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Monks Mound

Monks Mound is the largest Pre-Columbian earthwork in the Americas and the largest pyramid north of Mesoamerica. The beginning of its construction dates from 900 to 955 CE. Located at the Cahokia Mounds UNESCO World Heritage Site near Collinsville, Illinois, the mound size was calculated in 1988 as about 100 feet (30 m) high, 955 feet (291 m) long including the access ramp at the southern end, and 775 feet (236 m) wide.[1] This makes Monks Mound roughly the same size at its base as the Great Pyramid of Giza (13.1 acres / 5.3 hectares). The perimeter of its base is larger than the Pyramid of the Sun at Teotihuacan. As a platform mound, the earthwork supported a wooden structure on the summit.

Monks Mound
Monks Mound in summer. The concrete staircase follows the approximate course of the ancient wooden stairs
Location within Illinois today
LocationCollinsville, IllinoisMadison County, Illinois, United States
RegionMadison County, Illinois
Coordinates38°39′38.4″N 90°3′43.36″W / 38.660667°N 90.0620444°W / 38.660667; -90.0620444
History
Founded900–950 CE
CulturesMississippian culture
Site notes
ArchaeologistsThomas I. Ramey
Architecture
Architectural stylesPlatform mound
Responsible body: Illinois Historic Preservation Agency

Unlike Egyptian pyramids which were built of stone, the platform mound was constructed almost entirely of layers of basket-transported soil and clay. Because of this construction and its flattened top, over the years, it has retained rainwater within the structure. This has caused slumping, the avalanche-like sliding of large sections of the sides at the highest part of the mound. Its designed dimensions would have been significantly smaller than its present extent, but recent excavations have revealed that slumping was a problem even while the mound was being made.[2]

Construction and abandonment

 
Monks Mound from the side showing the 2 terraces.

Construction of Monks Mound by the Mississippian culture began about 900–950 CE, on a site that had already been occupied by buildings. The original concept seems to have been a much smaller mound, now buried deep within the northern end of the present structure. At the northern end of the summit plateau, as finally completed around 1100 CE, is an area raised slightly higher still, on which was placed a building over 100 ft (30 m) long, the largest in the entire Cahokia Mounds urban zone. Botanical remains from Monks Mound suggest it was built much more quickly than previously thought, perhaps on the order of several consecutive decades, providing an alternative view of its construction history.[3] Deep excavations in 2007 confirmed findings from earlier test borings, that several types of earth and clay from different sources had been used successively.[2] Study of various sites suggests that the stability of the mound was improved by the incorporation of bulwarks, some made of clay, others of sods from the Mississippi flood-plain, which permitted steeper slopes than the use of earth alone.[4] The structure rises in four terraces to a height of 100 feet (30 m) with a rectangular base covering nearly 15 acres (6.1 ha) and containing 22 million cubic feet of adobe, carried basket by basket to the site.[5]

The most recent section of the mound, added some time before 1200 CE, is the lower terrace at the south end, which was added after the northern end had reached its full height. It may partly have been intended to help minimize the slumping which by then was already under way. Today, the western half of the summit plateau is significantly lower than the eastern; this is the result of massive slumping, beginning about 1200 CE.[6] This also caused the west end of the big building to collapse. It may have led to the abandonment of the mound's high status, following which various wooden buildings were erected on the south terrace, and garbage was dumped at the foot of the mound. By about 1300, the urban society at Cahokia Mounds was in serious decline. When the eastern side of the mound started to suffer serious slumping, it was not repaired.[7]

European settlers

There is no evidence of significant Native American settlement in the Cahokia Mounds urban area for hundreds of years after about 1400 CE. In 1735, French missionaries built a chapel at the west end of the south terrace of the mound. The River L'Abbe Mission served a small Illiniwek community, until they were forced to abandon the area by rival tribes about 1752. In 1776, during the American Revolutionary War, a trading post called the Cantine was established next to the mound (by then known as the Great Nobb). It lasted only until 1784.

