The last Mississippian mound remaining in St. Louis ... not only for members of her tribe but for people of other Indigenous tribes not recognized or otherwise acknowledged in Missouri.
If you read the recent article in The Clarion-Ledger about five places that every Mississippian should visit, you may have walked away thinking this place or that should have been included.
The idea that American Indians could have built something resembling ... The latter two sites—among the largest Mississippian communities in their own right—were destroyed and paved over.
Nearly a thousand years ago, America's first city appeared in the Mississippi flood plain. Don finds out about a day in the life of Cahokia, what its vast mounds were used for, and why it is so ...
The Osage Nation has received the historic transfer of most of a sacred site called Sugarloaf Mound, set on the bluffs of the Mississippi River in St. Louis, with the help of the arts organization ...