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Miami Circle
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The Miami Circle at Brickell Point Site | |
Miami Circle Park, 7 March 2011 | |
| Location | Miami, Florida |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 25°46′10.0914″N 80°11′20.2596″W / 25.769469833°N 80.188961000°W |
| Built | 500 BC – AD 900[2] |
| NRHP reference No. | 01001534[1] |
| Significant dates | |
| Added to NRHP | February 5, 2002 |
| Designated NHL | January 16, 2009[3] |
The Miami Circle, also known as The Miami River Circle, Brickell Point, or The Miami Circle at Brickell Point Site, is an archaeological site in Brickell, Miami, Florida. It consists of a perfect circle measuring 38 feet (11.5m) of 600 postmolds that contain 24 holes or basins cut into the limestone bedrock, on a coastal spit of land, surrounded by a large number of other 'minor' holes. It predates other known permanent settlements on the East Coast. It is believed to have been the location of a structure, built by the Tequesta (also Tekesta) Indians, in what was possibly their capital. Discovered in 1998, the site is believed to be somewhere between 1,700 and 2,700 years old.
On February 5, 2002, the site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It was declared a National Historic Landmark on January 16, 2009.[3]
On February 3, 2014, the Miami Herald reported additional postholes had been excavated in Downtown Miami, further indicating presence of ancient habitation.[4]
The state bought the 2.5-acre site for $26.7 million to save the valuable historical artifact.[5] Because of the fragility of the artifact, it was buried again beneath layers of limestone, rather than putting it on display.[6][7]
History
[edit]The site of 401 Brickell Avenue, named after William Brickell, co-founder of Miami in the 1870s, held an apartment complex until 1998. Property developer Michael Baumann purchased the site for $8.5 million to build a luxury condominium, and in July 1998 tore down the standing apartment complex. According to City of Miami historic preservation code requirements, he was obliged to commission a routine archaeological field survey of the site prior to commencement of building, but this didn't occur until Bob Carr, then Director of the Miami-Dade County Historic Preservation Division, pressed the issue with the City and Baumann. The Miami-Dade Historic Preservation Division, along with volunteers and employees of the Archaeological & Historical Conservancy, conducted the salvage excavation of the site.
In the course of the exploration, the team discovered a number of holes cut into the Oolitic limestone bedrock. On examining the layout of the holes, the land surveyor postulated that they were part of a circle 38 feet (12 m) in diameter. Having calculated the center, he projected the likely location of the remaining holes. Excavation revealed that there were 24 holes forming a perfect circle in the limestone. Examination of the earth revealed numerous archeological artifacts, ranging from shell-tools and stone axe-heads to human teeth and charcoal from fires.
The developer Baumann offered to pay to relocate the circle to another site for preservation, an idea that former mayor and current City Commissioner Joe Carollo supported. Public opposition grew, concerned that the removal could potentially destroy one of the most archaeologically significant finds in North America. The Elizabeth Ordway Dunn Foundation made a donation of $25,000 to fund further exploration of the site, which continued until February 1999.
Following issuance of building permits by the City of Miami during the last week of January 1999, the Dade Heritage Trust (Miami-Dade County's largest historic preservation organization) filed a lawsuit on January 31, 1999, seeking an injunction against further construction on site. The Trust filed the suit and arranged for an emergency hearing at the home of Circuit Court Judge Thomas Wilson. The basis for the lawsuit was that the developer had not obtained required approval in the form of a certificate of appropriateness from the City of Miami's Historic and Environmental Preservation Board. At the hearing, the developer and the City were represented by counsel. Following arguments and Dade Heritage Trust's admission that it was not prepared to post a bond to support the injunction request, the Judge denied the motion for temporary injunction. Baumann agreed to postpone construction on the site for thirty days while the archaeologists finished their work.[8]
County Mayor for Miami-Dade Alex Penelas and others interested in saving the Circle, asked the County Commission to file a lawsuit to take ownership of the property. The Commission approved such action on February 18, and Judge Richard Feder ordered a temporary injunction against building on the site. Baumann agreed to sell, but asked for $50 million, a price which he eventually lowered to $26.7 million. In an unprecedented move, the State of Florida Preservation 2000 land acquisition program purchased the site from Baumann for that sum in November 1999, using both state funds and donations from various foundations and private citizens. The state considered creating a 3-D replica of the buried circle so that visitors could envision what the 2,000-year-old circle looked like.[9]
The "Brickell Point Site" was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on February 5, 2002.
Archaeology
[edit]
Artifacts recovered from the Miami Circle site are stored and on display at HistoryMiami. It is the official repository for all archaeological materials recovered in Miami-Dade County.[10]
Age
[edit]In order to date the site, pieces of burnt wood were sent in March 1999 for radiocarbon dating by John Ricisak, a specialist in the County Historic Preservation department. The results were a surprise, indicating that the wood was between 1,800–2,000 years old. Some scholars, most notably Dr. Jerald Milanich, doubted that the circle was as old as the wood. Further evidence to support the theory that the holes were of that age comes from Tom Scott and Harley Means of the Florida Geological Survey, who point to the buildup of a calcite "duricrust" on the edge of the cut face. Though this is an extremely imprecise way to date the holes, it rules out that they were of modern origin.
