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Prehistoric Cultures
at the Confluence and
the Rise and Fall of Cahokia Mounds
William R. Iseminger
Cahokia
Mounds State Historic Site, Collinsville, Illinois
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not quote or cite without permission
INTRODUCTION
The earliest inhabitants in
the present-day St. Louis area arrived at the end of the Ice Age,
and successive generations experienced and adapted to a number of
climatic and environmental changes. This presentation will examine
the evolution of late prehistoric cultural traditions in this region
around St. Louis and the impact that humans and environment had
upon each other prior to the arrival of the French in the late 1600s,
the beginning of the "historic" period.
Developments in the American Bottom and nearby
bluffs are representative of regional prehistoric developments and
settlements. The "American Bottom" (referring to the 18th
and 19th century settlement of this region by Americans, who generally
displaced the French, English, Spanish and Indians who had preceded
them) is usually considered to be the broad expanse of floodplain
on the Illinois side of the Mississippi River, bounded on the east
by the bluffs stretching from Alton on the north to just south of
the mouth of the Kaskaskia River near Chester, approximately 160
km. in length (Figure 1). The northern portion of the American Bottom,
from Alton to Dupo, Illinois, is the broadest, reaching a maximum
east-west width of about 18 km. between St. Louis, Missouri, and
Collinsville, Illinois (Figure 2). This "Northern Bottom Expanse"
is primarily the result of the confluence of the Missouri and Mississippi
Rivers, just south of Alton, especially the scouring action of the
postglacial meltwaters that flooded these river basins. Later, as
the river valley filled with deposits of silt, sand and clay, the
river took a meandering course, changing its route many times, swinging
from east to west across the valley. As former meanders were cut
off from the main channel they became lakes, sloughs and marshes;
streams draining the uplands captured other old meanders. These
various fluvial features formed an interconnected "inland waterway"
beyond the eastern banks of the Mississippi. They also provided
a superb resource base of fish, waterfowl and aquatic plants. Periodic
flooding of the region also deposited fertile soils across the ridge
and swale terrain of the American Bottom.
There were scattered woodlands concentrated
around the aquatic sources consisting primarily of cottonwood, willow,
sycamore, maple and hackberry, surrounded by large areas of prairie.
Bluffcrests often were topped with hillside prairies and cedar;
denser hardwood forests, primarily oaks and hickories, were concentrated
along the bluffslopes and adjacent dissected uplands, and tallgrass
prairies dominated the interior uplands.
These various environmental zones would have
provided a stable set of floral and faunal resources within less
than a day's walk from any settlement and ethnobotanical evidence
from archaeological sites show that all zones were being exploited,
although in varying degrees in different time periods. However,
the stability of these resources would be impacted by increased
and even over-exploitation, especially as population densities and
distributions increased through time.
CULTURAL TRADITIONS
Archaeologists recognize several prehistoric
(pre-European contact) cultural traditions in this region: PaleoIndian,
Archaic, Woodland, Emergent Mississippian, Mississippian and Oneota.
In turn, most of these traditions are seen to have had several sub-phases
of cultural development and change. PaleoIndian is generally believed
to have ranged from 9500 to 8000 B.C.; Archaic from 8000 to 600
B.C.; Woodland from 600 B.C. to A.D. 800; Emergent Mississippian
from A.D. 800 to 1000; Mississippian from A.D. 1000 to 1450; and
Oneota from A.D. 1450 to 1550. Actually, the beginning and ending
"dates" for these traditions are imprecise and would vary
from region to region, but they represent the generally accepted
time frames recognized in the American Bottom area. Each tradition
would be characterized by an assemblage of diagnostic artifact types
and forms, settlement patterns, domicile types and environmental
utilization. The subphase designations and durations are constantly
undergoing revision and refinement as new data accumulates from
ongoing research.
PaleoIndian peoples first arrived in this
area around 9500 BC, traveling in small bands. They were relatively
nomadic are sometimes referred to as big game hunters as they did
occasionally hunt some of the large species of animals that lived
in this region at the end of the Ice Age, but they also would have
hunted smaller animals and gathered some plant foods. There is some
debate about what caused the extinction of over 30 species, including
the mastodon, mammoth, horse, camel, giant sloth, short faced bear,
dire wolf, giant beaver, and long-horned bison, most of which were
larger than their modern day cousins. Some say it was the rapidly
changing environment following the Ice Age, as the climate grew
warmer and drier, the ice receded, and grasslands and deciduous
forests replaced tundra and boreal forest conditions. Favored environmental
niches were changing and the animals were having difficulty adapting.
However, another new factor was introduced-the PaleoIndians. They
were now hunting these animals, perhaps killing them faster than
they could reproduce. There are even some that suggest diseases
may have contributed to the extinctions as other species moved northward
following the expansion of the warmer climate environmental niches,
bringing pathogens for which the megafauna had little or no resistance.
