- UNESCO just added 42 new places to its World Heritage Sites.
- Of those 42, just one is in the United States: the Hopewell Ceremonial Earthworks in Ohio.
- The earthworks are mounds created by Native Americans thousands of years ago.
Thousands of years ago, disparate groups of Native Americans came together to form the Hopewell culture.
Members of that culture constructed complex, huge mounds, including those known as the Hopewell Ceremonial Earthworks in what is now Ohio. Around them, many artifacts have been unearthed that provide us with invaluable knowledge about the land.
On September 19, UNESCO added the Hopewell Ceremonial Earthworks to its list of World Heritage Sites, which it said was a "designation for places on Earth that are of outstanding universal value to humanity."
Here's what you need to know about the Hopewell Ceremonial Earthworks.
This month, UNESCO announced the newest additions to its list of World Heritage Sites. The only addition in the US was the Hopewell Ceremonial Earthworks in Ohio.
Source: UNESCO
UNESCO described the earthworks as "eight monumental earthen enclosure complexes built between 2,000 and 1,600 years ago along the central tributaries of the Ohio River."
Source: UNESCO
The earthworks, which Ohio History Connection describes as "part cathedral, part cemetery and part astronomical observatory," are spread across the Hopewell Culture National Historical Park in Chillicothe, as well as nearby Newark and Oregonia.
The term Hopewell doesn't refer to one Native American tribe. It actually refers to a group of distinct tribes living in North America who were connected by trade routes from 200 BC to AD 500.
Source: LiveScience
While we don't know exactly what the earthworks were for, UNESCO describes them as evidence of a developed society constructed to align with "the cycles of the Sun and the far more complex cycles of the Moon."
Source: UNESCO
Archaeologists have also found artifacts surrounding the earthworks that prove the people who lived there interacted with tribes as far away as Florida and Yellowstone, according to the National Park Service.
Source: National Park Service
As you can see, the mounds are huge and "form precise squares, circles, and octagons," according to the NPS.
Source: National Park Service
The sites included in the list are the Octagon Earthworks, Great Circle Earthworks, Hopeton Earthworks, Mound City, High Bank Works, Hopewell Mound Group, Seip Earthworks, and Fort Ancient.
Source: UNESCO