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References
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[1]
Cahokia Mounds - Illinois Historic Preservation DivisionCahokia Mounds is the largest prehistoric Native American city north of Mexico, with 70 of 120 mounds, including the 100-foot Monks Mound. It is a World ...
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Cahokia - Illinois State Archaeological SurveyCahokia, America's first city, was located near St. Louis, with 200 pyramids and a population of 20,000 in a 6 square mile area.
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Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site - National Park ServiceJul 23, 2020 · Population estimates for Cahokia proper range from 10-20,000, which was equivalent to the population of many European cities at that time.
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[4]
Cahokia: An Introduction & Monks Mound - Archaeology and LidarMar 5, 2023 · Cahokia is an archaeological site with 120 mounds, including Monks Mound, the largest earthen platform in North America, built by Mississippian ...
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[5]
Human Sacrifice in the Late Prehistoric American Bottom: Skeletal ...Evidence for human sacrifice in the American Bottom is best known from Mound 72 at the Cahokia Mounds. Evidence for ritualized sacrifice includes the ...
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[6]
Ancient bones, teeth, tell story of strife at CahokiaAug 4, 2016 · “There are several mass burials of young women in Mound 72 that range in age between 12 and 25. There are no marks on the bones that we can see ...
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Cahokia's emergence and decline linked to Mississippi River floodingAug 21, 2015 · At Cahokia, the largest prehistoric settlement in the Americas north of Mexico, new evidence suggests that major flood events in the Mississippi ...
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[8]
New study adds to mystery of Cahokia exodus | Arts & SciencesJul 2, 2024 · One popular theory is that the Cahokia residents abandoned the settlement after a massive crop failure brought on by a prolonged drought. But a ...<|separator|>
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[9]
Cahokia's emergence and decline coincided with shifts of flood ...These data show that Cahokia emerged during a period of reduced megaflood frequency associated with heightened aridity across midcontinental North America.
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[10]
Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site - UNESCO World Heritage CentrePrimary features at the site include Monks Mound, the largest prehistoric earthwork in the Americas, covering over 5 ha and standing 30 m high. Description is ...
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Geographic Names Information SystemPrimarily from U.S. Geological Survey 1:24,000-scale topographic maps (or 1 ... Coordinates. Sequence, Coordinates, Map, State. 1. 38.6244952, -90.1509428 / 38° ...
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[12]
About - The American BottomThis flood plain-- known to geographers and anthropologists as The American Bottom--is site to the social and spatial aspirations of pre-contact Native ...
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History - American Bottoms 100Put simply, it's a narrow floodplain of the Mississippi River in Illinois. It's bordered on the west by the river, and on the east by a long chain of bluffs. It ...
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[14]
Cahokia Mounds State Historic SIte Topo Map in St. Clair County ILCahokia Mounds State Historic SIte Information ; Coordinates: 38.6539386°N, -90.0645506°W ; Approx. Elevation: 420 feet (128 meters) ; USGS Map Area: Monks Mound
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Cahokia NAGPRA ProjectThe Cahokia Mound Center (11S34, 11MS4) is the largest pre-contact archaeological site in North America, dating to approximately AD 900-1300.Missing: facts | Show results with:facts
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Ancient poop helps show climate change contributed to fall of CahokiaFeb 25, 2019 · A new study shows climate change may have contributed to the decline of Cahokia, a famed prehistoric city near present-day St. Louis. And it ...
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[17]
Cahokia - ORIAS - UC BerkeleyCahokia is an archaeological site in Illinois that was built and occupied by Native Americans from about 1000-1400 CE.Letter to Students · Introduction to Cahokia · Changing Narratives: Who...
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[18]
Middle Mississippians - Aztalan - Milwaukee Public MuseumThe Mississippians at Cahokia, as well as at Aztalan, turned hundreds of fertile acres into farmland, and this vast agricultural enterprise formed the base of ...
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[19]
Severe Little Ice Age drought in the midcontinental United States ...Jul 5, 2021 · Drought has long been suspected as playing an important role in the abandonment of pre-Columbian Native American settlements across the midcontinental United ...
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[20]
Ancient Cahokia and the Mississippian CulturePerhaps 15,000 – 20,000 people resided in Greater Cahokia. Another 30,000-40,000 people lived in the surrounding rural countryside. If one thinks about Europe ...Missing: estimate | Show results with:estimate
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[21]
[PDF] Medieval Life in America's Heartland - Global Middle AgesWe think the actual founders of Cahokia were not Effigy Mound folk but a mix of local Late. Woodland people who had long called the area home and immigrants ...
