The Cole Culture (800–1300 CE) is a Late Woodland Period culture of Native American people from central Ohio.
Cole Culture people made flint tools and pottery. [1] They were agrarian and cultivated beans, maize, squash, and tobacco. Cole people buried their dead in subterranean graves instead of mounds. [2] They shared many traits with the Hopewell tradition and might be descended from them. [3] A major Cole Culture site is the Ufferman Site in Delaware County, Ohio. [1] Another is the Highbank Park Works, also in Delaware County, built between 800 and 1300 CE.
The Cole Culture (800–1300 CE) is a Late Woodland Period culture of Native American people from central Ohio.
Cole Culture people made flint tools and pottery. [1] They were agrarian and cultivated beans, maize, squash, and tobacco. Cole people buried their dead in subterranean graves instead of mounds. [2] They shared many traits with the Hopewell tradition and might be descended from them. [3] A major Cole Culture site is the Ufferman Site in Delaware County, Ohio. [1] Another is the Highbank Park Works, also in Delaware County, built between 800 and 1300 CE.