Trails: (unnamed)
Hike Location: Aztalan State Park (43.06341, -88.86238)
Geographic Location: west of Johnson Creek, WI
Length: 1.4 miles
Difficulty: 2/10 (Easy)
Date Hiked: September 2024
Overview: A loop hike around a village dating to 1000-1300 AD.
Park Information: https://dnr.wisconsin.gov/topic/parks/aztalan
Hike Route Map: https://www.mappedometer.com/?maproute=972445
Photo Highlight:
Three mowed-grass trails leave from the main parking lot; you want to take the one in the middle that heads northeast to the "southeast mound," which is also known as the Gravel Knoll. In fact, this "mound" is not a constructed mound but a naturally occurring kame deposited by retreating glaciers. The kame still makes an interesting stop on your mound tour even though it represents natural history rather than human history.
To get from the kame to a real mound, turn left and head due west to the Southwest Mound, a 2-tier platform/pyramid mound. Constructed wooden stairs lead to the top of the mound. You can survey the entire site from the top of the Southwest Mound, which is this site's biggest mound. Archaeologists think this mound had a large structure on its summit, and it was probably used for communal and ritual activities. No evidence of burials have been found in this mound. Also, notice the reconstructed stockade to the west; it is one of 2 such stockades in the park today.
After taking in the view, descend to the base of the mound and head north following another mowed-grass trail that goes through the sunny prairie. At 0.4 miles, you reach the Northwest Mound. This mound is another platform mound. Although it is smaller than the Southwest Mound, archaeological evidence indicates numerous burials in this mound compared to none at the previous mound. There are no stairs or trails leading to the top of the Northwest Mound, and I do not recommend that you climb it.
To continue your tour of the site, turn left and climb slightly to approach a secondary parking area that is very close to CR Q. Before reaching the parking lot, turn right to begin hiking north along a row of conical mounds. Archaeologists think these mounds were built to commemorate important events, and the row used to extend much further north than it does today.
At 0.65 miles, you reach the park's north boundary and the highest elevation on this hike, which is about 70 vertical feet above the trailhead. To begin your return route, turn right and descend steeply for a short distance along the north perimeter of the prairie. Goldenrod was in full bloom in this prairie when I came here on a warm evening in mid-September, and the return route focuses more on this site's natural scenery than on its human history.
When you reach the exterior of the stockade, turn left to head for the Crawfish River, which you reach 1 mile into the hike. The river was this site's original main entrance road, and down here you view the site the way ancient peoples would have approached it. Turn right to begin hiking downstream with the river on your left. Angle left when you reach the Gravel Knoll for a second time, and a short descent and climb returns you to the parking area to complete the hike.
Hike Location: Aztalan State Park (43.06341, -88.86238)
Geographic Location: west of Johnson Creek, WI
Length: 1.4 miles
Difficulty: 2/10 (Easy)
Date Hiked: September 2024
Overview: A loop hike around a village dating to 1000-1300 AD.
Park Information: https://dnr.wisconsin.gov/topic/parks/aztalan
Hike Route Map: https://www.mappedometer.com/?maproute=972445
Photo Highlight:
Hike Video: (coming April 24, 2026)
Directions to the trailhead: Between Madison and Milwaukee, take I-94 to SR 26 (exit 267). Exit and go south on SR 26. Drive SR 26 south 0.8 miles to Milwaukee Street and turn right on Milwaukee St. Milwaukee St. becomes Aztalan Street and then CR B as you drive west out of Johnson Creek. Drive a total of 4.9 miles from SR 26 to CR Q and turn left on CR Q. Drive CR Q south 0.3 miles to the signed park entrance on the left. Turn left to enter the park and drive the main park road to the large parking lot at its end. Park here.
The hike: When most people think of the ancient Middle Mississippian Mound Builders, they think of their amazing center they built at Cahokia Mounds across the Mississippi River from present-day St. Louis. Yet the Mound Builders' civilization extended north through most of present-day Wisconsin, and around 900 A.D they settled along the Crawfish River in the southern part of the state. Over the next 300 years the Middle Mississippian people built some of the largest pyramid/platform mounds in present-day Wisconsin, and they also built a stockade near the mounds by placing logs vertically into the ground.
The site was abandoned between 1200 and 1300 A.D., possibly due to a mini ice age making food sourcing in Wisconsin difficult. The ruins were discovered by Timothy Johnson in 1835, yet the land was still sold and farmed afterward. The mounds and stockades that had stood the test of time for hundreds of years did not fare as well against the plow: the mounds were flattened and the stockades destroyed.
In 1921, the Wisconsin Archaeological Society purchased a 3 acre plot of land that adjoined what remained of the stockade and contained 8 conical mounds. In 1948, the Wisconsin State Legislature authorized the purchase of 120 acres that would constitute the main part of the site, and Aztalan State Park opened in 1952. Today the mounds and stockade have been restored, and a system of hiking trails takes you through the site. This hike forms a grand loop past all of the mounds and stockades, thus offering a thorough exploration of the ancient site.
Leaving the parking area |
Stairs to top of Southwest Mound |
View of Gravel Knoll from Southwest Mound |
View of plaza to the north from Southwest Mound |
Northwest Mound |
Conical mound |
Crawfish River |