「Mississippian」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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During the | Mississippian a flysch sequence, with dark shales and gr |
ensive underlying cave system developed in | Mississippian age limestone bedrock. |
oductive horizons in the basin include the | Mississippian age Leadville Limestone, the Pennsylvanian |
the Sanders Group of Indiana Limestone, of | Mississippian age. |
it can also be found in older Cretaceous, | Mississippian, and Devonian reservoirs. |
ferous period (Early Pennsylvanian to Late | Mississippian, around 354-290 million years ago). |
It is best known for its | Mississippian artifacts, primarily from the Burial Urn C |
ontained a blend of Archaic, Woodland, and | Mississippian artifacts. |
L1), the site contains Hopewell and Middle | Mississippian artifacts. |
iver Valley may have also begun to develop | Mississippian characteristics at this point. |
During the Famennian and | Mississippian crevices emerged that were filled with cri |
The Earth/fertility | Mississippian cult was associated with earthen platform |
The site is on the southern margin of the | Mississippian cultural advance down the Mississippi Rive |
The site is on the southern margin of the | Mississippian cultural advance down the Mississippi Rive |
Mississippian culture | |
Main article: | Mississippian culture pottery |
Main article: Caddoan | Mississippian culture |
Map of the Caddoan | Mississippian culture and some important sites |
Some of the | Mississippian culture pottery found at the Winterville s |
Map of the Caddoan | Mississippian culture and some important sites, includin |
The | Mississippian culture was documented as established in w |
Choctaw ancestors were likely part of the | Mississippian culture in the Mississippi river valley. |
Mississippian culture peoples built massive earthwork mo | |
ntinued to be played after the fall of the | Mississippian culture around 1500 CE. |
site has the largest mound of the Caddoan | Mississippian culture (a regional variation of the Missi |
Although the | Mississippian culture was heavily disrupted before a com |
modern day city of Wickliffe is home to a | Mississippian culture village now known only as Wickliff |
If the Mesoamerican origin of | Mississippian culture is correct then the origin of the |
an Mounds Site (16RR1) is an Early Caddoan | Mississippian culture archaeological site in Red River P |
The farming Kichai band of the Caddoan | Mississippian culture dates as far back as 200 BCE in th |
Chucalissa Indian Village (40 SY 1) is | Mississippian culture archaeological site dating back to |
The Marshall Site (15CE27) is an Early | Mississippian culture archaeological site located near B |
tes has been identified at Joara, a former | Mississippian culture village near Morganton. |
The Turk Site (15CE6) is a | Mississippian culture archaeological site located near B |
enous mound builder peoples, of the Middle | Mississippian culture of eastern North America, built an |
ion, and was important in the Woodland and | Mississippian culture periods, from 100 BCE to about 150 |
After 1050 influence from the | Mississippian culture led some groups to construct platf |
It was occupied by a | Mississippian culture and is important to understanding |
In North America, the | Mississippian culture is believed to have produced proto |
Analysis of ceramics suggested it was a | Mississippian culture site, probably from the Late Bottl |
d believed to have been constructed by the | Mississippian culture (1000-1500 AD) stands on the shore |
ckliffe Mounds (15 BA 4) is a prehistoric, | Mississippian culture archaeological site located in Bal |
Rare painted and incised sherds of | Mississippian culture pottery have been found at all fou |
Some sources connect the Saura with the | Mississippian culture chiefdom of Joara, where Spanish e |
15BA2) (also known as the Nolan Site) is a | Mississippian culture archaeological site located near B |
Mississippian culture pottery and stone tools in the Cah | |
The prehistoric | Mississippian culture of indigenous peoples in eastern N |
and the Brick Church Pike Mound Site) is a | Mississippian culture archaeological site located in Nas |
away as Spiro and Gahagan Mounds, Caddoan | Mississippian culture sites in Oklahoma and Louisiana. |