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[22]
The Formative Emergent Mississippian Sponemann Phase ...This site presents the first evidence in late prehistory for the significant influx of non-residents into the area as a prelude to the emergence of Cahokia.
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[23]
Isotopic Confirmation of the Timing and Intensity of Maize ...Apr 22, 2020 · We present new lines of evidence that confirm subsistence-level maize use at Cahokia was introduced rather abruptly at about AD 900 and ...Missing: intensification | Show results with:intensification
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[24]
Cahokia's rise parallels onset of corn agriculture - Illinois News BureauMay 14, 2020 · Corn cultivation began in the vicinity of the city of Cahokia between AD 900 and 1000, researchers report in a new study.Missing: 800-1050 CE
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An evaluation of fecal stanols as indicators of population change at ...Fecal stanols deposited in sediment provide evidence of trace human waste products and have been proposed as a proxy for measuring population change.
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[26]
Monks Mound - WikipediaLocated at the Cahokia Mounds UNESCO World Heritage Site near Collinsville, Illinois, the mound size was calculated in 1988 as about 100 feet (30 m) high, 955 ...
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(PDF) The chronology of Monks Mound - ResearchGateAug 6, 2025 · Monks Mound is the largest single Native American construction in North America. The mound sits at the center of the Cahokia site, and ...
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Fecal stanols show simultaneous flooding and seasonal ...Feb 25, 2019 · Furthermore, Pauketat and Lopinot (14) estimated that the population at Cahokia during the Lohmann phase was five to 10 times higher than in the ...
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[29]
(PDF) Isotopic Confirmation of the Timing and Intensity of Maize ...We argue that migration into Greater Cahokia played a causal role in the rapid intensification of maize agriculture and associated processing technology.
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[PDF] The development and Collapse of Political Complexity at Cahikia in ...Apr 16, 2019 · From the Lohmann phase high of 10 to 15.000, Stirling phase population is estimated to have dropped to between 5.000 and 7.000.
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(PDF) Cahokia Interaction and Ethnogenesis in Midcontinental USCahokia represents a significant sociopolitical transformation in the Midcontinental region of North America around AD 900. This paper explores the dynamic ...
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Cahokia: Urbanization, Metabolism, and Collapse - FrontiersWithin this political landscape, Cahokia by the early eleventh century was already a large and expanding community, home to perhaps 1,400 people or more. A ...Missing: 9th | Show results with:9th
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Some perspectives on Cahokia and the northern Mississippian ...Nov 23, 2017 · Proffered explanations for Cahokian interest in the region include militaristic expansion, proselytization, and trade (e.g., Emerson 1991a; ...
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Cahokia's boom and bust in the context of climate changeDuring the early Mississippian Lohmann phase (A.D. 1050-1100), the American Bottom experienced a political and economic transformation.
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Severe Little Ice Age drought in the midcontinental United States ...Jul 5, 2021 · The δ18OHSL record indicates that Cahokia emerged as a regional center during the early Mississippi period (i.e., 1050–1200 CE) under relatively ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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Archeology This Month: Native American Heritage (U.S. National ...Feb 13, 2025 · Cahokia's population may have numbered 10-20,000 people, perhaps as many as 50,000, at its peak between 1050 and 1150 CE. An agricultural ...
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[PDF] Cahokia Mounds State Historic SiteCahokia Mounds reached its peak between 1100 to 1200 A.D. It is believed the Mississippian period at Cahokia Mounds began to decline about 1200 A.D., and the ...
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'Revealing Greater Cahokia' details research on ancient North ...With a population between 10,000 and 30,000 in its heyday (A.D. 1050-1200) ... The more famous part of the city is preserved as Cahokia Mounds ...Missing: zenith trade
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The Cahokian Crucible: Burning Ritual and the Emergence of ...Jul 12, 2019 · Formalized political-religious buildings introduced during the Lohmann phase continued to be built and used during the Stirling phase.
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(PDF) What Constituted Cahokian Urbanism? - Academia.eduThe paper explores the urban landscape of Cahokia, investigating how its formation and structure can inform contemporary urban studies.Missing: peak | Show results with:peak
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Study: Scant evidence that 'wood overuse' at Cahokia caused local ...Apr 8, 2021 · Archaeologists from Arts & Sciences excavated around earthen mounds and analyzed sediment cores to test a persistent theory about the collapse of Cahokia.
