The Vacant Quarter Revisited: Late Mississippian Abandonment of the Lower Ohio Valley
- 1 October 2002
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Antiquity
- Vol. 67 (4) , 625-641
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1593795
Abstract
The idea that a substantial portion of the North American midcontinent centered on the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers confluence was largely depopulated around A.D. 1450–1550—Stephen Williams's “Vacant Quarter” hypothesis—has been generally accepted by archaeologists. There has been, however, some disagreement over the timing and extent of the abandonment. Our long-term research along the Ohio River in southern Illinois's interior hill country has yielded a substantial corpus of late Mississippian period radiocarbon dates, indicating that depopulation of the lower Ohio Valley occurred at the early end of Williams's estimate. Furthermore, the abandonment was a widespread phenomenon that involved Mississippian groups living in remote settings, as well as along major drainages. Although causes for the Vacant Quarter are still debated, evidence from other regions indicates that regional abandonment by agricultural groups was not a unique event in the Eastern Woodlands.Keywords
This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Mississippian Settlement Patterns in Southwestern IndianaPublished by Elsevier ,1978