Sociopolitical Implications of Mississippian Mound Volume
- 1 April 2004
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Antiquity
- Vol. 69 (2) , 291-301
- https://doi.org/10.2307/4128421
Abstract
Variation in the scale of Mississippian mound building is an important measure of regional settlement hierarchies. However, factors thought to determine the size of platform mounds are subject to two contradictory interpretations. Mound volume is said to result from either the duration of mound use or the size of the labor force recruited by leaders for mound construction. To evaluate these competing propositions, a sample of excavated mounds is examined and four variables are recorded for each mound: a mound volume index, the duration of mound use, the number of construction stages, and the number of mounds at the site. The relationships among these variables are summarized, and the relative merits of the two competing interpretations are assessed. It is concluded that not all of the variation in mound volume can be explained by duration of use, that additional factors must be considered, and that the social context of mound construction probably differed at large multiple-mound sites and smaller mound sites.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mississippian Chiefdoms and the Fission-Fusion ProcessAmerican Antiquity, 1999
- Higher ground: The archaeology of North American platform moundsJournal of Archaeological Research, 1997
- A Second-Terrace Perspective on Monks MoundAmerican Antiquity, 1993
- The Institutional Organization of Mississippian ReligionAmerican Antiquity, 1986
- Prehistoric Archaeology in the Southeastern United States, 1970-1985Annual Review of Anthropology, 1986
- Location Theory and Complex Chiefdoms: A Mississippian ExamplePublished by Elsevier ,1978
- Aspects of Regional Analysis in ArchaeologyAnnual Review of Anthropology, 1977
- Some Archaeological Correlates of Ranked SocietiesAmerican Antiquity, 1977
- On the Relationship between Size of Population and Complexity of Social OrganizationSouthwestern Journal of Anthropology, 1967
- Stratigraphic and Area Tests at the Emerald and Anna Mound SitesAmerican Antiquity, 1951