Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Ghosts of Crescent Hills

For over ten thousand years people have been quarrying high quality Burlington chert from the hills around my home.  It has been transported throughout North America and was worked into Clovis tools long before the Great Sphinx was a dream. The Crescent Hills Quarry District was one of the primary sources of tools for the Mississippian Mound Civilization. Workers transported bifaces and finished tools down the Meramec River to the Mississippi/Meramec Confluence where trade with the Mound People took place.  Trade stone was transported by foot northward to the Mississippi/Missouri Confluence where it was destined for the Great Plains and the Great Lakes. The almost pure white, vitreous, easy to flake Crescent Hills Chert was legendary among the indigenous people of North America.

The quarry district is listed in the St. Louis County National Register of state historic sites as address restricted, Crescent.” The finest and most exposed quarrying evidence is along the West Tyson County Park spur of the Chubb Trail.  Here, one can see literally hundreds of pits dug out of the steep hillsides, and piles of lithic flake and quarry artifacts piled ten feet deep. The size of the operation was massive by today’s standards. Two miles downhill of the quarries is a prairie complex along the Meramec River.

At dusk along this ridge I can almost feel the spirits of tens of thousands of humans making their way to the prairie camp for dinner and stories. There would be fish in abundance, smoked venison, acorn and nut breads and juicy blackberries to name just a few menu items. Today the knowledge of the past allows me a glimpse of how it must have been. Amazingly very little archaeological work has been undertaken in this area. As I bushwhack down the hillsides from the quarries, avoiding the Chubb Trail, I have found bifaces on the ground near seeps and springs. The area is littered with scrapers and stone tool work just waiting to be found.


I ordered a reprint of a book from the Missouri University Library that is one of the few archaeological studies of this area.  My hope is to gain further insight into the nature and location of ancient habitation in the Crescent Hills. If I’m lucky, I may receive tiny gifts of wisdom from the people who came before.

Squirrel Pipe from the Davis Site, near Crescent Hills

More about the Davis Site near Crescent Hills