Contributory members are able to log private notes and comments about each site
Sites stonetracker has logged. View this log as a table or view the most recent logs from everyone
Elkhorn Plantation Mound
Date Added: 6th Mar 2025
Site Type: Artificial Mound
Country: United States (The South)
Visited: Yes on 1st Feb 2025. My rating: Condition 3 Ambience 4 Access 4

Elkhorn Plantation Mound submitted by AKFisher on 3rd Aug 2023.
The Elkhorn Plantation Mound on the official Louisiana Ancient Mound Trail. It was constructed in 450 AD and inhabited until around AD 1100. The area was discovered with pottery strewn around everywhere indicating a large habitation area. The erosion by farming is evident.
Photo courtesy Dr Greg Little, author of the Illustrated Encyclopedia of Native American Indian Mounds & Earthworks (2016).
(View photo, vote or add a comment)
Log Text: Elkhorn, a single mound site on private land, is about a mile or so north of Frogmore Mound on Dunbarton Rd (Route 566). The mound is in a vast cultivated field about 100 ft east of the road. There are no shoulders or designated pulloffs, so I parked on a nearby field road and walked a short distance to the mound from there. In late winter, nothing is planted yet and the place was deserted, so there was little risk of being "caught." ;-)
Lessley Mound
Date Added: 6th Mar 2025
Site Type: Artificial Mound
Country: United States (The South)
Visited: Yes on 1st Feb 2025. My rating: Condition 3 Ambience 4 Access 5

Lessley Mound submitted by stonetracker on 7th Mar 2025. The mound. Zoom in to the top to see the iron fence around the family cemetery.
(View photo, vote or add a comment)
Log Text: This mound is on the north side of MS Route 24, and right next to the roadway and a convenient parking pulloff at the interpretive sign. So it is possible to view it at close range without leaving the vehicle. However an old barbed wire fence prevents entry into a field on the other side of the mound. It is easily crossed but I respected the private property restrictions of the landowner.
Foster Mounds
Date Added: 4th Mar 2025
Site Type: Artificial Mound
Country: United States (The South)
Visited: Yes on 1st Feb 2025. My rating: Condition 3 Ambience 4 Access 3

Foster Mounds submitted by AKFisher on 5th Aug 2023.
Foster Mounds in Mississippi. The largest platform mound at the site has a late 1800s home on its summit. The mound was lowered and altered to accommodate the house. Excavation of a second mound at the site showed that the site was a village area in 500 BC.
Photo courtesy Dr Greg Little, author of the Illustrated Encyclopedia of Native American Indian Mounds & Earthworks (2016).
(View photo, vote or add a comment)
Log Text: The site is largely as described and on private property in a residential area. I was lucky enough to bump into the landowner who said I could walk down his driveway to get a closer look at Mound A with his house on it. The mound is in very good condition. There is a flat area south of Mound A that obviously was part of the plaza.
Mound B is about a 200 yd walk south of and downhill from Mound A on the same side of Foster Mound Rd. It is fenced off but you can get within 100 yds of it. It is up on a bluff that borders St Catherine Creek and has suffered some erosion over the years. It is unclear at this point what the original shape of the mound was.
As for parking, there is no easy pulloff at Mound A, so I just parked in the Volunteer Fire Dept lot 100 yds north of Mound A and walked from there.
Smith Creek Mounds
Date Added: 7th Mar 2025
Site Type: Artificial Mound
Country: United States (The South)
Visited: Yes on 1st Feb 2025. My rating: Condition 3 Ambience 3

Frogmore Mound submitted by AKFisher on 1st Aug 2023. The site of a series of ancient Native American earthworks (dating to 700-1200 AD)
Photo courtesy Dr Greg Little, author of the Illustrated Encyclopedia of Native American Indian Mounds & Earthworks (2016).
(View photo, vote or add a comment)
Log Text: This was somewhat disappointing for what is a pretty interesting mound complex. All of the mounds are on private property although you can get very close to Mound A as it's literally right next to the highway. There's not much of a shoulder but you can pull mostly off the road next to that mound. The other two mounds are across the road on a property filled with vehicles and a home. I was greeted by a pack of barking dogs when I pulled in but apparently the owner brought them inside and they calmed down enough that I could walk around a bit.
All of the mounds are completely overgrown and hard to photograph, even in late winter. The location coordinates given for Mound A are in fact correct, but Google Streetview won't show much because of overgrowth. I tried to capture an image of it myself with mixed results. Mound B is a little clearer, but only remote viewing is possible unless you get permission. Mound C is much reduced by erosion and too far away to get a decent image.
Insley Mounds
Date Added: 8th Mar 2025
Site Type: Artificial Mound
Country: United States (The South)
Visited: Yes on 1st Feb 2025. My rating: Condition 3 Ambience 3

