Culture & Heritage • South Central Wisconsin
Burial Mounds and Effigy Earthworks of Devil's Lake State Park
Date
- Aug 5, 2026
Price Range
- Free
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About this Event
For untold generations, what is now called Devil's Lake and the surrounding lands has been an important cultural landscape for the Indigenous people of this area. It has long been known as Tee Wakacak in the Ho-Chunk language, closely meaning Sacred Lake in English. At both the north and south shores there are earthworks, commonly referred to as burial mounds, in effigy as well as geometrical shapes. These mounds are monuments of a culture that thrived on this landscape some 1,000 years ago and the descendants who continue to live in this area.
This presentation will consider these earthworks as a reflection of a culture, why and how they may have been created, how they were viewed by early European settlers, some early efforts for the preservation of these sites, and how they can be appreciated and respected as a part of the current cultural landscape of Devil's Lake State Park. The presentation will include maps and models of the state park's earthworks and mounds, as well as closely observing some of these as they exist today.
The presentation will begin among the effigy earthworks located just north of the Sugar Maple Shelter on the North Shore. Please park in the Visitor Center parking lot. To finish the presentation, we will drive to the South Shore to experience the bird-shaped earthwork located there.
This program is funded in part by a grant from Sauk County Economic Development, Arts and Culture Committee, a Committee of the Sauk County Board of Supervisors and the Wisconsin Arts Board.
Dates & Times
Aug 5, 2026
6 PM - 8 PM
Aug 5, 2026
6 PM - 8 PM
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