In the west face of the trench was found a
Linear series of holes, about thirty in number
in a distance of twenty-three feet, most of
them less than six inches in diameter and
about two feet in depth. Although they had
been completely covered over by at least
nine feet of earth the holes were only partly
filled with dirt. In the bottom of many of
them occurred brown decayed bone....The
series ended nearly due north-south and
while most of the holes were vertical, a few
slanted 10 degrees from vertical. [1929: 129]
The circular structures underneath the James
Ramey Mound, as Mound 33 is referred to by
Moorehead, are similar to other circular structures
at the Cahokia site. For example, Harriet Smith
found such structures underneath Mound 55 (Smith
1942,1969). Moorehead sometimes referred to them
as sun circles, but there is no reason to accept this
terminology.
Much of the pottery Moorehead illustrated came,
he said, from the James Ramey Mound and appeared
to be the Ramey Incised type, which belongs to the
Moorehead phase of Cahokia development. Based on his observations,
Reed et al.(1968: 146) suggest that this pottery came from
under Mound 33 and that this mound was started
while Monks Mound was in its final stages or had
already been completed. However, it is not clear
from reading Moorehead's reports that this pottery
indeed came from underneath Mound 33; therefore,
suggestions as to the time period when the mound
was constructed may not be correct. On the other hand,
from the illustrations, one pot sherd allegedly
from the base of the mound is an excised and engraved type that is not
Ramey Incised. It should be recalled that
Moorehead thought that the characteristic pottery
of the lower portions of the James Ramey Mound was red, thin pottery.
Although he provides no details, this sounds similar to the types
characteristic of the Early Mississippian period. Without proper
illustrations, however, it would be difficult to draw
conclusions. Other interesting artifacts found by
Moorehead include a Ramey Knife and a large flint hoe. A detailed
discussion of the artifacts from Mound 33 can be
found in Roger Wagner's study entitled An Analysis
of the Material Culture of the James Ramey Mound
(Wagner 1959).