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Ocmulgee
is a memorial to the antiquity of man in this
corner of the North American continent. The
National Monument preserves a continuous record
of human life in the Southeast from the earliest
times to the present. From Ice-Age hunters to
the Muscogee (Creek) people of historic times,
there is evidence here of 12,000 years of human
habitation.
One
period stands out. Between AD 900 and 1200 a
skillful farming people lived on this site.
Known to us as Mississippians, they were part
of a distinctive culture which crystallized
about AD 750 in the middle Mississippi Valley
and over the next seven centuries spread along
riverways throughout much ofthe central and
eastern United States. The Mississippians brought
a more complex way of life to the region and
here they left behind eight earthen mounds and
the remains of a ceremonial earthlodge.

The
Monument today consists of two units separated
by two miles of riverine wetlands along the
Ocmulgee River. The Main Unit is adjacent to
the city of Macon, an urban area with a population
of 118,000. The isolated Lamar Mounds and Village
Unit can be visited by special permit.
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