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Questioning the Great Cahokia Flood - PMC - PubMed CentralThere is no archaeological evidence of a flood. In fact, excavations demonstrate large-scale construction efforts modifying the landscape to manage the movement ...<|separator|>
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(PDF) Revealing Greater Cahokia,North America's First Native CitySep 7, 2025 · ... population and influence began to decline before 1200 CE [7][8][9]. ... Age and origin of a Cahokian wooden monument at the Mitchell site ...<|separator|>
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New study debunks myth of Cahokia's Native American lost civilizationJan 27, 2020 · By the 1400s, Cahokia had been abandoned due to floods, droughts, resource scarcity and other drivers of depopulation. But contrary to ...
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[PDF] Social Complexity at Cahokia - AWSCahokia is an important urban place for theories of social complexity, as it appears to have emerged in the absence of a supporting regional administrative.
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Fresh look at burials, mass graves, tells a new story of CahokiaAug 4, 2016 · This mound, now called Mound 72, held five mass graves, each containing 20 to more than 50 bodies, with dozens of other bodies buried ...Missing: elite | Show results with:elite
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“But some were more equal than others:” Exploring inequality at ...Sep 6, 2024 · Conclusions have varied considerably: “Social inequality is suggested by the sizes of buildings, equipment, and burial gifts…” wrote James ...
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“But some were more equal than others:” Exploring inequality at ...Sep 6, 2024 · Wealth inequality, social stratification ... Status and gender differences in diet at Mound 72, Cahokia, revealed by isotopic analysis of bone.
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Status and gender differences in diet at Mound 72, Cahokia ...Substantial status- and gender-related differences in burial style are apparent. Some burials are associated with large quantities of prestigious grave goods, ...
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[PDF] Chapter 9: Elements of Cahokian Neighborhoods - AnthroSourceAround Greater Cahokia, the differences can be difficult to discern in the absence of large-scale excavation or high-resolution geophysical data. Page 5. This ...
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[PDF] Surplus Labor, Ceremonial Feasting, and Social inequality at CahokiaSURPLUS LABOR, CEREMONIAL FEASTING, AND SOCIAL INEQUALITy AT CAHOKIA. 243. Pauketat, Timothy R. 2000. “The Tragedy of the Commoners.” In Agency and Archaeology,.
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[PDF] A Case Study of Cahokia's Mound 72 - CORERethinking the Mound 72 Mortuary context. The Mound 72 story goes beyond the reflective representations of elite hierarchy and enactments of hero-figures ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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New dental and isotope evidence of biological distance and place of ...Jul 14, 2015 · The elaborate burials and human sacrifices in Mound 72 have been interpreted as clear evidence of marked social stratification and display ...
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Scientists Think Most of Those Sacrificed at Cahokia Were LocalsAug 28, 2015 · The mound, excavated in the 1960s, contained three large pits that held human remains laid out in neat rows. Most of the dead were young women ...
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Sacrificed at Cahokia: Teenage Girls and the end of Mississippian ...Feb 26, 2022 · Analysis suggests that nearly all of these graves were human sacrifices. Analysis of Mound 72 shows that the burials did not happen all at once, ...
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Politics as usual in west-central Illinois? Warfare and violence ...During Cahokia's demographic ascendency from AD 1050-1200, violent rituals were played out in mortuary monuments in the AB and CIV, but skeletal trauma from ...
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Conflict and death in a late prehistoric community in the American ...Aug 7, 2025 · Detecting violence in the archaeological record: Clarifying the timing of trauma and manner of death in cases of cranial blunt force trauma ...
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Cahokian Indians: America's Ancient Warriors - HistoryNetJun 12, 2006 · The Cahokian Indians used a sophisticated form of warfare to create the largest Indian empire of the Mississippian civilization.
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Ancient and Frontier Fortifications in Illinois.Nov 24, 2018 · The prehistoric Cahokia Mounds Stockade was located in modern-day Collinsville, Illinois. Although some evidence exists of occupation during the ...
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[PDF] LIVING WITH WAR: THE IMPACT OF CHRONIC VIOLENCE IN THE ...in the Central Valley has also revealed instances of violence-related skeletal trauma in the form of graves with multiple interments and individuals with ...
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Deer, drought, and warfare: Managing risk in the central Illinois river ...Apr 20, 2024 · Bioarchaeological and paleodemographic research reveals that the Mississippian-period CIRV had the highest rate of adult violent trauma in the ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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How Did Cahokian Farmers Feed North America's Largest ...Mar 28, 2019 · By using flotation—allowing water to bubble up through sediment and examining the tiny particles that float to the top—archaeologists have ...Missing: soil | Show results with:soil
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Cahokia's rise parallels onset of corn agriculture - ScienceDailyMay 16, 2020 · In a new study, scientists report that corn was not grown in the ancient metropolis of Cahokia until sometime between A.D. 900 and 1000, a ...