Origin
[edit]Initial theories on the origin of the site by many members of the public were that it was created by the Olmec or Mayan civilizations. No evidence was found of any artifacts of Central American origin, however. Further examination of the artifacts found at the site, particularly the shell tools, shark teeth, and other items of aquatic origin, showed that they matched perfectly with artifacts known to be from a local tribe, the historic Tequesta.
The Tequesta were a tribe who were believed to be primarily nomadic, hunting fish and alligators in the Florida Everglades. They were considered aggressive as they killed many early European explorers who attempted landfall in Florida. The Tequesta, like many other Native Americans, succumbed to the new infectious diseases brought by European colonists, as well as were disrupted by warfare.
Purpose
[edit]Randolph Widmer of the University of Houston suggested holes were postholes for some kind of structure, probably a cone-shaped building with a hole in the top. These sorts of structures were known to have existed in the Eastern United States, yet none was thought to have had such a permanent base as the Miami Circle. Critics of this theory pointed out that there was no evidence of fire on the bedrock as is usually found in the remains of this type of buildings. Widmer's response was that, given the weather common across Florida and resulting flooding, the early people may have raised the structure on stilts. This theory also suggested that the seemingly random array of holes could have been for support posts. They appear in clusters perhaps due to the necessity to replace them as the wood rotted.
Researchers next tried to determine the purpose of the structure. Two obvious candidates are living quarters, or a ceremonial building of some sort. The lack of evidence for the former began to suggest the latter, and further evidence can be put forward to support the theory. Firstly the effort necessary to create such a structure would involve considerable teamwork, particularly given the lack of tools. This sort of teamwork is often seen in the construction of religious buildings.
Secondly, there were certain anomalies in the artifacts discovered. Many 'common' Tequesta relics were found at the site—tools and perhaps decorative items made from shells and other aquatic materials like sharks' teeth—but there were a few pieces discovered that did not fit. The main items were two basalt axe heads. These axes would have been a particularly sought after item on the southern Florida coast due to the lack of any equivalent hard stone in the area, yet these axe heads are completely untouched. Further analysis of the stone by Dr. Jacqueline Dixon, University of Miami, found that the basalt was likely from the region of Macon, Georgia, some 600 miles (970 km) away. Additional items that may have been placed in, or buried under the structure were a complete 5-foot (1.5 m) long shark skeleton, aligned east to west, a dolphin skull, and a complete carapace of a sea-turtle. Four human teeth were also found, though no other evidence pointed to its being a burial site.
Former septic tank
[edit]University of Florida archaeologist Jerald Milanich was concerned that there was, from the previous apartment block, a septic tank that was aligned perfectly at the edge of the circle. He suggested that the circle could be nothing more than a sink for the sewage from the septic tank.[11]
In attempting to refute this claim, Ricicek pointed to two things. Firstly there was clearly a terracotta outflow from the tank that would not tie with the need for a sink, and the plans for the apartment complex clearly show a sewage outflow to the south, into the river. Secondly, returning to the analysis of the calcite buildup on the holes by the Florida Geological Survey, the bedrock that had been cut out to lay the tank had little or no duricrust, showing the considerable age difference between the septic tank construction and the Circle.
Miami Circle Park
[edit]HistoryMiami, then known as the Historical Museum of Southern Florida, signed a 44-year lease of the site in March 2008.[12]
A waterfront park managed by HistoryMiami opened in 2011. The circle itself remains buried to protect it, while an audio tour and several panels describing it are available.[13][14]
See also
[edit]- Pompano Beach Mound: another Tequesta archaeological site
References
[edit]- ^ "National Register of Historical Places - Florida (FL), Dade County". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. August 17, 2007.
- ^ "Brickell Point Site". Florida Heritage Tourism Interactive Catalog. Florida's Office of Cultural and Historical Programs. August 17, 2007. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007.
- ^ a b "Interior Secretary Kempthorne Designates 9 National Historic Landmarks in 9 States". Department of the Interior. January 16, 2009. Archived from the original on March 5, 2009.
- ^ Viglucci, Andres (February 3, 2014). "Prehistoric village found in downtown Miami". Miami Herald. Archived from the original on February 4, 2014. Retrieved November 12, 2018.
- ^ Drake, Carolina (November 30, 2023). "Miami's little-known Indigenous history". BBC. Retrieved December 1, 2023.
- ^ "It's time to make Miami's historic national landmark visible". Miami Today. July 26, 2022. Retrieved December 1, 2023.
