Gee's Slough Mound Group
Gee's Slough Mound Group | |
The "Gees Slough" Effigy Mound of New Lisbon, WI. This form is reportedly the Water Panther | |
Nearest city | New Lisbon, Wisconsin |
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Area | 2 acres (0.81 ha) |
Built | 0300 |
NRHP Reference # | 78000108[1] |
Added to NRHP | March 8, 1978 |
The Gee's Slough Group of Indian Mounds, located just outside the city of New Lisbon, Wisconsin, are placed on the US National Register of Historic Places. The New Lisbon Area was a winter gathering place for the Woodland Culture Indians who are considered the ancestors to the Ho-Chunk (Winnebago) tribe.
Conical mounds ranging from several meters to over 20 meters in diameter were first constructed in Wisconsin by Woodland tradition cultures as early as 400 BC. Conical mounds usually were constructed as receptacles for the dead and may represent family or lineage burial tombs. These mounds were built by cultures of the Early Woodland stage (500–100 BC), the Middle Woodland stage (100 BC–AD 500) and the Late Woodland stage (AD 500–AD 1300).
During the Middle Woodland stage, mound building cultures participated in long-distance trade and exchange in order to obtain materials from as far away as the Gulf Coast of Mexico and the Great Plains. The cultures also began to experiment with horticulture by growing a variety of domestic and imported Mesoamerican plants.
During the Late Woodland stage, the preceding elaborate trade system declined. Populations subsisted on a corn, beans, and squash agriculture, supplemented with hunting and gathering in the southern part of the state and a hunting and gathering strategy to the north.
Late Woodland stage mound building included the construction of effigy-(animal-) shaped mounds for the burial of the dead.
References
- ↑ National Park Service (2010-07-09). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.