Caborn-Welborn culture

Caborn-Welborn was a precontact and proto-historic North American culture defined by archaeologists as a Late Mississippian cultural manifestation that grew out of – or built upon the demise of – the Angel chiefdom located in present-day southern Indiana. Caborn-Welborn developed around 1400 and seems to have disappeared around 1700 CE. The Caborn-Welborn culture was the last Native American occupation of southern Indiana prior to European contact. It remains unclear which post-contact Native group, if any, are their descendants. It's likely they were the Taarsite identified by the French in 1682 at the confluence of the Wabash and the Ohio, possibly ancestral to some portions of the Dhegihan Siouan speaking peoples, like the Quapaw, Omaha, Ponca and Osage.