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Castalian Springs Mound Site : ウィキペディア英語版
Castalian Springs Mound Site

The Castalian Springs Mound Site (40SU14)〔 (also known as Bledsoe's Lick Mound and Cheskiki Mound) is a Mississippian culture archaeological site located near the small unincorporated community of Castalian Springs in Sumner County, Tennessee. The site was first excavated in the 1890s and again as recently as the 2005 to 2011 archaeological field school led by Dr. Kevin E. Smith. A number of important finds have been associated with the site, most particularly several examples of Mississippian stone statuary and the ''Castalian Springs shell gorget'' held by the National Museum of the American Indian.
==Site==
The Castalian Springs site is the largest of four Mississippian mound centers on the eastern edge of the Nashville basin, located on a flood terrace of a tributary creek of the Cumberland River.〔 It was occupied from 1100 to 1450 CE,〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Bledsoe's Lick Historical Association )〕 with the main occupation dating to 1200-1325 CE. The palisaded village and surrounding habitation area was approximately in size and consisted of a dozen platform mounds, a burial mound, plaza and a number of dwellings and civic structures.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Historical Background of Bledsoe's Lick )〕 The site was first noted in the early 1820s by Ralph E.W. Earl, who did extensive digging at the site. He described a low earthen embankment with raised earthen towers enclosing , the remnants of what is now known to have been a wooden palisade. Earl also described the principal mound ( Mound 1) inside the enclosure as being a compound structure consisting of a rectangular platform long by wide and to in height and aligned in an east-west direction. On the western end of the platform was a conical shaped mound with a flattened top, approximately to in height.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Castalian Springs Mound )〕 On the southern side of the mound was a plaza, which was bordered on its eastern edge by a in diameter tall burial mound (Mound 2) and on its western edge by another large platform mound (Mound 3). Outside of the palisade to southwest on the banks of Lick Creek was a stone mound (Mound 4) in diameter and , similar examples of which have been found at the Beasley Mounds and Sellars Indian Mound sites. Over the years since Earls first description Euro-Americans have plowed the area for agricultural purposes and consequently the main platform mound and a few raised impressions are all that are still visible of the embankment and the 12 platform mounds once contained within it. Scattered throughout the area archaeologists have also found stone box graves, mortuary caves and other features thought to be associated with the Castalian Springs site. The karst terrain of the area produced numerous small caves, one of which is located a few hundred yards west of the Castalian Springs site. Known locally as the "Cave of the Skulls" (40SU126), this small cave was explored by Myer at sometime during one of his three excavation of the site.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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