Deck 14: An Explosion of Complexity: North America
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Deck 14: An Explosion of Complexity: North America
1
The site of Cahokia was:
A) an ancient, prehistoric, Native American city
B) an outpost of ancient Maya traders just east of the modern city of St. Louis
C) a Native American ceremonial center with a very small population
D) the geographic focal point of a powerful Native American chiefdom
A) an ancient, prehistoric, Native American city
B) an outpost of ancient Maya traders just east of the modern city of St. Louis
C) a Native American ceremonial center with a very small population
D) the geographic focal point of a powerful Native American chiefdom
D
2
At its peak, Cahokia's population was likely in the range of:
A) 1,000-2,000
B) 5,000-10,000
C) 30,000-50,000
D) 100,000-150,000
A) 1,000-2,000
B) 5,000-10,000
C) 30,000-50,000
D) 100,000-150,000
B
3
Cahokia was at its peak in terms of population size and influence about when?
A) A.D. 1200
B) A.D. 1000
C) A.D. 800
D) A.D. 600
A) A.D. 1200
B) A.D. 1000
C) A.D. 800
D) A.D. 600
A
4
At its peak, greater Cahokia was the equivalent of a:
A) large village
B) port city
C) fiefdom
D) city-state
A) large village
B) port city
C) fiefdom
D) city-state
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5
What characteristics did Cahokia possess that warrant its inclusion in the ranks of complex chiefdom and early state societies?
A) monumental works, elite burials
B) writing, mathematics
C) military rulers, urbanization
D) all of the above
A) monumental works, elite burials
B) writing, mathematics
C) military rulers, urbanization
D) all of the above
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6
Two mound-building cultures that preceded the temple mound builders like those at Cahokia were the:
A) Mogollon and Hohokam
B) Etowah and Moundville
C) Adena and Hopewell
D) Archaic and Woodland
A) Mogollon and Hohokam
B) Etowah and Moundville
C) Adena and Hopewell
D) Archaic and Woodland
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7
The purpose for most of the larger mounds-like Monks Mound-built at places like Cahokia was:
A) to serve as burial places for the elite
B) to serve as platforms for temples built at their summits
C) to enclose the elite precincts of the community
D) to serve as archaeoastronomical viewing places
A) to serve as burial places for the elite
B) to serve as platforms for temples built at their summits
C) to enclose the elite precincts of the community
D) to serve as archaeoastronomical viewing places
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8
Mound 72 at Cahokia was:
A) a platform mound on top of which a great temple once stood
B) an effigy mound in the shape of a snake
C) the burial site of one of Cahokia's elite
D) the oldest Adena burial mound
A) a platform mound on top of which a great temple once stood
B) an effigy mound in the shape of a snake
C) the burial site of one of Cahokia's elite
D) the oldest Adena burial mound
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9
The oldest large earthen mounds in North America date back to:
A) 500 years ago
B) 1,000 years ago
C) 2,500 years ago
D) 5,000 years ago
A) 500 years ago
B) 1,000 years ago
C) 2,500 years ago
D) 5,000 years ago
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10
The oldest earthen mounds in North America have been found at which site:
A) Cahokia
B) Hopewell
C) Poverty Point
D) Watson Brake
A) Cahokia
B) Hopewell
C) Poverty Point
D) Watson Brake
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11
The settlement of Aztalan in Wisconsin may have been:
A) a distant colony established by the people at Cahokia
B) a rival of Cahokia in the lower Mississippi Valley
C) a Mexican source for resources relied on by Cahokia's artisans
D) the place where effigy mounds originated
A) a distant colony established by the people at Cahokia
B) a rival of Cahokia in the lower Mississippi Valley
C) a Mexican source for resources relied on by Cahokia's artisans
D) the place where effigy mounds originated
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12
The focus of the diet of the first mound builders in North America was on:
A) corn, beans, and squash
B) gathered wild plants, hunted animals, and fish
C) domesticated native seed crops
D) Pleistocene megafauna
A) corn, beans, and squash
B) gathered wild plants, hunted animals, and fish
C) domesticated native seed crops
D) Pleistocene megafauna
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13
The purpose for the larger mounds built by the Adena and Hopewell people was to:
A) serve as burial places for the elite
B) serve as platforms for temples built at their summits
C) enclose the elite precincts of the community
D) serve as defensive works
A) serve as burial places for the elite
B) serve as platforms for temples built at their summits
C) enclose the elite precincts of the community
D) serve as defensive works
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14
The Adena and Hopewell people constructed mounds:
A) in the center of their large, densely populated settlements
B) in sparsely populated ceremonial centers
C) adjacent to rivers where their summits served as safe havens from floods and enemies
D) far from their urban centers