obably spread through the dominance of the | Mississippian culture in the 10th century. |
The Rowlandton Mound Site (15MCN3) is a | Mississippian culture archaeological site located in Pad |
The Adams Site (15FU4) is a | Mississippian culture archaeological site located near H |
lding Native American culture known as the | Mississippian culture that flourished in the Southeaster |
ht to be the easternmost expression of the | Mississippian culture's moundbuilding. |
Caddoan | Mississippian culture, 800 - 1600 |
ound was probably built during the earlier | Mississippian Culture, it was the spiritual center of th |
amic effigy jug of the underwater panther, | Mississippian culture, from Rose Mound in Cross County, |
wo most important sites at the core of the | Mississippian culture, located near Tuscaloosa, Alabama. |
s its name to a local phase of the Caddoan | Mississippian culture, the Belcher Phase, which radiocar |
m the Woodland period, associated with the | Mississippian culture. |
hase in southwestern Tennessee of the Late | Mississippian culture. |
e and northwestern Mississippi of the Late | Mississippian culture. |
site of the Caborn-Welborn variant of the | Mississippian culture. |
rthest eastern known representation of the | Mississippian culture. |
ived as trade goods from the region of the | Mississippian culture. |
and Kentucky as part of the Angel Phase of | Mississippian culture. |
iddle Woodland Hopewell culture, and later | Mississippian culture. |
site of the Caborn-Welborn variant of the | Mississippian culture. |
ed from 600 CE to 1200 CE and were part of | Mississippian culture. |
ture, the Pensacola culture was not a true | Mississippian culture. |
Map: various | Mississippian cultures, including the Upper Mississippia |
amurian straddles the boundary between the | Mississippian epoch (359-318 Ma) and the Pennsylvanian e |
limestone unit deposited during the Middle | Mississippian Epoch (345.3 ± 2.1 - 326.4 ± 1.6 Ma). |
elemnites is a genus of belemnite from the | Mississippian Epoch. |
Hematites is a genus of belemnite from the | Mississippian Epoch. |
lived during the Tournaisian stage of the | Mississippian epoch. |
lived during the Tournaisian stage of the | Mississippian epoch. |
lived during the Tournaisian stage of the | Mississippian epoch. |
ological evidence of warfare dating to the | Mississippian era. |
chaeologists for its resemblance to Middle | Mississippian fortified towns found in Ohio which date f |
ooper's book, "Mississippi Trivia," as the | Mississippian having received the most votes ever in any |
The Girkin is a limestone | Mississippian in age. |
The limestone deposit is | Mississippian in age, in the Meramecian series, roughly |
iography in 1901 called Reminiscences of a | Mississippian in Times of Peace and War, which is now in |
Over 200 years passed and the | Mississippian Indian culture disappeared, devastated by |
(ca. 100 to 500 CE) peoples, and later by | Mississippian influenced Steed-Kisker peoples (ca. |
, and Michael Schwerner, 24, and one black | Mississippian, James Chaney, 21, were murdered in Philad |
The | Mississippian limestone is rich in marine fossils, espec |
he rocks prevalent in the Osage Plains are | Mississippian limestone, limestone shale, Ordovician dol |
Formation overlying more soluble layers of | Mississippian limestone. |
The deeply eroded valleys are cut into | Mississippian limestones and below that layer Ordovician |
This talented | Mississippian made a huge contribution to development of |
These were built by the | Mississippian mound builder culture, about 1000 CE. |
Like other | Mississippian mound centers, Towosahgy also had a borrow |
The site features a | Mississippian mound complex, nature trail and arboretum, |
They held the ancient | Mississippian mounds at Ocmulgee to be sacred and made p |
s that is the largest and most intact Late | Mississippian Nodena phase village site within the Centr |
Zoophycos trace fossil from the | Mississippian of northern Kentucky. |
ninckioceratid genus and nautilid from the | Mississippian of North America, named by Hyatt, 1884, wi |
enochildae (Aipocerataceae) from the Upper | Mississippian of North America and equivalent (uL Carb) |
timated to be less than 320 million years ( | Mississippian or younger). |
