3:54 there are no natural hills west of the Mississippi river and east of the Ouachita. Its a space 70 miles wide that is as flat as you could imagine
My theory: Poverty Point is in the Mississippi River Delta and is prone to flooding. These large mounds were built to have a safe place to go during a flood.
It’s very obvious and simple. The land in the Mississippi River Delta is extremely flat.
A very sound theory!
Really entertaining video. Nice work. Increased intrigue.
Thank you!
I never knew there were proto-civilizations that old in North America, can't wait for more of this kind of stuff!
the teaching company has a series of talks all about proto-civilization in North America, very interesting and one of them is about poverty point.
There’s increasing evidence that we’re underestimating the age of some of these civilisations/or their remains.
@@dalelane1948 Graham Hancock agrees ..😁
@Matt DeMouy It is just great to learn that the American Indians didnt just live in teepees and hunt bison
@@TheWareek It appears many in the South and Ohio Valley went through various golden ages followed by dark ages etc much like Europe and the Near East