The
Sinnissippi Mounds were made by a mysterious culture or group of cultures known only as "the Mound-Builders", or the
Hopewell tradition, or the
Adena Culture.
In his new book about the mounds,
Fritz Zimmerman argues that the the Hopewell were
Sioux (Dakota and Lakota) along with the kindred tribes of
Cherokee and
Iroquois (Haudenosaunee). The author explores over 700 mound and earthwork sites in 5 states; it took him eleven winters to complete the project. The book includes photographs of 222 sites and gives directions to the sites.
The Criel Mound in South Charleston,
West Virginia, USA.A Photographic Essay And Guide To The Adena, Hopewell Sioux And Iroquois Mounds And Earthworks, 1000 B.C. to 500 A.D.
By Fritz Zimmerman
ISBN 978-1-934690-14-7
History / Native American Studies
Tasora Books · August 2009
The book also argues that the mound-builders had complex mathematical knowledge which enabled them to build the mounds, and hypothesises that we can work out the purpose of the mounds by linking them with the mythology of the Sioux, Iroquois and Cherokee Nations. Whether or not that is the case (I'm a little bit sceptical), this book is still a valuable gazetteer of the mounds, and will doubtless fascinate anyone who is interested in Native American culture.