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Did a Mega-Flood Doom Ancient American City of Cahokia?
One thousand years ago, on a floodplain of the Mississippi River near modern-day St. Louis, the massive Native American city known today as Cahokia sprang suddenly into existence. Three hundred years later it was virtually deserted.
The reasons for Cahokia's quick emergence and precipitous decline have been among the greatest mysteries in American prehistory, but new research suggests a possible cause of the city's demise: a catastrophic flood. NatGeo
A team led by Samuel E. Munoz, a doctoral student at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, reported at the 2013 conference of the Geological Society of America that their study of sediment cores from a lake adjacent to the site of Cahokia reveals calamitous flooding of the area around 1200 C.E., just as the city was reaching its apex of population and power.
While analyzing cores from Horseshoe Lake, an oxbow lake that separated from the Mississippi River some 1,700 years ago, Munoz's team discovered a layer of silty clay 19 centimeters (7.5 inches) thick deposited by a massive ancient flood.
punkinworks10
reply to post by JohnnyCanuck
That's very interesting JC,
It must have been one heck of a flood to force them away. Or it might have been of factors with a social component, ie rebellion against the elite combined with a disastrous flood. One would think that they were no strangers to large floods.
dlbott
punkinworks10
reply to post by JohnnyCanuck
That's very interesting JC,
It must have been one heck of a flood to force them away. Or it might have been of factors with a social component, ie rebellion against the elite combined with a disastrous flood. One would think that they were no strangers to large floods.
No flood would do it, quickly too. Think about the time and the type of shelter and what struggle life was already without dealing with flood. It is possible the Buffalo herds took massive hit during large flood event. If the event also happened during cold weather the results would be exponentially worse.
Everything for people, ancient native Americans, all across a wide area were dependant on the herds of Buffalo. Society rose and fell with food and water. The other side of this coin is drought. This too has a huge impact on society.
I can easily see where a great flood could have caused the demise of a great city and culture.
The Bot
Excavations in the Midwest have turned up evidence of a massive ancient fire that likely marked “the beginning of the end” for what was once America’s largest city, archaeologists say.
The digs took place in southern Illinois, just meters away from the interstate highways that carve their way through and around modern-day St. Louis. But 900 years ago, this was the heart of Greater Cahokia, a civilization whose trade routes and religious influence stretched from the Great Lakes to the Deep South, and whose culture shaped the lifeways of the Plains and Southern Indians.
Here, researchers with the Illinois State Archaeological Survey have discovered a widespread layer of charcoal and burned artifacts among the foundations of ancient structures — evidence of a great and sudden conflagration that consumed perhaps as many as 100 buildings.
While there’s only “circumstantial evidence” as to what caused the fire, the researchers say, what’s even more striking is that the event seems to mark an ominous turning point in Cahokian culture.
The structures destroyed by the fire were never rebuilt, the excavations showed. Meanwhile, other large, important buildings, like distinctive ceremonial “lodges” or houses for local elites, stopped appearing altogether throughout the region. And soon after the fire, a great palisade wall went up around the nearby city center — known to archaeologists as Downtown Cahokia — most likely for protection.
“My colleagues and I believe that we have pinpointed a major turning point in ancient Cahokia’s history,” writes Dr. Tim Pauketat, archaeologist at the University of Illinois, in a statement.
“We have found, we think, the beginning of the end of this American Indian city.”