I know you don't question my belief in the Bible, Peewee,
It doesn't say the Biblical giants will walk among us in the 21st century.
Here's some info on a tour they're having this week at the great mounds in Ohio:
Quote:
https://www.archaeologicalconservancy.org/tours/ohio-moundbuilders/Ohio Moundbuilders
When: June 5 – June 9, 2019
Hundreds of years ago in what is now part of southern Ohio, a complex culture of moundbuilders flourished. Extensive earthworks, some towering six stories high, are the legacy of the Hopewell and Adena people. The Hopewell and Adena cultures, which flourished in the eastern United States from about 800 B.C. to A.D. 400, consisted of rich traditions and elaborate rituals. Mica and copper ornaments, ostentatious burials, and the remains of large wooden structures are often found at their mound sites.
The Conservancy’s tour offers an opportunity to discover more about the Hopewell and Adena cultures with visits to some of their most awe-inspiring mounds and earthworks, which are now “short-listed” for designation as a World Heritage Site. Throughout the tour, expert archaeologists will offer their insights into the mysterious world of the moundbuilders.
Wednesday, June 5
Join us in downtown Columbus for a welcome reception.
Thursday, June 6
We’ll begin our travels by heading to the reconstructed Sun Watch Village, a 12th century Fort Ancient culture site near Dayton. After that, we’ll visit the Miamisburg Mound, an Adena culture mound that stands nearly 70 feet high. In the afternoon we’ll tour Fort Ancient, the famous Hopewell culture site where the walls are more than ten feet tall. We’ll spend the evening in the northern Cincinnati area.
Friday, June 7
We’ll start the day with a visit to the Fort Salem Earthworks, a Hopewell period mound and circle complex and the 300th archaeological preserve established by The Archaeological Conservancy. Then we’ll travel to Serpent Mound, Near Chillicothe (Adams County) a snake effigy mound that stretches 1,400 feet and is perhaps the most enigmatic archaeological feature in the United States.
The Serpent Mound is the most dramatic of the Ohio Indian Mounds. It is also the largest effigy earthwork in the world. Located in Adams County in Southern Ohio near the Ohio River, the 1,370-foot long site is shaped like a curved snake with its mouth open and an egg at its mouth. The site, believed to be built by the Adena people, was discovered by Chillicothe surveyors, Ephraim Squier and Edwin Davis in 1846.
After lunch we will conclude the day with a trip to Hopewell Culture National Historic Park in Chillicothe. We’ll visit the museum and grounds of Mound City and the Conservancy-rescued Hopewell Earthworks, the largest site of the extraordinary Hopewell culture. We’ll spend the night in Columbus.
Saturday, June 8
On our final day we’ll visit Flint Ridge Quarries, the source of a workable stone particularly esteemed by the Hopewell culture, to view the remains of prehistoric mining.
We will close our tour by visiting Newark to tour the magnificent Hopewell culture complex that once spread more than seven miles. The site includes a circle and octagon covering more than 100 acres, and a great circle more than 900 feet in diameter and about 10 feet tall. We’ll return to Columbus for a final night downtown. Sunday.
Sunday, June 9
Participants depart for home.
Another website gives a more generous timezone for the people who created these marvels.
https://www.tripsavvy.com/ohios-fascinating-indian-mounds-753018A Little About Ohio's Indian Mounds
Hopewell Cultural National Historic Site Ohio
The State of Ohio has more than 70 Indian mounds, burial sites of the Adena and Hopewell tribes--the "mound builders"--who inhabited central and southern Ohio from roughly 3,000 BCE until the 16th century.
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I know you don't question my belief in the Bible, ... (