- ^ "Historic Miami Circle Park closing for an upgrade". Miami Today. May 25, 2021. Retrieved December 1, 2023.
- ^ Cass, D: "Vicious Circle," Metropolis, 108, 113, November 1999.
- ^ "'Great and exciting improvements' due at Miami Circle". Miami Today. January 15, 2019. Retrieved December 1, 2023.
- ^ "Museum Artifacts". HistoryMiami. Archived from the original on February 8, 2012. Retrieved February 22, 2012.
- ^ Jerald T. Milanich (September–October 1999). "Much Ado About a Circle". Archaeology. 52 (5). Archaeology.org. Retrieved January 2, 2013.
- ^ Prieto, Alison (March 14, 2008). Historical Museum Signs Sublease with State of Florida to Manage the Miami Circle (PDF) (Report). Historical Museum of Southern Florida. Retrieved April 25, 2008.[permanent dead link]
- ^ Weiner, Jacquelyn (October 28, 2010). "12 years after discovery, Miami Circle due December opening". Miami Today. Retrieved November 8, 2010.
- ^ "Miami Circle®". HistoryMiami. Archived from the original on March 18, 2012. Retrieved February 22, 2012.
External links
[edit]- Miami Circle at Florida Dpt of State Historical Resources
- Miami Circle at Florida Heritage, Dpt of State
- Miami circle: essential facts
- "What was the Miami Circle?". Archaeological Institute of America (AIA). September 28, 1999.
University of Florida archaeologist Jerald Milanich suggests the Miami Circle may be a septic-tank drainage system. Check out the evidence on both sides for yourself
- Lumsden, Michael (January 25, 2001). "The Mystery of the Miami Circle". Horizon documentary. BBC.
- "Bernie Powell". Southeast Region: FPAN. February 13, 2015. Archived from the original on February 26, 2022.
An amazing gentleman, Bernie Powell, recently donated a model he made of the Phase I archaeology excavation of the Miami Circle
at Florida Public Archaeology Network (FPAN) - Southeast Region
Miami Circle
View on GrokipediaDiscovery and Excavation
Pre-Discovery Context
The Miami Circle site occupies Brickell Point at the mouth of the Miami River where it meets Biscayne Bay, a location strategically chosen by the Tequesta, a Native American tribe native to southeastern Florida. The Tequesta, described as a small and relatively peaceful group, established villages along the Biscayne Bay coastline and the Miami River, with their primary settlement—potentially the chiefdom's capital—on the river's north bank. This area supported their subsistence economy based on fishing, hunting, and gathering, with evidence of long-term habitation predating European arrival by up to 2,000 years.[4][5][6] European contact beginning in the 16th century, initiated by Spanish explorers, introduced diseases and disrupted indigenous populations, leading to the Tequesta's sharp decline and eventual dispersal or assimilation by the early 18th century. The Brickell Point area remained largely undeveloped until the late 19th century, when the Brickell family, early Anglo-American settlers, acquired the land and operated a trading post there starting in the 1870s to exchange goods with remaining Native groups and support regional commerce.[6][7] By the mid-20th century, Miami's urbanization transformed the site, with a complex of apartments built in the 1950s directly atop prehistoric midden layers—shell and refuse deposits spanning 50-75% of the parcel and signaling underlying archaeological significance. Despite this known potential from surface surveys and regional studies, no systematic excavations had occurred at Brickell Point prior to 1998, as the focus of earlier Florida archaeology emphasized larger mound sites rather than urban-embedded features. The impending demolition of the apartments for a high-rise condominium project, Brickell Point, prompted required salvage archaeology under state preservation laws.[8][2][9]1998 Salvage Excavations
In 1998, salvage excavations commenced at the Brickell Point site (8DA12) in downtown Miami, Florida, as a mitigation measure required under local historic preservation ordinances ahead of demolishing a 1950s-era apartment complex to facilitate luxury condominium construction.[10][1] The effort was directed by archaeologist Robert S. Carr, then serving as director of the Miami-Dade County Historic Preservation Division, with involvement from the Archaeological and Historical Conservancy.[11][8] Initial test units and monitoring during demolition phases uncovered dense, intact black earth midden deposits up to 1.5 meters thick, containing organic remains indicative of prolonged prehistoric human occupation rather than the disturbed fill anticipated from prior surveys.[1][8] These layers preserved stratified evidence of activity, including shell, bone, and lithic debris, prompting expanded hand-excavation to document features before potential destruction by heavy machinery.[10] During this phase, excavators identified a large circular arrangement of at least 24 basin-like postholes—each roughly 4-6 inches deep and up to 18 inches wide—excavated into the oolitic limestone bedrock, forming a precise 37.75-foot-diameter perimeter with a central posthole.[10][9] The feature's geometry suggested deliberate cultural modification, distinct from natural karst formations, though full exposure and detailed mapping extended into early 1999 as development pressures mounted.[8] Preliminary recovery included conch shell celts, bone awls, and Glades-region pottery sherds from overlying strata, supporting attribution to pre-Columbian indigenous use.[11]Key Findings During Dig
