The Huff Archeological Site represents a prehistoric Mandan village dated around 1450 AD, located near the town of Huff in Morton County, North Dakota on the bank of the Missouri River. The settlement was established approximately 200 years before European influence reached the region. The village's inhabitants were agriculturalists who also hunted bison, living in a period when conflict appeared to be a significant concern for the community.
Indigenous peoples had inhabited North America for at least 15,000 years before European contact, developing complex societies across every region of the continent. The Mississippian culture, centered on the city of Cahokia near present-day St. Louis, reached its peak around 1100 AD with a population estimated at 10,000 to 20,000 — larger than contemporary London. The Ancestral Puebloans built multi-story stone complexes at Chaco Canyon and Mesa Verde between the 9th and 13th centuries. The Iroquois Confederacy, formed between roughly 1450 and 1600, united five nations under a constitution that influenced later American democratic thinking. Across the eastern woodlands, the Great Plains, the Pacific Coast, and the Southwest, hundreds of distinct nations maintained sophisticated trade networks, agricultural systems, and governance structures. European contact beginning in the late 15th century introduced epidemic disease — smallpox, measles, influenza — which devastated Indigenous populations by an estimated 50 to 90 percent within a century.
Pre-Columbian tribal groups — specific identities and numbers unknown; scale inferred from archaeological evidence
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