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The Early Woodland period continued many trends begun during the Late and Terminal Archaic periods, including extensive mound-building, regional distinctive burial complexes, the trade of exotic goods across a large area of North America as part of interaction spheres, the reliance on both wild and domesticated plant foods, and a mobile subsistence strategy in which small groups took advantage ...
Early Woodland Period 1000 BCE – 1 CE Adena culture: 1000 – 100 BCE Deptford culture – Atlantic region 800 BCE – 700 CE Deptford culture – Gulf region 500 BCE – 200 CE Middle Woodland Period 1 – 500 Point Peninsula complex (a Hopewellian culture) 600 BCE – 700 CE Laurel complex (a Hopewellian culture) 300 BCE – 1100 CE ...
Development of the Plains Woodland peoples has been heavily tied to interactions with the Hopewell culture, which existed to the east. Around 2000–1700 BP, cultural exchange and trade between the Hopewellians and the peoples of the Great Plains was at its strongest. During this period, burial mounds were more common than previously. Many of ...
Woodland period sites in Canada (13 P) Early Woodland period (1 C, 6 P) Late Woodland period (7 C, 35 P) Middle Woodland period (12 P) H. Hopewellian peoples (7 C, 34 ...
The Rumford Archaeological Sites are a collection of prehistoric Native American sites in the vicinity of the Androscoggin River near Rumford, Maine.These six sites provide a window of observation into the movements and practices of Native Americans from c. 7,000 BCE (the early Archaic period) to the Late Woodland period and contact with Europeans.
Late Woodland Southeast (Alachua culture, Suwannee Valley culture) Safety Harbor culture 1492: Christopher Columbus sails in search of a new route to India and lands in the Caribbean , leading to the first European contact in the Americas since the Norse colonization of North America 500 years earlier.
The Mississippians first appeared around 1000 CE, following and developing out of the less agriculturally intensive and less centralized Woodland period. The largest urban site of these people, Cahokia—located near modern East St. Louis, Illinois—may have reached a population of over 20,000. Other chiefdoms were constructed throughout the ...
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