In the early 19th century, the land was claimed by people of French descent, and Nicholas Jarrot had a deed for most of it. He donated some to a small group of French Trappist monks, who settled on one of the smaller mounds from 1809. They took advantage of the big mound's terraces to grow produce, which was elevated above the danger of flooding: wheat on the upper levels, garden produce on the south terrace. During their short stay in the area, which lasted until 1813, Henry Brackenridge visited the site and published the first detailed description of the largest mound. He named it Monks Mound.

In 1831 T. Amos Hill bought the plot including the Mound. He built a house on the upper terrace, and sank a well. This work revealed various archaeological remains, including human bones.[8]

Archaeology

 
Looking over the Cahokia Mounds site from the top of Monks Mound

Thomas I. Ramey, who bought the site in 1864, began an era of more responsible ownership, and encouraged archaeological investigation. Many artifacts were found at or near the surface. Ramey had a tunnel made nearly 30 m (98 ft) into the north face of the mound, but it revealed nothing of historic interest. By this time, people were beginning to consider the mound more within its context. A survey made for local dentist Dr. John R. Patrick in the 1880s marked the beginning of modern understanding of the Cahokia site as a whole, and its relationship to other sites in the area.[8]

Many archaeological investigations of the mound have taken place since then. One of the biggest began in the 1960s, when Nelson Reed, a local businessman and historian of native cultures, obtained permission to conduct excavations. He was trying to locate the high-status building (temple or palace) presumed to have stood at the peak of Monks Mound. By drilling cores at various points on the mound, his team revealed the various stages of its construction from the 10th to 12th centuries CE. Remains of a fairly recent house (presumably Hill's) were found, but no temple.

In 1970 Reed returned to work at the mound, and adopted a new strategy: scraping away the topsoil from several 5 m2 (54 sq ft) patches with a backhoe, to a depth of around 60 cm (24 in). This quickly revealed various features, including what appeared to be the outline of the temple. Further backhoe work in 1971 confirmed the shape of the presumed temple at over 30 m (98 ft) long, the largest building found at Cahokia. This technique was opposed by professional archaeologists because it destroyed several hundred years of stratification over most of the mound's summit, which was the evidence by which they could place and evaluate artifacts and construction. Reed's backhoe excavations revealed other significant features, such as a hole which seemed to have been the socket for a post about three feet (one metre) in diameter. The dramatic finds encouraged the Governor of Illinois to budget for an expansion of the Cahokia Mounds State Park.[9]

Preservation

From the time the original urban society collapsed, the great mound became overgrown with trees, the roots of which helped stabilize its steep slopes. In the 20th century, researchers removed the trees in the course of work at the mound and park preparation. Reduction of groundwater levels in the Mississippi floodplain during the 1950s caused the mound to dry out, damaging the clay layers within. When heavy rainfall occurred, it caused new slumping, starting about 1956. The increasingly violent weather of recent decades has exacerbated the problem.[10] In 1984-5 there were several slumps, and the state government brought in surplus soil to make repairs to the major scar on the eastern side. A decade later, there was further slumping on the western side, so irregular that repair was impractical. Drains were installed to reduce the effects of heavy rain. It was during this process that workers discovered a mass of stone deep within the mound.

The repairs of the 1980s and 1990s were only partly successful. In 2004-5 more serious slumping episodes occurred. These demonstrated that adding new earth to repair the major slump on the east side had been a mistake. Experts decided to take a new approach. In 2007, backhoes were used to dig out the entire mass of earth from this slump and another at the northwest corner, to a level beyond the internal slippage zone. Engineers created a series of anti-slip "steps" across the exposed face before the original earth (minus the imported repair material) was replaced at its original level. To avoid introducing water deep into the mound's interior, the work was carried out in high summer, and as quickly as possible. In parallel with the repair work, teams of archaeologists studied the evidence that was being revealed.[2] The eastern sliding zone penetrated more deeply within the mound than originally estimated, and the excavation had to be very large-[11] 50 feet (15 m) wide, to a height of 65 feet (20 m) above the mound base.[2] This heightened concerns about a conflict between conservation and archaeology.

