Watson Brake

Watson Brake
Artist's conception of the Watson Brake Site
Watson Brake is located in Louisiana
Watson Brake
Location within Louisiana today
Watson Brake is located in the United States
Watson Brake
Watson Brake is located in North America
Watson Brake
Watson Brake (North America)
LocationLogtownOuachita Parish, LouisianaUSA
RegionOuachita Parish, Louisiana
Coordinates32°22′6.31″N 92°7′53.00″W / 32.3684194°N 92.1313889°W / 32.3684194; -92.1313889
History
Founded3500 BCE
CulturesArchaic period
Site notes
Responsible body: private

Watson Brake is an archaeological site in present-day Ouachita Parish, Louisiana, from the Archaic period. Dated to about 5400 years ago (approx. 3500 BCE), Watson Brake is considered the oldest earthwork mound complex in North America.[1] It is older than the Ancient Egyptian pyramids or Britain’s Stonehenge. Its discovery and dating in a paper published in 1997 changed the ideas of American archaeologists about ancient cultures in the Southeastern United States and their ability to manage large, complex projects over centuries. The archeologists revised their date of the oldest earthwork construction by nearly 2000 years, as well as having to recognize that it was developed over centuries by a hunter-gatherer society, rather than by what was known to be more common of other, later mound sites: a more sedentary society dependent on maize cultivation and with a hierarchical, centralized polity.

The arrangement of human-made mounds at Watson Brake was constructed over centuries by members of a hunter-gatherer society. It is located near Watson Bayou in the floodplain of the Ouachita River, near present-day Monroe in northern Louisiana, United States. Watson Brake consists of an oval formation of eleven earthwork mounds from three to 25 feet (7.6 m) in height, connected by ridges to form an oval nearly 900 feet (270 m) across.[1]

Watson Brake is dated to 1,900 years before the better-known Poverty Point in northern Louisiana; begun about 1500 BCE, it was previously thought to be the earliest mound site in North America. Mound building in the Americas started at an early date.

The discovery and dating of Watson Brake as a Middle Archaic site demonstrate that the pre-agricultural, pre-ceramic, indigenous cultures within the territory of the present-day United States were much more complex than previously thought. While primarily hunter-gatherers, they planned and organized large work forces over centuries to accomplish the complex mound and ridge constructions. Monumental constructions have marked the rise of social complexity worldwide. The earthen mounds of Eastern North America are part of mankind's monument tradition.

  1. ^ a b Cite error: The named reference Saunders was invoked but never defined (see the help page).