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Mount Vernon Site

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Hopewell Culture archeological site United States historic place
Mount Vernon Site
12 Po 885
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Remains of the site in 2011
Mount Vernon Site is located in IndianaMount Vernon Site
LocationPosey County, Indiana
Coordinates37°54′48″N 87°56′23″W / 37.91333°N 87.93972°W / 37.91333; -87.93972
Built~100 AD
Architectural styleCrab Orchard Culture
NRHP reference No.95001542
Added to NRHP11 January 1996

The Mount Vernon Site, also known as the GE Mound, is a Hopewell site near Mount Vernon in southwest Indiana. The site was discovered and mostly destroyed in 1988 during road construction at a General Electric plastic manufacturing facility. The mound was partially leveled, used for road fill, and subject to widespread looting shortly after its discovery, resulting in a contentious and precedent-setting prosecution under the Archeological Resources Protection Act. It was one of the five largest recorded Hopewell mounds before its destruction. The depth and breadth of artifacts recovered from the site are some of the most significant of all Hopewell sites and even in its degraded condition it is one of the most significant Hopewell mounds yet discovered.

Characteristics

Before its destruction, the mound was loaf-shaped and measured 125 m (410 ft) long, 50 m (160 ft) wide, and 6 m (20 ft), with evidence of potential structures or tombs within the body of the mound. This large size makes it one of the five largest known Hopewell mounds. The mound is located near the confluence of the Ohio and Wabash rivers near another large-scale Hopewell site, the Mann site. The mound was used as a ceremonial and burial site, most likely by the Mann phase of the Crab Orchard Culture.

A great number of artifacts were discovered inside the mound, with both the quantity and quality unmatched by few other Hopewell sites. The thousands of chert bifaces, dozens of quartz and obsidian blades, copper celts, silver ear spools, and bear teeth are common at Hopewell sites but have rarely been found in such numbers. Rarer artifacts include panpipes, carved coal ornaments and worked human and animal bones. Particularly notable are intact organic artifacts including fragments of cloth and decorated leather ornaments which have rarely survived due to their fragile organic nature.

Some of these artifacts traveled great distances, with the copper and silver originating in the Keweenaw Peninsula in northern Michigan and the obsidian coming all the way from Obsidian Cliff in Wyoming. Pearls produced in the area have been found at both Mount Vernon and Ohio Hopewell sites, potentially indicating trade connections between Mount Vernon and the wider prehistoric-United States.

Discovery and looting

Preliminary surveys prior to a 1988 highway extension project identified the feature as a natural hill to be used for road fill. During planned work between April and June 1988, artifacts were discovered as the mound was being leveled. After highway work had finished, local collectors were made aware of this and descended upon the site - looting thousands of artifacts from what was left of the mound without informing the landowner, General Electric, or state authorities as required by state law. Indiana Department of Highways archeologists learned of the site in October of that year after an anonymous tip, and began work to salvage what was left of the mound.

Trial and controversy

Media coverage brought public outrage and attention to the site. Multiple parties including General Electric, Federal and State government and Native American tribes had significant cause for outrage. In a then-novel case, the FBI began investigating and brought charges against five looters under the 1979 Archeological Resources Protection Act. As part of a plea deal, the looters returned any unsold artifacts and described the unaltered condition of the mound to archeologists. Fines and jail time were leveled on the looters, and the case helped to establish the legitimacy of federal protections on archeological sites. The trial exacerbated existing stresses between archeologists, native groups and amateur archeologists.

The artifacts were reburied in 1994 without proper scientific study at the insistence of out-of-state Native American groups. The marginalization of local Indian group wishes and the loss of rare and significant artifacts caused a second round of controversy.

Today the mound is mostly destroyed and the remnants lie on well protected private property - currently owned by SABIC.

See Also

Mann Site - Related large Hopewell mound complex located several miles up the Ohio River

References

  1. ^ Munson, Cheryl Ann; Jones, Marjorie Melvin; Fry, Robert E. (January 1995). "The GE Mound: An ARPA Case Study" (PDF). American Antiquity. 60 (1): 131–159. doi:10.2307/282080. JSTOR 282080 – via JSTOR.
  2. ^ Jeske, Robert (September 2024). "Residual Effects of Grave Desecrations: The GE Mound Case". Center for Archaeology in the Public Interest - Public Archaeology Review. 2 (2): 7 – via Academia.edu.
  3. ^ Lynott, Mark (2014). Hopewell Ceremonial Landscapes of Ohio. Oxbow Books. p. 43. ISBN 978-1-78297-754-4.
  4. ^ Tomak, Curtis H. (Fall 1994). "The Mount Vernon Site: A Remarkable Hopewell Mound in Posey County, Indiana". Archaeology of Eastern North America. 22: 1–46. JSTOR 40914376 – via JSTOR.
  5. "Looking at Prehistory: Middle Woodland Period 200 B.C. to A.D. 500". US Forest Service. 21 November 2008.
Hopewellian peoples
Ohio Hopewell
Crab Orchard culture
Goodall focus
Havana Hopewell culture
Kansas City Hopewell
Marksville culture
Miller culture
Point Peninsula complex
Swift Creek culture
Santa Rosa-Swift Creek culture
Other Hopewellian peoples
Exotic trade items
Related topics
Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley
Black drink
burial mound
Ceremonial pipe
Effigy mound
Hopewell pottery
Hopewell Ceremonial Earthworks
Horned Serpent
Eastern Agricultural Complex
Underwater panther
U.S. National Register of Historic Places in Indiana
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