The Miami Circle: An Abbreviated History

 


Shell mounds built from calcified clam houses. Lobsters. Crabs. They are the secret, mysterious force of construction left by the ancient people of South Florida as islands for future generations to continue on and enjoy. From the old native capital found in the ten thousand mangrove shorn islands of the Fort Myers area, all the way across the big lake in the middle of the state over to modern day Miami, the mouth of the river into Biscayne Bay, base rock compounds cemented in the heat and sun during low tides are one of the main clues as to the civilizations that came before.

One of the major southeast location, location, locations for tribal activity is today known as Brickell, where ceremonial sites uncovered by the condo building boom that began with the high rise cocaine era, have continued to be found today as international finance and large scale technology have fueled a greater upward concrete strategy that perhaps the next wave of dominant creatures will discover in wonder.

The Miami Circle is just such a place, and if you like energy fieldz, you should check it out in real life. 

Located at the site of some overhyped condos and a hotel, the Miami Circle is preserved as a dog park, but if you stick your head into the wind, you can just about hear a far gone past as the ocean currents meet the sweet, filtered waters from the limestone aquifer. 

The fountains of youth that a guy named Ponce De Leon was obsessed with looking for, they are located on the floor of the Biscayne Bay as fresh water springs flowing up into the salty bite of the sea.