Monday, April 16, 2018

Watson Brake




 There are many such structures in the USA.  What this does is confirm that the earliest such facility dates exactly contemporaneous with the appearance of the European bronze Age and the sea borne traffic between Europe and North America one thousand years before the Great Pyramid and Stonehenge.

I actually expected this to be particularly confirmed in exactly this way.  again all this is part of the early Atlantean global culture itself which hit its maximal global distribution about a thousand years later.  Wherever they could they established cultural centers such as this to impress upon locals their cultural precepts and surely established trade factories as well..

It is also noteworthy that the cultural conceptualization then became the local meme to produce many such centers throughout the SE USA and culminated worldwide with permanent stone structures as well.

The interesting question is the actual homeland of all this global activity. 

 
Mysterious Watson Brake: Oldest Mound Complex In North America With Earthworks Raised For Unknown Purpose

AncientPages.com | February 21, 2018 | Ancient Places, Civilizations, Featured Stories, News

Share this:

Ellen Lloyd - AncientPages.com - In northern Louisiana, North America there is a very interesting and mysterious ancient site known as Watson Brake. This ancient site challenges our knowledge about North American history as the mounds have been found to be the earliest known remnants of human construction in the New World.

 
Mounds At Watson Brake Were Raised By Complex Ancient Society

Located in the floodplain of the Ouachita River near Monroe, Watson Brake consists of 11 ancient mounds that measure from three to 25 feet in height.





Some sections of the oval shaped earth berm probably have been eroded during the past 5,000 years by rains and floods. Credit: Northeastern State University

The construction of the mounds started about 5,400 years ago, predate other similar public architecture at Indian sites by nearly 2,000 years. This suggests the region was inhabited by a pre-agriculture, pre-ceramic hunting society that was much more socially complex than previously thought.

What we understand about the Mound Builders is changing as a result of research in the last decade.

 
What Was the Purpose Of The Mounds?

According to many archaeologists the purpose of the mounds is unknown. Since no human remains or ceremonial objects have been found, so perhaps the mounds were not used for burial or religious purposes.



On the other hand, the area enclosed by the mounds was kept clean of debris, suggesting its use as ritual space. The reasons why such elaborate activities first occurred here remain elusive. Another possibility is that the mounds were originally built to protect Native Americans from floods.

Yet, it seems logical to assume our ancestors must have had a reason for building these mounds. The surfaces of the ridges and mounds show little evidence of occupation, leading archaeologists to believe that Watson Brake was occupied primarily before and during the building of the mounds.

William F. Romain, Ph.D who runs the Ancient Earthworks Project believes Watson Brake is the oldest solstice-aligned earthwork complex in the Americas.





Credit: Ancient Earthworks Project

The ancient mounds are very difficult to access because half of the site is on private property, making it very restricted. The Archaeological Conservancy purchased the other half of the site in 1996.

In 2014, William F. Romain was finally given permission to visit the site and he invited Dick Shiels, Director of the Newark Earthworks Center, and Bill Monaghan, Associate Director of the Glenn Black Laboratory to accompany him. Using LIDAR technology, William F. Romain discovered Watson Brake was indeed an important archaeoastronomical site that our ancestors used for sky watching.

See also:

The theory that Watson Brake was an ancient astronomical site is not far-fetched. Watson Brake is just like Poverty Point located in Louisiana.





Watson Brake, Louisiana Credit: VR Image by Richard Thornton

Poverty Point, is still a place that remains a prehistoric mystery. It has been suggested that the Poverty Point octagon was the world’s largest ancient solstice marker. The massive earthworks at Poverty Point near Epps were long considered the beginning of extensive mound construction.

Based on numerous discoveries, researchers now have reason to believe that mound construction was widespread by 3000 BC in northern and southern Louisiana as well as Mississippi and Florida.

Were the Watson Brake mounds and huge earthworks at Poverty Point built by the same culture?

There are also scientists who think the ancient mounds at Watson brake might have been raised without a purpose.





Poverty Point Octagon

''I know it sounds awfully Zen-like, but maybe the answer is that building them was the purpose, 'Dr. Bruce D. Smith, an archeologist and specialist in early American agriculture at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington said.

Tristam Kidder, associate professor of anthropology at Tulane University, said the archaeological sites found along the Ouachita River are both typical of those found elsewhere in the southeastern United States and also unique. They are unique in that they are older, but the earlier sites are more or less similar to the rest of the southeast in general characteristics, Kidder said.

It is very difficult say anything with certainty about Watson Brake. Few archaeological excavations have been conducted at the site and the full extent of the first earthworks is not yet known.

Watson Brake earthworks are a testimony to the complexity of an ancient culture that still remains largely a mystery.

Written by Ellen Lloyd – AncientPages.com

Copyright © AncientPages.com & Ellen Lloyd All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or part without the express written permission of AncientPages.com and Ellen Lloyd

About the author:

Ellen Lloyd – is the owner of AncientPages.com and an author who has spent decades researching ancient mysteries, myths, legends and sacred texts, but she is also very interested in astronomy, astrobiology and science in general











No comments: