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Hardin County
Attractions...
     
      

Shiloh Indian Mounds - National
Historic Landmark
Route
1 Box 9 •
Shiloh, TN 38376
• (800)552-3866
www.nps.gov/shil
About 800 years ago, a town occupied the high
Tennessee River Bluff at the eastern edge of the Shiloh Plateau.
Archaeologists refer to the society centered at Shiloh as a “chiefdom”.
On a bluff overlooking the Tennessee River, six platform mounds
surrounded by over three dozen individual house mounds and encircling
palisade make up the finest surviving Mississippian Moundbuilder village
in the Tennessee Valley. This prehistoric culture, which reached the
height of its influence around A. D. 1200, is today interpreted at the
Tennessee River Museum.
Survey
work in the winter of 1933-34 revealed numerous small, round mounds at
the Shiloh site, each about one foot high and ten to twenty feet in
diameter, the remains of wattle-and daub houses. These structures had
walls of vertical posts interlaced with branches (wattle), which were
then coated with a thick layer of clay (daub). Each house had a
fireplace in the center of the floor. A palisade wall, also made of
wattle and dub, protected the site. The early inclusion of the mounds
area within the boundary of the national military park has protected the
site form any modern use. Because the Shiloh site has never been
disturbed by the plow, the daub of collapsed walls still stands as low
rings or mounds. Shiloh is one of the very few places in the eastern
United States where remains of prehistoric houses are still visible on
the ground’s surface.
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