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Early Native Americans

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Native Americans who hunted buffalo, such as the. Apache and ... Among the peoples of the West were: Chinook, Haida, Nez Perce, Pomo, Shoshone, Tlingit, Ute, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Early Native Americans


1
Early Native Americans
  • Chapter 1, Section 3 Pages 28 - 33

2
Did You Know?
  • Native Americans who hunted buffalo, such as the
  • Apache and Navajo, relied on the animal for meat.
  • The buffalo, however, served other uses such as
  • hides for clothing, pouches, and dolls hair for
  • headdresses and pillow stuffing tails for whips
  • hoofs for glue and horns for cups and spoons.

3
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4
The Anasazi
  • The Anasazi lived in an area known as the Four
    Corners
  • (or the meeting place) of present-day Utah,
    Colorado,
  • Arizona, and New Mexico from A.D. 1 to A.D. 1300.
  • The Anasazi built stone and cliff dwellings. A
    pueblo or stone dwelling looked like an apartment
    building.
  • The cliff dwellings were built into the walls of
    steep cliffs. Pueblo Bonito and Mesa Verde are
    examples of each.
  • In about 1300, the Anasazi left these dwellings
    to settle in smaller communities, perhaps due to
    droughts during which their crops dried up.

5
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6
The Hohokam
  • The Hohokam lived in the desert of present-day
  • Arizona. Their civilization flourished from
    about A.D.
  • 300 to A.D. 1300.
  • They built irrigation channels to bring water to
    the hot, dry land from the nearby Gila and Salt
    Rivers and left behind pottery, carved stone, and
    shells.

7
Mound Builders and Adena
  • The Mound Builders lived in central North America
  • from present-day Pennsylvania to the Mississippi
  • River valley. They built mounds of earth that
    looked
  • like the Aztec stone pyramids.
  • The Adena were hunters and gatherers and among
  • the earliest Mound Builders living in the Ohio
    Valley
  • around 800 B.C.

8
The Hopewell and Cahokia
  • The Hopewell people were farmers and traders who
  • built large burial mounds shaped like birds,
    bears, and
  • snakes. They left behind pearls, shells, cloth,
    and
  • copper in the mounds to show their variety of
    trade.
  • The Cahokia built the largest settlement in
    present
  • day Illinois. This city may have had 16,000
    people.
  • The highest mound, Monks Mound, rose nearly 100
  • feet and was probably the highest structure north
    of
  • Mexico.

9
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10
The Inuit
  • The peoples of the North were the Inuit, settling
    in the
  • cold Artic region.
  • The Inuit built igloos to protect themselves from
    severe weather.
  • They wore furs and sealskins to keep them warm
    and dry.
  • They were hunters and fishers.

11
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12
People of the West
  • Among the peoples of the West were Chinook,
  • Haida, Nez Perce, Pomo, Shoshone, Tlingit, Ute,
  • and Yakima.
  • They used the resources of the forest and sea as
    they hunted and gathered.
  • The Shoshone and Ute created temporary shelters
    as they traveled for food.

13
People of the Southwest
  • The peoples of the Southwest were the Acoma, the
  • Hopi, and the Zuni. Their homes were made of
    adobe
  • bricks, and they raised maize, beans, and squash.
  • The Apache and Navajo settled in the region in
    the
  • 1500s. They were hunters and gatherers, unlike
    the
  • other people of the region, and built square
    homes
  • called hogans.

14
People of the Plains
  • The peoples of the Plains were nomads.
  • They hunted and farmed and built tents called
    tepees that they moved with them from place to
    place.
  • They learned to tame wild horses and used them to
    hunt and fight.

15
People of the East
  • The peoples of the East, the Cherokee and the
    Iroquois,
  • formed complex political systems of governing.
  • The Iroquois formed five groups the Onondaga,
    the Seneca, the Mohawk, the Oneida, and the
    Cayuga.
  • Until the late 1500s when these groups formed
    the Iroquois League, also called the Iroquois
    Confederacy, they fought wars with one another.

16
People of the Southeast
  • The peoples of the Southeast were the Creek,
  • Chickasaw, Choctaw, Cherokee, and Seminole.
  • They farmed and adapted to the warmer woodlands
  • climate of the south.

17
Discussion Questions
  • Why do you think the dwellings of these early
    Native Americans (the pueblos, mounds, and cliff
    dwellings) were large and massive?
  • Why do you think the different Native American
    groups developed a wide variety of cultures?
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