Monday, May 21, 2012

Henleyfield Indian Mound


I found a historical account in the Picayune Library referring to "someone's" house north of Picayune as the site of an ancient Indian Mound. A friend of mine from Henleyfield helped me find the house. When we spoke to "that person", he said that a man named Arjel might know where the Indian Mound is.

We drove a small white car to Mr. Arjel’s house. He wore overalls, spoke in a mumbled southern accent, and drew maps in the sand and on the dust of his big pickup truck in the middle of thoughts. He directed us towards an Indian Mound down an old dummy line road in a hunting reserve against the Pearl River. Can this Toyota make it? I asked. Sure, Arjel declared.  

So we went. The road was rough with deep muddy holes everywhere. I was straddling canyons in a small Toyota. The vegetation around us got green, thick and swampy. Eventually I got the car stuck, had to push it out, and headed back to the main road. The trip was not a complete failure because I did see a brilliant patch of wild cypruss trees and some Alligator tracks.




My brother was telling me about his new hobby, working with GIS maps. I described the directions that Arjel gave me to him and he located the mound on lidar. Lidar is an advanced mapping system that reads and displays elevation changes and land formations.




Notice the UFO looking formation in the middle of the blue flood plain. That is the Indian Mound in Henleyfield on the Pearl River. It is extremely circular and 185 feet in diameter. It is round like a gigantic tomato cut in half placed on earth with a planetary ring dipping into the soil around it. 

Mr. Arjel told me the Indians built a ditch from the mound to the river deep enough for a canoe. When I asked why he said it is a mystery. I don't see a ditch to the river but... 

A closer view of the mound shows a circular ditch around the mound. Perhaps it was a mechanism to catch fish when the flood waters rose?










3 comments:

  1. Hello, my name is Janice I live across the swamp from said locations...in Louisiana and study our local Indians. email Janice.l.griffin@gmail.com I look forward to hearing from you.

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  2. I would like to know 2 things:
    Where are you getting the lidar data?
    What tool are you using to visualize it?

    Interesting articles by the way.

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  3. My technocratic brother is the brains behind the lidar operation, so I am not sure what tool he is using. An engineering firm on Goodyear Boulevard also provided some lidar data, but those were for the area across the Hobolochitto from the Hermitage.

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