Most likely, it was a combination of all the above. One of the best
represented sites of this period is at Mastodon State Park, just
south of St. Louis near Kimmswick. The diagnostic Clovis spearpoints
and other tools were found in association with mastodons and other
megafauna.
The next period of development is called
the Archaic. The climate was warmer and drier for the most part,
the glacial masses had retreated and deciduous forests and grasslands
expanded into much of the Midwest, along with a wide range of other
flora and fauna. Human populations increased and settlements were
at least seasonally occupied. Regional diversity and territorialism
became more important. They often made use of natural rockshelters
where available, or built small houses at their base camps or villages
from which they would foray at certain times of the year to establish
campsites to exploit resources as they became available-fishing
and fowling in the floodplain after the spring floods receded, or
gathering nuts in the uplands in the fall. Fish, mussels and waterfowl
were very important in their diet, as were deer, elk and smaller
mammals and other birds, and they gathered nuts, berries, roots
and other plant resources. They also began plant husbandry, growing
domesticated varieties of squash, gourds, erect knotweed, marshelder,
sunflower and lambsquarters. Archaic people also started building
a few mounds in some areas, and they began making ground stone tools,
not just chipped tools. The atlatl, or spearthrower was the primary
weapon, as the bow and arrow would not appear for thousands of years,
and their spearpoints were generally large and well-chipped.
In the American Bottom region, the first
significant occupations were during the Late Archaic, initially
as small base camps, and later as extensive occupations of hunting
and gathering groups. The fairly permanent settlements were on the
higher, more stable clay meander banks and talus slopes.
Following the Archaic was the Woodland period.
In this region, it begins around 600 BC, marked by the introduction
of pottery making and the increased emphasis on building mounds,
mostly for mortuary purposes. During Middle Woodland times (100
BC-AD 350), these mounds often had a central tomb for high status
burials, which were often accompanied by a wide range of exotic
and prestige, goods as well as tools and weapons.
Agriculture intensified and expanded to include
more seed bearing crops, such as maygrass, little barley, tobacco.
Eventually corn, or maize, became an important crop during Late
Woodland times, after A.D. 700. The widespread cultivation of maize
helped foster larger population densities or concentrations, the
production of larger food surpluses, and the development of more
complex political and social organization. The introduction of the
bow and arrow greatly changed the hunting strategies as this powerful
new weapon allowed harvesting game from greater distances with more
accuracy.
The Mississippian period begins to emerge
around AD 800. The community pattern usually included groupings
of houses and other structures arranged around a courtyard, often
with a central post that was sometimes surrounded by pits, and larger
structures, probably communal or ceremonial, to one side or in the
courtyard area. These formal arrangements suggest the emergence
of a ranked form of socio-political organization in the American
Bottom region, and perhaps the appearance of chiefs. The presence
of large communities suggests population increases.
Corn had become an even more important crop,
providing the quantities and surpluses needed to feed larger populations,
but the starchy seed crops discussed earlier and many wild plant
and animal foods still contributed in major ways to the diet. With
this stable food base a foundation was laid upon which the massive
community of Cahokia could be built.
Larger populations could be supported and,
as population numbers and densities increased, societal ordering
became more complex. More well-defined social classes and hierarchies
developed; there was increased specialization and division of labor;
political alliances became more important; trade was highly structured;
conflicts and even warfare between groups and polities increased,
perhaps fueled by competition for resources or territory.
Elaborate ritualism also became increasingly
important. Perhaps the ultimate expression of this at Cahokia was
the construction of a Woodhenge, a circular arrangement of large
cedar posts, with a central observation post. From there, the sun
priest could observe the rising sun on the horizon as it lined up
with certain posts. This calendar could be used to determine the
winter and summer solstices and spring and fall equinoxes, as well
as other important dates in their ritual cycle. There were at least
five Woodhenges built at Cahokia.
During Mississippian, new ceramic forms appeared
with a greater variety of form and style than previously seen, and
gradually the majority of wares were tempered with burned and crushed
mussel shell, mixed with a paste made from local clay outcrops There
was an increase in exotic wares from distant regions, primarily
from the south, most likely used as containers for commodities being
traded rather than the pottery itself being traded. Exchange networks
were well developed and growing, probably under the control of high
ranking personages.
