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- Hopewell Culture Pipestone - U. S. National Park Service
The bird pipe in the photo is the only pipe found at Mound City Group that was made from catlinite pipestone, from Pipestone National Monument in Minnesota Most of the pipes found at Mound City in Hopewell Culture National Historical Park are made from local limestone, claystone, and claylike sedimentary rock deposits such as Ohio pipestone
- Landscape of the Ancients: The Hopewellian Burial Mounds Lift the Veil . . .
Hopewell mounds from the Mound City Group in Ohio (Herb Roe CC BY-SA 3 0) The Laurel Culture Spanned More Than a Thousand Years Perhaps the most extraordinary manifestation of Hopewellian culture in Minnesota is known as The Laurel Culture or Rainy River Aspect Occupying northern Minnesota, north-western Ontario, eastern Manitoba, southern
- Middle Woodland Period - The Hopewell Culture · The Moundbuilders Art . . .
The human form was a rare depiction in Hopewell art The Hopewell were more sedentary than the Adena and continued and extended the Eastern Agricultural Complex by expanding the range of crops grown, including tobacco, but still maintained the framework of a hunter-gatherer lifestyle By A D 400, the Hopewell culture and its earthwork building
- Various Woodland Artifacts - Arrowheads. com
Various Woodland Artifacts This 4 1 inch long Hopewell point is made from a white Burlington chert with tinges of pink It was found by Felix Broleo of Johnston City, Illinois in the 1950’s He was excavating a Hopewell site at the mouth of the Saline River in Hardin County, Illinois and several were found in Hopewell Mounds made
- Hopewell tradition - Wikipedia
The Hopewell tradition, also called the Hopewell culture and Hopewellian exchange, describes a network of precontact Native American cultures that flourished in settlements along rivers in the northeastern and midwestern Eastern Woodlands from 100 BCE to 500 CE, in the Middle Woodland period The Hopewell tradition was not a single culture or society but a widely dispersed set of populations
- Who Were the Hopewell? - Archaeology Magazine Archive
The Hopewell culture flourished in Ohio and other parts of eastern North America during the Middle Woodland Period, possibly as early as 100 B C We do not know what these people might have called themselves The name we use comes from Mordecai Hopewell, a Chillicothe landowner on whose property mounds were excavated in the 1800s
- Hopewell culture | North American Mound Builders, Artifacts Trade . . .
Hopewell culture, notable ancient Indian culture of the east-central area of North America It flourished from about 200 bce to 500 ce chiefly in what is now southern Ohio, with related groups in Michigan, Wisconsin, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Pennsylvania, and New York The name is derived from the Hopewell farm in Ross county, Ohio, where the first site—centring on a group of burial
- Recognizing Hopewell and Cultural Continuity | An Indigenous History of . . .
Even on just an aesthetic level, Hopewell art seems more familiar to me than Mississippian; Mississippian art reminds me of the stark Plains painting traditions, while the curlicue lines of Hopewell look a lot like the Anishinaabe paintings I’ve seen on rocks and birchbark and canvas in modern Woodland Medicine Style art So I started to look
- Minnesota. gov Portal mn. gov Minnesotas State Portal
American Indian Rock Art, State of Minnesota Section number E Page in southwestern Wisconsin (Salzer 1987b; 1993) Recently, federal archaeologists have been actively identifying and Woodland and Protohistoric times Lothson's original notes, photographs and petroglyph rubbings are near- or sub-surface artifacts associated directly with
- Hopewell Culture (200 BC - AD 500) - ArrowHeads. com
Hopewell Culture (200 BC - AD 500) 05-26-2014, 04:54 PM The Hopewell Indians were known as superior craftsmen who created some of the finest works of art in the prehistoric Americas The Hopewell dominated only 500-600 years, from middle to late Woodland times Hopewell Indians established villages along waterways, which they would
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