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Hopewell people build mounds for burial grounds.
The Mound Builders who were Adena and Hopewell and Mississippian.
the Hopewell
The Hopewell Culture represented dozens of different tribes and languages, but since none of them had any system of writing, there is no information about what languages they spoke.
This is another question impossible to answer, there is no such tribe as the Hopewell. The Hopewell was a tradition describing Indians at many different developmental stages living up the Mississippi Valley from Louisiana to Illinois east to Alabama and Georgia, west to Texas, and into Ohio.
Hopewell people build mounds for burial grounds.
The Mound Builders who were Adena and Hopewell and Mississippian.
the Hopewell
Paleo, Archaic, Woodland, and Mississippian
the Mississippian site is the answer have a fun quiz day lol
The Paleo-Indian Era, The Archaic Era, The Woodland Era, The Mississippian Era
"Paleo" refers to a time span in Earth's history while "Mississippian" refers to an area of land on the Earth.
Farming played a crucial role in the rise of the Adena and Hopewell cultures by enabling food surplus, population growth, and the development of complex societies. The ability to produce more food allowed these cultures to support larger populations and build social structures, ceremonial sites, and extensive trade networks.
The Hopewell Culture represented dozens of different tribes and languages, but since none of them had any system of writing, there is no information about what languages they spoke.
The crops they grew were maize, barley, sunflower, squash, goosefoot, may grass, and wheat.
This is another question impossible to answer, there is no such tribe as the Hopewell. The Hopewell was a tradition describing Indians at many different developmental stages living up the Mississippi Valley from Louisiana to Illinois east to Alabama and Georgia, west to Texas, and into Ohio.
Some Native American tribes did practice metallurgy with copper and bronze, such as the Hopewell and Mississippian cultures in North America. However, it was not as widespread as in cultures like Mesoamerica or South America. The techniques and extent of metallurgy varied among different tribes.