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Features: On the Last Shell - The Past and Future of Oysters in Florida’s Big Bend - Part 1
February 14th, 2012

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February 11th, 2012

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February 7th, 2012

Features: North Florida - Wild Florida: Walking Turtles
September 1st, 2011

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July 16th, 2011

Features: Book Reviews: Paradise Lost by Janice Coupe
October 31st, 2009

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October 18th, 2009

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August 20th, 2009

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July 13th, 2009

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July 4th, 2009

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June 7th, 2007

Features: Book Review: Future Jihad
February 22nd, 2007

Features: Methodists Welcome New Pastor
August 10th, 2006

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July 5th, 2006

Features: God`s Welfare Program
June 21st, 2006

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Lower Suwannee Refuge Volunteers Assist Archaeologists at Shell Mound

Lower Suwannee Refuge Volunteers Assist Archaeologists at Shell Mound

Pam Darty

Who doesn`t love a mystery? Most of us are captivated by them and driven to discover and disclose them. For decades so many of us have been compelled by Shell Mound, the gigantic crescent-shaped archaeological site that sits on coastal zone of Levy County within the Lower Suwannee National Wildlife Refuge (NWR). Over the past three years Dr. Kenneth Sassaman and his graduate students have been surveying the thirty coastal miles of the Lower Suwannee NWR and the thirteen islands of the Cedar Keys National Wildlife Refuge in order to reveal some of the truths about the mound and the cultures that erected it.


Three features are seen at the bottom of this pit.


Back in March, Florida Archaeology Month, the Refuge staff hosted Dr Sassaman`s update of the ongoing archaeological surveys of both Refuges at the Cedar Key Library. His Powerpoint presentation showed reconstructed images of the many "shell rings", or shell heaps engineered into semi-circles surrounding village sites across the Cedar Keys. At that presentation, Sassaman announced his next project, Shell Mound, would be open to public viewing. He also arranged for volunteers from the Refuge and Friends of the Lower Suwannee National Wildlife Refuge to participate.


Refuge volunteers Ron Black and Mac Cox help by screening through oysters, bones, and sherds

Over the weekend, Dr. Sassaman and his dedicated graduate students, teachers themselves, spent Friday, Saturday, and Sunday digging and sifting, measuring and graphing, packaging and packing, as well as photo-documenting the site. Any visitors who happened-on to the dig were invited to view its progress and to ask questions. Sassaman seemed to thoroughly enjoy escorting onlookers, pointing out both test holes, and walking visitors over to the screening process, so they might see artifacts.

Throughout the weekend, volunteers from the Refuge corps and the Refuge Friends group helped sift buckets and buckets of mollusks finding fish and bird bones, along with shell tools and bits of pottery shards. On Saturday, an exciting find nearly 2-meters deep, down passed the millennia worth of shells, to the amber sand was a good size Deptford Period pottery shard. Another exciting find was a chert core which could allow a cutting edge to be created at a moment`s notice.


Dr Sassaman stops his work to educate a youngster as Heddy Havel and Andrew Gude look on.

Handled by white cotton gloves, each artifact will be processed at the Florida Museum of Natural History and the pieces of this 5-acre puzzle, will be united in order to tell the story of the shell cultures who constructed the 28-foot tall landmark on the Gulf. In about a year, the dedicated people of University of Florida`s Department of Anthropology will return to Shell Mound to discover the rest of the story.

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