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Women shaped cuisine, culture of ancient Cahokia - The SourceMar 21, 2019 · She explores the origins of other early food crops, such as a native squash, sunflower, erect knotweed and chenopod, which were domesticated in ...Missing: adaptation | Show results with:adaptation
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Uncovering Cahokia's Food History & Forgotten FarmscapesAug 30, 2023 · The original residents of Cahokia cultivated crops we still grow like corn, squash and nuts. They also grew so-called “lost crops” as they are no longer in ...Missing: systems beans
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Feeding Cahokia: Early Agriculture in the North American HeartlandJan 31, 2024 · The economic engine that fueled this metropolis was agriculture, and the dominant crop was corn. Or so we thought. In Feeding Cahokia, ...Missing: yields intensification
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[PDF] Cahokia and the Mississippian Period, 950–1600 CEMississippians grew maize on labor-intensive raised ridge and ditch fields, where fertility is replenished every year when the farmers clean out the ditches ...
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Soil Study Suggests Cahokia's Crops Survived Drought ConditionsJul 9, 2024 · Mueller and Rankin think that the residents of Cahokia developed solutions to grow crops in harsh conditions.Missing: farming | Show results with:farming
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[PDF] Feeding Cahokia: Early Agriculture in the North American Heartland.Dec 28, 2024 · The book focuses on early agriculture in the North American Heartland, particularly the American Bottom, and the intensification of diverse ...
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Cahokia: America's Ancient Metropolis | Environment & Society PortalMississippian trade routes emanating from Cahokia reached from Wisconsin to the Gulf of Mexico. ... archaeology · settlements · cities · soil. Themes ...Missing: scholarly | Show results with:scholarly
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Cahokia Mounds Hosted Only Copper Works In North AmericaAug 1, 2014 · Kelly's team concluded that copper was imported to Cahokia from the Great Lakes and worked into artifacts here that were then exported all over ...
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(PDF) Cahokia's Mound 72 shell artifacts - ResearchGateFeb 3, 2021 · This article presents results from my reexamination of all shell artifacts from Mound 72, including some new artifact identifications, bead counts, and ...
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Cahokia Becomes the First North American City | Research StartersCahokia's development reflects the Mississippian culture, noted for its ... Population estimates at its zenith, c. 1050-1150, range from eight thousand ...
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Cahokia's shell bead crafters and maize producersCahokia's beginnings are indicated by maize at AD 900–1000 and Mound 72 beaded burials around CE 1050. · Maize nixtamalization using “stumpware” was greatly ...Missing: intensification | Show results with:intensification
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Cahokia - Alliance for Networking Visual CultureCahokia is a Mississippian culture site in Illinois, occupied from AD 800-1350, with a population of 10,000-25,000. It had over 100 mounds and a palisade.
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(PDF) Cahokia and the Archaeology of Power - ResearchGateAug 6, 2025 · Cahokia and the Archaeology of Power by Thomas E. Emerson. Review by: Robert J. Watson and Melvin L. Fowler. Source: Journal of Field Archaeology.Missing: peer- | Show results with:peer-
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Why Did Cahokia, One of North America's Largest Pre-Hispanic ...Apr 16, 2021 · A new study challenges the theory that resource exploitation led to the Mississippian metropolis' demise.
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(DOC) Analysis of Faunal Remains from the 1960 Excavations at ...A sizeable faunal assemblage was recovered during the 1960 salvage excavations at Cahokia's Tract 15B. Over 25,000 pieces of bone and shell are present, ...
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[PDF] AN INTRA-SITE SPATIAL ANALYSIS OF SELECTED FAUNAL ...evidence that faunal remains at Cahokia were different from outlying sites where non-elites would have been living. Whitetail deer elements were much more ...
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1. The view from Cahokia - ResearchGateCahokians drew their subsistence from a combination of hunting, fishing, gathering, and the cultivation of maize, beans, and squash. The rise and fall of ...
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[PDF] Late Prehistoric and Historic Period Paleoethnobotany of the North ...and plant gathering, though important foods in May and June reported by Strachey (Major 1849:73) include acorns, chestnuts, walnuts (all of which must have ...
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The Role of Plants and Animals in the Termination of Three ...Dec 13, 2022 · In this article, we present analyses on the ethnobotanical and zoological remains recently recovered from the Spring Lake Tract, Cahokia.