The 1998 salvage excavations, led by archaeologist Robert Carr, revealed a circular pattern of 24 large, evenly spaced basins chiseled into the oolitic limestone bedrock, measuring approximately 38 feet (11.5 meters) in diameter.[10][12] Each basin was oval to quasi-rectangular, averaging 56-74 cm long, 36-47.5 cm wide, and 30-45 cm deep, with vertical striae from stone tools evidencing intentional carving; the arrangement displayed north-south symmetry and spacing of 130-155 cm between centers.[12] Approximately 500 smaller post holes, varying 10-25 cm in diameter, were scattered within the circle and across the 2.2-acre site, alongside six smaller basins integrated into the perimeter.[2][12] Overlying these features were intact black earth midden deposits up to 50 cm thick, containing sand-tempered plain pottery, St. Johns Check Stamped sherds, shell, and bone refuse indicative of sustained prehistoric occupation.[12] Key faunal discoveries included a complete east-west oriented sea turtle carapace, an articulated shark skeleton exceeding 6 feet in length (later radiocarbon dated to AD 1560-1680), and teeth from an extinct Caribbean monk seal species.[2][12] Exotic lithic artifacts comprised two basalt celts of non-local origin—one embedded in a post hole—along with a galena bead and hematite fragments, suggesting exchange networks beyond south Florida.[2][12] An eye-shaped aperture marked the eastern cardinal point, while about 85% of the circle remained intact despite 20th-century disturbances from apartment foundations.[2] These elements collectively indicated the remnants of a substantial structural foundation rather than natural formations or modern utilities.[12]Site Description
Physical Layout and Features
The Miami Circle comprises a circular pattern of archaeological features excavated directly into the oolitic limestone bedrock at Brickell Point, measuring 38 feet (11.6 meters) in diameter.[7][13] This layout includes approximately 600 postmolds arranged in a ring, with 24 larger basins integrated into the pattern.[14] The basins alternate between relatively large oval or quasi-rectangular forms and smaller circular postholes, creating a discernible structural perimeter.[12] The features exhibit variation in size and shape, with the larger basins typically filled with black earth midden material upon discovery.[14] Cut marks from stone tools are visible on the walls of many holes, indicating manual carving into the bedrock using chisels or similar implements.[14] The site's elevation and proximity to the Miami River mouth, at the confluence with Biscayne Bay, suggest it was positioned for strategic environmental advantage, though no above-ground superstructure remains.[1] Beyond the central circle, the broader Brickell Point site (8DA1212) encompasses midden deposits and additional posthole clusters, but the defining element is the intact bedrock circle, preserved in situ after halting development in 1998.[2] The layout's precision, with postholes spaced at regular intervals, implies deliberate engineering rather than incidental accumulation.[12]Associated Artifacts and Materials
Excavations at the Miami Circle site uncovered artifacts consistent with the Glades archaeological tradition, including bone tools fashioned from deer metatarsals, shark teeth, and other faunal remains, which primarily served utilitarian functions such as cutting or scraping. Shell implements, chipped stone artifacts, and stone axes were also recovered from surrounding midden deposits, reflecting everyday activities at the Brickell Point location.[15] Exotic trade goods highlight connections to distant regions, with galena beads and copper artifacts likely sourced from central North America, basaltic celts from the Appalachian Mountains, and additional non-local materials like pumice indicating participation in broader exchange networks during the site's occupation. These items, found in association with the site's limestone bedrock features, suggest the location's role in regional interactions rather than purely local production.[3][16][17] The 24 postholes defining the circle were backfilled with prehistoric midden layers containing faunal remains, charcoal, and scattered artifacts, but no evidence of post supports or contemporaneous items directly within the holes themselves, preserving stratigraphic integrity without modern intrusions.[18][19]Dating and Chronology
Methods of Age Determination
The primary method employed to determine the age of the Miami Circle involved radiocarbon dating of charcoal samples recovered during the 1998 excavations. Charcoal fragments were collected from within one of the site's cut limestone basins and from the overlying midden deposits, which directly overlie the circular feature. These samples were submitted for accelerator mass spectrometry analysis, yielding uncalibrated ages that, when calibrated to calendar years, indicate the materials date to approximately 1,800–2,000 years before present (BP).[2][1] Supplementary radiocarbon dating was conducted on shellfish remains from the associated midden layers, providing broader context for the site's occupational history. One such analysis returned a calibrated date of around 730 BCE for the earliest midden deposits, establishing a long-term sequence of human activity at Brickell Point but not directly dating the circle's construction, which appears stratigraphically later.[20] These dates, processed in early 1999 by specialists including those from Beta Analytic, offer a terminus ante quem for the feature's use, as the organic materials likely represent post-construction burning or discard events infilling the basins. Artifact seriation provided corroborative evidence, with recovered items such as plain and cord-marked pottery sherds and ground stone tools typologically consistent with South Florida's Glades II-III periods (circa 500 BCE–1200 CE), aligning with the radiocarbon chronology. No dendrochronology or optically stimulated luminescence was applied, as the site's limestone bedrock and lack of suitable wood sequences limited such techniques; instead, the combined radiocarbon and typological approaches established the circle's construction around 2,000 years ago, with potential use extending into later pre-contact eras.[14]Evidence for Age Range
