Poverty Point |
In a rural part of northeast Louisiana,
approximately 25 miles from Lake Providence (near the small town of Epps)
stands the largest and most important earthworks in the Western
Hemisphere. The Poverty Point mounds were built in 1500 B.C., which
pre-dates the Parthenon in Greece, the Great Wall of China, and the
Colosseum in Rome.
The earthworks are situated on Bayou Macon (pronounced 'mason'), which separates East and West Carroll Parishes. The Native Americans used the Bayou as a means of transportation. They were also able to ship in supplies and sell their goods to other parts of the territory.
Bayou Macon today creates the border between East and West Carroll Parishes. |
The inhabitants of Poverty Point used the natural resources that were plentiful in the Mississippi floodplain. Their culture is considered a pre-agricultural society, but the amount of man power and the thousands of hours of work that it took to construct the earthworks suggests a highly evolved society, living and surviving together. The earthworks were built by the Poverty Point people, digging and carrying thousands of loads of dirt by hand in woven baskets. |
Poverty Point's "central construction
consists of six rows of concentric ridges, which at |
During excavations, hundreds of personal articles were recovered. Bird effigies, stone tools, spears, and gems that are not native to Louisiana have been found, along with hundreds of round, clay balls. Historians believe that these clay balls were used for cooking. The balls were heated in a fire and then placed in a pit, which created an oven for cooking meat and other foods. |
Today, Poverty Point is a popular tourist
attraction and a site for archeological study. |