Hailed by Bruce D. Smith, curator of North American archaeology at the Smithsonian Institution, as “without question the best available book on the pre-Columbian . . . societies of eastern North America,” this wide-ranging and richly illustrated volume covers the entire prehistory of the Eastern Woodlands and the thousands of earthen mounds that can be found there, built between 3100 BCE and 1600 CE.
The second edition of The Moundbuilders has been brought fully up-to-date, with the latest research on the peopling of the Americas, including more coverage of pre-Clovis groups, new material on Native American communities in the thirteenth to sixteenth centuries CE, and new narratives of migration drawn from ancient and modern DNA. Far-reaching and illustrated throughout, this book is the perfect visual guide to the region for students, tourists, archaeologists, and anyone interested in ancient American history.
Living in an area with numerous Ojibway petroglyphs and rock paintings, I have an interest in the art and culture of the Eastern Woodland Indians. Milner's book provides an excellent introduction to the moundbuilders who lived in the United States in the Pre-Columbian era with clear prose and handsome illustrations. This work is intended for the general public but nonetheless provides an excellent foundation for the reading of more academic books later.
I had to read this book for a class on the Indigenous groups of the Northeastern US and found this to such an interesting look into their history and later lives. I thought the final chapter was especially interesting since its touched on much more modern developments but overall the entire book was fantastic.
I’ve been so spoiled by Douglas Brinkley and other historians who happen to be talented writers. This book is informational, but boy is it dry. The sheer scarcity of monographs on mound builder cultures was the only thing that kept me reading.
(Almost) unbelievable to see a text so recent that still uses outdated names for Indigenous nations, ignores real knowledge from Indigenous peoples about their ancestors' societies, and peddles the now thoroughly-debunked Bering Strait theory.
Add to any knowledge you have on the lives of those who lived in the Mississippi Valley and eastward to the Atlantic before European arrival in this academically thorough yet not pedantic nonfiction book. It's enlighenting and often myth breaking, a work that would make a good textbook for a college course in anthropology. There are more than a few sections worthy of pulling out the Hi-Lighter to aid memory, such as, "In contract to commonly held, but overly romanticized, notions of hunter-gatherer life, a person's worth was measured by his or her contributions to group survival." That issue of survival comes into play over and over, as items uncovered in burial mounds, and even the sites of the mounds and how they were constructed, offer keys to how our predecessors in these forests and prairies lived here for centuries before the Pilgrims landed. Author George R. Milner deserves credit for not whitewashing the impact of European expansion through woods and fields where native people had survived since the end of the Ice Age, nor does he fail to mention how warring tribes often led to the ouster or disappearance of neighboring clusters of the mound builders. It is interesting to see the difference in how later generations who settled near mounds have treated them. In one case there is a road going right through the middle of a mound, and in others the mounds have become a source of civic pride, preserved, protected and a resource of local history. If you're interested in visiting some of these sites, Milner has a five-page guide that lists where mounds can be viewed, including some with museums that offer further information about the people who left the mounds behind.
This was a wonderful book. I am not really a student of archeology (one college class and a passing interest), but the story told here was incredibly interesting, and just the right level for me. It was well-researched and detailed, but not so much as to detract from the overall presentation and story of the evolution of the mounds - where they came from and why. To me, the most interesting aspect was how the construction of the mounds was linked with the transition between hunter-gather living and agriculture. Since the mounds were stationary markers, they were both the result of, and a facilitation for, a more sedentary lifestyle. But of course, there is a great variety of culture found in the Native American peoples, and that is well-described in this text. I strongly recommend this to anyone with an interest in pre-Columbian Native Americans, archeology, or pre-history in general.
A very informative book that reads a bit akward and slow. Milner is not a master of diction by any means, and goes to extensive lengths to describe just about every major mound in the east and midwest in extreme detail. A great read for the uninitiated, but be ready to read sentences that are twice the length the could be with a different author.
A dense text covering the history of mound building native societies in North America. While I enjoyed learning more about the peoples who inhabited this land pre-European contact, the text was a bit dry at times. However, overall, it is an authoritative source.
Have you ever wondered about the people and the purposes of the mounds all over the Midwest? Here are the answers. This book is written in an academic style, but is accessible to a lay reader. No fantasy stories, but a review of historical excavations and current available information. The title indicates "Eastern North America", but mounds east of the Mississippi river are the subject matter. Many historical photographs and illustrations are included. Recommended for anyone curious about our preserved mounds.
Would have preferred it to have been more centralized to Ohio and upper midwest archaeology, but overall very good read. Nothing I didn't learn in undergrad, but a nice refresher nonetheless.