· Duck
· Nuts
· Deer
· Pumpkin
· Raccoon
· Elk
· Berries
· Wild fruits
· Dogs
· Cats
· Rabbits
The Mound Builders who were Adena and Hopewell and Mississippian.
mound diggers
Adena were there first (800 B.C. - 200 A.D.). The Hopewell culture came later but overlapped with the Adena (200 B.C. - 400/500 A.D.). Most theories hold that the two intermixed peacefully, and the Hopewell culture was an elaboration and extension of the Adena mound-building culture. Thus the Hopewell art, burial ceremonies, etc were more flamboyant than that of the earlier and more primitive Adena.
The Mississippi Mound Builders ate foods such as berries, nuts, and mushrooms from the area. They also ate deer, and fish.
mound builders
They are both mound builders.
They are both mound builders.
Adena Culture
Adena and Hopewell
Ohlone
The Adena Mound
The Mound Builders who were Adena and Hopewell and Mississippian.
corn
mound diggers
how did the mound builders survive
they ate bison fish
Adena were there first (800 B.C. - 200 A.D.). The Hopewell culture came later but overlapped with the Adena (200 B.C. - 400/500 A.D.). Most theories hold that the two intermixed peacefully, and the Hopewell culture was an elaboration and extension of the Adena mound-building culture. Thus the Hopewell art, burial ceremonies, etc were more flamboyant than that of the earlier and more primitive Adena.