| • Science | • People | • Locations | • Timeline |
Monk's Mound is the largest man-made earthen mound in North America at about 100 feet (30.5 meters) high and a base of 1,037 feet (316.1 meters) by 790 feet (240.8 meters).
During the Pre-Columbian era, Cahokia was for a time the largest North America city north of the Mesoamerican cities of central MexicoThis article is about the country Mexico. For other meanings, see Mexico (disambiguation The United Mexican States or Mexico ( Spanish: Estados Unidos Mexicanos or Mexico regarding the use of the variant spelling Mejico see section The name below) is a co. Estimates of the city's peak populationFor the use of the word population in statistics, see statistical population. In the most common sense of the word, a population is the collection of people—or organisms of a particular species—living in a given geographic area. Populations are studied in range from 8,000 to 40,000.
The Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site, inscribed in 1982Events January January 6 William Bonin is convicted of being the "freeway killer". January 8 AT&T agrees to divest itself of twenty-two subdivisions January 11 Mark Thatcher, son of the British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, disappears in the Sahara du as a World Heritage SiteA UNESCO World Heritage Site is a specific site (such as a forest, mountain range, lake, desert, building, complex, or city) that has been nominated for the international World Heritage program administered by UNESCO. The program aims to catalogue, name,, protects the area of the mounds and is the site of ongoing archaeological excavations.