Insley Mounds submitted by AKFisher on 9th Aug 2023.
Archaeological reconstruction of the Insley Mounds in Louisiana from the mound encyclopedia.
Image courtesy Dr Greg Little, author of the Illustrated Encyclopedia of Native American Indian Mounds & Earthworks (2016).
(View photo, vote or add a comment)
Log Text: This site is spread out over a small residential area on Frankie Loftin Rd, a narrow rural roadway. Two mounds, B and C, are right next to the road and very close to Bayou Macon. There is no real parking area, but you can get mostly off the road near what looks like an abandoned house next to Mound C and near the interpretive sign. Mound B is a 100 yd walk north of the sign and surrounded by a wooden fence. Mound D is 200 yds south of the sign and about 200 yds west of the road in a private yard. It can only be viewed remotely. The mound in Dr. Little's photo is Mound D.
Most of the remaining mounds of the original 13 mound complex were leveled by cultivation. Supposedly there are 3 other small mounds to the east of the road, but I had no time to look for them and have no information on their whereabouts. They are almost certainly on private land.
Note: I was unable to positively locate Mound A.
Tendal Mound
Date Added: 9th Mar 2025
Site Type: Artificial Mound
Country: United States (The South)
Visited: Yes on 1st Feb 2025. My rating: Condition 3 Ambience 3 Access 5

Tendal Mound submitted by bat400 on 29th Aug 2012. Tendal Mound taken from the east side, showing how the modern house was built in the approximate center of this low platform mound.
Photo by bat400, Oct 2011.
(View photo, vote or add a comment)
Log Text: Tendal is a single rectangular platform mound site, located 50-100 ft north of US Route 80 and just west of the Tensas River. A currently occupied house was built on top of the mound and therefore the site is private. However you can park within 100 ft of it, at the corner of US Route 80 and Tendal Rd in the front lot of a currently unused commercial building. An interpretive sign is in the front yard of the residence.
Schicker Mound
Date Added: 9th Mar 2025
Site Type: Artificial Mound
Country: United States (The South)
Visited: Yes on 1st Feb 2025. My rating: Condition 3 Ambience 3 Access 5

Schicker Mound submitted by stonetracker on 9th Mar 2025. The house is sitting on and beneath what is left of the Schicker Mound. The mound was likely twice this height originally before house construction.
(View photo, vote or add a comment)
Log Text: This site consists of a single platform mound. A house with cellar was built on it in 1926 and I believe what you see now is the original dwelling. It is currently occupied so the site is private and can only be viewed from 100 yds away. The location is in Tallulah, LA in a residential area on the west side of Mississippi St. I found it easier to park on Desoto St, a nearby side street, and walk across Mississippi St 100 ft to the site.
La Salle Street Mound
Date Added: 10th Mar 2025
Site Type: Artificial Mound
Country: United States (The South)
Visited: Yes on 1st Feb 2025. My rating: Condition 3 Ambience 4 Access 5

