Spiro Mounds Archaeological Center
Spiro Mounds Archaeological Center
18154 First Street
Spiro, OK 74959
918-962-2062
spiro@history.ok.gov
35.311731, -94.568431
Director: Anna Vincent
Geocache:
N35° 18.696' W94° 34.164'
Hours
Tuesday through Saturday
9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Admission
Admission fees are waived while the center is undergoing updates.
Due to staffing limitations we recommend calling prior to your visit; unexpected events occasionally result in an unplanned closing.
Spiro Mounds Archaeological Center will be closed November 28–30 in observance of Thanksgiving.
Spiro Mounds Archaeological Center preserves 150 acres of the site along the Arkansas River. Visitors can explore nearly two miles of interpreted trails, including a half-mile nature trail. The center offers exhibits, and a historian is on site to answer questions and lead tours. Schools and groups of 10 or more can request guided tours of the site by contacting the staff by phone or email at least prior to their visit.
Spiro Mounds Archaeological Center is located northeast of Spiro, Oklahoma, four miles north of US-271. The site is closed on state holidays.
Prehistoric Gateway, Present-day Enigma
The mounds site, located seven miles outside of Spiro, Oklahoma, is the only prehistoric, American Indian archaeological site in Oklahoma open to the public. The mounds are one of the most important American Indian sites in the nation. The prehistoric Spiro people created a sophisticated culture which influenced the entire Southeast. Artifacts indicate an extensive trade network, a highly-developed religious center, and a political system which controlled the entire region. Located on a bend of the Arkansas River, the site was a natural gateway from which the Spiro people exerted their influence. Much of the Spiro culture is still a mystery, as well as the reasons for the decline and abandonment of the site.
Today, the Spiro Mounds site and artifacts are among Oklahoma’s richest cultural resources. The protected site included 150 acres of land that encompass twelve mounds, the elite village area and part of the support city. Although various groups of people camped on or near the Spiro area over the previous 8,000 years, the location did not become a permanent settlement until AD 800 and was used until about AD 1450. During this period, known as the Mississippian period, Spiro leaders were developing political, religious, and economic ties with people from the Gulf of California to the Gulf of Mexico and from the coast of Virginia to the Great Lakes. They shared horticulture, elaborate ceremonies, mound building, and an iconographic writing system with more than sixty different tribes. From AD 900 to 1300, the leaders at Spiro Mounds thrived. The mound center declined and was eventually abandoned by AD 1450, although the city continued to be occupied for another 150 years. The people of the Spiro Mounds are believed to have been Caddoan speakers, like the modern Wichita, Kichai, Caddo, Pawnee, and Arikara. The site remained unoccupied from AD 1600 until 1832. While Choctaw and Choctaw Freedmen cleared the mound site for farming late in the 1800s, they did not allow any major disturbance of the site until the Great Depression.
During the 1930s commercial, and later academic, excavations revealed one of the greatest collections of artistic and utilitarian prehistoric American Indian artifacts in the United States. Early looting of the site led to new laws, making Oklahoma one the first states to preserve and scientifically research archaeological sites. Spiro Mounds Archaeological Center opened to the public on May 9, 1978. Today the site is owned and operated by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Explore More
Archaeology in Oklahoma e-exhibit“Spiro Mounds: A Story of Prehistoric Oklahoma,” Crossroads
“Spiro Mounds” in The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture
“What is Spiro?,” A Very OK Podcast