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Library

Library

Explore the FOBA Library

Start with places, timelines, evidence labels, source trails, Wiki entries, Tales, community notes, and careful Muur history framing.

Partner learning path

Use both sites without collapsing their meanings

TheFoundationsOf.us focuses on foundations, Muur history, ancestral memory, place-based research, and community learning. MoorofUs.org provides evidence-first Moor history, people, places, timelines, claims, and sources. Use both sites together to move between historical context and foundational research.

Story Map

Use the map to compare place hubs, rivers, routes, and research questions. A text list is included for readers who prefer not to use the map.

Map Places

Industrial
  1. 1854 Montezuma incorporates as rail and river routes reshape movement

    Transportation choices helped shape where people gathered, traded, and left records.

Treaty-Land Reorganization
  1. 1830s Removal policy era reshapes the Southeast

    Federal and state policy, land cessions, and forced removals changed Native Nations and local communities in lasting ways.

  2. Late 1700s Paths, rivers, and trade networks link communities

    Before paved roads, river crossings and paths supported trade, diplomacy, travel, and memory.

Contact-Colonial
  1. 1500s-1600s Contact era begins reshaping Florida and the Southeast

    European arrival introduced mission systems, conflict, alliances, trade shifts, and disease disruption.

Mound Cities
  1. 900-1500 CE Mound cities flourish across the Southeast

    Large towns, plazas, mound-building projects, and farming economies reveal organized civic and ceremonial landscapes.

Woodland
  1. 1000 BCE-900 CE Woodland-period earthworks and exchange networks grow

    Earlier earthworks and exchange systems help learners avoid treating mound history as a single moment.

Paleoindian-Early Peoples
  1. 12,000+ years ago Long human presence in the region

    People lived, traveled, hunted, gathered, and adapted to changing climates long before mound cities.

Deep Time
  1. About 50 million years ago Ancient seas leave traces in the landscape

    Fossils and marine sediments remind learners that the land itself changed long before human history.

Start With A Collection

Note: This is an educational project. It does not certify identity, tribe, or legal status.

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