1 / 6

Poverty Point: An Economic Legacy Long Distance Trade

Louisiana History Unit 4: Early Peoples of Louisiana and a Meeting of Different Worlds Activity 1: Ancient Economics (GLEs: 13 , 51 , 78 ) From the 2008 LA Comprehensive Curriculum . Poverty Point: An Economic Legacy Long Distance Trade.

whitney
Download Presentation

Poverty Point: An Economic Legacy Long Distance Trade

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Louisiana HistoryUnit 4: Early Peoples of Louisiana and a Meeting of Different WorldsActivity 1: Ancient Economics (GLEs: 13, 51, 78) From the 2008 LA Comprehensive Curriculum

  2. Poverty Point: An Economic LegacyLong Distance Trade Artifacts indicate that a vast network of trade existed over 3,000 years ago in association with the Poverty Point Culture. The Poverty Point civilization once existed near the present-day community of Epps, Louisiana in East Carroll Parish. The relics and remains of this ancient community provide evidence that items were traded between the present-day Northeast Louisiana civilization and other groups ranging in distances of 1,400 miles. Artifacts including foreign materials such as flint, copper, soapstone, gemstones, ironstone, and crystal quartz have been found at the East Carroll site. The origins of these materials can be traced to regional locations in the Upper Ouachita, Ozarks, Appalachians, and Great Lakes. (See Figure 1).

  3. Sources of Poverty Point Trade Materials Exchange of Goods The high concentration of artifacts consisting of foreign rocks provides evidence that an active trade network occurred between the inhabitants of Poverty Point and distant communities. The foreign objects, including flint and copper, provided the Poverty Point inhabitants with materials of better quality for certain uses such as tools while other ornate rocks provided aesthetic and decorative functions. According to Jon L. Gipson, author of Poverty Point, the foreign rocks were “highly desired and the large quantities that were circulated show that demand was high and supply and exchange systems efficient” (p. 23). The simple economic principles of supply and demand in combination with the scarcity of selected materials encouraged the long distance trading between the various ancient communities (See Figure 2). Drawing by Denise A. Malter, Courtesy of Louisiana Division of Archaeology: http://www.crt.state.la.us/archaeology/POVERPOI/trade.htm

  4. Specialization at Poverty Point Artifacts indicated ornamental jewelry was valued by the inhabitants of Poverty Point. It is believed these relics had aesthetic and symbolic significance. Specific objects are believed to have been crafted at Poverty Point and have been found at archaeological sites throughout the probable trade network. One relic believed to originate from the skilled craftsmen of Poverty Point was the Fat-Bellied Jasper Owl Pendants. According to Jon Gipson, this symbolic ornament was circulated across the Gulf Coast from western Louisiana to central Florida. Additional artifacts such as pendants in geometric shapes resembling animals, especially birds, were crafted at Poverty Point and circulated throughout the trading network (See Figure 3). Courtesy of Louisiana Division of Archaeology:Graphic retrieved from Louisiana Archaeology Poverty Point Trade and Symbolic Objects: http://www.crt.state.la.us/archaeology/POVERPOI/trade.htm

  5. Economic Legacy According to Gipson (1999), “Because Poverty Point culture is defined in terms of stone tools and trade rocks, it really represents a technological and economic pattern more than a social and political one” (p. 3). One can conclude that the geographic bond of these distant trading partners was the Mississippi River and its vast system of connected waterways. The Poverty Point site was accessible and possibly a major crossroads for traders. This assumption may be supported by the archaeological findings indicating that the largest collection of foreign rock artifacts are found at the Poverty Point site, not at other sites of participating trade partners. Once again, history indicates that exploration and exchange between various and different groups of people was motivated by economic needs and wants.

  6. The End

More Related