Settlement patterns also changed, and there
was greater variety in community size. During most of the Mississippian
phases, communities outside of Cahokia were small and moundless,
referred to as "homesteads," "farmsteads" or
"hamlets." However, a number of villages of small to moderate
size were scattered throughout the area, some with one or two mounds
that were probably local centers. There seems to be a nucleation
of settlement associated with the Cahokia site and some smaller
administrative centers, mostly identifiable as multiple-mound towns
such as those near the present-day communities of St. Louis, Missouri,
and East St. Louis, Dupo, and Mitchell, Illinois. They were not
all necessarily contemporary, nor were their peak periods of equal
duration. At their inception, some of these communities may have
been equal in power or size to Cahokia, but Cahokia soon outpaced
them and dominated the area for a couple centuries. Cahokia may
have been at its greatest during the Lohmann phase (A.D. 1000-1050),
but the subsequent Stirling phase (A.D. 1050-1150) was also a time
of dense population and elaborate cultural complexity, and Cahokia
rose to dominance as the largest Mississippian site in eastern North
America.
The dominant features of Cahokia then and
now, are the mounds, as many as 120 of them in Cahokia proper. They
were constructed entirely of earth, carried in baskets from Cahokia's
many borrow pits. The mounds come in three forms: platform, conical
and ridgetop. Platform mounds were the most common, serving as elevated
bases for temples, residences of the elite, community storage facilities,
council lodges and other important buildings. The conical mounds
have been interpreted as burial mounds but few have been excavated
and few burials located. The ridgetop mounds seem to mark important
locations along Cahokia's major axes, and those that have been tested
indicate they do have mortuary functions as well. However, most
people were not buried in mounds but in cemeteries; only elite or
ritual burials seem to have mound associations, such as Mound 72
with is elite and numerous mass graves of sacrificed young women.
All mounds examined thus far show evidence of several stages of
construction, perhaps commemorating calendric cycles, the deaths
of leaders or ascent of new ones, or ritual reburial of the mound
in a rite of purification.
A majority of the "downtown" mounds
are clustered around several suggested plazas, the largest being
the 40 acre Grand Plaza, south of Monks Mound, which excavations
have shown to be artificially filled or leveled. It was as important
as the mounds, being the central gathering place for festivals,
rituals and public gatherings. It was the heart of their city.
Population estimates for Cahokia have varied
greatly. However, many modern researchers tend toward conservatism
in conjunction with more recent research and reevaluation of the
earlier data, suggesting that population at its peak was probably
10-20,000, sometime between A.D. 1050-1150. Cahokia had the largest
known concentration of prehistoric peoples north of Mexico, and
was substantially larger than any other Mississippian community,
the largest of which are usually referred to as "temple towns,"
and by virtue of its scale I believe "city" is an appropriate
term for Cahokia.
Cahokia was involved in a network of exchange.
Its proximity to the confluence of the Missouri, Mississippi and
Illinois rivers was probably instrumental in its development as
a gateway center. These "highways" for canoe travel and
trade gave Cahokia access to the resources provided by the drainages
of these great waterways and their many tributaries and the different
resources and environments associated with them.
The rise of Cahokia to dominance is in part
related to its role in a number of exchange webs that operated both
locally and externally. Many exotic materials were being brought
into Cahokia. Most abundant was marine shell originating from the
Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic, used mostly for ornament, such
as beads, pendants, gorgets, and decoration for clothing. Vast quantities
have been recovered from Cahokia and surrounding sites, and possible
workshop areas have been identified where the raw material was processed
into finished goods. The acquisition of marine shell was probably
under the control of certain elites at Cahokia and other administrative
centers, who may have served as patrons to craftsmen who fashioned
the shell into ornaments and these elites would then control the
redistribution.
Copper was also imported, mostly from the
area around Lake Superior. Almost pure copper nuggets were cold-hammered
into ceremonial ornaments and specialized tools. Sheets of mica
from the southern Appalachians were often cut and fashioned into
ornaments. Other minerals, such as lead, hematite and ocher were
imported, mostly from southeastern Missouri, and primarily processed
to make paint pigments, or an occasional rare ornament. The majority
(around 80 percent) of the chert (flint) for making tools and weapons
came from quarries and outcrops south of St. Louis, and the rest
came from several sources in Monroe and Union counties in Illinois.
Salt brines were extracted from springs in numerous locations in
southern Illinois and eastern Missouri, and evaporated in large
pans, and the resulting salt was used in cooking foods and was widely
traded.
THE DECLINE OF CAHOKIA: ENVIRONMENTAL
AND CULTURAL IMPACTS
What caused Cahokia's demise? There is no
single cause or answer, but a combination of factors are believed
to have been involved.
A population of any size has to be fed and,
considering the estimated size of Cahokia, this would have been
a major undertaking. Massive amounts of land would have to have
been allocated for agricultural fields. This would mean clearing
many acres of grasses, trees and brush for areas of preferred soils,
possibly resulting in siltation from run-off into the various waterways,
impacting wildlife as habitats were altered or destroyed, and affecting
the availability of certain faunal resources. Also, hundreds of
years of farming may have exhausted the nutrients in the soils,
reducing yields.
