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Poverty Point
Ellerbe, Jenny

Poverty Point

revealing the forgotten city : a UNESCO World Heritage Site

Louisiana State University Press (2015)
9780807160213
| Hardback
Dewey 976.3
LC Classification E99.P84 .E55
LC Control No. 2014037146

Subject

  • Indians Of North America - Antiquities. - Southern States
  • Poverty Point Culture
  • Poverty Point State Park (La.) - Antiquities

Plot

The settlement of Poverty Point, occupied from about 1700 to 1100 BC and once the largest city in North America, stretches across 345 acres in northeastern Louisiana. The structural remains of this ancient site-its earthen mounds, semicircular ridges, and vacant plaza-intrigue visitors as a place of artistic inspiration as well as an archaeological puzzle. Poverty Point: Revealing the Forgotten City delves his enduring piece of Louisiana's cultural heritage through personal introspection and scientific exploration. With stunning black and white photography by Jenny Ellerbe and engrossing text by archaeologist Diana M. Greenlee, this imaginative and informative book explores in full Poverty Point's Late Archaic culture and its monumental achievements. Ellerbe's landscapes and commentary reflect the questions and mysteries inspired by her many visits to the site, and Greenlee delves into the most recent archaeological findings, explaining what past excavations have revealed about the work involved in creating its mounds and the lives of the people who built them. The conversation between artist and archaeologist also presents some of the still-unanswered questions about this place: What was the city's function in the ancient world? How did its people acquire their stone materials, some of which originated over a thousand miles from Poverty Point? Recognized by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site in 2014, Poverty Point remains a historical treasure with many secrets still buried in its past.

Personal

Location E99.P84 .E55 ELL 2015
Index 4362
Added Date Oct 02, 2017 19:57:04
Modified Date Feb 14, 2018 23:59:35