
Nocoroco
Remnants
of St. Johns-period habitation can be found throughout the northern end
of the Tomoka State Park peninsula, especially along the shorelines. Portions
of once-extensive oyster middens remain here--a strategic point of land
surrounded by rich lagoons and protected from hurricanes by an eastern
barrier island.
Documented
in 1605 by Spanish diplomat Alvaro Mexia, a town called Nocoroco once
existed along the peninsula's western shores. This late-St. Johns period
site represented one of the Timucuan people's last strongholds in northeastern
Florida.
Tomoka
State Park also contains archaeological evidence from thousands of years
before the Timucua lived in this area. Ask park staffers about the Tomoka
Stone site (with rocklike masses of coquina shell and four thousand-year-old
pottery) and the Strickland Mound complex (with middens and burials dating
back even further). The first is not currently open to the public; the
latter is considered one of Florida's most interesting prehistoric spots.
Directions:
Tomoka State Park
2009
North Beach Street
Ormond
Beach
Take S.R..40 (Granada Boulevard) to Beach Street; travel north to Tomoka
State Park entrance; follow park road to northern end of peninsula. Look
for National Register of Historic Places sign for interpretation. The
park charges an admission fee.

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