See also

References

  1. ^ Skele, Mike "The Great Knob", Studies in Illinois Archaeology, no. 4], Springfield, IL, Illinois Historic Preservation Agency (1988) ISBN 0942579038, pp. 1–3, via archive.org
  2. ^ a b c d Iseminger, Bill et al. "Monks Mound (Mound 38) Projects 1997 – 2007 Archived 2005-01-08 at archive.today, from The Cahokian (various issues 1998–2007)- at cahokiamounds.com
  3. ^ Lopinot, Neal H.; Schilling, Timothy; Fritz, Gayle J.; Kelly, John E. (2015-05-19). "Implications of Plant Remains from the East Face of Monks Mound". Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology. 40 (3): 209–230. doi:10.1179/2327427115y.0000000003. ISSN 0146-1109. S2CID 131309970.
  4. ^ S.C. Sherwood; Tristram .R. Kidder (March 2011). "The DaVincis of Dirt". Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 30 (1): 69–87. doi:10.1016/j.jaa.2010.11.001.
  5. ^ Nash, Gary B. Red, White and Black: The Peoples of Early North America Los Angeles 2015. Chapter 1, p. 6
  6. ^ Rose, Mark (Jan–Feb 1999). "Sampling Monks Mound". Archaeology. 52 (1).
  7. ^ Young, Biloine W.; Fowler, Melvin L. (2000). Cahokia, the Great Native American Metropolis. Urbana, Illinois: University of Illinois Press. pp. 171–2. ISBN 0-252-06821-1.
  8. ^ a b John A. Walthall & Elizabeth D. Benchley, "The River L'Abbé Mission: A French Colonial Church for the Cahokia Illini on Monks Mound", Studies in Illinois Archaeology, No. 2, Springfield, IL: Historic Preservation Agency (1987), via archive.org
  9. ^ Young & Fowler, pp. 154–7
  10. ^ Skele, p98
  11. ^ Bostrom, Peter A. Mound repair: Cahokia Mounds (31 Jul 2007)- summary with photos

Further reading

  • Price, Douglas T. and Gary M. Feinman. Images of the Past, 5th ed. New York: McGraw-Hill (2008) ISBN 978-0-07-340520-9. pp. 282–285.
  • "The Trappists of Monk's Mound" — Illinois Catholic Historical Review, 8:106‑136 (1925)

External links

  • Monks Mound (Mound 38), Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site website.
  • UNESCO – Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site
  • Cahokia Mounds Photo Gallery
  • 2016 discussion of new research indicating construction in as little as twenty years

