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Serpent Mounds Park

Coordinates:44°12′33″N78°09′17″W/ 44.20917°N 78.15472°W/44.20917; -78.15472
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Serpent Mounds Park
  • Tumulus Serpent
  • Serpent Mounds complex
  • Serpent Mounds National Historic Site of Canada
Burial moundslike these inspired the name of the park due to their curves resembling movement of aserpent.
Map
LocationKeene, Ontario,Canada
Nearest cityPeterborough, Ontario
Coordinates44°12′33″N78°09′17″W/ 44.20917°N 78.15472°W/44.20917; -78.15472
Area1.35 km2(0.52 sq mi)
Opened1955(1955)
Closed2009;15 years ago(2009)
Operated by
StatusClosed due to decline in tourism and failing infrastructure
DesignatedJune 12, 1982;42 years ago(1982-06-12)
StatuteHistoric Sites and Monuments Act
IUCNCategory III (Natural Monument)
Designated1957;67 years ago(1957)
WDPAID19782

Serpent Mounds Parkis a historical place located nearKeene, Ontario, Canada.Serpent Mounds operated as a provincial park, established in 1955 through a lease with theHiawatha First Nation,of theMichi Saagiig(Mississauga Anishinaabeg). In 1982, while operating as a provincial park the mounds were designated aNational Historic Site,including East Sugar Island.[1]

From 1995 to 2009, Hiawatha First Nation operated the park privately, offering camping facilities, beach access onRice Lake,a cultural center, and interpretive walks among the historic serpent and nearby mounds. The park was closed to the public in 2009, due to the decline in the tourism and deteriorating infrastructure.[2]

History

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Archaeologicalfield work revealed that the construction and early occupation of the serpent mounds area occurred about 2000 years ago during theprehistoricMiddle Woodland Period.The first prehistoric peoples to occupy the site were classified by archaeologists as thePoint Peninsula complex,based on theirartifacts.

The people gathered in areas of what are now the jurisdictions of central and southeasternOntarioand southwesternQuebecin Canada, and northern parts ofNew York statein the United States, to camp, hunt, fish, collect fresh water mussels, and to harvestmanoominback to 58 BC.[2]

The nine earthen mounds located on Roach's Point were disclosed as places to bury the dead and revere the ancestors providing an exceptionally complete record of life for a period of 350 years ending about C.E.. 300; the burial mound shaped like a serpent is the only one of its kind in Canada.[1]

Serpent Mounds incorporates a 4.4-hectare area, as well as a 49-hectare area on East Sugar Island. The designated site comprises six distinct areas of archaeological interest, including the Serpent Mounds site, the Alderville site, the Island Centre site, the East Sugar Island site, the Corral site and an unnamed Site.[1]

The largest mound, known as "the serpent" for its winding outline, is 194 ft (59.1 m) long, 25 ft (7.6 m) wide, 5 to 6 ft (1.5 to 1.8 m) high, and is the only one in Canada.

The eight oval/round mounds known as "the serpents eggs" range between 23 and 48 ft (7.0 to 14.6 m) long, 1 to 4.5 ft (0.4 to 1.6 m) high. Significant items found inside the mounds, in addition tohuman remains,were shell disc beads, fossilizedcoral,fish bonehook,flintchips,copper foilbeads, carvedlimestone,adze,and numerous types of animalbones.[3]

Nearby

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Serpent Mounds Park activities close by, include::

See also

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References

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  1. ^abc"Serpent Mounds National Historic Site of Canada".pc.gc.ca.Retrieved2023-12-11.
  2. ^ab"Hiawatha First Nation Serpent Mounds Park".hiawathafirstnation.Retrieved2023-12-11.
  3. ^Kenyon, Walter Andrew (1986).Mounds of sacred earth: burial mounds of Ontario.Royal Ontario Museum. Toronto: Royal Ontario Museum.ISBN978-0-88854-303-5.

Literature

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