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8th November 03:02
External User
Posts: 1
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Listeros,
Archaeologists are digging at a Calusa mound at Brown's Mound Complex in Pineland, Florida. They are investigating Mound 5 at the site. The Calusa were the dominant tribe of south Florida when the Spanish arrived. They received tribute from as far away as the Keys and Cape Canaveral. So far, they have excavated lots of Belle Glade pottery made by people from Lake Okeechobee. This shows the Calusa were trading with and possibly controlling populations beyond their home in the 8th and 9th centuries. Evidence of the period of drought known as the Vandal Minimum are being found at Mound 5. Smaller shells like conchs and whelks are being found; very few oysters, since the oyster beds were dying; duck bones, which the Calusa did not normally eat. Ducks were being forced south into Calusa territory by way of colder winters during this period. The Calusa formed as a tribe between 500 BCE and 500 CE. They were making hafted shell tools, large sedentary populations and eating lots of fish. Not a lot is known about their origins. Did they arrive late to this area or are they related to earlier paleo-indian groups in the area? The News-Press of Ft. Myers has the story here; http://www.news-press.com/article/20...022/1002/RSS01 A tiny URL; http://fwd4.me/2wX Mike Ruggeri Mike Ruggeri's Moundbuilders/Ancient Southwest News and Links http://tinyurl.com/b5mgtv |
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