Mississippian Emergence

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American Indians
archaeology
artifacts
Category=NKD
ceramics
ceremonial complex
climate
Early Archaic
Eastern United States
environment
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
excavations
farming
fauna
fishing
geology
habitats
hunting
Indigenous societies
material culture
Middle Archaic
Middle Woodland
migration
mounds
Native Americans
Paleoindians
plants
Pleistocene
pottery
projectile points
public archaeology
settlement
shell middens
shellfish
southeastern archaeology
subsistence
violence
warfare
water transportation
Woodland period

Product details

  • ISBN 9780817354527
  • Weight: 333g
  • Dimensions: 218 x 278mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Oct 2007
  • Publisher: The University of Alabama Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This is a thorough examination of the rise of prehistoric chiefdoms. This collection, addressing a topic of ongoing interest and debate in American archaeology, examines the evolution of ranked chiefdoms in the Midwestern and Southeastern United States during the period A.D. 700-1200. The volume brings together a broad range of professionals engaged in the fieldwork that has vitalized the theoretical debates on the development of Mississippi Valley cultures. The initial chapter provides a general discussion of various explanations for the rise of these distinctive ranked societies in the eastern United States (A.D. 750-1050) and sets the stage for the interdisciplinary analysis from multiple viewpoints that follows. The first section discusses a cluster of individual sites in the Midwest and Southeast and reveals the parallel - and occasionally divergent - paths followed by the inhabitants as they transitioned from Late Woodland into Mississippian lifeways. The chapters in the second half discuss by region the emergence of ranked agricultural societies and examine how these networks played a role in the large-scale and roughly contemporaneous socio-political development.
Bruce D. Smith is an Archaeologist at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History and editor of Rivers of Change.