Radiocarbon dating provides the primary empirical evidence for the Miami Circle's age, with samples derived from charcoal embedded in the site's limestone basins (interpreted as postholes) and the overlying black earth midden. Two key determinations, one from a basin fill and one from the midden within the circle, both calibrate to approximately 100 A.D., indicating activity associated with the structure around 1,900–2,000 years ago.[2] Stratigraphic analysis of the midden layers, integrated with additional radiocarbon assays and diagnostic artifacts, extends the depositional sequence from ca. 500 B.C. to A.D. 900, encompassing the circle's construction and subsequent use within a broader occupational horizon.[14] This range aligns with calibrated uncertainties in the assays, though potential old-wood effects in charcoal samples could bias dates toward earlier tree growth rather than the exact carving event.[2] Artifactual corroboration reinforces the radiocarbon framework, as recovered pottery fragments and tools match Glades culture phases II–III (ca. 500 B.C.–A.D. 1200), established through regional typological sequences from dated South Florida sites.[14] No contradictory evidence from thermoluminescence or other methods has been reported, though minority interpretations invoking Paleoindian origins (10,000+ years ago) lack supporting dated materials from the circle itself and rely on unverified stylistic analogies.[2] The consensus chronology thus centers on 1,700–2,500 years before present, privileging the direct assays over speculative extensions.Cultural Attribution
Association with Tequesta
The Miami Circle, excavated at the Brickell Point site (8DA12), lies at the confluence of the Miami River and Biscayne Bay, precisely where Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de León documented a substantial Tequesta village in 1513 during his initial voyage into the region.[11] This geographic alignment supports cultural continuity, as the Tequesta maintained year-round settlements in this estuarine environment, relying on marine resources evident in the site's dense shell middens and fishing implements.[1] Associated artifacts, including over 100,000 bone tools, shell adzes, and ground stone celts recovered during the 1998 salvage excavations, exhibit forms and use-wear patterns—such as those for fiber processing and woodworking—characteristic of Tequesta material culture from the Glades II-III phases (ca. 500 BCE–1500 CE).[19] Ceramic sherds, though scarce, align with the undecorated, sand-tempered pottery typical of southern Florida's indigenous groups, including the Tequesta, distinguishing them from northern influences like those of the Calusa.[19] Stratigraphic layers reveal superimposed occupations spanning millennia, with the circular bedrock feature (approximately 37 feet in diameter) embedded in deposits containing Tequesta-linked subsistence remains, such as shark teeth knives and conch shell celts, indicating persistent use by the same cultural lineage into the protohistoric era.[1] National Park Service assessments classify the site as integral to Tequesta territorial core, with linear posthole arrangements suggesting communal structures akin to those inferred from ethnohistoric accounts of Tequesta villages.[19] This attribution draws from the absence of intrusive later materials and the site's isolation from non-Tequesta ceramic traditions, reinforcing its role in the chiefdom centered at what Europeans later termed Tequesta (or Tekesta).[14]Alternative Origin Theories
One prominent alternative theory posits that the Miami Circle is not of prehistoric origin but rather a remnant of a mid-20th-century septic tank system associated with the Brickell Point Apartments, constructed in the 1950s. Magician and skeptic James Randi advanced this idea, suggesting the circular arrangement of holes represented a drain field for wastewater disposal, with the features formed by runoff from a nearby septic tank.[8][21] Archaeologists refuted this, citing the absence of a drain field extending eastward as shown in historical plans, the presence of ancient artifacts like basalt tools inconsistent with modern construction, and radiocarbon dates from organic remains predating the 1950s by centuries.[22][8] Archaeologist Jerald T. Milanich expressed skepticism regarding the site's prehistoric attribution, advocating caution until definitive evidence ruled out a 20th-century provenance. In 1999, Milanich argued in Archaeology magazine that the circle's features could potentially align with modern disturbances, urging further testing to verify antiquity amid what he viewed as premature hype.[21][9] This minority position contrasted with on-site excavators' findings of intact pre-Columbian deposits across 70% of the 2.2-acre property, though Milanich maintained that peer-reviewed validation was essential to counterbalance initial interpretations.[23][1] Exotic theories have also emerged, including claims of Mesoamerican influence, such as construction by Maya migrants who voyaged to southern Florida 2,000–3,000 years ago in large canoes, potentially using the circle as a celestial calendar or ritual platform.[24][25] Proponents cited the site's geometric precision as echoing Mayan architectural motifs, but these lack empirical support; recovered basalt axe heads sourced from Georgia or local Florida materials contradict long-distance import from Mesoamerica, and no corroborating Mayan artifacts or stylistic parallels have been identified.[8] Such attributions remain speculative and unendorsed by professional archaeologists, who emphasize regional indigenous continuity over transoceanic contacts.[26]Empirical Challenges to Attribution