A) in the center of their large, densely populated settlements
B) in sparsely populated ceremonial centers
C) adjacent to rivers where their summits served as safe havens from floods and enemies
D) far from their urban centers
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15
Much of the Hopewell diet consisted of:
A) wild foods
B) cattle
C) llamas and alpacas
D) all of the above
A) wild foods
B) cattle
C) llamas and alpacas
D) all of the above
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16
A significant component of Hopewell subsistence was:
A) maize, beans, and squash
B) locally domesticated native seeds crops
C) sea mammals
D) Pleistocene megafauna
A) maize, beans, and squash
B) locally domesticated native seeds crops
C) sea mammals
D) Pleistocene megafauna
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17
Sunflower, squash, maygrass, knotweed, and goosefoot are all:
A) crops domesticated in Mesoamerica before maize
B) wild plants that made up the diet of the inhabitants of Mesa Verde
C) crops introduced by the Spanish explorers of the American Southeast
D) crops domesticated by Native Americans in the Midwest, Mid-South, and Southeast
A) crops domesticated in Mesoamerica before maize
B) wild plants that made up the diet of the inhabitants of Mesa Verde
C) crops introduced by the Spanish explorers of the American Southeast
D) crops domesticated by Native Americans in the Midwest, Mid-South, and Southeast
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18
Non-native, exotic raw materials found in Hopewell burial mounds include:
A) obsidian from the Rocky Mountains
B) copper and silver from the Great Lakes region
C) quartz crystals and mica from the Appalachian Mountains
D) all of the above
A) obsidian from the Rocky Mountains
B) copper and silver from the Great Lakes region
C) quartz crystals and mica from the Appalachian Mountains
D) all of the above
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19
Archaeologist Brad Lepper has hypothesized that the Hopewell:
A) were influenced by ideas filtering from the Maya area to the south
B) constructed ceremonial roads connecting some of their most important ceremonial sites
C) were part of a group of non-Indian settlers to the New World who were wiped out by the ancestors of modern American Indians
D) built temple mounds as artificial mountains, a tradition traceable to east Asia
A) were influenced by ideas filtering from the Maya area to the south
B) constructed ceremonial roads connecting some of their most important ceremonial sites
C) were part of a group of non-Indian settlers to the New World who were wiped out by the ancestors of modern American Indians
D) built temple mounds as artificial mountains, a tradition traceable to east Asia
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20
Among the later mound builders of North America, Cahokia was:
A) absolutely unique; there are no other large mound-building sites
B) the only large mound site to show clear evidence of contact with the complex civilizations of Mesoamerica to the south
C) not the largest but the first of the urban-like settlements
D) by far the largest but not the only impressive, densely settled, mound-building community
A) absolutely unique; there are no other large mound-building sites
B) the only large mound site to show clear evidence of contact with the complex civilizations of Mesoamerica to the south
C) not the largest but the first of the urban-like settlements
D) by far the largest but not the only impressive, densely settled, mound-building community
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21
Subsistence at Cahokia was based primarily on:
A) local, native crops domesticated by Native Americans beginning about 4,000 years ago: sunflower, goosefoot, lamb's quarter
B) maize and squash
C) fishing
D) beans
A) local, native crops domesticated by Native Americans beginning about 4,000 years ago: sunflower, goosefoot, lamb's quarter
B) maize and squash
C) fishing
D) beans
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22
Archaeologist Timothy Pauketat views Cahokia as being:
A) a central place in a three-tiered hierarchy of communities
B) an ancient city on the Mississippi with a population of close to 30,000 people
C) a ceremonial center without a substantial resident population
D) the capital of an extensive Native American kingdom
A) a central place in a three-tiered hierarchy of communities
B) an ancient city on the Mississippi with a population of close to 30,000 people
C) a ceremonial center without a substantial resident population
D) the capital of an extensive Native American kingdom
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23
When the first Spanish explorers traversed the American Southeast in the sixteenth century:
A) mound-builder society had already collapsed
B) the mound builders had already migrated to Mexico
C) some mound-builder societies were still flourishing
D) the mound builders were living in large cities
A) mound-builder society had already collapsed
B) the mound builders had already migrated to Mexico
C) some mound-builder societies were still flourishing
D) the mound builders were living in large cities
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24
What impact did the Hernando de Soto expedition have on the mound builders?