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Cahokia's emergence and decline coincided with shifts of flood ...May 4, 2015 · Here, we present evidence that Cahokia emerged during a ... Lopinot NH, Woods WI. Wood overexploitation and the collapse of Cahokia.
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Cahokia - Alliance for Networking Visual Culture... wild resources could be exploited through hunting, fishing, and gathering local, wild plant populations. Cahokia was partly able to become such a dominating ...Missing: strategies | Show results with:strategies
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Fecal stanols show simultaneous flooding and seasonal ... - PNASFeb 25, 2019 · The environmental degradation hypothesis argues that wood overexploitation and agricultural ground clearing increased watershed erosion and ...
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Scant evidence that 'wood overuse' at Cahokia caused collapseApr 8, 2021 · Kidder said: "This research demonstrates conclusively that the over-exploitation hypothesis simply isn't tenable. This conclusion is important ...Missing: decline | Show results with:decline
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Mound 72 – Cahokia Mounds State Historic SiteOct 23, 2015 · Mound 72 is a small, ridge-topped mound with a unique orientation, excavated between 1967-1971, containing burial pits, deposits, and over 250 ...Missing: elite hierarchy
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Mound 48 – Cahokia Mounds State Historic SiteOct 23, 2015 · Mound 48 is a large, nearly square mound with a flat top, oriented to cardinal points, and was likely used by Trappist monks. It is about 367.4 ...
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Woodhenge - Cahokia Mounds, Illinois - ScienceViews.comWoodhenge is a circle of wooden posts at Cahokia Mounds, marking solstices and equinoxes, acting as a calendar, and possibly with other meanings.
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Cahokia's PrecinctsCahokia's main precinct has pyramids and plazas. East St. Louis and St. Louis have additional precincts with pyramids and building complexes.Missing: layout | Show results with:layout
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Seeing into the Past: Remote Sensing - Cahokia MoundsAt Cahokia most houses were erected in basins dug one to three feet deep. After a house was dismantled or burned down, the house basin then became the ...<|separator|>
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Cahokia: A Pre-Columbian American CityWe now know that Cahokia began as a modest-sized, Late Woodland agricultural village. Around the wide floodplain of the Mississippi River opposite St. Louis, ...
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Building Monks Mound, Cahokia, Illinois, a.d. 800–1400Nov 12, 2013 · Although poorly engineered relative to modern standards, the suitability of the mound as a platform may have been secondary to other design ...Missing: labor | Show results with:labor
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Solid Core Drilling of Monks Mound: Technique and FindingsJan 20, 2017 · Evidence of construction stages is described and used to arrive at an estimate of labor figures and the necessary sustaining population of the ...
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(PDF) Building Monks Mound, Cahokia, Illinois, A.D. 800–1400Aug 6, 2025 · The results suggest that the mound is not optimally positioned for stability and its location may ultimately accelerate deterioration. Moreover, ...
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EXPLORE – Cahokia Mounds State Historic SiteAbout 100 meters (328.1 feet) south of Monks Mound is a tumulus… Mound 50. This mound is one of a series (Mounds 50, 51 ...
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Q & A: Measuring Cahokia – Bill IsemingerA standard unit of measure he called “The Cahokia Yard.” It measured 3.425 feet (1.044 meters) and multiples and fractions thereof he believed were used to ...
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Notes from Underground - College of LSAMay 9, 2025 · Cahokia Mounds is the largest precolonial settlement north of Tenochtitlan (Mexico City). The site was home to up to 20,000 people at its peak ...
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The Residues of Feasting and Public Ritual at Early CahokiaJan 20, 2017 · Archaeological remains excavated from the stratified layers of a pre-Columbian borrow pit in the middle of the Cahokia site inform our ...
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Death and Sacrifice in the American Bottom - Illinois Experts... ritual offerings ... Mound 72 at the American Bottom Mississippian mound center of Cahokia. These offertory burial events and evidence for human sacrifice ...
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Cahokia and the Southeastern Ceremonial Complex - ResearchGateNov 25, 2021 · The classic expression of the Southeastern Ceremonial Complex (SECC) at Etowah, Moundville, and Spiro forms a distrnct period rn the early fourteenth century.
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Cahokia Mounds Bird Man Tablet - The Story of IllinoisThis small sandstone tablet, only about four inches tall, shows a man in a bird costume (possibly representing an eagle or peregrine falcon).Missing: Pauketat | Show results with:Pauketat
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[PDF] The southeastern ceremonial complex: The evolution of a conceptApr 27, 2023 · that the motifs found in the Macon Plateau and Cahokia suggest that the cult developed from a Middle Mississippian religion (Williams 1968 ...
