Mounds State Park Serpent : Causeway to the Afterlife
Stone Serpent crosses the White River at Mounds State Park, in Anderson, Indiana. The Dakota Sioux were the Hopewell mound builders. Was this serpent constructed for the dead spirits to cross into the afterlife?
Stone Serpent crosses the White River at Mounds State Park, in Anderson, Indiana. The Dakota Sioux were the Hopewell mound builders. Was this serpent constructed for the dead spirits to cross into the afterlife?
Most of the Native American tribes appear to have believed that the soul had to undertake a long journey before it reached its destination. The belief of the Chinooks in this respect is perhaps a typical one. They imagine that after death the spirit of the deceased drinks at a large hole in the ground, after which it shrinks and passes on to the country of the ghosts, where it is fed with spirit food and drink. After this act of communion with the spirit-world it may not return. The Algonquins and Dakotas believe that departed spirits must cross a stream bridged by an enormous snake.
A natural spring, high in iron oxides is located at the foot of the bluff , adjacent to the stone serpent.
A natural spring, high in iron oxides is located at the foot of the bluff , adjacent to the stone serpent.