La Salle Street Mound submitted by stonetracker on 10th Mar 2025. The mound and apartment building adjacent
(View photo, vote or add a comment)
Log Text: This mound is very close to Schicker Mound and on neighboring La Salle St. On-street parking is available on La Salle right next to the mound or across the street. It's also easy walking distance from Schicker. Unusually for Louisiana, you can walk right up to the mound as it abuts the sidewalk even though it's private.
Transylvania Mound
Date Added: 10th Mar 2025
Site Type: Artificial Mound
Country: United States (The South)
Visited: Saw from a distance on 1st Feb 2025. My rating: Condition 3 Ambience 3
submitted by on .
(View photo, vote or add a comment)
Log Text: This was originally a 12-mound site, but cultivation has completely leveled the smaller peripheral mounds. The site is now on a large private farm set well back from the road and only 5-6 mounds remain visible above the surface. The closest extant mound is about 500 ft south of LA State Highway 581 and the tallest mound is 1000 ft south of the roadway. As with many Louisiana mound sites, no dedicated parking is available so the only option is to pull off briefly on private field roads. There is one next to the interpretive sign for the site on Mound Rd. There are other field roads east and west of this location.
Julice Mound
Date Added: 11th Mar 2025
Site Type: Artificial Mound
Country: United States (The South)
Visited: Yes on 1st Feb 2025. My rating: Condition 3 Ambience 3 Access 4

Julice Mound submitted by stonetracker on 13th Mar 2025. Site layout, courtesy of the "Indian Mounds of Northeast Louisiana" web site.
This was a single square platform mound, although it looks long and skinny on the north side of LA Hwy 581 today. A 1954 survey described it as 8 feet tall with a small platform on the summit, and noted that it had been impacted by Hwy 581 construction. Indeed, at least half of the mound was destroyed by road construction.
The interpretive sign is 100 yards west of the current mound in a flat area that is ...
(View photo, vote or add a comment)
Log Text: Like nearby Transylvania Mounds, parking is tricky here. I was unwilling to park a rental car near the interpretive sign in the adjacent historic cemetery as it would have involved crossing a ditch in who knows what condition. Your mileage may vary, but I was able to find a conveniently vacant property about 200 yds east near the jct of State Routes 581 and 881 and parked in the driveway. Then I walked 200 yds west down Route 581 to the site.
The mound literally abuts the highway as it was cut in half by road construction.
Fitzhugh Mounds
Date Added: 12th Mar 2025
Site Type: Artificial Mound
Country: United States (The South)
Visited: Yes on 1st Feb 2025. My rating: Condition 2 Ambience 5 Access 5

Fitzhugh Mounds submitted by AKFisher on 31st Jul 2023.
Archaeological reconstruction of the Fitzhugh Mound Complex in Louisiana from the mound encyclopedia. The elevated walkway (terrace) running from the right middle to the upper center was 2700-feet long and 75-feet wide. The large platform mound by it has a base of 250 x 160 feet and was 30-feet high. The site is dated to AD 1200 and only 2 mounds remain today.
Image courtesy Dr Greg Little, author of the Illustrated Encyclopedia of Native American Indian Mounds & Earthworks (2016).
(View photo, vote or add a comment)
Log Text: The site is very scenic, thus the Superb ambience rating. Unfortunately all that remains of the 7 mound site are two small mounds. The unusual elevated causeway is also long gone.
Mound D just so happens to now be the site of a still-used cemetery so I parked there. It is about 200 yds south of LA hwy 602 on a firm dirt road suitable for most vehicles. The interpretive signage is located a little farther south at the corner of Route 602 & Busby Rd.
Pocahontas Mound A
Date Added: 14th Mar 2025
Site Type: Artificial Mound
Country: United States (The South)
Visited: Yes on 1st Feb 2025. My rating: Condition 4 Ambience 5 Access 4

Pocahontas Mound A submitted by Flickr on 1st Nov 2019. Pocahontas Mound Image copyright: dmott9 (DM), hosted on Flickr and displayed under the terms of their API.
(View photo, vote or add a comment)
Log Text: I had visited this site a few years ago as Mound A is in a convenient state roadside park area with bathroom facilities. It's also on the way to more northerly MS mound sites like Jaketown and Winterville.
Anyway I just stopped by to check out the latest improvements. The site's outdoor interpretive signage provided by Mississippi State Univ has always been great, but now they've added some replicas of ceramics found during excavations to an exhibit inside the visitor center. This plus more interpretation inside and improved signage outside. With many mound sites neglected and even derelict, it's good to see some serious effort put forth towards visitor education in an easily accessible and well-preserved site.
Note: There was a Mound B north of this site in a private neighborhood that I looked for some yrs ago with no access. I'll see if I can find more info.