A) the Spanish, with their superior weaponry, defeated the mound builders in a protracted, four-year war
B) these Spaniards may have inadvertently introduced smallpox and other infectious diseases against which Native Americans possessed no immunity, resulting in epidemics and a dramatic reduction in native population
C) it was de Soto and his men who introduced the idea of constructing mounds in the first place
D) none; mound-builder culture had already collapsed before the arrival of the de Soto expedition
A) the Spanish, with their superior weaponry, defeated the mound builders in a protracted, four-year war
B) these Spaniards may have inadvertently introduced smallpox and other infectious diseases against which Native Americans possessed no immunity, resulting in epidemics and a dramatic reduction in native population
C) it was de Soto and his men who introduced the idea of constructing mounds in the first place
D) none; mound-builder culture had already collapsed before the arrival of the de Soto expedition
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25
The chronicler of the sixteenth-century De Soto expedition:
A) made no mention of witnessing Indians building or using mounds
B) wrote that the Indians told him that mysterious white settlers had built the mounds
C) claimed that De Soto's large group of soldiers had built the mounds as fortifications
D) clearly described the construction and use of mounds by the Indians he had witnessed
A) made no mention of witnessing Indians building or using mounds
B) wrote that the Indians told him that mysterious white settlers had built the mounds
C) claimed that De Soto's large group of soldiers had built the mounds as fortifications
D) clearly described the construction and use of mounds by the Indians he had witnessed
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26
The dominant earthwork forms found at Town Creek Mound, Etowah, Komoki, and Moundville are:
A) temple mounds
B) burial mounds
C) effigy mounds
D) enclosure mounds
A) temple mounds
B) burial mounds
C) effigy mounds
D) enclosure mounds
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27
The dominant mound form found at Mound City in Ohio is:
A) temple mounds
B) burial mounds
C) effigy mounds
D) enclosure mounds
A) temple mounds
B) burial mounds
C) effigy mounds
D) enclosure mounds
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28
The Hohokam homeland is best described as a:
A) tropical rainforest
B) desert
C) mountainous region
D) tundra
A) tropical rainforest
B) desert
C) mountainous region
D) tundra
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29
Hohokam complexity flowered when:
A) A.D. 700-A.D. 1100
B) A.D. 1000-A.D. 1500
C) A.D. 1200-A.D. 1640
D) A.D. 1300-A.D. 1380
A) A.D. 700-A.D. 1100
B) A.D. 1000-A.D. 1500
C) A.D. 1200-A.D. 1640
D) A.D. 1300-A.D. 1380
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30
The Hohokam were able to survive in the environment of their homeland by:
A) focusing on riverine resources
B) subsisting on wild plants abundant in the desert
C) trade
D) constructing an elaborate system of canals
A) focusing on riverine resources
B) subsisting on wild plants abundant in the desert
C) trade
D) constructing an elaborate system of canals
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31
Hohokam villages consisted of:
A) cliff dwellings
B) pit-houses
C) multiple sets of separate courtyard groups
D) all of the above
A) cliff dwellings
B) pit-houses
C) multiple sets of separate courtyard groups
D) all of the above
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32
Snaketown was a large settlement of which culture:
A) Hohokam
B) Mogollon
C) Ancestral Puebloan
D) Basketmakers
A) Hohokam
B) Mogollon
C) Ancestral Puebloan
D) Basketmakers
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33
The Mogollon homeland is best described as a:
A) tropical rainforest
B) desert
C) mountainous region
D) tundra
A) tropical rainforest
B) desert
C) mountainous region
D) tundra
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34
The early Mogollon lived in
A) cliff dwellings
B) pit-houses
C) multiple sets of separate courtyard groups
D) all of the above
A) cliff dwellings
B) pit-houses
C) multiple sets of separate courtyard groups
D) all of the above
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35
Grasshopper Pueblo is a large settlement of which culture:
A) Hohokam
B) Mogollon
C) Ancestral Puebloan
D) Basketmakers
A) Hohokam
B) Mogollon
C) Ancestral Puebloan
D) Basketmakers
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36
Southwestern kivas were (and are) used for:
A) food storage facilities
B) dwellings
C) care of the elderly
D) religious ceremonies
A) food storage facilities
B) dwellings
C) care of the elderly
D) religious ceremonies
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37
The Great Houses of Chaco Canyon represent which culture:
A) Hohokam
B) Mogollon
C) Ancestral Puebloan
D) Basketmakers
A) Hohokam
B) Mogollon
C) Ancestral Puebloan
D) Basketmakers
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38
The flowering of the Ancestral Puebloans occurred about when:
A) soon after A.D. 1000
B) A.D. 750
C) A.D. 100
D) soon after A.D. 1540
A) soon after A.D. 1000
B) A.D. 750
C) A.D. 100
D) soon after A.D. 1540
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39
The largest of the Great Houses were built by which culture:
A) Hohokam
B) Mogollon
C) Ancestral Puebloan
D) Basketmakers
A) Hohokam
B) Mogollon
C) Ancestral Puebloan
D) Basketmakers
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40
Archaeologist John Kanter suggests that the Chaco road system seems to have had what kind of primary purpose:
A) ritual
B) economic
C) political
D) military
A) ritual
B) economic
C) political
D) military
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41
Mesa Verde is characterized by:
A) cliff dwellings
B) pit-houses
C) multiple sets of separate courtyard groups
D) Great Houses
A) cliff dwellings
B) pit-houses
C) multiple sets of separate courtyard groups
D) Great Houses
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42
The prehistoric pueblo builders of the American Southwest are considered to represent what level of socio-political complexity?
