Overview
Spiro Mounds sits on a bluff above the Arkansas River in what is now LeFlore County, Oklahoma, at the western edge of the broader Mississippian cultural world that stretched across much of the eastern and southeastern United States. Occupied from around 800 CE, the site grew into a major ceremonial, political, and trade centre for Caddoan-speaking peoples, reaching its peak of construction and influence between approximately 1200 and 1450 CE.
The site comprises twelve mounds arranged around a central plaza, serving a range of functions including elite residences, temples, and burials — a layout characteristic of major Mississippian ceremonial centres elsewhere, such as Cahokia, though Spiro developed its own distinctive regional artistic and religious tradition, often described by archaeologists as part of the wider Southeastern Ceremonial Complex, a shared iconographic and ritual system linking Mississippian centres across a huge geographic area through common symbols, motifs, and probably shared beliefs.
Spiro's global archaeological significance rests overwhelmingly on Craig Mound, the largest and most complex mound at the site, and specifically on a chamber within it that came to be known as the "Great Mortuary." When looters began digging into the mound in the 1930s — during the Great Depression, when a group of local men formed the "Pocola Mining Company" specifically to excavate and sell artefacts — they discovered an internal wooden-log-lined chamber whose unusual construction had created unintentional but remarkably effective environmental conditions: a stable temperature and humidity that preserved organic materials — woven textiles, worked wood, basketry, and feather objects — that almost never survive in the archaeological record anywhere in North America, alongside spectacular worked shell engravings, copper repoussé plates, and stone effigy pipes.
The looting caused catastrophic and irreversible loss of archaeological context before the University of Oklahoma and the Works Progress Administration intervened with salvage excavations from 1936, working to document and recover what remained. Despite the damage, the surviving corpus of Spiro material — much of it now held by the Smithsonian Institution, the University of Oklahoma, and other institutions — remains one of the richest bodies of Mississippian-era art and material culture ever recovered, and the shell engravings in particular preserve detailed depictions of costume, weaponry, and ritual regalia that have become central reference material for understanding Southeastern Ceremonial Complex iconography across the entire Mississippian world.
Analysis of raw materials found at Spiro — marine shell from the Gulf of Mexico, copper likely from the Great Lakes region, and other non-local minerals — confirms the site functioned as a hub within extensive North American trade networks reaching well beyond the immediate region. Spiro was largely abandoned by around 1450 CE, for reasons that remain unclear, predating sustained European contact with the region by more than a century. The site is now protected as the Spiro Mounds Archaeological Center, operated by the Oklahoma Historical Society.