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Announcements: COAST To COAST: The Cedar Key Library Presents:
March 27th, 2012

Announcements: BOOK BUNCH NEWS
March 24th, 2012

Announcements: Celebrate Florida Archealogy Month with The Lower Suwannee Wildlife Refuge
March 21st, 2012

Announcements: Spring Cleaning
March 19th, 2012

Announcements: Cedar Key Lions St. Patrick`s Day Adopt-a-Road Pickup
March 18th, 2012

Announcements: Cedar Key Girl Scouts Celebrate the Big 1-0-0
March 17th, 2012

Announcements: Levy County Tourism Councel
March 17th, 2012

Announcements: A Grovelling Apology
March 16th, 2012

Announcements: Florida Black Bear Festival is free, family fun
March 16th, 2012

Announcements: Florida Master Naturalist Class in Cedar Key
March 12th, 2012

Announcements: Friends of the Cedar Key Airport - First Anniversary Meeting
March 10th, 2012

Announcements: Education Salad Luncheon
March 10th, 2012

Announcements: Cedar  Key  Eagles  4194  announce  fund  raising  event  for  Fred  and  Tina  Berger.  
March 9th, 2012

Announcements: Unlock Mysteries of the Past During Florida Archaeology Month
March 9th, 2012

Announcements: Lower Suwannee & Cedar Key National Wildlife Refuge Present:
March 8th, 2012

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Shell Cultures to be Explored November 17th

Shell Cultures to be Explored November 17th

Pam Darty

Join the Lower Suwannee National Wildlife Refuge Ranger for a walk across one of the largest ancient mounds on the Gulf. The Ranger-led walk starts at the trailhead sign for Shell Mound. The twenty-eight feet high mound is just one of the archeological sites protected by the National Wildlife Refuge System.

The six thousand year-old Shell Mound site was begun before the great pyramids of Egypt, before the creation of pottery, and before the complex spirituality of the later culture of the Crystal River mound complex, one hour south of the Refuge. Over the 3,000 years of construction, the people living here progressed and developed into what academia calls the Woodland Period culture.

The site, previously a mudflat at the edge of the vast estuary referred to as the Big Bend, probably began as a fish camp over 6,000 years ago. As the ancient anglers hunkered down to eat the many oysters they had gathered, the shells were dropped to the mud beneath their feet. People of the Archaic Period created the land mass referred to as a midden, upon which sits the 5-acre crescent Shell Mound. As the mound grew, so did the intellect and technology of the developing cultures who occupied the mound.

Ceremony, weaponry, clothing, music, and plant resources will be addressed along the trail. Often referred to as the "shell cultures," they developed tools from the same mollusks with which they adorned themselves. Not having to hunt for game, they instead manufactured cordage to make nets, netted fish and shrimp, cracked-open oysters, and dug into lightening whelks for their supper.

If you want to learn more about pre-Florida Indians than you ever did in school, get yourself to the Shell Mound Trailhead on CR 326, just off CR 347. Meet the Ranger at 11:00 AM for the hour program on November 17th.

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