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Ceremonial Shell Cup
Spiro Mounds, Oklahoma
1300CE
Decorated with symbols of the Birdman. Transformation motifs. Man and animals as cousins/brothers. Ability to shift between the two.
Welk Shell Cup - buried with the dead.
Decoration similiar to MesoAmericans - balancing earth and sky. |
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Poverty Point
1700CE
Tennesse
Oldest, intact ancient sit.
Bird imagery, huge labor force.
Lapidary Industry - working of precious stones |
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Serpent Mound
Alabama
Earth diety - seemed to be constructed for overhead viewer
Precurser to Hopewell
Small burial houses inside mound, then burned until mound could be built over it. Possibly an elite family burial.
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Mask with Antlers
Spiro Mounds, Oklahoma
1200-1350CE
shell inlay |
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Cahokia
1200CE
St. Louis
Largest mound in the world, city bigger than London.
Monks Mound - circle of poles for equinox
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Femal Figurine Tilling the Jaguar-Serpent Earth
Cahokia Mounds, St. Louis
1100CE
Relationship to Earth and Woman. Woman's power over plants |
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Okvik Eskimo
Old Bering Sea Culture
200BCE-100CE
Ivory woman. Armless, fertility amulettes.
Circle and dot motifs (tatoos or clothing) |
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Zoomorphic Rake
Ipiutak, Point Spencer, Alaska
450-850CE
Ivory. Bear, seal, and human motifs.
May be link to Japanese/Chinese culture |
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Hole in the floor symbolizing underworld. |
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Pueblo Bonito
Chaco Canyon, New Mexico
850-1150CE
Converged at this site (trade, ceremony, etc)
Entire compound aligned with the skies. |
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Mimbres Pottery
1200CE
'Kill hole' - Rendered the vessel unusable in this world, but implies a spiritual use.
Killing the pot ritual: Punch hole in bottom to be purely spiritual |
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