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- Toolesboro Mounds National Historic Landmark - Iowa
Travel the grounds of these burial mounds dating from 200 B C to 300 A D They include some of the best-preserved and accessible remnants of Iowa’s Hopewell culture, a Middle Woodland people who hunted, gathered and gardened
- Toolesboro Mounds State Preserve - Iowa Department of Natural Resources
Toolesboro Mounds State Preserve is a 3-acre preserve featuring a cluster of ancient Indian mounds, a Visitors Center and Museum, and a small prairie
- This Stunning Earthwork In Iowa Is An Archaeological Mystery
While the most well-known example of the rich Native American tradition of earthwork in the Hawkeye State can be seen at Effigy Mounds National Monument, you'll also find evidence of these intriguing structures on a smaller scale near the town of Wapello and the confluence of the Iowa and Mississippi Rivers
- Toolesboro Mounds National Historic Site - mycountyparks. com
They include some of the best-preserved and accessible remnants of Iowa’s Hopewell culture, a Middle Woodland people who hunted, gathered and gardened Explore the prairie demonstration plot and the visitor center exhibits of this National Historic Landmark and State Archeological Preserve
- Toolesboro Mounds National Historic Landmark
The Toolesboro site consists of seven burial mounds on a bluff overlooking the Iowa River near where it joins the Mississippi River The conical mounds were constructed between 200 B C and 300 A D by a local Hopewell group
- Toolesboro Mound Group - Wikipedia
The Toolesboro Mound Group, a National Historic Landmark, is a group of Havana Hopewell culture earthworks on the north bank of the Iowa River near its discharge into the Mississippi The mounds are owned and displayed to the public by the State Historical Society of Iowa
- Toolesboro Mounds National Historic Site (2025) - Tripadvisor
Toolesboro Mounds National Historic Site 4 0 (1 review) #2 of 4 things to do in Wapello
- Toolesboro Indian Mounds - American Heritage
The five-acre site includes several large surviving mounds, an education center and a prairie demonstration plot The State Historical Society of Iowa owns and preserves the Toolesboro Indian Mounds and Museum
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