Orr-Herl Mound and Village Site
Orr-Herl Mound and Village Site | |
The village site as seen from Illinois Route 146 | |
37°26′04″N 88°19′39″W / 37.43444°N 88.32750°W / 37.43444; -88.32750 | |
Area | 40 acres (16 ha) |
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NRHP reference No. | 78001151[1] |
Added to NRHP | November 21, 1978 |
The Orr-Herl Mound and Village Site is an archaeological site located along the Ohio River in Hardin County, Illinois, United States. The site consists of a mound, which includes a sizable midden, and the remains of a village. The village was inhabited from roughly 900 to 1500 AD by Mississippian peoples. The site was an important source of fluorspar, which Mississippian peoples used for carvings and beads. The village was likely a manufacturing site for fluorspar items, which were then traded to other villages; this theory is supported by fluorspar artifacts recovered from the Kincaid Site, a Mississippian chiefdom center on the Ohio River in Illinois.[2]
The site was added to the National Register of Historic Places on November 21, 1978.[1]
References
- ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
- ^ Maruszak, Kathleen. National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Orr-Herl Mound and Village Site. National Park Service, 1976-12.
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- List of Mississippian sites
- Timeline of Mississippi valley
Mississippian
American Bottom and Upper Mississippi | |
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Lower Ohio River and Confluence area | |
Middle Ohio River | |
Tennessee and Cumberland | |
Central and Lower Mississippi |
Mississippian
- Adamson
- Avery
- Beaverdam Creek
- Bell Field Mound
- Bessemer
- Biltmore
- Blair
- Bussell Island
- Chauga
- Chiaha
- Chota
- Citico
- Coosa
- Dallas phase
- Dyar
- Etowah
- Garden Creek
- Hoojah Branch
- Irene
- Jere Shine
- Joara
- Joe Bell
- King
- Lamar
- Lamar phase
- Liddell
- Little Egypt
- Long Swamp
- Mabila
- Mandeville
- McMahan
- Moccasin Bend
- Moundville
- Mouse Creek phase
- Mulberry
- Muscogee (Creek)
- Nacoochee
- Nikwasi
- Ocmulgee
- Park Mound
- Pisgah phase
- Punk Rock Shelter
- Rembert
- Roods Landing
- Rucker's Bottom
- Savannah
- Shiloh
- Sixtoe
- Summerour
- Taskigi
- Tomotley
- Toqua
- Town Creek
- Waddells Mill Pond
- Wilbanks
Mississippian
Mississippian
cultures
Oneota | |
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Fort Ancient culture |
Agriculture |
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Artwork | |
Languages | |
Religion |
- Related topics
- Chevron bead
- Clarksdale bell
- Mound Builders
- de Soto Expedition
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