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(PDF) The Elements of Cahokian Shrine Complexes and the Basis ...The archaeological findings surrounding Cahokia's shrine complexes lead us to two primary inferences. First, religion as it was lived (if not also as an ...
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Cahokia and the Archaeology of Power - Project MUSEThese centers consolidated the symbolism of such 'artifacts of power' as figurines, ritual vessels, and sacred plants into a rural cult that marked the ...
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Cahokia in Context: Hegemony and Diaspora - Project MUSE... Cahokia. Contributors find evidence for Cahokia's hegemony—its social, cultural, ideological, and economic influence—in artifacts, burial practices, and ...
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[PDF] Cosmic negotiations: Cahokian religion and Ramey Incised pottery ...Sep 25, 2017 · The presence of Cahokia-style cosmograms outside of the American Bottom represents an expression of Caho- kian religious ideology as adopted by ...
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The Sourcing and Interpretation of Cahokia-Style Figurines in the ...Jan 20, 2017 · Exchange of preciosities is often considered an integral factor in the emergence of Mississippian chiefdoms, and the rise of Cahokia has ...
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[PDF] mississippian missionaries: bundling a cahokian religious movementThis dissertation examines religion as a catalyst for culture change using Indigenous missionary and proselytizing practices as it pertains to the rise of ...
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Mississippian Culture - 64 ParishesFeb 1, 2020 · Recognizable aspects of Mississippian culture emanated from Cahokia to most regions of the Southeast, including parts of Louisiana, by 1200 CE.
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[PDF] The Role of Cahokia in the :Evolution of Southeastern Mississippian ...Much of what we think of as Mississippian material culture and tech- nology, in fact, likely arose from the highly fertile interaction that occurred between ...
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America's First Pastime - Archaeology Magazine Archive'Chunkey' was a game that had a significant role in organizing social and political life at Cahokia, the great prehistoric city that arose around A.D. 1050 ...
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[DOC] Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site - National Park ServiceThe largest earthen mound in the Americas, 30 meter (100 foot) high Monks Mound was at the center of the site. At its peak between AD 1050-1150, Cahokia was ...
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Greater Cahokia ArchaeologyWelcome to the Greater Cahokia website. We are engaged in a collaborative set of inquiries to understand the historical effects of this singular ancient ...
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Refiguring the archaeology of greater CahokiaGreater Cahokia was a product of local agricultural populations dominated and accommodated over three centuries. The processes of domination and accommodation, ...
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(PDF) Revealing Greater Cahokia, North America's first native cityRevealing Greater Cahokia, North America's first native city: rediscovery and large-scale excavations of the East St. Louis Precinct.<|separator|>
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Corn, Climate, and the Human Population of Greater CahokiaWe argue that migration into Greater Cahokia played a causal role in the rapid intensification of maize agriculture and associated processing technology.<|control11|><|separator|>
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Feature 2000, East St. Louis Mound CenterAlthough some 50 mounds were associated with the ancient city of East St. Louis, this mound, designated as Feature 2000 by ISAS researchers, was not previously ...
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Age and origin of a Cahokian wooden monument at the Mitchell site ...Oct 3, 2025 · All of the rest of the known cypress wood dates to the urban period of Cahokia history (1050–1200 ... Fecal stanols show simultaneous flooding and ...
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(PDF) REDISCOVERING THE MITCHELL SITE (11MS30)1150-1200 at best, the Mitchell site developed into a large satellite community of Cahokia with a defined plaza and planned spatial organization for structures.
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RiverWeb Settlement Patterns - Illinois State MuseumThus, we do not know whether or not this settlement hierarchy represents the socio-political function of a Cahokia polity encompassing the whole American Bottom ...
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Cahokian culture spread across eastern North ... - The ConversationOct 30, 2020 · During the early days of Cahokia, around 1050, emissaries from the city traveled north to sites in what is now Wisconsin, spurring the local ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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NoneSummary of each segment:
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THE SOUTHERN CULT RECONSIDERED - jstorsites, Etowah, Moundville, and Spiro were occupied. Two views emerged on this matter that differed basically on the age of the Spiro site, which is the most ...
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[PDF] The Ramey Incised Pottery of Cahokia (IL) USAAug 20, 2020 · This archaeological site had risen to be the great- est Mississippian settlement by the middle of the 11th century until its final abandonment ...
