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  2. Gordon Tract Archeological Site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gordon_Tract_Archeological...

    The Gordon Tract is a late Woodland period archeological site located on the floodplain and bluffs of Hinkson Creek near Columbia, Missouri, United States, which contains the remains of a prehistoric village and mounds.

  3. Winterville site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winterville_Site

    Winterville Mounds, named for the nearby town of Winterville, Mississippi, is the site of a prehistoric ceremonial center built by Native Americans of the Plaquemine culture, the regional variation of the Mississippian culture. This civilization thrived from about 1000 to 1450CE.

  4. Looking Out: The mystery of the yard holes

    www.aol.com/looking-mystery-yard-holes-083057601...

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  5. Earth lodge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth_lodge

    In Hidatsa culture, men only raised the large logs; the rest of the work was done by women. Therefore, a lodge was considered to be owned by the woman who built it. A vestibule of exposed logs marked the entrance and provided an entryway; these vestibules were often a minimum of 6 to 9 feet (1.8 to 2.7 m) in length (determined by the size of the lodge and resulting outer-clay thickness).

  6. Hughes Mound Site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hughes_Mound_Site

    The 4.5-acre (1.8 ha) is an important Caddoan Mississippian culture village center, at the northeastern frontier of that civilization. It is the only known platform mound site south of Benton on the Saline River. The site has not been dated, but artifacts found there are consistent with the Caddoan period; no contact-period artifacts have been ...

  7. Panther Intaglio Effigy Mound - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panther_Intaglio_Effigy_Mound

    Whatever was intended, the shape is commonly found among the raised mounds of the upper Midwest. The hole at Fort Atkinson is also known to be man-made because it once lay in a group of over a dozen raised mounds, including some conical mounds, a bird, a bear, [3] a dumb-bell shape, and some linear mounds. [4]

  8. Warren (burrow) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_(burrow)

    A modern view of a medieval pillow mound at Stoke Poges, England. The most characteristic structure of the "cony-garth" ("rabbit-yard") [1] is the pillow mound.These were "pillow-like", oblong mounds with flat tops, frequently described as being "cigar-shaped", and sometimes arranged like the letter E or into more extensive, interconnected rows.

  9. Beattie Park Mound Group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beattie_Park_Mound_Group

    The mounds in Beattie Park probably date from the early part of the time period 700-1100, when most of the effigy mounds seem to have been built. The grouping represents the remnants of a cluster that originally included nine conical mounds, a linear mound, an earthen embankment, and two effigy mounds: a bird and a turtle. [2]