Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Harrell Site

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NRHP Reference #
  
66000825

Area
  
4 ha

Nearest city
  
South Bend, Texas

Designated NHL
  
July 19, 1964

Added to NRHP
  
15 October 1966

Location
  
Young County, Texas, USA

Harrell site


The Harrell Site, also known as the M.D. Harrell Site, is a Native American archeological site near South Bend in southern Young County, Texas. The site was discovered in 1937 as a result of survey work for the area to be inundated by the Possum Kingdom Lake. The site occupies the first and second terraces above the Brazos River's floodplain. Archeological investigation began in 1938 as a Work Projects Administration and University of Texas Statewide Archeological Survey. The site documents a Plains Indian agricultural village, and was first excavated in 1938-39. The site contains artifacts from the Late Prehistoric period, approximately 1200 AD to 1600 AD, including a variety of chipped stone points and scrapers. Fired earthenware bowls and jars have also been found.

Contents

The site contains numerous hearths and more than one hundred burial sites, suggesting a settled population. Excavations have also found evidence of mass graves, scalpings, and bodies with other signs of murder and mutilation such as dismemberment and arrow wounds dating back around 1000 - 1500 A.D., leading archaeologists to believe the area was sought after because of its access to water and fertile farmland. The site is still under excavation today.

Harrell site


References

Harrell Site Wikipedia