The attribution of the Miami Circle to the Tequesta people relies on its geographic location within their documented territory along Biscayne Bay and an approximate temporal alignment with radiocarbon dates from associated charcoal and wood samples, calibrated to roughly 100 CE ± 200 years. However, direct empirical linkages remain tenuous, as no Tequesta-specific diagnostic artifacts—such as distinctive shell-tempered pottery or burial goods—were recovered from the primary structural features or postholes.[2] Instead, the site's midden yields predominantly utilitarian shell tools and food remains consistent with generalized coastal foraging, lacking markers that conclusively distinguish Tequesta from contemporaneous Glades or Calusa cultural complexes.[8] The circle's construction techniques present further anomalies: its 38-foot-diameter layout of 24 quarried limestone basins and square postholes, penetrating up to 2 feet into bedrock, deviates markedly from known Tequesta architecture, which emphasized ephemeral shell middens and thatched structures without evidence of systematic stone quarrying or geometric planning.[27] This uniqueness—no comparable bedrock-cut prehistoric foundations exist elsewhere in North American indigenous sites—raises questions about whether the builders possessed technological or organizational capacities atypical for the Tequesta, whose material culture shows limited investment in permanent monumental works.[2] Exotic lithic artifacts, including two basalt celts traced via geochemical analysis to sources in northern Georgia over 600 miles away, imply participation in long-distance exchange networks that surpass the scale of Tequesta trade documented in ethnohistoric accounts, which focused on regional shell and marine resources.[8] Such imports, absent typical Central American markers despite early speculative claims, suggest potential influences from broader Southeastern or Atlantic networks, complicating a purely local Tequesta origin.[8] Minority scholarly views posit an earlier attribution, potentially to a pre-Tequesta Archaic or transitional culture dating 10,000–13,000 years ago, based on inferred stratigraphic depths and the site's anomalous sophistication relative to regional sequences; however, these interpretations conflict with calibrated radiocarbon assays and lack corroborating organic remains due to soil acidity.[2] Early post-discovery debates, including archaeologist Jerald T. Milanich's proposal that the features aligned with 1920s-era gazebo foundations visible in aerial imagery, underscored interpretive ambiguities, though geological patina on the carvings—formed over centuries—refuted modern origins.[8] Overall, the absence of redundant comparative sites or high-fidelity cultural diagnostics leaves the attribution inferential rather than demonstrative, highlighting gaps in Florida's fragmentary archaeological record.[27]Functional Interpretations
Evidence for Structural Use
The Miami Circle features 24 primary postholes arranged in a precise 38-foot-diameter circle, each cut into the oolitic limestone bedrock to depths of up to 3 feet and diameters of 4 to 18 inches, consistent with sockets for large wooden posts supporting a structural framework.[18][1] Additional excavations uncovered secondary rings of smaller postholes and basins, indicating a multi-layered construction possibly for walls, roof supports, or internal divisions in a single large building.[28][14] The holes' uniform spacing and curvature align with southeastern U.S. Native American typologies for erecting substantial timber structures, such as council houses or dwellings, where posts formed a circular perimeter to bear thatched roofs and walls.[29] Archaeological analysis of the posthole fills revealed organic residues, including charred wood fragments and tool marks from chisels or adzes, confirming deliberate bedrock carving rather than natural erosion or modern interference.[18][11] Underlying the cuts, intact midden deposits containing shellfish remains, bone tools, and pottery sherds dated to circa 500–1300 CE provide stratigraphic evidence of prolonged human activity tied to the structure's use, rather than isolated ceremonial placement.[28] This combination of features represents the only documented in-situ stone posthole pattern for a prehistoric circular building in northern Florida or the eastern U.S.[14][11] University of Houston archaeologist Randolph Widmer proposed the postholes supported a cone-shaped or domed structure with a central smoke hole, based on comparative ethnohistoric accounts of Tequesta-like architecture and the circle's load-bearing geometry.[18] Complementary evidence includes nearby linear posthole alignments suggesting entryways or enclosures, reinforcing interpretation as a functional habitation or assembly building rather than a purely symbolic marker.[29] No comparable natural formations exist in the local limestone, and experimental replications have demonstrated the feasibility of erecting stable wooden superstructures on such foundations using period-appropriate materials.[28]Claims of Ceremonial or Symbolic Purpose
