- Swift Creek culture
The Swift Creek culture was a Middle
Woodland period archaeological culture in Georgia ,Alabama ,Florida ,South Carolina , andTennessee dating to around 100-800 AD. Swift Creek ceremonial practices and burial complexes are referred to technically as the Yent-Green Point complex in Florida. The Swift Creek culture was contemporaneous with and interacted with theHopewell culture ; Swift Creek is often described as "Hopewellian." The type site for the Swift Creek culture was the Swift Creek mound site, which was located inBibb County, Georgia . TheLeake Mounds are another significant Swift Creek Culture site from Georgia.Swift Creek peoples practiced mound building but were generally non-sedentary, living by hunting, gathering/collecting, and fishing. Swift Creek is characterized by earthenware
pottery with complicated stamped designs involving mostly curvilinear elements.References
*Kelly, A.R., and Betty A. Smith1975 The Swift Creek Site, 9 Bi 3, Macon, Georgia. Ms. on file, Ocmulgee National Monument, Macon, Georgia.
*Snow, F.H.1975 Swift Creek Designs and Distributions: A South Georgia Study.Early Georgia 3(2):38-59.
*Williams, M., and D.T. Elliott, editors1998 A World Engraved: Archaeology of the Swift Creek Culture. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.
Notes
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