Although not all | Mississippian peoples practiced all of the following act |
l proposed that the maskettes were used by | Mississippian peoples as part of ritual adoptions in whi |
was inhabited by Middle Woodland and Upper | Mississippian peoples. |
Mississippian Period article, Encyclopedia of Alabama | |
y sherds dating to the Woodland period and | Mississippian period were uncovered at Eva, they were re |
2005, Neutron Activation Analysis of Late | Mississippian Period Pottery from the Greenbrier Site (3 |
The Emerald Mound Site is a Plaquemine | Mississippian period archaeological site located on the |
It is a Middle Woodland / | Mississippian period Pre-Columbian complex of earthen mo |
Southeastern Missouri occupied by the Late | Mississippian Period Nodena Phase from 1350 to 1541 CE. |
By the Middle | Mississippian period, local Late Woodland peoples in the |
re built between 1200 and 1500 A.D. in the | Mississippian Period. |
and 340 million years ago during the late | Mississippian period. |
occupations from the Archaic period to the | Mississippian period. |
period (Adena and Hopewell cultures); and | Mississippian period; dating from roughly 3000 BCE to th |
rcheological artifacts of the Woodland and | Mississippian periods found inside. |
ere are also strata from the Devonian, and | Mississippian periods. |
A seventh-generation | Mississippian, Pickering was raised in the Hebron commun |
Mississippian platform mounds are usually four-sided tru | |
Documented uses for | Mississippian platform mounds include semi-public chief' |
ppian-Devonian Rockwell Formation, and the | Mississippian Pocono Formation. |
work designs that evolved from pre-Contact | Mississippian pottery into traditional 18th and 19th cen |
always small and uninfluential (unlike its | Mississippian predecessor on the site), survived until t |
Houses were typical | Mississippian rectangular wall trench wattle and daub st |
gen., a new | Mississippian red alga, and remarks on the Archaeolithop |
ramecian or Maramec stage is a sequence of | Mississippian rocks in the Mississippi River Valley. |
cks are overlain by disturbed Devonian and | Mississippian rocks. |
her site is Millstone Bluff, a prehistoric | Mississippian settlement in the Shawnee National Forest. |
Like many | Mississippian settlements, it is located on the bank of |
ay is about six miles (10 km) from another | Mississippian site on the Register in Illinois, Dickson |
Mississippian sites on the Lower Ohio River | |
Almost all dated | Mississippian sites predate 1539 (when Hernando de Soto |
x graves have been found at many different | Mississippian sites from the American Bottom to the deep |
Like at most | Mississippian sites, Mississippi Plain and Bell Plain ar |
for a more comprehensive list see List of | Mississippian sites. |
herers and the chiefdoms characteristic of | Mississippian society...over these centuries, the social |
ceramic figurines very similar in style to | Mississippian stone statuary which are now on display at |
rliest certain coleoids are known from the | Mississippian sub-period of the Carboniferous Period, ab |
Both of these meanings could refer to | Mississippian temple mounds located in Tennessee since a |
8 (mostly refuse pits) were classified as | Mississippian, the rest were Cherokee. |
"I am | Mississippian to the Core. |
He was the first native | Mississippian to serve in that post. |
erbedded sandstones and limestones of late | Mississippian to Pennsylvanian age. |
iven a range from the Lower Carboniferous ( | Mississippian) to the Lower Permian, has been found in N |
t shales with sandstones and limestones of | Mississippian to Pennsylvanian age. |
emple mound, the most important feature of | Mississippian towns, since one would have to ascend the |
ow that these remains were part of a large | Mississippian village site. |
orf Site is the site of a late prehistoric | Mississippian village and is preserved as an archaeologi |
The | Mississippian village that preceded the site's Cherokee |
The | Mississippian way of life began to develop in the Missis |
e layout of the site is characteristically | Mississippian, with a number of mounds surrounding a cen |
ly Paleozoic from the Cambrian through the | Mississippian with the deposition of shelf sandstones, s |
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