Much of the land surrounding Cahokia may
have been essentially deforested to satisfy the need for firewood
and construction timber, which came mostly from the slopes, valleys
and uplands of the bluffs to the east. An estimated 20,000 logs
were needed for each of the four stockade wall constructions, which
are estimated to have been 1.75 miles (2800 m.) long. Large areas
of forest would be stripped of suitable trees, not only affecting
forest cover but also the associated forest flora and fauna which
were important to Cahokians. The construction of thousands of houses
and countless fires burning for hundreds of years were also major
impacts. It has been suggested that increased cutting of bluff forests
would elevate the amount of erosional runoff and resulting siltation
of bottomland streams. In turn, this would lead to increases in
localized flooding episodes which would endanger areas of cropland.
Also, a reduction in local resources meant
the Cahokians had to travel greater distances to obtain what they
needed. There would be subsequent increased competition, perhaps
even conflict, between the regional polities for the remaining resources.
The presence of the Stockade is indicative of socio-political changes
and indicates regional stresses had escalated. Built during the
period from A.D. 1150-1250, the four successive Stockades were primarily
defensive features--their ultimate purpose was to protect or defend
the central, sacred precinct of the community. From the bastions,
warriors could launch arrows at attackers, but the identity of the
enemy is uncertain, or if they ever attacked. Perhaps the increased
competition for the existing and less abundant resources led to
interregional conflicts, or maybe it was more intraregional, as
local polities became more autonomous and less dependent on Cahokia,
occasionally massing to threaten or raid the once more powerful
center.
Within the walled area were Monks Mound and
17 other mounds, the Grand Plaza, and most likely the residences
of the ruling class (although excavations have yet to be conducted
to verify the latter). Admittance was probably limited to those
who lived there or those who had business with them, or for the
general population on ceremonial occasions and for public gatherings.
Thus, the wall had a secondary purpose, as a social barrier. We
are not sure who got to live within, but they were probably affiliated
by kinship with the paramount chief. Besides the general population
residential areas, there were also definite elite areas outside
the wall, but at this time it is not clear how they were distinguished
from those within.
Climate change occurred after AD 1200, characterized
by increased incidents of late spring and early fall frosts, which
would affect cultivated plants and result in a shorter growing season.
This was apparently accompanied by a shifting or less reliable rainy
season, leading to a greater frequency of moisture extremes such
as drought and flood. Couple this factor with the aforementioned
siltation of local streams associated with deforestation and cultivation,
and flooding from heavy summer thunderstorms would have had disastrous
effects on bottomland maize fields. It is interesting to note that
during the Moorehead Phase (A.D. 1150-1250) at Cahokia and much
of the American Bottom, there is a decline in population and most
settlement is concentrated on the slightly higher elevations, suggestive
of wetter conditions and higher water tables. There is also a population
dispersal and increase in Moorehead Phase settlements into the uplands.
It is possible that the spread of bison into
the region may have affected Cahokia. With waning local resources,
the appeal of bison hunting west of the Mississippi may have encouraged
some to leave and pursue this resource, if not from Cahokia itself,
at least from some of the surrounding settlements. Bison do not
appear to have been in Illinois until just before European contact,
possibly the 1500s, and no remains have been found at Cahokia.
Other factors which have been suggested as
contributing to, but not causing, Cahokia's decline, include nutritional
and health problems. There is some evidence that Mississippians
elsewhere, and presumably at Cahokia, suffered more health problems
than their predecessors. The spread of diseases may have been due
in part to the release of soil borne organisms stirred up by the
intensive digging for agricultural fields and mound construction,
but the greater concentration of populations living in close proximity
to each other increased the incidence of contagion.
It was probably a combination of some or
all of the above, coupled with economic and political degradation,
that sealed Cahokia's fate. It could never be what it once was.
Ultimately Cahokia may have collapsed under its own weight. There
is no direct evidence for any disaster or traumatic event; it was
a gradual process that accelerated during the 13th century and by
A.D. 1400 Cahokia was essentially abandoned. The population gradually
dispersed as small groups, probably into the local area at first,
especially the uplands, then gradually to other areas. They may
have established new cultural identities or been assimilated into
existing groups, perhaps where they had kin ties.
Another cultural tradition known as Oneota,
which may have its roots in Mississippian, had begun to emerge around
A.D. 1100 in the Upper Mississippi River Valley and spread into
the American Bottom region by the 1400s. Only a few scattered sites
have been found locally and it is not well understood at this time,
but seems to have been an intrusion into this area. Oneota has distinctive
tool types, structures and ceramic decorations that differ from
those of the Mississippians. To the west and north it is believed
that the Iowa, Missouri, Osage, Otoe, Winnebago and a few other
later tribal groups are descendants of Oneota peoples. It is not
known who the direct descendants of the Cahokia Mississippians are,
as oral traditions of later groups do not show direct ties to this
once great and unique community.

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