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  2. Prehistory of Ohio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prehistory_of_Ohio

    Prehistory of Ohio provides an overview of the activities that occurred prior to Ohio's recorded history. The ancient hunters, Paleo-Indians (13000 B.C. to 7000 B.C.), descended from humans that crossed the Bering Strait. There is evidence of Paleo-Indians in Ohio, who were hunter-gatherers that ranged widely over land to hunt large game.

  3. History of Ohio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Ohio

    See Battle of Fallen Timbers. [ 1] Downtown Cincinnati in 2010. The history of Ohio as a state began when the Northwest Territory was divided in 1800, and the remainder reorganized for admission to the union on March 1, 1803, as the 17th state of the United States. The recorded history of Ohio began in the late 17th century when French ...

  4. List of the prehistoric life of Ohio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_the_prehistoric...

    Selected Paleozoic taxa of Ohio. Fossil of the Middle-Late Ordovician giant trilobite Isotelus. Life restoration of the Carboniferous-Permian amphibian Phlegethontia. Life restoration with a conifer-like body plan of the Silurian-Late Devonian tree-like probable fungus Prototaxites. John William Dawson (1888).

  5. Nobles Pond site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobles_Pond_Site

    Nobles Pond site is a 25-acre archaeological site near Canton in Stark County, Ohio, and is a historical site with The Ohio Historical Society. It is one of the largest Clovis culture sites in North America. At the end of the Ice age, about 10,500 to 11,500 years ago, a large number of Paleo-Indians, the first people to live in Ohio, camped at ...

  6. Newark Earthworks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newark_Earthworks

    The Newark Earthworks in Newark and Heath, Ohio, consist of three sections of preserved earthworks: the Great Circle Earthworks, the Octagon Earthworks, and the Wright Earthworks. This complex, built by the Hopewell culture between 100 BCE and 400 CE, contains the largest earthen enclosures in the world, and was about 3,000 acres in total extent.

  7. Paleontology in Ohio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleontology_in_Ohio

    The fossil record of Ohio includes greater numbers of land plants, brachiopods, clams, crinoids, fishes. [4] Ohio was a low-lying swampy plain near the coast during the Pennsylvanian. Its latitude was near the equator. Sea levels rose and fell sporadically so the rock record shows a history of land, freshwater, and sea deposits.

  8. Teays River - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teays_River

    Teays River. The Teays River network, which existed before disruption by glaciers during the Pleistocene. Reconstruction is based on the discovery of large buried valleys in West Virginia, Ohio, and Indiana and other evidence. The Teays River / ˈteɪz / [ 1] (pronounced taze) was a major preglacial river that drained much of the present Ohio ...

  9. Marietta Earthworks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marietta_Earthworks

    Platform mounds, burial mound, enclosuress, The Marietta Earthworks is an archaeological site located at the confluence of the Muskingum and Ohio Rivers in Washington County, Ohio, United States. Most of this Hopewellian complex of earthworks is now covered by the modern city of Marietta. Archaeologists have dated the ceremonial site's ...