A) band
B) tribe
C) chiefdom
D) state
A) band
B) tribe
C) chiefdom
D) state
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43
The so-called "great houses" of the American Southwest show the:
A) capacity of some non-state societies to organize the labor of a large population
B) impact of Mesoamerican civilizations on their cousins to the north
C) enormous effect of the Spanish missions on the architecture of the sixteenth-century Southwest
D) great wealth and power of the kings who lived in the great houses
A) capacity of some non-state societies to organize the labor of a large population
B) impact of Mesoamerican civilizations on their cousins to the north
C) enormous effect of the Spanish missions on the architecture of the sixteenth-century Southwest
D) great wealth and power of the kings who lived in the great houses
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44
The great houses at Chaco canyon date to about when:
A) 4,000 years ago
B) 2,200 years ago
C) 1,700 years ago
D) 900 years ago
A) 4,000 years ago
B) 2,200 years ago
C) 1,700 years ago
D) 900 years ago
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45
Pueblo Bonito is:
A) an Anasazi cliff dwelling
B) an 800-room great house at Chaco Canyon
C) a large ceremonial structure called a kiva
D) a Spanish mission in the American Southwest
A) an Anasazi cliff dwelling
B) an 800-room great house at Chaco Canyon
C) a large ceremonial structure called a kiva
D) a Spanish mission in the American Southwest
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46
The Room 33 burial at Pueblo Bonito has been interpreted by some as that of:
A) slaves
B) Spanish colonists
C) a ruling family at Chaco Canyon
D) victims of cannibalism
A) slaves
B) Spanish colonists
C) a ruling family at Chaco Canyon
D) victims of cannibalism
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47
DNA extracted from the remains of those interred in the Room 33 burial at Pueblo Bonito shows that the people buried there most likely were:
A) not Indians
B) close blood relatives
C) members of the same family that settled in Mesa Verde
D) all children whose deaths were the result of sacrifice
A) not Indians
B) close blood relatives
C) members of the same family that settled in Mesa Verde
D) all children whose deaths were the result of sacrifice
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48
Which of the Southwest US societies constructed ceremonial ball courts?
A) Hohokam
B) Mogollon
C) Sinagua
D) Ancestral Puebloan
A) Hohokam
B) Mogollon
C) Sinagua
D) Ancestral Puebloan
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49
About how many ceremonial ball courts have been identified in the American Southwest?