monks, mound, largest, columbian, earthwork, americas, largest, pyramid, north, mesoamerica, beginning, construction, dates, from, located, cahokia, mounds, unesco, world, heritage, site, near, collinsville, illinois, mound, size, calculated, 1988, about, feet. Monks Mound is the largest Pre Columbian earthwork in the Americas and the largest pyramid north of Mesoamerica The beginning of its construction dates from 900 to 955 CE Located at the Cahokia Mounds UNESCO World Heritage Site near Collinsville Illinois the mound size was calculated in 1988 as about 100 feet 30 m high 955 feet 291 m long including the access ramp at the southern end and 775 feet 236 m wide 1 This makes Monks Mound roughly the same size at its base as the Great Pyramid of Giza 13 1 acres 5 3 hectares The perimeter of its base is larger than the Pyramid of the Sun at Teotihuacan As a platform mound the earthwork supported a wooden structure on the summit Monks MoundMonks Mound in summer The concrete staircase follows the approximate course of the ancient wooden stairsLocation within Illinois todayLocationCollinsville Illinois Madison County Illinois United StatesRegionMadison County IllinoisCoordinates38 39 38 4 N 90 3 43 36 W 38 660667 N 90 0620444 W 38 660667 90 0620444HistoryFounded900 950 CECulturesMississippian cultureSite notesArchaeologistsThomas I RameyArchitectureArchitectural stylesPlatform moundResponsible body Illinois Historic Preservation AgencyUnlike Egyptian pyramids which were built of stone the platform mound was constructed almost entirely of layers of basket transported soil and clay Because of this construction and its flattened top over the years it has retained rainwater within the structure This has caused slumping the avalanche like sliding of large sections of the sides at the highest part of the mound Its designed dimensions would have been significantly smaller than its present extent but recent excavations have revealed that slumping was a problem even while the mound was being made 2 Contents 1 Construction and abandonment 2 European settlers 3 Archaeology 4 Preservation 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksConstruction and abandonment nbsp Monks Mound from the side showing the 2 terraces Construction of Monks Mound by the Mississippian culture began about 900 950 CE on a site that had already been occupied by buildings The original concept seems to have been a much smaller mound now buried deep within the northern end of the present structure At the northern end of the summit plateau as finally completed around 1100 CE is an area raised slightly higher still on which was placed a building over 100 ft 30 m long the largest in the entire Cahokia Mounds urban zone Botanical remains from Monks Mound suggest it was built much more quickly than previously thought perhaps on the order of several consecutive decades providing an alternative view of its construction history 3 Deep excavations in 2007 confirmed findings from earlier test borings that several types of earth and clay from different sources had been used successively 2 Study of various sites suggests that the stability of the mound was improved by the incorporation of bulwarks some made of clay others of sods from the Mississippi flood plain which permitted steeper slopes than the use of earth alone 4 The structure rises in four terraces to a height of 100 feet 30 m with a rectangular base covering nearly 15 acres 6 1 ha and containing 22 million cubic feet of adobe carried basket by basket to the site 5 The most recent section of the mound added some time before 1200 CE is the lower terrace at the south end which was added after the northern end had reached its full height It may partly have been intended to help minimize the slumping which by then was already under way Today the western half of the summit plateau is significantly lower than the eastern this is the result of massive slumping beginning about 1200 CE 6 This also caused the west end of the big building to collapse It may have led to the abandonment of the mound s high status following which various wooden buildings were erected on the south terrace and garbage was dumped at the foot of the mound By about 1300 the urban society at Cahokia Mounds was in serious decline When the eastern side of the mound started to suffer serious slumping it was not repaired 7 European settlersThere is no evidence of significant Native American settlement in the Cahokia Mounds urban area for hundreds of years after about 1400 CE In 1735 French missionaries built a chapel at the west end of the south terrace of the mound The River L Abbe Mission served a small Illiniwek community until they were forced to abandon the area by rival tribes about 1752 In 1776 during the American Revolutionary War a trading post called the Cantine was established next to the mound by then known as the Great Nobb It lasted only until 1784 In the early 19th century the land was claimed by people of French descent and Nicholas Jarrot had a deed for most of it He donated some to a small group of French Trappist monks who settled on one of the smaller mounds from 1809 They took advantage of the big mound s terraces to grow produce which was elevated above the danger of flooding wheat on the upper levels garden produce on the south terrace During their short stay in the area which lasted until 1813 Henry Brackenridge visited the site and published the first detailed description of the largest mound He named it Monks Mound In 1831 T Amos Hill bought the plot including the Mound He built a house on the upper terrace and sank a well This work revealed various archaeological remains including human bones 8 Archaeology nbsp Looking over the Cahokia Mounds site from the top of Monks MoundThomas I Ramey who bought the site in 1864 began an era of more responsible ownership and encouraged archaeological investigation Many artifacts were found at or near the surface Ramey had a tunnel made nearly 30 m 98 ft into the north face of the mound but it revealed nothing of historic