ANGEL MOUNDS STATE HISTORIC SITE
 
The 600+ acres that comprise Angel Mounds State            Historic Site were purchased in 1938 by the Indiana            Historical Society with financial assistance from Eli Lilly.            In 1947, the Indiana Historical Society transferred            ownership to the State of Indiana. It is now managed and            interpreted by the Indiana State Museum and Historic            Sites. Indiana University is responsible for excavations            and research on the site.
Five to seven hundred years ago, the area we now call            Angel Mounds State Historic Site was a thriving            Mississippian Indian town. Built between A.D. 1100 and            1300, the town was occupied by one thousand to three            thousand inhabitants until its abandonment around 1450.            Throughout that time, it was the largest settlement in            Indiana. It served as the center of trade, government and            religion for smaller satellite communities within a 70-mile            radius.
            Mississippian culture originated in the southeastern            United States between A.D. 700 and 800, and in some            places survived as late as 1700. The culture was very            innovative. It was the first to extensively exploit            agriculture and build permanent communities with            thousands of residents. This economic and social            system was made possible by the widespread cultivation            of corn, a crop nutritious enough to be a dietary staple            and capable of being harvested and stored in large            quantities. The large and important town at Angel            Mounds lends its name to the Angel phase, the period of            Mississippian culture found near the confluence of the            Wabash and Ohio Rivers from the late 11th through the            early 15th century. 
                 After more than 200 years of constant                 occupation, the town at Angel Mounds was                 abandoned, and by 1450, the site was                 empty. There is no evidence to show why                 the inhabitants left. Over a long period of                 occupation, the local supply of wood for                 building and fire would have been severely            depleted. Intense agriculture may have overworked the            soil. Game may have been scarce from over hunting.            Although there is no indication of attack from outside,            there may have been political upheavals from within.            Some combination of these factors, or perhaps all, may            have played a role in the town?s desertion.
            The Mississippian people did not disappear entirely from            Indiana; however, their lifestyle changed. The center of            population also shifted 30 miles to the west of Angel            Mounds where dispersed farmsteads and villages            continued to exist along the Ohio River through the early            1600s. These later Mississippians were also gone before            the arrival of Europeans in Indiana.
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