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Eastern

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This was a way the Iroquois hunters showed a deep connection to and respect for nature ... shared fires kept smoke down inside the longhouse and were safer than ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Eastern


1
Eastern Woodland Wonderland
J ust Plain Fun
I Hopi Have a Nice Day
Kwakiutl Capers
...and One More
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2
This is who made the decisions and rules in the
Iroquois League
3
The Great Council, which is still practiced today
among modern day Iroquois people
4
These are three forest resources and what they
were used for.
5
Wood for homes and tools rivers and lakes to
drink, wash, water crops, and fish animals for
hides (clothing, blankets, housing), bones (for
tools),meat.
6
This was a way the Iroquois hunters showed a deep
connection to and respect for nature
7
They spoke to and thanked the animals they killed.
8
This was why longhouses had shared, centrally
located fires
9
Since many families lived in the longhouse, it
was easier to share a fire than make separate
ones. Also, fewer, shared fires kept smoke down
inside the longhouse and were safer than having
many fires.
10
This is the Iroquois League and why it was formed
11
The Iroquois League was formed by a group of 5,
and then 6 Native American tribes. Its purpose
was to establish peace and cooperation.
Together, all members made decisions that
affected all the tribes in the League.
12
Most Plains people got their food by these two
methods
13
Farming and hunting buffalo
14
These are three ways horses affected the lives of
the Plains people
15
They could hunt buffalo easier, traveling was
much faster and they could transport more,
warfare with enemy tribes was easier
16
This is how Plains Indians measured their wealth
17
In horses (not dollars like us!)
18
This is where many Cheyenne Indians live today
19
Montana
20
This is how tepees are the same as lodges (1
way). This is how they are different (whats
unique about each?)
21
Both are a form of shelter for the Plains
Indians. Lodges are permanent homes made of
earth-packed walls built over a hole. Tepees are
mobile and used when on the hunt. They are made
of poles and animal skin walls.
22
This describes the climate of the Southwest
Desert Cultural Region
23
Hot and arid (dry)
24
This is why Hopi built their homes on the top of
mesas and had no doors on the first level of
their homes
25
To protect them from enemies and wild animals
26
This is true of Hopi today (2 things)
27
They blend old ways and new ways. They still
have their capital city of Oraibi. Many Hopi
live on a reservation.
28
This is the connection between Pueblo and Anasazi
housing.
29
Their housing customs are similar. They are
built of mud and clay (adobe) and are apartment
building-like, rising several stories high. Both
built their homes at the top of mesas, or up high
30
This ceremony honored the Kachinas and asked for
their help
31
The Hopi Dance
32
This is a Potlatch
33
A party where the hosts give gifts to the guests
to show generosity and wealth
34
This is the main role of the shaman in Kwakiutl
culture
35
They were healers and cured illnesses, often by
performing special dances.
36
These people could become a shaman in Kwakiutl
culture
37
Men and woman
38
This was the cultural purpose of the totem pole
and the potlatch
39
They were both a way to show wealth
40
This is why Kwakiutl made clothing out of cedar
bark.
41
They used the natural resources available to them.
42
These are four foods eaten by the Kwakiutl. This
is why they ate these foods.
43
Wild game, fish, nuts, berries, seals, whales.
They did not need to grow food because there was
such an abundance of natural resources available.
All they had to do was hunt and gather.
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