New Orleans East Area in Orleans Parish, Louisiana — The American South (West South Central)
Prehistoric Inhabitants of Bayou Sauvage
Adapting to a Dynamic Delta
Inscription.
Human occupation and settlement of the fertile marshes and estuaries that now include Bayou Sauvage Refuge began before 500 BC. Two local archaeological sites, Big Oak and Little Oak Islands, represent human adaptation to the Lake Pontchartrain Basin from about 520 B.C. to 495 AD The Tchefuncte and, later, the Marksville cultures represented here show a people that had begun to adapt to marsh- estuarine environments associated with new lands. The Tchefuncte were the first people in the Pontchartrain Basin to widely use ceramics (pottery), which included decorated and non-decorated varieties. Housing structures are evident, as well as a wide range of tools including spears, atlatls, bolas, blades, and scrapers. The small related groups that inhabited these sites were hunter-gatherers, with a diet based largely on the brackish-water rangia cuneata clam, along with other fish and shellfish, turtles and deer. The shells of these clams accumulated in what are known as shell middens or shell mounds, which also contain the debris of human activity. What is known about the inhabitants comes from archeological digs on these middens, beginning on Big Oak Island in 1935.
As the delta of the Mississippi River continued to grow and evolve, the river's Bayou Sauvage distributary grew to the east until it closed off Lake Pontchartrain from the Gulf of Mexico. The lake waters became fresher, and the Rangia cuneata clam became less available. The Marksville people living there by that time abandoned the area around 90 B.C. to follow the brackish-water food sources they had become adapted to. The area was again utilized circa 495 A.D. by a later culture, the Troyville/Coles Creek peoples, as a mass burial ground. 2 Big Oak Island contains four layers of cultural occupation. The basal layer is an earthen midden reported to be a small Tchefuncte village dated at 520 B.C. It is overlain by a thick Rangia clam midden that functioned as a fishing/shell-processing center, dated to 235 B.C. Artifacts coming from the third layer prove it an early Marksville camp with low population, at 90 B.C. The upper most layer consists of a burial ground for the peoples of the Troyville/Coles Creek culture. The date obtained from this layer is much later, at 495 A.D. (Cummins 1977).
Erected by U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
Topics. This historical marker is listed in these topic lists: Anthropology & Archaeology • Indigenous Peoples and Communities • Parks & Recreational Areas.
Location. 30° 3.314′ N, 89° 52.73′ W. Marker is in New Orleans, Louisiana
, in Orleans Parish. It is in the New Orleans East Area. It can be reached from Chef Menteur Highway (U.S. 90), on the right when traveling west. Touch for map. Marker is at or near this postal address: 20876 Chef Menteur Highway, New Orleans LA 70129, United States of America. Touch for directions.
Regionally, this marker is in Louisiana’s River Parishes. It is also in the American South, specifically in the Deep South, on the Gulf Coast, and in the Great River Road Region. Globally, it is in North America, a Gulf of Mexico state, the Western Hemisphere, the Western World, and the Anglosphere. Historically, it finds itself in what was once New Spain, the Viceroyalty of New France, the territory of the Mississippian Culture, the Louisiana Purchase, one of the Confederate States of America, and the Antebellum South.
Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within 10 miles of this marker, measured as the crow flies: Bayou Sauvage Ridge (about 300 feet away, measured in a direct line); Hurricane Katrina (approx. 0.2 miles away); Henriette Delille (approx. 8.3 miles away); Jumonville Plantation (approx. 9.2 miles away); Plantation of Jacques Philippe Villere (approx. 9½ miles away); Denis de La Ronde Site (approx. 9.7 miles away); Lacoste Plantation (approx. 9.7 miles away); The Chalmette Plantations (approx. 9.7 miles away). Touch for a list and map of all markers in New Orleans.
More about this marker. Located along the boardwalk trail through the NWR.
Credits. This page was last revised on February 12, 2023. It was originally submitted on December 30, 2022, by Cajun Scrambler of Assumption, Louisiana. This page has been viewed 983 times since then and 70 times this year. Photos: 1, 2. submitted on December 30, 2022, by Cajun Scrambler of Assumption, Louisiana.