Archaeologists such as Robert S. Carr, who led the excavation, have interpreted the Miami Circle's circular pattern of 24 large postholes and hundreds of smaller ones as the foundation for a ceremonial structure, possibly a temple or council house, distinguishing it from typical Tequesta dwellings due to its bedrock excavation and rectangular elements atypical for regional architecture.[16] The site's association with ritual activity is further supported by animal interments and offerings, including bones of marine species and unused tools, suggesting dedicatory or symbolic deposits rather than everyday refuse.[14][26] Zooarchaeological evidence bolsters claims of sacred use, with analysis revealing consumption of the extinct Caribbean monk seal—a "royal food" reserved for elites like chiefs or shamans—as well as other high-status marine resources such as shark, grouper, and migratory birds symbolizing authority in Tequesta cosmology.[16] Exotic artifacts, including basalt ax heads sourced from the Appalachian Mountains, galena crystals, and copper fragments, indicate long-distance trade networks converging at the site, interpreted by Carr as markers of its ceremonial prestige rather than mundane habitation.[16] Certain interpretations posit symbolic or astronomical functions, with some proposing the circle's geometry aligned with solstice sunrise and sunset positions at the site's latitude (approximately 25.77°N), potentially encoding ratios related to solar and lunar cycles around 1700–2200 B.P. for calendrical or cosmological purposes.[30] Others have speculated it served as a Maya-influenced observatory for timekeeping, though such claims rely on hypothetical alignments without direct artifactual corroboration tying it to Mayan presence.[24] These symbolic theories emphasize the circle's precise 38-foot diameter as representing cosmic order, akin to other prehistoric monumental forms, but remain conjectural pending further geospatial verification.[30]Critiques and Alternative Explanations
Archaeologists such as Jerald T. Milanich have critiqued the attribution of ceremonial or symbolic significance to the Miami Circle, arguing that the site's circular arrangement of postholes more likely represents the practical foundation of a large wooden structure rather than a ritual platform, given the absence of associated artifacts or features typical of ceremonial contexts in regional prehistoric cultures.[22] Milanich emphasized that the Tequesta and related groups lacked documented traditions of monumental stone circles or symbolic bedrock carvings, suggesting interpretations of astronomical alignment or spiritual purpose rely on unsubstantiated speculation rather than empirical parallels from Florida archaeology.[22] Alternative explanations posit the circle as the base for a council house or communal building, supported by the pattern of approximately 600 postmolds and 24 bedrock basins consistent with post supports for elevated thatched structures adapted to the humid, flood-prone environment of the Miami River mouth.[2][7] Excavation data indicate the holes facilitated wooden posts for platforms, aligning with broader evidence of residential occupation in the area, including nearby postholes for dwellings and boardwalks, rather than isolated symbolic use.[14] A controversial hypothesis advanced by Milanich proposed the circle might correspond to a 1920s-era septic tank drain field from the overlying apartment complex, citing spatial overlap with historical plumbing plans, though this was refuted by radiocarbon dating of organic remains in the holes to 500–1300 CE and inconsistencies in effluent pipe alignments.[22][31] Such mundane modern analogies underscore critiques that prehistoric ceremonial claims amplify the site's uniqueness without sufficient causal evidence, as similar posthole clusters elsewhere in the Southeast U.S. denote structural rather than esoteric functions.[29]Preservation History
Initial Development Threats
In 1998, the Miami Circle site at Brickell Point faced destruction from a planned luxury condominium development. Property developer Michael Bauman purchased the 2.2-acre parcel, which included six low-rise apartment buildings constructed in the 1950s, for $8.5 million, intending to demolish the structures and erect high-rise residential towers.[2][8] The project's scale threatened to obliterate subsurface archaeological features through site grading, foundation piling, and construction activities.[9] Miami-Dade County's stringent historic preservation ordinances mandated archaeological monitoring for developments in archaeologically sensitive zones, prompting initial surveys by the Archaeological and Historical Conservancy. These investigations, conducted in August and September 1998, uncovered the circle's 38-foot-diameter pattern of 24 bedrock-cut basins and over 600 postmolds, confirming prehistoric significance but highlighting the site's vulnerability as demolition loomed.[2] Bauman prioritized proceeding with the project, estimating potential delays from preservation efforts could cost millions in lost revenue, and suggested alternatives like excavating and relocating the feature to Bayfront Park.[20][32] The threat intensified as the developer resisted halting construction, arguing the site's value did not justify forgoing private property rights on prime waterfront land valued for economic development. Archaeologists countered that the circle's in situ context—essential for understanding its cultural and functional role—was irreplaceable, with carbon-dated artifacts indicating occupation around 2,000 years old.[33] This conflict underscored tensions between urban growth pressures in Miami's booming real estate market and the need to protect undocumented pre-Columbian remains, setting the stage for broader preservation advocacy.[7]Legal and Political Resolutions