A) 20
B) 200
C) 2,000
D) 5,000
A) 20
B) 200
C) 2,000
D) 5,000
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50
The complex societies of the northwest coast of North America are best described as:
A) horticulturalists
B) pastoral nomads
C) affluent foragers
D) irrigation farmers
A) horticulturalists
B) pastoral nomads
C) affluent foragers
D) irrigation farmers
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51
Historically, the native societies of the northwest coast of North America were ruled by:
A) democratically elected chiefs
B) absolute monarchs called "Sun Kings"
C) powerful, hereditary chiefs
D) warrior priests
A) democratically elected chiefs
B) absolute monarchs called "Sun Kings"
C) powerful, hereditary chiefs
D) warrior priests
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52
The example of the complex societies of the northwest coast of North America indicates that, in order for complexity to arise, a society must:
A) be able to produce a food surplus
B) be agricultural
C) be located adjacent to a coast
D) all of the above
A) be able to produce a food surplus
B) be agricultural
C) be located adjacent to a coast
D) all of the above
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53
The rejection by European thinkers of a local, native source for the complex societies of the mound builders as well as for the construction of Great Zimbabwe was based on:
A) archaeological evidence
B) historical records
C) oral traditions in those areas showing that the native people themselves believed that they had nothing to do with those cultures
D) racism
A) archaeological evidence
B) historical records
C) oral traditions in those areas showing that the native people themselves believed that they had nothing to do with those cultures
D) racism
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54
The so-called myth of the mound builders was:
A) based on the belief that Native Americans had been incapable of building the monumental earthworks found in North America
B) based on the memoirs of those on the de Soto expedition who maintained that the Indians knew nothing of mound construction
C) based on the discovery of stone tablets in the mounds with characters derived from Old World alphabets
D) all of the above
A) based on the belief that Native Americans had been incapable of building the monumental earthworks found in North America
B) based on the memoirs of those on the de Soto expedition who maintained that the Indians knew nothing of mound construction
C) based on the discovery of stone tablets in the mounds with characters derived from Old World alphabets
D) all of the above
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55
To the satisfaction of virtually all scientists, the "mystery" of who had built the mounds in the American Midwest and Southeast was solved:
A) in the 1600s
B) just a little more than 125 years ago
C) by Thomas Jefferson in the eighteenth century
D) fewer than 50 years ago with the development of radiocarbon dating
A) in the 1600s
B) just a little more than 125 years ago
C) by Thomas Jefferson in the eighteenth century
D) fewer than 50 years ago with the development of radiocarbon dating
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56
Discuss the site of Cahokia. How big was it? What does the archaeological record there show about the nature of life at the site?
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57
On what basis do archaeologists assert that greater Cahokia was a city-state?
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58
Did Cahokia possess an egalitarian or socially stratified society? How do we know?
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59
What does Mound 72 tell us about the social, economic, and political nature of the Cahokia city-state?
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60
Discuss the evolution of the mound builders. When did mound building in North American begin? How did the purpose of the mounds change through time?
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61
What does the construction of the mounds like those at Cahokia signify in terms of the social and political organization of the mound builders?
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62
Was Cahokia unique? If so, how so?
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63
What was the purpose of the Adena or Hopewell burial mounds? In terms of their social and political position, who do archaeologists think was buried in the mounds? On what do they base this hypothesis?
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64
Archaeologist Brad Lepper describes the period after 2,800 years ago in the American Midwest as one of "dramatic, if not revolutionary, cultural transformation." In what ways were these changes dramatic or revolutionary? In what ways were these changes or transformations more evolutionary than revolutionary?
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65
How does archaeologist Brad Lepper explain the alignments at the Newark earthworks in Ohio?
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66
How have the records of Spanish explorers contributed to our understanding of the mound builders?
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67
What were the impacts of Spanish explorers on the indigenous chiefdoms of the American Southeast?
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68
Describe the archaeological record of the Mogollon, Hohokam, and Ancestral Puebloan.
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69
What physical evidence is there for social and political complexity at Hohokam, Mogollon, and Ancestral Puebloan villages?
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70
What is a Kiva? What is a "Great Kiva"? What does the appearance of Great Kivas signify?
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71
Discuss the Room 33 burial at Pueblo Bonito. What does the DNA tell us about the relationships among the people buried there.
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72
What were the purposes of the ceremonial roads of the Hopewell and of the Ancestral Puebloans? What does the construction of these roads signify about their societies?
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73
Why is the use of the term "Anasazi" controversial? Why do some of the descendants of the people who built the Great Houses and cliff dwellings object to the use of this name commonly used by archaeologists?
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74
What was the economic base of ancient northwest coast society? How did that economic base contribute to the development of complexity there? How does this differ from most of the other examples provided for the development of complexity?
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75
Initially, many Europeans rejected the possibility that the mounds of North America had been built by Indians as well as the notion that Great Zimbabwe had been built by Africans. What was behind this? Why did many Europeans think it impossible that local, indigenous people had produced these sites?
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76
What was the "myth of the mound builders?" How was the myth busted?
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77
Discuss the burials at Mound 72, focusing on the remains found in Mound 72sub1.
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78
Using the Messages from the Past section of this Chapter as a jumping off point, how can you visit the past in the present? Seriously, based on the brief discussions of many, many sites in this book, are there any you'd put on your bucket list of places you'd like to see? Why would you like to see them?
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