Raffman Site

The Raffman Site ( 16 MA 20 ) is an archaeological site located in Madison Parish, Louisiana and constructed between 700 and 1200 CE.[1] It has components from the Tchefuncte culture and the Coles Creek culture, whose main period of occupation was during the Balmoral Phase(1000-1100 CE) of the Tensas Basin and Natchez Bluffs chronology and which was virtually deserted by the end of the Preston Phase (1100-1200 CE).[2]

Raffman Site
16 MA 20
Diagram showing the arrangement of plaza and platform mounds at site
Location within Louisiana today
LocationWaverly, Louisiana, Madison Parish, Louisiana,  USA
RegionMadison Parish, Louisiana
Coordinates32°28′23.92″N 91°20′46.97″W
History
Founded500 BCE
Abandoned1200 CE
PeriodsBalmoral Phase
CulturesTchefuncte culture, Coles Creek culture
Site notes
Excavation dates1981, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2004
ArchaeologistsTristram R. Kidder, Lori Roe
Responsible body: private

Description

The site is quite large with nine platform mounds arranged around a central plaza. The plaza is 90 metres (300 ft) by 100 metres (330 ft), with Mounds A, B, C, D, E, and G closely crowded around it. Mounds H and I are located adjacent to Mound A just to the southeast of the plaza. Located on the southern boundary of the plaza is Mound A, the largest at the site. It is 12 metres (39 ft) in height and 75 metres (246 ft) by 100 metres (330 ft) at its base.[2]

Chronology

Testing of the site revealed Early Woodland period deposits from the Tchefuncte period (600 BCE to 200 CE) underlying the Coles Creek period mounds (700 to 1200 CE).[3] After the Early Woodland phase the site was the site of Middle and early Late Woodland occupations. Sometime after 700 CE the inhabitants of the site began erecting large flat and conical mounds. By 1000 CE during the Coles Creek period a massive construction effort succeeded in restructuring the plaza and further mounds were added to the group. About 1200 CE the site was almost entirely abandoned.[4]

Excavations

Raffman is first mentioned as an archaeological site in 1954 by noted archaeologists Philip Phillips and Robert Neitzel. Except for some mapping and shovel tests in 1981 by Williams, Belmont and Kardish, investigations over the fifty years were sparse.[2] Beginning in the late 1990s the site was excavated over multiple seasons by archaeologist Tristam R. Kidder in 1998 and 2000 and then by Lori Roe and Kidder in 2002 and 2004.[3]

See also

References

  1. Kidder, Tristram R. (2004). "Plazas as architecture : An example from the Raffman Site, Northeast Louisiana". American Antiquity. 69 (3): 514–532. doi:10.2307/4128404. JSTOR 4128404.
  2. Lori Roe (2007). "Coles Creek antecedents of Plaquemine mound construction : Evidence from the Raffman Site". In Rees, Mark A.; Livingood, Patrick C. (eds.). Plaquemine Archaeology. University of Alabama Press. pp. 20–37.
  3. Kidder, Tristram R; Roe, Lori; Schilling, Timothy M. "Early Woodland settlement and mound building in the Upper Tensas Basin, Northeast Louisiana". Retrieved 2011-10-21.
  4. "Raffman Project". Washington University in St. Louis. Archived from the original on 2010-07-23. Retrieved 2011-10-21.
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