Moundbuilder is prehistoric American Indian and was named after the custom of embedding their body in a big mountain. About three thousand years ago, they have spread through the Great Lakes Region to the Mississippi Valley and built numerous earthworks entering the Gulf of Mexico. Many of them survive today, but they are made of hundreds of tons of soil, clay and stone. And the construction worker did not put a strain on the wheel and did not use the wheel, but it was built on a large scale. Adna people are a group of Mound Builder. They will appear in the Ohio Valley around 400 BC. They are hunters, collectors, and fishermen. They settled in a village dotted in the area. The biggest Adena mound is the Grave Creek mound in Moundsville, West Virginia, 900 feet (270 m) in length and 70 feet (21 m) in height. Scholars believe that practices of mound construction will expand as Adener deals with other American Indians.
Other mound builders are Hopewell and Mississippi. Hopewell is a hunter and collector, but also grows corn and pumpkin. They have settled in the Midwestern United States where they can still find their tombs; the biggest places are Newark, Ohio. Objects such as shells, shark teeth, volcanic glasses found in the Hopewell civil engineering work indicate that they trade with distant tribes. This trade network had collapsed before. 500 and Hopewell died. Mississippi settles in the Mississippi Valley, and today it has settled in South America. Their culture appeared in the year 700 and continued until the 1700's. The people in Mississippi are farmers and have livestock. In addition to their mounds, their biggest one is in Cahokia, Illinois, and the cities they built were one of the earliest cities in North America. Mississippi deals with Mexican Indians (such as Aztecs and Mayas) and may be influenced by them as many of their earthworks (about 1200-1500) contain temples at the top of the mound .
This article contains information on Mound Builder culture, its temples, houses and houses. The North American Mound Builder Mississippi culture ancient people built a big mound as part of their village complex. Each village has a temple with a temple and a head of the chief. Through a series of staircases close to the top of the mound, temples and chiefs' houses are at the edge of a mound that is separated by plazas. Mound Builders live in eastern parts of the United States and many parts of Canada. The largest deposits were in the Mississippi River and the Ohio Valley.
Novelists are also aware of the charm of Mound, for some time, the type of Mound Builder Novel is an active branch of America's pop literature. A typical swatch is the huge one of Cornelius Matthews: The Legend of Mound Builder (1839) explains Mound Builder's efforts to deal with the supernatural size and power of Mammoth. Until they were killed by a hero named Bokulla, their size and strength were destroyed in their town. Such a novel was eagerly consumed by a New York farm boy named Joseph Smith who had found a major religious belief based on Mound Builder's story. Smith born in 1805 was given a religious vision as a boy but still guesses the origin of the mound. His mother later remembered: