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Norton Mound group

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Archaeological site in Michigan, United States

United States historic place
Norton Mound group
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
U.S. National Historic Landmark
Norton Mound group is located in MichiganNorton Mound groupShow map of MichiganNorton Mound group is located in the United StatesNorton Mound groupShow map of the United States
Interactive map
Nearest cityWyoming, Michigan
Coordinates42°56′11.69″N 85°43′19.13″W / 42.9365806°N 85.7219806°W / 42.9365806; -85.7219806
NRHP reference No.66000396
Significant dates
Added to NRHPOctober 15, 1966
Designated NHLDecember 21, 1965

The Norton Mound group, (also known as Norton Mound Site (20KT1) and Hopewell Indian Mounds Park), is a prehistoric Goodall focus mounds site in Wyoming, Michigan that is under the protection of the Grand Rapids Public Museum.

Significance

According to the National Park Service's Statement of Significance: "These are the most important and best-preserved Hopewell mounds in the western Great Lakes region.

History

Mound H

The Norton Mound group was the center of Hopewellian culture in that area, from ca. 400 B.C. to A.D. 400. These mounds were probably constructed in the first century AD.

The name "Norton Mounds" comes from Captain A.N. Norton, who owned this property in the 1800s. The mounds were first excavated in 1874 by W. L. Coffinbury. This excavation revealed numerous burials rich in grave offerings. Further excavations were undertaken by H. E. Sargent in 1915. In 1936, Mrs. W. B. Stiles deeded the land that many of the mounds were located on to the city of Grand Rapids, and the area became a city park. The site was listed on the Michigan Register of Historic Sites in 1957, and it was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1965.

Later excavations in 1963-1964 by James B. Griffin provided information on mound construction methods.

According to the National Park Service, "Severe erosion, flooding, and nearby development threaten the Mound Group." "The Public Museum of Grand Rapids has been awarded funding to complete a Cultural Landscape Management Plan that will assess the site's condition. Public awareness of the NHL has increased due to ongoing development of the Millennium Park." That plan was completed in February 2007.

Description

Map of mound locations

The site of the mounds is located between Indian Mounds Drive and Interstate 196 in Wyoming, Michigan near the Grand River. The Norton Mounds site covers approximately 55 acres and is currently closed to the public. The Norton Mounds were once part of a more extensive grouping of mounds that included the Converse Mounds (20KT2), a grouping of nearly thirty mounds near what is today downtown Grand Rapids. The Converse Mounds were razed in the nineteenth century as Grand Rapids expanded, and no trace remains of them today.

As of Coffinbury's initial exploration in 1874, there were 17 mounds in the group. In 1936, these 17 mounds were labelled A through Q. The three largest mounds are located near the river, with the other mounds arranged in a curved line behind them. By 1963, only eleven of the 17 were substantially untouched, and four had been obliterated.

The remaining mounds range from 30 feet in diameter and 1.5 feet in height to 100 feet in diameter and 15 feet in height. The mounds are built of a series of layers, starting with a layer of black dirt, then a layer of "ash" (probably the remains of leafy branches), then a mound fill cap, and finally a layer of natural sod. Below these layers are burial pits; these are primarily below ground level, although in the largest mound (mound M), the burial chambers are above the level of the surrounding grade. The burial pits are shallow and rectangular in shape.

Burial pits contained human remains, and nearby burial goods. The burial goods included jars, cups, dishes, spoons, arrowheads, pipes, tools, beads, pearls, and shell items.

  • Excavation of Mound M Excavation of Mound M
  • Geometrical engravings from turtle carapaces Geometrical engravings from turtle carapaces
  • Burial Chamber, Mound M Burial Chamber, Mound M
  • Burial Chamber, Mound M Burial Chamber, Mound M
  • Ornaments from Norton Mounds Ornaments from Norton Mounds
  • Burial Utensils from Norton Mounds Burial Utensils from Norton Mounds
  • Hopewell Pottery from Mound M Hopewell Pottery from Mound M
  • "Work kit" from Norton Mounds "Work kit" from Norton Mounds

References

  1. ^ "Norton Mound Group". National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Archived from the original on September 23, 2003. Retrieved May 3, 2008.
  2. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
  3. ^ Smith, Robert (February 1966). "Excavating the Hopewell Burial Mounds at Grand Rapids". Research News. 16 (8).
  4. Jaworowski, Matt (March 8, 2023). "'Deeper understanding:' GRPM to host program on Grand River Burial Mounds". WOODTV.com. Retrieved March 10, 2023.
  5. ^ "Museum Sites". Grand Rapids Museum.
  6. Note: A National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination document should be available upon request from the National Park Service for this site, but it appears not to be available on-line from the NPS Focus search site.
  7. Simon-Tibbe, Dorothy; Branz, Bill; White, Kelly (2009). Wilderness to Wyoming (1 ed.). Wyoming, Michigan: Franklin Press, Inc. p. 7. ISBN 9780578028583.
  8. Holman, J. Alan; Holman, Margaret B. (2009). The Michigan Roadside Naturalist. University of Michigan Press. pp. 98–99. ISBN 9780472024599.
  9. Coffinberry, Wright L.; Strong, E. A. (1876). "Notes Upon Some Explorations of Ancient Mounds in the Vicinity of Grand Rapids, Kent County, Michigan". Proceedings of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. 24: 293–297.
  10. ^ "Norton Mound Group". State of Michigan.

Further reading

External links

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
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