For decades, scholars who studied Mississippian culture — a vast network of Native American settlements from Florida to Minnesota from roughly 800 AD to 1500 — accepted the theory that these societies ...
The Mississippian American Indian culture rose to power after A.D. 900 by farming corn. Now, new evidence suggests a dramatic change in climate... About a 15-minute drive east of St. Louis is a ...
INDIANAPOLIS -- What caused the rapid disappearance of a vibrant Native American agrarian culture that lived in urban settlements from the Ohio River Valley to the Mississippi River Valley in the two ...
Papers presented at the Center for Archaeological Investigations' 20th annual Visiting Scholar Conference, held at Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, March 2003. Contents Borne on a litter with ...
Sometimes you know about art you’ve never seen. If you love Mayan, Incan and Aztec culture and haven’t visited the National Museum of Anthropology in Mexico City or the ruins at Chichen Itza, heading ...
The Journal of Paleontology, published by the Paleontological Society, includes original articles and notes on the systematics of fossil organisms and the implications of systematics to ...
About a fifteen minute drive east of St. Louis, Missouri, is a complex of earthen mounds that once supported a pre-historic city of thousands. For a couple hundred years, the city, called Cahokia, and ...
Scientists report on dramatic environmental changes that occurred as Native Americans flourished and then vanished from the Midwestern United States before Europeans arrived. The researchers theorize ...
About a 15-minute drive east of St. Louis is a complex of earthen mounds that once supported a prehistoric city of thousands. For a couple of hundred years, the city, called Cahokia, and several ...