Transformations in Mississippian Native American CultureJabe FincherJr
美 英 网络密西西比文化;密西西比文明
The pre-Columbian culture of the Mississippi woodlands has received surprisingly little attention from historians. Studying this culture, which was in many respects highly advanced, opens an entirely new perspective on what we are used to thinking of as'American'history. This essay by a ...
美 英 网络密西西比文化;密西西比文明 英英 网络释义 n. 1. thelastoftheNativeNorthAmericanmound-buildingcultures,whichflourishedfromabout800to1300
Extralocal contact with the adjacent American Bottom (AB) region is often perceived as the catalyst for this change since the AB is widely held as the birthplace of Mississippian culture. To investigate the premise that population movement from the AB was a component in the development of ...
SPIRO AND THE MISSISSIPPIAN CULTUREThe article reports on the artifacts found in the prehistoric Native American site in Oklahoma, called Spiro Mounds Archaeological State Park.Cobblestone
Native American studies Political economy of exotic trade on the Mississippian frontier| A case study of a fourteenth century chiefdom in southwestern Virginia UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY Richard Jefferies MeyersMaureen Elizabeth SiewertAlthough the Mississippian culture area has been studied for decades, the ...
Archaeologists and architects draw upon theoretical perspectives from their fields to provide valuable insights into the structure, development, and meaning of prehistoric communities.Architecture is the most visible physical manifestation of human culture. The built environment envelops our lives and ...
In other words, the authors seem to be broadly interested in the interrelationship between political action and the environmental milieu, while breaking down the barriers between the false dichotomy of culture and nature. The scope is somewhat wider than political ecology, however, in that climate ...
1050 Late Woodland peoples living near the Mississippi River and its tributaries experienced vast changes in material culture, site organization, and ideology. These changes are often attributed to trade, religion, or migration from the center of Mississippian cultural expansion, the Cahokia site, near...