In response to the discovery of the Miami Circle in late 1998, preservation advocates, including Dade Heritage Trust, initiated lawsuits seeking court injunctions to halt demolition by developer Michael Baumann, who planned luxury condominiums on the Brickell Point site.[34] These efforts invoked Miami-Dade County's historic preservation ordinance, one of the strictest in the U.S., which requires review of archaeological impacts prior to development.[8] However, initial legal challenges faced resistance from city officials favoring economic development, exposing tensions between municipal priorities and county-level protections.[9] On June 28, 1999, a Miami-Dade County Circuit Court judge ruled in favor of the county, affirming its authority to exercise eminent domain over the 2.3-acre property to prevent destruction, marking a pivotal legal victory for preservationists.[35] This decision stemmed from arguments that the site's rarity— a intact pre-Columbian structure—outweighed private development rights, though it highlighted regulatory gaps in balancing urban growth with archaeological safeguards.[36] Political pressure mounted, with public outcry, Native American groups, and archaeologists lobbying state legislators; Miami-Dade County commissioners requested emergency funding under Florida's archaeological preservation laws.[32] The resolution culminated in November 1999, when the State of Florida's Preservation 2000 program acquired the site for $26.7 million using state bonds and county contributions, an unprecedented intervention to preserve the circle in situ rather than excavate and relocate it.[37] This purchase averted further litigation and development, though it drew criticism for the high cost to taxpayers amid debates over property rights versus cultural heritage.[9] The action underscored causal tensions in Florida's governance, where local development incentives clashed with statewide interests in irreplaceable artifacts, ultimately prioritizing empirical preservation of the 2,000-year-old feature.[38]Post-Preservation Developments
The Miami Circle site was acquired by Miami-Dade County and the State of Florida in November 1999 for $26.75 million following eminent domain proceedings, ensuring its preservation as public land amid initial threats from high-rise development.[3] Post-acquisition, archaeological investigations extended into the early 2000s, including assessments by the Florida Bureau of Archaeological Research that confirmed intact prehistoric deposits across approximately 70% of the 2.2-acre property and radiocarbon dating placing the structure around 100 A.D.[1] Experts from institutions such as the Smithsonian Institution and Harvard University conducted on-site evaluations starting in January 1999, contributing to analyses that affirmed the site's anthropogenic origins and cultural importance.[2] The Brickell Point Site, encompassing the Miami Circle, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on February 5, 2002, recognizing its exceptional archaeological value.[39] This was followed by its elevation to National Historic Landmark status on January 16, 2009, highlighting it as the only known prehistoric circular structure of its kind in North America north of Mexico.[40] These designations facilitated federal protections and funding for interpretive infrastructure, while the circle itself was reburied under a layer of soil and gravel to prevent erosion and vandalism, preserving it in situ. Miami Circle Park, managed by HistoryMiami, officially opened to the public on February 23, 2011, transforming the preserved area into a waterfront green space with interpretive panels, an audio tour, and viewing platforms overlooking the Miami River.[41] The park's development, delayed by legal and planning processes, integrated the site into Brickell's urban expansion, where surrounding parcels saw construction of luxury high-rise condominiums and commercial towers, such as those in the Icon Brickell complex, without encroaching on the protected footprint.[42] Subsequent maintenance and minor enhancements, including pathway improvements, have sustained public access, with the site drawing visitors for educational tours amid the district's skyline growth.[43]Current Status
Miami Circle Park Features
Miami Circle Park spans 2.2 acres at 401 Brickell Avenue in downtown Miami, Florida, preserving the prehistoric archaeological site known as the Miami Circle.[43][1] The central feature is a 38-foot (11.5-meter) diameter circle formed by 24 holes and basins excavated into the oolite limestone bedrock, alternating between larger oval or rectangular basins and smaller round or oval depressions, many filled with black earth midden deposits containing artifacts.[44][1] Cutting marks from stone tools are visible on the hole walls, indicating prehistoric construction techniques.[44] For protection, the circle is partially buried under a layer of soil and sod, with select holes and midden areas exposed for public viewing.[1] The park provides free public access 24 hours a day and includes interpretive signage panels that explain the site's discovery in 1998, its Tequesta or earlier indigenous origins dating to approximately 500–1300 CE, and ongoing archaeological debates.[1] An audio tour is available via the Trail of Florida's Indian Heritage, offering narrated insights into the site's cultural significance.[1] Managed by HistoryMiami Museum since its opening as a public park in 2011, the site integrates native vegetation in surrounding areas to evoke prehistoric landscapes while ensuring structural integrity.[1][7] Positioned at the mouth of the Miami River overlooking Biscayne Bay, the park contrasts ancient earthworks with Miami's modern skyline, attracting visitors for both historical reflection and scenic waterfront views.[7] Basic amenities support passive recreation, including open lawn areas suitable for picnics and benches oriented toward bay vistas and sunrises.[45] The site's urban adjacency facilitates pedestrian access via nearby Brickell pathways, though it lacks extensive recreational facilities to prioritize archaeological preservation.[7]
