mississippian-moundbuilders
Society, History, By Region, North America, Ancient Age, Mississippian-Moundbuilders
- Article about the earthworks of the Mississippian "moundbuilders."
- Presents a theory that total solar eclipse phenomena provides the key to decoding the religious iconography of the Mississippian moundbuilders Native American culture.
- Brief history of the Mississippian culture and the Etowah Indian Mounds.
- Dickson Mounds Museum, a branch of the Illinois State Museum and a National Historic Site, is one of the major on-site archaeological museums in the United States. It offers a unique opportunity to explore the world of the American Indian in an awe
- This site holds information on the Cahokia site in East St Louis, Illinois, as well as the more recent history of the area.
- Several mounds including Monks Mound, the largest earthen mound in the New World. This web site includes information on the interpretive center, and presents photos, history, and event calendar at this World Heritage site.
- Massive bibliography of Oneota-related texts and websites.
- Traces the last 15,000 years of Native American occupation of Tennessee, using artifacts from the McClung Museum's collections. Includes the Duck River Cache dating from the Late Mississippian period (ca. AD 1450).
- The Logan Museum of Anthropology at Beloit College in Beloit, Wisconsin, possesses a diverse collection of artifacts from the Woodland and Mississippian cultures of eastern North America. Not only are all of the
- Archaeology, protohistory, and ceremony in the Pee Dee River Valley of North Carolina.
- C.H. Nash Archaeological Museum and reconstructed Indian village on a pre-Columbian site in modern-day Tennessee.
- Image gallery of Mississippian pottery, pipes, jewelry, beads, and other artifacts.
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