Everett Knoll Complex Explained

Everett Knoll Complex
Nearest City:Everett, Ohio
Coordinates:41.2044°N -81.5758°W
Added:May 25, 1977
Refnum:77000157
Built:~200AD
Location:Everett, Ohio
Partof:Cuyahoga Valley National Park, Everett Historic District

Everett Knoll Complex, also known as Everett Mound is a Hopewell site in Northeast Ohio near the unincorporated community of Everett within Cuyahoga Valley National Park. It consists of a ~16feet diameter mound directly south of Everett road and habitation sites surrounding it.[1] [2]

Dating from the late Hopewell period between 200 and 500 AD, the mound consists of a 2.5feet diameter pit containing a hexagonal limestone crypt topped with a layer of silty clay. Stone and copper artifacts and human and animal remains were recovered from the crypt within the mound. Pottery shards, stone artifacts, and charred animal bones recovered from the surrounding area indicate habitation. It is one of the few known Hopewell sites in northeast Ohio and is smaller than the Hopewell sites found in southern Ohio.

The complex was discovered in 1875 when artifacts were unearthed when building a schoolhouse. The site was excavated in detail by a team from Case Western Reserve University in 1970.

Notes and References

  1. Brose . David . January 1974 . The Everett Knoll: A Late Hopewellian Site in Northeastern Ohio . Ohio Journal of Science . 74 . 1.
  2. Book: Lynott, Mark . Hopewell Ceremonial Landscapes of Ohio . 2014 . . 978-1-78297-754-4 . 39.