97. An Archeological Overview and Assessment of
Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore, Indiana.
Bringelson, Dawn and Jay T. Sturdevant
The Indiana Dunes area along the southern Lake Michigan shore
holds a unique and unsurpassed set of natural resources. The exceptional
nature of this area’s topography and resulting biological
diversity attracted the attention of scientific and conservation
communities by the turn of the 20th century. This appreciation,
coupled with severe and ongoing impact by industry to the southern
Lake Michigan dunes, sparked activism that ultimately contributed
to the formation of Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore (INDU) at
the end of the 1960s. Today, INDU contains most of the last remaining
intact duneland of the larger area. Archeological investigations
of the dunes area, starting with avocational observations some
100 years ago, have intensified over recent decades as a result
of park activities and research. Information about the archeological
record at INDU derives from a wide variety of circumstances, including
intensive and systematic inventory, testing and data recovery
projects, but also from incidental discoveries and numerous monitoring
projects. Data indicate that human use of the INDU area has occurred
over much of the last 10,000 years. Archeological materials are
distributed across INDU and suggest that some areas in the park
were occupied and reoccupied over thousands of years. The intact
topography at INDU offers a rare opportunity to learn more about
prehistoric and historic land use and cultural relations around
Lake Michigan and the mid-continent.