Loess, such as that shown in the bluff at the right (notice the interesting bee-tunnels... ), is composed of tiny mineral particles with very specific characteristics
What if we dug a hole through all the loess, sand and gravel, and kept on going for thousands of feet deeper?
Sometimes, in the rocks below the loess, sand and gravel, there's a whale of a story
LOESS HILLS PEOPLE BEFORE & AFTER EUROPEAN CONTACT
The first humans to reach the Lower Mississippi Valley's Loess Hills left little evidence of themselves, but over time a rich mosaic of diverse indigenous cultures formed here.
Natchez warrior, unknown artist; image courtesy of Smithsonian Institution, National Anthropological Archives
The first Europeans to visit the Loess Hills was a roving band of Spanish conquistadors, led by Hernando de Soto
One tribe still maintaining many of its old traditions when European settlers began arriving was the Natchez Nation
Conflict between the French and English pitted Indian nation against Indian nation, and sped the Indian demise.
A few hundred Chickasaws were the last indigenous Americans to live on their ancestral homes in our Loess Hills