
Eyes open:
observing Volusia's Native People and their signs
In 1605, a
Spanish emissary to the Native Americans explored the Halifax River and chronicled his
discovery of several native villages and mounds, including a town at present-day New
Smyrna Beach. Alvaro Mexia also reported a population center at the north end of today's
Tomoka State Park, north of Ormond Beach. Called Nocoroco, this place was one of the last
strongholds for east Florida's native people, soon to be wiped out by European diseases
and slave raiding.
In 1765, royal botanist John
Bartram traveled up the St. Johns River - by then British territory - to survey
the area's plants. He described huge sand and shell mounds along the stream, and at a
traditional crossing which settlers later called Volusia.
In time,
certain mounds even acquired the label "mount" as part of their names. Others
became important landscape features in this low-lying country, and their locations
often appear as small triangles signifying high points on U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey
maps. The sites themselves had concrete markers with plates listing elevations above sea
level.
Though many
mounds have been destroyed, topographic maps still tell their stories.
Turtle Mound
Florida State Archives
Just how visible were these sites? Turtle Mound
(south of New Smyrna Beach at the Canaveral National Seashore) stands more than 50-feet
high today, and once was even taller. For centuries, navigational maps have shown this
feature since sailors can see it from miles offshore. But why did native people build the
region's mounds in the first place? And what later happened to many of these interesting
sites?
On the Ground
Volusia
County contains outstanding archaeological sites - special for what they show about
people's lives. Some of the earliest pottery in North America has been excavated from
along the St. Johns River. Tick Island at Lake Woodruff, near DeLeon Springs, has yielded
spectacular stone, shell and bone artifacts.
East
Florida is famous for its "mounds"
on the sea coast, on streams, and in between.
Many are middens (piles of shell and other refuse). Some are special mounds for human
burials, ceremonies or buildings. Certain sites had more than one use, and native people
often lived on top of earlier settlements since east Florida was occupied for so long.


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