The Loess Hills have a rich archaeological heritage. The hills around
Glenwood, in
Mills County, were inhabited by the
Glenwood culture, an eastern extension of the Nebraska Phase of the
Woodland period. The Glenwood Culture lived in the area from roughly 900 A.D. to 1300 A.D. and built hundreds of earth lodges in the region, farming the rich valley bottoms and cultivating native plants from the surrounding hills. An earth lodge replica has been reconstructed in Glenwood Lake Park, and the Mills County Museum, also located at the park, houses an excellent collection of artifacts collected by renowned amateur archeologist Paul Rowe. The city of
Council Bluffs, Iowa (originally "Kanesville") derives its name from the hills based on the
Lewis and Clark first formal "council", or meeting, with
Native Americans in 1804, although the meeting with the
Oto and
Missouri tribe actually took place on the Nebraska side of the Missouri River at
Fort Atkinson.
Sgt. Charles Floyd, the only fatality of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, is buried on a bluff in the Loess Hills in what is now
Sioux City, Iowa. In 1853,
Mormon elder Charles B. Thompson split off from the main
wagon train to
Utah. He initially led 50 to 60 Mormon families to
Kanesville. Thompson and a few other men then chose an area called Monona ("peaceful valley"), where they founded the town of
Preparation, named for "School of Preparation for the
Life Beyond." Realizing the valley's wealth as a
farming region, Thompson used his
newspaper to report a message "from a spirit" directing the Mormon people to turn over all deeds and possessions to Thompson, who changed his name to "Father Ephraim". In 1856, the people asked for the return of their property; Thompson refused and they decided to
lynch him. Thompson escaped the mob by hiding in an attic in
Onawa. He then fled Iowa. On August 12, 1859,
Abraham Lincoln ascended the hills at Cemetery Hill at Fairview Cemetery in Council Bluffs while being briefed on possible locations for the
First transcontinental railroad. ==Other loess landscapes==