Consisting of 18 earthen mounds and numerous additional habitation areas dating to A.D. 1250-1550, the Bottle Creek site was first professionally investigated in 1932 when David L. DeJarnette of the Alabama Museum of Natural History began work there to determine if the site had a cultural relationship with Moundville, connected to the north by a river system. Although partially mapped in the 1880s, Bottle Creek's location in the vast Mobile-Tensaw Delta of Baldwin County completely surrounded by swamp made it inaccessible and protected it from most of the plunder experienced by similar sites...
Consisting of 18 earthen mounds and numerous additional habitation areas dating to A.D. 1250-1550, the Bottle Creek site was first professionally inve...
This attractive volume catalogues the effigy pottery so-called because they're decorated with the heads and sometimes with the fins, tails, and feet of various creatures collected from prehistoric mounds in Arkansas for the Peabody Museum by Edwin Curtiss in the late 19th century. The collecting expedition is described at length in initial chapters
This attractive volume catalogues the effigy pottery so-called because they're decorated with the heads and sometimes with the fins, tails, and feet o...