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Ellis Mounds

Coordinates:40°17′15″N83°20′56″W/ 40.28750°N 83.34889°W/40.28750; -83.34889
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Ellis Mounds
Overview from the north
Ellis Mounds is located in Ohio
Ellis Mounds
Ellis Mounds is located in the United States
Ellis Mounds
LocationWithin the triangle formed by Hillview Rd., Wolford-Maskill Rd., andState Route 4[2]
Nearest cityMarysville, Ohio
Coordinates40°17′15″N83°20′56″W/ 40.28750°N 83.34889°W/40.28750; -83.34889
Area2 acres (0.81 ha)
NRHP referenceNo.74001638[1]
Added to NRHPJuly 30, 1974

TheEllis Moundsare a complex ofNative American moundsnearMarysvilleinUnion County,Ohio,United States.[1]These three mounds form an east-west line on a small ridgeline in a farm field. Believed to have been built byHopewellian peoples,the mounds are important because they may reveal information about daily life in the Hopewell culture. Archaeologists who study the Hopewell have generally concentrated on their largest ceremonial centers: as a result, while themortuary customsof the Hopewell are well known, other aspects of their culture are little understood. For this reason, a site such as Ellis that bears the potential of yielding information about such aspects is valuable indeed, especially because its date has not yet been established: Ellis may have been built as early as 300 BC and as late as AD 600. Furthermore, the location of the mounds outside of the Hopewellian heartland farther south may demonstrate the spread of Hopewell influence, since excavations in numerous locations have demonstrated the necessity of assembling a complex society with many workers in order to construct the ceremonial mounds for which the Hopewell are well known.[2]

In 1974, the archaeological significance of the Ellis Mounds was recognized when they were listed on theNational Register of Historic Places.They are one of seven National Register sites in Union County and the only one in the county's northern regions: three of the other six are withinMarysville'scity limits; the other three are south and west of Marysville.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abc"National Register Information System".National Register of Historic Places.National Park Service.March 13, 2009.
  2. ^abOwen, Lorrie K., ed.Dictionary of Ohio Historic Places.Vol. 2.St. Clair Shores:Somerset, 1999, 1362.