interest By this time people were beginning to consider the mound more within its context A survey made for local dentist Dr John R Patrick in the 1880s marked the beginning of modern understanding of the Cahokia site as a whole and its relationship to other sites in the area 8 Many archaeological investigations of the mound have taken place since then One of the biggest began in the 1960s when Nelson Reed a local businessman and historian of native cultures obtained permission to conduct excavations He was trying to locate the high status building temple or palace presumed to have stood at the peak of Monks Mound By drilling cores at various points on the mound his team revealed the various stages of its construction from the 10th to 12th centuries CE Remains of a fairly recent house presumably Hill s were found but no temple In 1970 Reed returned to work at the mound and adopted a new strategy scraping away the topsoil from several 5 m2 54 sq ft patches with a backhoe to a depth of around 60 cm 24 in This quickly revealed various features including what appeared to be the outline of the temple Further backhoe work in 1971 confirmed the shape of the presumed temple at over 30 m 98 ft long the largest building found at Cahokia This technique was opposed by professional archaeologists because it destroyed several hundred years of stratification over most of the mound s summit which was the evidence by which they could place and evaluate artifacts and construction Reed s backhoe excavations revealed other significant features such as a hole which seemed to have been the socket for a post about three feet one metre in diameter The dramatic finds encouraged the Governor of Illinois to budget for an expansion of the Cahokia Mounds State Park 9 PreservationFrom the time the original urban society collapsed the great mound became overgrown with trees the roots of which helped stabilize its steep slopes In the 20th century researchers removed the trees in the course of work at the mound and park preparation Reduction of groundwater levels in the Mississippi floodplain during the 1950s caused the mound to dry out damaging the clay layers within When heavy rainfall occurred it caused new slumping starting about 1956 The increasingly violent weather of recent decades has exacerbated the problem 10 In 1984 5 there were several slumps and the state government brought in surplus soil to make repairs to the major scar on the eastern side A decade later there was further slumping on the western side so irregular that repair was impractical Drains were installed to reduce the effects of heavy rain It was during this process that workers discovered a mass of stone deep within the mound The repairs of the 1980s and 1990s were only partly successful In 2004 5 more serious slumping episodes occurred These demonstrated that adding new earth to repair the major slump on the east side had been a mistake Experts decided to take a new approach In 2007 backhoes were used to dig out the entire mass of earth from this slump and another at the northwest corner to a level beyond the internal slippage zone Engineers created a series of anti slip steps across the exposed face before the original earth minus the imported repair material was replaced at its original level To avoid introducing water deep into the mound s interior the work was carried out in high summer and as quickly as possible In parallel with the repair work teams of archaeologists studied the evidence that was being revealed 2 The eastern sliding zone penetrated more deeply within the mound than originally estimated and the excavation had to be very large 11 50 feet 15 m wide to a height of 65 feet 20 m above the mound base 2 This heightened concerns about a conflict between conservation and archaeology See alsoList of Mississippian sites Mound 34 Mound 72 Southeastern Ceremonial Complex Sugarloaf MoundReferences Skele Mike The Great Knob Studies in Illinois Archaeology no 4 Springfield IL Illinois Historic Preservation Agency 1988 ISBN 0942579038 pp 1 3 via archive org a b c d Iseminger Bill et al Monks Mound Mound 38 Projects 1997 2007 Archived 2005 01 08 at archive today from The Cahokian various issues 1998 2007 at cahokiamounds com Lopinot Neal H Schilling Timothy Fritz Gayle J Kelly John E 2015 05 19 Implications of Plant Remains from the East Face of Monks Mound Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 40 3 209 230 doi 10 1179 2327427115y 0000000003 ISSN 0146 1109 S2CID 131309970 S C Sherwood Tristram R Kidder March 2011 The DaVincis of Dirt Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 30 1 69 87 doi 10 1016 j jaa 2010 11 001 Nash Gary B Red White and Black The Peoples of Early North America Los Angeles 2015 Chapter 1 p 6 Rose Mark Jan Feb 1999 Sampling Monks Mound Archaeology 52 1 Young Biloine W Fowler Melvin L 2000 Cahokia the Great Native American Metropolis Urbana Illinois University of Illinois Press pp 171 2 ISBN 0 252 06821 1 a b John A Walthall amp Elizabeth D Benchley The River L Abbe Mission A French Colonial Church for the Cahokia Illini on Monks Mound Studies in Illinois Archaeology No 2 Springfield IL Historic Preservation Agency 1987 via archive org Young amp Fowler pp 154 7 Skele p98 Bostrom Peter A Mound repair Cahokia Mounds 31 Jul 2007 summary with photosFurther readingPrice Douglas T and Gary M Feinman Images of the Past 5th ed New York McGraw Hill 2008 ISBN 978 0 07 340520 9 pp 282 285 The Trappists of Monk s Mound Illinois Catholic Historical Review 8 106 136 1925 External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Monks Mound Monks Mound Mound 38 Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site website UNESCO Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site Cahokia Mounds Photo Gallery 2016 discussion of new research indicating construction in as little as twenty years Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Monks Mound amp oldid 1141370610, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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