The LSU campus mounds, with construction beginning at ∼11,000 BP, are the oldest known extant man-made structures in the Americas

IF 1.9 3区 地球科学 Q3 GEOSCIENCES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY American Journal of Science Pub Date : 2022-06-01 DOI:10.2475/06.2022.02
B. Ellwood, S. Warny, Rebecca A. Hackworth, Suzanne H. Ellwood, Jonathan H. Tomkin, S. Bentley, D. Braud, G. Clayton
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Radiocarbon dating of the two LSU Campus Mounds (16EBR6) indicates that the construction of one, Mound B, began at ∼11,000 BP, making Mound B the oldest known and intact manmade structure in the Americas. The age analyses presented here are based on thirty one 14C dates. The older (deeper) parts of both of the LSU Campus Mounds contain many thin, burned ash lenses, suggesting that the Mounds may have been used for ceremonial or cremation purposes. These ash layers are composed mainly of phytoliths, bio-silicate (SiO2) structural compounds in plants that remained after burning of these plants. Analysis of the abundant ash lenses indicates that the plants burned were mainly C4 hydrophilic grasses that are dominated by 90-98% reed and cane plants. The ash layers also contain microscopic fragments of burned, large mammal osteons (bone). The layers of reed and cane phytoliths, containing very small numbers of osteons, are indicative of very hot fires. This finding supports the argument that the fires were used for ceremonials or cremations. No ash beds later than 5,000 BP are known from either LSU Campus Mound A or B, although at ∼800 calBP, a wooden post (now charcoal) was planted and burned on the top of Mound B. It appears that construction of Mound B began during the climate amelioration that followed the Younger Dryas climate event, which ended at ∼11,700 BP. Construction of Mound A appears to have begun at ∼9,500 calBP. Building of the LSU Campus Mounds shows a hiatus when climate deteriorated during the 8200 Climate Event, which defined the end of the Holocene Greenlandian Stage and the beginning of the Northgrippian Stage. Construction began again at ∼7,500 BP, when both mounds continued construction until ∼6,000 BP, with one apparently anomalous date in Mound A at ∼5,100 calBP.
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路易斯安那州立大学校园的土堆始于约11000 BP,是美洲现存最古老的人造建筑
路易斯安那州立大学两个校区丘(16EBR6)的放射性碳年代测定表明,其中一个丘B的建造始于约11000 BP,使丘B成为美洲已知最古老、完整的人造结构。这里给出的年龄分析基于31个14C日期。路易斯安那州立大学校园土丘的较老(较深)部分都有许多薄的、燃烧过的灰烬透镜,这表明土丘可能用于仪式或火葬目的。这些灰层主要由植硅体组成,植物中的生物硅酸盐(SiO2)结构化合物在这些植物燃烧后残留。对大量灰透镜体的分析表明,被烧毁的植物主要是C4亲水草,其中90%至98%为芦苇和甘蔗植物。火山灰层还含有被烧伤的大型哺乳动物骨(骨)的微小碎片。芦苇和甘蔗植硅体层含有非常少量的骨素,表明存在非常热的火灾。这一发现支持了火被用于仪式或火葬的说法。路易斯安那州立大学A校区或B校区均未发现超过5000 BP的火山灰床,尽管在~800 calBP时,在B校区顶部种植并焚烧了一根木桩(现在的木炭)。B校区的建设似乎始于Younger Dryas气候事件后的气候改善期间,该事件于~11700 BP结束。丘A的建造似乎已经在~9500 calBP开始。8200年气候事件期间,当气候恶化时,路易斯安那州立大学校园丘的建设出现了中断,该事件定义了全新世格陵兰阶段的结束和北格里普阶的开始。施工在~7500 BP再次开始,当时两个土堆都在继续施工,直到~6000 BP,其中一个明显异常的日期是在~5100 calBP的土堆A。
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来源期刊
American Journal of Science
American Journal of Science 地学-地球科学综合
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
3.40%
发文量
17
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Science (AJS), founded in 1818 by Benjamin Silliman, is the oldest scientific journal in the United States that has been published continuously. The Journal is devoted to geology and related sciences and publishes articles from around the world presenting results of major research from all earth sciences. Readers are primarily earth scientists in academia and government institutions.
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