Located north of Eatonton in Putnam County, Rock Eagle is an Indian-made rock structure dating back to the Middle Woodland period (300 B.C. to A.D. 600).
Photograph by Brian McInturff
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Weeden Island Period Pottery
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Drawings depict derived effigies with zoned incising found at the Davis Point excavation site at the Kolomoki Mounds. Weeden Island burial mounds are well known for the inclusion of elaborate animal effigy pots in large deposits.
From Excavations at Kolomoki, by W. H. Sears
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Kolomoki Mounds
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The Kolomoki Mounds site in Early County is one of the largest prehistoric mound complexes in Georgia and includes at least eight mounds.
Courtesy of Kolomoki Mounds State Historic Park
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Swift Creek Culture
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Swift Creek pottery is noted for its distinctive decoration. Complex curvilinear patterns were first carved into a wooden paddle, which was used to stamp the design into the soft clay walls of the pottery before it was fired.
Courtesy of Kennesaw State University
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Cane Island Site
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In 1978 and 1979 the University of Georgia's Department of Anthropology excavated portions of the Cane Island archaeological site before it was flooded. It now lies beneath Lake Oconee in Greene County, Georgia.
Courtesy of W. Dean Wood
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Oconee River
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Cane Island, the site of one of the earliest Native American farming villages in Georgia, was located in present-day Greene County along a shallow portion of the Oconee River known as Long Shoals. Wild plants and animals around the river likely supplied most of the food for the Cane Island residents.
Courtesy of W. Dean Wood
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Kolomoki Mounds
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Archaeologists now recognize that the main occupation of the Kolomoki Mounds site dates to the Woodland Period (1000 B.C.-A.D. 900).
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Kolomoki Mounds Artifact
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Ceramic artifacts were found during excavations of the Kolomoki Mounds in Early County.
Photograph by Bubba73, Wikimedia Commons
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