Anna site explained

Anna site
22 AD 500
Map Type:USA Mississippi
Coordinates:31.6954°N -91.3498°W
Location:Natchez, MississippiAdams County, Mississippi United States
Region:Adams County, Mississippi
Built:1200
Abandoned:1500
Epochs:Anna phase
Cultures:Plaquemine culture
Excavations:1924, 1997
Archaeologists:Warren K. Moorehead, James A. Ford, Jesse D. Jennings, John L. Cotter
Architectural Styles:platform mound
Architectural Details:Number of temples: 8
Embed:yes
Anna site
Nrhp Type:nhl
Designated Nrhp Type:September 14, 1993[1]
Added:September 14, 1993
Refnum:93001606
Notes:Responsible body: Private
Precolumbian:yes

The Anna site (22 AD 500) is a prehistoric Plaquemine culture archaeological site located in Adams County, Mississippi, 10miles north of Natchez. It is the type site for the Anna phase (1200 to 1350 CE) of the Natchez Bluffs Plaquemine culture chronology. It was declared a National Historic Landmark on September 14, 1993.[1]

Description

The Anna site is located on a bluff above the Mississippi River, about 10miles north of Natchez, Mississippi. The site consists of eight platform mounds, six of which are situated around a central plaza. The main group of six mounds sits near the bluff, with the largest being Mound 3. It is 50feet in height and sits directly on the edge of the bluff overlooking the river. A ramp runs down the front of this mound onto the plaza area and toward a smaller mound (Mound 5) which is about 300feet away and measures 12feet in height. A small mound (Mound 4) sits adjacent (northeasterly) to Mound 3, just off the plaza. Excavations of this mound have found evidence of a summit structure. Another small mound (Mound 1) sits in a similar position on the southern side of Mound 3. Mound 2 flanks the plaza in between Mound 1 and Mound 5. Mounds 3, 2 and 5 are situated parallel to the plaza area, but Mound 6 is diagonally positioned. Mound 6 also has remnants of a ramp. Two other mounds (Mounds 7 and 8) are situated to the east and northeast of the main group. Deep ravines surround the mounds, and material, including Plaquemine culture pottery, is scattered in the area.

History

The construction of the Anna site began c. 1200, corresponding to the beginning of the interaction among various Lower and Middle Mississippi cultures, leading to the formation of the Plaquemine culture.[1] There were minor occupations at the site but the most significant period of occupation at the site starts during the Gordon phase 1000–1200 of the Coles Creek period (700–1200). Mound construction may have begun during this period but had definitely begun by the succeeding Anna phase (1200 to 1350) and continued through the Foster phase (1350–1500) and Emerald phase (1500 to 1680). This 300-year period saw the transformation of the site into a regionally significant multi-mound center, possibly ruled over by a burgeoning hereditary elite class. The site was occupied until c. 1500.[1]

There is no indication that the site was later reoccupied. The site was excavated in 1924 by archaeologists Warren K. Moorehead and Calvin S. Brown. James A. Ford, Jesse D. Jennings and John L. Cotter also worked at the site at different times over the next fifty years. The site was recommended by both Ford and Jennings to the State of Mississippi for purchase and future excavation and as a property for an archaeological museum, but the recommendations were not followed through. Cotter's 1951 excavations and analysis of the site were important in establishing the phases for the Natchez Bluffs chronology. The Gulf Coast Survey and the Alabama Museum of Natural History conducted joint excavations in 1997 and reaffirmed the previous chronological placement of the site.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Anna Site . 2007-10-13. National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service.