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Native Americans:Prehistoric:Mississippian:Economy:TradeThe city of Cahokia was a Mississippian marketplace where one might obtain marine shell, different types of stone for making arrowpoints or woodworking ...
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Mississippian & Oneota Traditions Introduction - Pre-European PeopleThese Mississippian ideas were dispersed from the center of Mississippian culture in Cahokia to other areas including Wisconsin.
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Cahokia Interaction and Ethnogenesis in the Northern MidcontinentJun 6, 2016 · ... Archaeological evidence indicates that about AD a small. group of elite Cahokians and their retainers moved into this region (Conrad ) ...
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[PDF] The Lamb Site (11SC24): Evidence of Cahokian Contact and ...The Lamb site residents appear to have been selectively adopting or emulating aspects of Mississippian lifeways, while maintaining certain Bauer Branch ...Missing: CE | Show results with:CE
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Why was the ancient city of Cahokia abandoned? New clues rule ...Apr 12, 2021 · An archaeologist has likely ruled out one hypothesis for Cahokia's demise: that flooding caused by the overharvesting of timber made the area increasingly ...
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Cahokian Collapse: Re-evaluating Archaeological Assumptions and ...Jan 6, 2022 · While overexploitation of resources leading to ecological damage ... Yes, the full answer to Cahokia's decline remains a mystery.
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Scant evidence that 'wood overuse' at Cahokia caused local ...Apr 8, 2021 · One oft-repeated theory is tied to resource exploitation: specifically, that Native Americans from densely populated Cahokia deforested the area ...Missing: critiques | Show results with:critiques
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This Ancient North American City May Have Collapsed Due to ...Feb 23, 2022 · His results supported an older theory: that the decline of the Cahokia corresponded with a period of frequent drought. According to the ...Missing: empirical critiques
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New study debunks myth of Cahokia's Native American lost civilizationJan 27, 2020 · A UC Berkeley archaeologist has dug up ancient human feces, among other demographic clues, to challenge the narrative around the legendary demise of Cahokia.
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The environmental impact of a pre-Columbian city based on ...Dec 27, 2018 · This study demonstrates that the sediment deposits in Horseshoe Lake contain a detailed record of environmental change and human disturbance to ...Missing: empirical critiques
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Internal dissension cited as reason for Cahokia's dissolution - Phys.orgFeb 23, 2016 · The archaeologists claim internal conflict by social, political, ethnic, and religious factions are a more reasonable description of events that led to Cahokia ...Missing: critiques | Show results with:critiques
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(PDF) Contemplating Cahokia's Collapse - ResearchGateNov 29, 2015 · ... There is very little evidence that erosion did increase during Cahokia's occupation and no evidence that flooding in the bottomlands became ...Missing: empirical critiques<|separator|>
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Cahokia: The Political Capital of the “Ramey” State? - Sage JournalsCahokia, with its elite control, political and economic classes, and hierarchical bureaucracy, was likely the capital of a state-level society.
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[PDF] Rethinking the Ramey State: Was Cahokia the Center of a Theater ...Ramey Incised pottery is the ceremonial ware at Cahokia and is found in various amounts throughout the American Bottom, the broad floodplain surrounding Cahokia ...
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[PDF] COLLAFSE. - ResearchGateContemplating Cahokia's Collapse A variety of elements relating to hierarchical control and horizontal specialization and differentiation within relatively ...
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Evaluating narratives of ecocide with the stratigraphic record at ...Feb 12, 2021 · The wood-overuse hypothesis suggests that tree clearance in the uplands surrounding Cahokia led to erosion, causing increasingly frequent and ...Missing: critique | Show results with:critique
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Scientists can measure population change through chemicals found ...May 8, 2018 · Using empirical evidence available in the form of the fecal stanols, we can now see that the end of Cahokia was not so much a 'collapse' but ...
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New study debunks myth of Cahokia's Native American lost civilizationJan 27, 2020 · Overall, the results suggest that the Mississippian decline did not mark the end of a Native American presence in the Cahokia region, but rather ...
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[PDF] After Cahokia - The Schroeder Laboratory of Wisconsin ArchaeologyThe indigenous repopulation of the area coincides with environmental changes conducive to maize-based agriculture and bison-hunting subsistence practices of the ...
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Cahokia Mounds Site Mound 72 Excavation - Lithic Casting LabMost of the burials were sacrificial offerings and placed there as either extended or bundle burials. High status burials in mound 72 would include two burials ...
