SOUTHEASTERN CEREMONIAL COMPLEX OBJECTS

 

S.E.C.C. motifs have been found on a variety of non-perishable materials, including shell, pottery, carved stone and copper. Undoubtedly many other materials were also used, but haven't survived the intervening centuries. It may be judged by looking at the remaining artifacts that S.E.C.C. practitioners worked with feathers and designs woven into cloth, practiced body painting, and possibly tattooing as well as having pierced ears. One surviving painting found on a baked clay floor at the Wickliffe Mounds site suggests they also painted designs in and on their dwellings. Paintings displaying S.E.C.C. imagery have also been found in caves, most notably Mud Glyph Cave in Tennessee. Animal images, serpents, and warrior figures occur, as well as winged warriors, horned snakes, stylized birds, maces, and arrows. Their location underneath the Earth probably reflect aspects of Mississippian myth and cosmology concerning the (perhaps sacred) precincts beneath the earth.

 

SOUTHEASTERN CEREMONIAL APAREL

 Artifacts in this section have been set aside from other aparel covered under that topic because of its relationship to ceremonial application. 

Costume 

 

Ear Spools 

 

Hair Pins 

 

Pendents 

 

 

SOUTHEASTERN CEREMONIAL SHELL ART

 Again, items that appear in this section are set apart from those that appear in earlier sections because of their ceremonial application.

 

Shell Masks 

 

Shell Gorgets 

 

Shell Engravings 

 

SOUTHEASTERN CEREMONIAL STONE ART

 These stone artifacts appear in both the ground stone section and here because for the sake of complete coverage.

 

Ceremonial Blades 

 

Monolithic Axes 

 

Batons 

 

Stone Discs 

 

Spuds 

 

Spatulas 

 

Ceremonial Pipes 

 

Stone Effigies 

 

 SOUTHEASTERN CEREMONIAL METALLIC ART

 

 

Copper Symbols 

 

 Celts 

 

SOUTHEASTERN CEREMONIAL POTTERY

 

Ceremonial Pottery 

 

Corn God Pottery