Europeans also reported
other natives in or near present-day Volusia County. South of Lake George on the St. Johns
lived people the Spanish called the Mayaca. Accounts place them along the river up to
modern-day Seminole County, at which point the Jororo people became dominant.
On the
coast, the Spanish noted natives occupying a region from Turtle Mound south to Cape
Canaveral. Named Surruque, they are thought to have been related to the Ais people, whose
larger southeast coast culture may also have had Turtle Mound as its northern boundary.
Before
the Europeans
The
earliest occupied sites in Florida date from 12,000 years ago, when nomadic hunters called
Paleo-Indians roamed over vast areas. During that time, the climate was much drier and
cooler than today, and water was in short supply.
Paleo-Indians
were drawn to the northern and panhandle "limestone region" of Florida, where
surface water collected in watering holes used by animals and human beings alike.
Around
8000 B.C., the climate began to warm, glaciers melted, and sea levels rose. Water was
more plentiful, allowing people to live in more permanent camps. Mammoths and other large
game animals became extinct, and smaller game such as deer and raccoons proliferated. This
marked the beginning of the Archaic Period.
The trend toward a
wetter climate continued from 5000 to 3000 B.C. as Florida's human population grew and
spread out. By the late Archaic period, people were living along the coast of east-central
Florida in large numbers and settling the St. Johns River valley. The area's coastal
estuaries and freshwater marshes provided a rich source of food; and as villages of this
era became permanent, they developed distinctive ways of life. After 500 B.C., regional
cultures like the St. Johns Culture began to stand out.

Pottery
fragments from the St. Johns River and Lake Monroe described by Jeffries
Wyman, 1867
Around
2000 B.C., Florida saw a landmark development in its native cultures: the making of fired
pottery, with the clay bound by plant fibers such as palm fronds and Spanish moss. Before
then, containers were made of wood, basketry, gourds, or other natural materials. It is
not known where this pottery making began, but it spread from coastal South Carolina and
Georgia down to southwestern Florida.
Each region
produced its own style of pottery, and these differences in ceramic artifacts have helped
scientists sort the people who created them. Whatever its special features, the St. Johns
Culture was heading for a fatal challenge around 1500 A.D.