Mound at the site
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Location | Ballard County, Kentucky, USA |
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Region | Ballard County, Kentucky |
Coordinates | 36°58′15.67″N 89°5′34.30″W / 36.9710194°N 89.0928611°W |
History | |
Founded | 1000 CE |
Abandoned | 1350 |
Cultures | Mississippian culture |
Site notes | |
Architecture | |
Architectural styles | platform mounds, plazas |
Architectural details | Number of temples: |
Wickliffe Site
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NRHP Reference # | 84000789 |
Added to NRHP | December 08, 1984 |
Responsible body: State |
Wickliffe Mounds (15 BA 4) is a prehistoric, Mississippian culture archaeological site located in Ballard County, Kentucky, just outside the town of Wickliffe, about 3 miles (4.8 km) from the confluence of the Ohio and Mississippi rivers. Archaeological investigations have linked the site with others along the Ohio River in Illinois and Kentucky as part of the Angel Phase of Mississippian culture. Wickliffe Mounds is controlled by the State Parks Service, which operates a museum at the site for interpretation of the ancient community. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, it is also a Kentucky Archeological Landmark and State Historic Site.
The town at Wickliffe Mounds is located on a bluff above the Ohio River, and was both a ceremonial and administrative center of an important chiefdom in the Mississippian culture. At its peak it had a population probably reaching into the hundreds.
The site is dominated by two large platform mounds, with at least eight smaller mounds scattered around a central plaza area. Agriculture was based on the cultivation of maize as a staple, which was stored and supported denser populations and stratification of society. The Mississippian culture peoples had trade with societies as far away as North Carolina, Wisconsin, and the Gulf of Mexico. As in most other Mississippian chiefdoms, the community of Wickliffe had a social hierarchy ruled by a hereditary chief.