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Leake Mounds

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Founded
  
300 BCE

Architectural details
  
Number of temples: 3

Period
  
Woodland period

Abandoned
  
1500 CE

Region
  
Bartow County, Georgia

Leake Mounds wwwbartowdigcomimagesLeake20significance20pa

Location
  
Cartersville, Georgia, Bartow County, Georgia,  USA

Periods
  
Middle Woodland, Lamar Phase

Cultures
  
Swift Creek Culture, South Appalachian Mississippian culture

Kayaking etowah river water trail leake mounds


Leake Mounds (9BR2) is an important archaeological site in Bartow County, Georgia built and used by peoples of the Swift Creek Culture. The site is 2 miles (3.2 km) west of Etowah Mounds on the Etowah River, although it predates that site by hundreds of years. Excavation of nearly 50,000 square feet (4,600 m2) on the site showed that Leake Mounds was one of the most important Middle Woodland period site in this area from around 300 BCE to 650 CE, a center with ties throughout the Southeast and Midwest. It was abandoned about 650 CE and not occupied again until by different peoples near the end of the Mississippian culture period, about 1500.

Contents

The site includes at least three major mounds and a large semi-circular moat/ditch. While much of the mounds were razed to be used as road fill for the expansion of the Georgia State Route 113 and Georgia State Route 61 in the 1940s, significant portions of the site remain. Several sites on nearby Ladds Mountain were integrally associated with Leake, including Shaw Mound, a stone burial mound; Indian Fort, a stone wall enclosure; and Ladds Cave, a large cave.

Examples of a type of pottery decoration consisting of a diamond-shaped checks found at Leake Mounds are also known from Hopewell sites in Ohio (such as Seip, Rockhold, Harness, and Turner), the Mann Site in southern Indiana, as well as other sites in the South such as the Miner's Creek site, 9HY98, and Mandeville Site in Georgia, and the Yearwood site in southern Tennessee.

Walking tour clues about the past


References

Leake Mounds Wikipedia