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New insights into Monks Mound at Cahokia - Heritage DailyJul 21, 2022 · Archaeological evidence suggests that the city was founded around AD 1050, reaching an apex of 20,000 inhabitants until it was abandoned ...<|separator|>
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Mapping of Cahokia will be Largest Project of its Kind in all the ...Feb 7, 2023 · The most comprehensive map ever of the city of Cahokia, located in modern-day Illinois across the Mississippi River from St. Louis, Missouri.Missing: residential layout
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Archaeology - Remote Sensing LabSLU's Remote Sensing Lab is bringing the most advanced geospatial tools to the study of archaeological questions at Cahokia.
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Reimagining the Development of Downtown Cahokia Using Remote ...Our aerial and terrestrial remote sensing data offered new information on the nature and sequence of monument construction in Downtown Cahokia.Missing: reassessments | Show results with:reassessments<|separator|>
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Combining Remote Sensing Approaches for Detecting Marks of ...Remote sensing data are increasingly being used in digital archaeology for the potential non-invasive detection of archaeological remains.
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NOV 18 | Cahokia Rise and Fall - The Archaeological ConservancyWith the discovery of the first yellow-floored shrine house in 2000, archaeologists began to rethink the rise of one of North America's most important ...Missing: present | Show results with:present
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New Mississippi River Bridge Project/East St. LouisArchaeological work for the bridge project uncovered two cities: an early Euro-American city and an ancient American Indian city (A.D. 1000–1200).
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Rediscovery and Large-Scale Excavation of Cahokia's East St ...Dec 21, 2015 · In the mid-1000s CE a religious, social, and political event known as the Lohmann phase (1050-1100 CE) “Big Bang” signified the birth of Cahokia ...
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New findings in North America's first city - Heritage DailyJun 15, 2024 · The team unearthed 900-year-old ceramics, microdrills, structures, and wall trenches dating from around AD 1100 to 1200, during the Sterling Phase of the ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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Native American artifacts from 1100 AD found at Cahokia MoundsJun 11, 2024 · Saint Louis University professors, students and visiting scholars discovered approximately 900-year-old Native American pottery, microdrills and wall trenches.
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'Plaza' in ancient city of Cahokia near today's St. Louis was likely ...Aug 11, 2022 · These flat zones, called plazas by archaeologists, were thought to be communal areas near the many mounds and structures of the city.Missing: residential | Show results with:residential
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Tally of bones, artifacts reveals 2000 years of population ... - ScienceFeb 3, 2025 · Radiocarbon dates from tens of thousands of bones, textiles, food scraps, and charcoal bits are shedding light on fluctuations in Indigenous population numbers.
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Cahokia Mounds | TCLF - The Cultural Landscape FoundationSep 24, 2022 · The site came under threat from federal highway development in the 1950s, when an interstate highway was constructed through the Cahokia ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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Transitions and Growing Pains Part 2 In the 1970s, State leaders ...Oct 3, 2025 · Transitions and Growing Pains Part 2 In the 1970s, State leaders worked to preserve more of the site. This included a land acquisition program ...Missing: challenges | Show results with:challenges
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Supporters say they haven't given up on making Cahokia Mounds a ...Jan 20, 2017 · Hours have been reduced year-round at the Cahokia Mounds state historic site in Collinsville because of Illinois budget problems.Missing: challenges | Show results with:challenges
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Indigenous Mound in St Louis is Transferred to the Osage NationNov 22, 2024 · ... Osage are the most likely descendants of the Mississippians. ... Other Dhegihans and Algonguin peoples agree they are descendants of Cahokia.What modern Native American tribes are descended from ... - RedditCahokia was a pre-Columbian Indigenous city located in present ...More results from www.reddit.com
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Episode 7: Descendants of Cahokia - National GeographicDec 7, 2021 · Hear how an Osage anthropologist is protecting the remaining burial mounds and sacred shrines so the descendants of Cahokia's founders can keep its legacy ...
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Osage Nation Reacquires Sugarloaf Mound, a Sacred Osage Site ...Sep 22, 2025 · Osage Nation Reacquires Sugarloaf Mound, a Sacred Osage Site and Oldest Human-Made Structure in St. Louis | Osage Nation.
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NPS awards $1.9 million for the return of Native American remains ...Aug 6, 2021 · FY 2021 NAGPRA Repatriation Grant Recipients. Total funds $142,544.00 ... remains recovered from Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site.
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Illinois repatriation law will return remains to tribal nations - STLPRAug 21, 2023 · Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker signed a bill this month intended to improve the process of returning native remains and cultural artifacts to their nations of ...