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cleansed.40 Some of the Mississippian-era human remains unearthed during archaeological
excavations at Ocmulgee National Monument also show signs of scrape marks consistent with
postmortem flesh removal. The placement of these remains relative to surrounding structures,
often within the confines of a primary dwelling, suggest that bones, not full bodies, held cultural
significance for the people who lived at the Ocmulgee site.41 Although the Creek Nation's
religious traditions have changed significantly over the intervening centuries, a burial practice
still used by some members of the Muscogee Nation ties directly back to these older traditions.
In many cemeteries in Okmulgee42, Oklahoma, small houses are erected over grave sites. While
bodies today are buried intact, these structures harken back to the buildings erected to shield
decomposing bodies from predation as seen by both Ortiz and Yarrow.43
Occupation at the Lamar site and surrounding region by Muskogean speakers continued
from the late Mississippian encounter of the de Soto expedition through the early 1800s. Though
English accounts of the people living at Ocmulgee are not extremely detailed until after the War
for American Independence, William Bartram, an adventurous botanist traveling through the
region in the 1770s, made note of both the people and the mounds at Ocmulgee.44 Changes in
the region drastically altered the political climate of the Indigenous Southeast over this same
period. At Achese, the Spanish found a small, settled, agricultural village, tribute to the much
more powerful Ocute region to the north.45 However, by the late 1600s smaller Native American
groups banded together, and formed strong confederacies, many in reaction to encroachment by
both Europeans and other hostile Indigenous bands. The formation of these new polities
40 Henry Yarrow, “The Study of Mortuary,” in First Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of
the Smithsonian Institution:1879-1880, ed. J.W. Powell (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1881), 93-94.
41 Davis, interview by author, February 1, 2018.
42 Ocmulgee holds such a special place in Muscogee history, the Creek Nation named their new capitol in
Oklahoma in its honor.
43 Davis, interview by author, February 1, 2018.
44 Jennings, ed., The Flower Hunter and The People, 27-29.
45 Smith, Narratives of De Soto, 50-53.
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