'' Before excavations were first done at the site in 1846 a road and part of the
Ohio and Erie Canal had already been constructed during the early 1830s on the western third of the enclosure. Squier and Davis partially excavated the central mound in 1846. They found a number of artifacts made from
copper and
mica as well as large quantities of charred bones. The artifacts resemble those found at
Adena culture sites more than they do artifacts excavated from the nearby Mound City Group. They included the site in their influential book
Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley in 1848. They named the site after Henry Shriver, who owned the site and much of the farmland in the area during the mid-1800s. Much of the site was damaged by farming in the 1800s and early 1900s. During
World War I the
United States Army built a military training base,
Camp Sherman, on the site. The circle was graded down and the camp's
parade ground was constructed in its location. After the war, the camp was razed and
Ohio State Route 104, a road which runs through the site, was widened, causing even more damage. Part of the site was covered by the
Chillicothe Correctional Institution when it was constructed in the early 1960s. By the early 2000s, when archaeologists from the
Hopewell Culture National Historical Park began doing magnetic surveys, the site's features were so flattened that they could not be distinguished by eye from the surrounding fields, although they could be made out on old aerial photos. In 2005 a series of
LIDAR investigations and field excavations were conducted at the site. ==See also==