Sims site

Last updated
Sims site
16 SC 21
USA Louisiana location map.svg
Archaeological site icon (red).svg
Location within Louisiana today
Location Paradis, Louisiana,  Saint Charles Parish, Louisiana, Flag of the United States.svg  USA
Region Saint Charles Parish, Louisiana
Coordinates 29°51′17.46″N90°27′11.52″W / 29.8548500°N 90.4532000°W / 29.8548500; -90.4532000
History
Founded850 CE
Abandoned1700
Cultures Coastal Coles Creek culture, Plaquemine Mississippian culture
Site notes
Excavation dates1978, 1979, 1980
Responsible body: private

The Sims site (16SC2), also known as Sims Place site, is an archaeological site located in Saint Charles Parish, Louisiana, near the town of Paradis. The location is a multi-component mound and village complex with platform mounds and extensive midden deposits. The site habitations are divided into three periods. It was first inhabited about 800 CE by peoples of the Coastal Coles Creek culture. By 1100 CE the culture of the site had transitioned into the Mississippianized Plaquemine culture that lasted until 1450 CE. A little later was a Late Mississippian/protohistoric period that lasted from 1500 until about 1700 or 1800. [1] [2] [3]

Contents

Site description

Connection of Sims site to other Mississippian peoples Gulf Coast Shell Tempered Ceramics HRoe 2012.jpg
Connection of Sims site to other Mississippian peoples

The large site is located along both banks of a small stream known as Bayou Saut d'Ours and at one time had five to six earthen mounds, but only two mounds and the remains of a third mound are visible today. Mound A is topped by a historic period cemetery. It was one of the largest if not the largest site in the vicinity during the time of its occupation and likely served as a local civic and ceremonial center as well as being a center of trade. The inhabitants traded their local marine resources, including such locally produced items as shells and shell beads, to peoples located further up the Lower Mississippi River valley. [1] [3]

The local use of Plaquemine culture pottery grog tempering for pottery and the gradual adoption of shell tempered pottery associated with other areas has allowed archaeologists to track trade interactions with the people of the Sims site and peoples from these other areas. During the second occupation period trade expanded, and the local ceramics show connections to Lower Mississippi Valley peoples and Plaquemine peoples located near modern-day Barataria Bay and to peoples of the Pensacola culture, located on the upper Gulf Coast near what is modern-day Biloxi, Mississippi. This period, between 1100 and 1450 CE, was during the initial phases of occupation and expansion of the Bottle Creek site, the major center of the Pensacola culture. This period also sees the most significant Plaquemine connections at the site. The next phase sees increasing contact with Mississipianized Plaquemine peoples from as far up the Mississippi River as the Baton Rouge area, as well as continued interaction with the Mississippian Pensacola peoples. [3]

See also

Related Research Articles

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pensacola culture</span> Archaeological culture in the southeastern US

The Pensacola culture was a regional variation of the Mississippian culture along the Gulf Coast of the United States that lasted from 1100 to 1700 CE. The archaeological culture covers an area stretching from a transitional Pensacola/Fort Walton culture zone at Choctawhatchee Bay in Florida to the eastern side of the Mississippi River Delta near Biloxi, Mississippi, with the majority of its sites located along Mobile Bay in the Mobile-Tensaw River Delta. Sites for the culture stretched inland, north into the southern Tombigee and Alabama River valleys, as far as the vicinity of Selma, Alabama.

The Atchafalaya Basin Mounds is an archaeological site originally occupied by peoples of the Coastal Coles Creek and Plaquemine cultures beginning around 980 CE, and by their presumed historic period descendants, the Chitimacha, during the 18th century. It is located in St. Mary Parish, Louisiana on the northern bank of Bayou Teche at its confluence with the Lower Atchafalaya River. It consists of several earthen platform mounds and a shell midden situated around a central plaza. The site was visited by Clarence Bloomfield Moore in 1913.

References

  1. 1 2 Mann, Rob (2006). "Recent investigations at the Sims site (16SC2)" (PDF). Newsletter of the Louisiana Archaeological Society. Louisiana Archaeological Society. 34 (1): 15–16. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-10-23.
  2. Davis, Dave D.; Kidder, Tristram R.; Barondess, David A. (1983). "Reduction analysis of simple bone industries : An example from the Louisiana zone". Archaeology of Eastern North America. Eastern States Archeological Federation. 11: 98–108. JSTOR   40914225.
  3. 1 2 3 Weinstein, Richard A.; Dumas, Ashley A. (2008). "The spread of shell-tempered ceramics along the northern coast of the Gulf of Mexico" (PDF). Southeastern Archaeology. 27 (2). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-04-25.