from the Fort Walton site The Fort Walton culture was named by archaeologist
Gordon Willey for the
Fort Walton Mound site near
Fort Walton Beach, Florida, based on his work at the site. Through more work in the area archaeologist have now come to believe the Ft. Walton site was actually built and used by people of the contemporaneous
Pensacola culture. The peoples of the Ft. Walton culture used mostly sand, grit,
grog, or combinations of these materials as
tempering agents in their pottery, whereas the Pensacola culture peoples used the more typical Mississippian culture
shell tempering for their pottery. Using this unique combination of sand/grit/grog tempering as its criterion Fort Walton culture is now defined within the geographical area stretching from the
Aucilla River in the east to a Pensacola–Fort Walton transitional area around
Choctawhatchee Bay in the west and north into the interior of south Alabama and Georgia, up the
Apalachicola River and up the
Chattahoochee River. ==History==