The Native Peoples of America, to 1500 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 44
About This Presentation
Title:

The Native Peoples of America, to 1500

Description:

Eskimos, Inuits, Aleuts. Crossed the Bering Sea to AK. Collectively called Paleo-Indian ... Eskimos and Aleuts. Arrived in western AK from Siberia. Advanced ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:2355
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 45
Provided by: black9
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Native Peoples of America, to 1500


1
Chapter 1
  • The Native Peoples of America, to 1500

2
Introduction
  • American History began more than 10,000 pre
    Columbus 1st voyage.
  • Native Americans
  • Diverse cultures
  • Much interaction between groups

3
Introduction (cont.)
  • How did environmental change shape the transition
    from Paleo-Indian to Archaic ways of life?
  • What were the principal differences among the
    Native American cultures that emerged after 2500
    B.C.?
  • Despite their diversity, what significant values
    and practices did North American Indians share?

4
The First Americans, c. 13,000-2500 B.C.
  • Peopling New Worlds
  • 2 main theories about the origins of the people
    of the Americas
  • During the last Ice Age (10,500 B.C.), bands of
    hunters from Siberia crossed the then-existing
    land bridge into Alaska and from there spread out
    over the Western Hemisphere
  • As early as 13,000 B.C. people came by boat,
    settling at various spots along the western coast
    of the Americas

5
(No Transcript)
6
Peopling New Worlds (cont.)
  • Most archaeologists believe both theories are
    correct
  • Around 7000 B.C.Athapaskan-speaking people
    arrived in AK and northwestern Canada
  • Migrated southwest
  • Ancestors of the Apaches and Navajo

7
Peopling New Worlds (cont.)
  • More recent group
  • Non-Indian
  • Eskimos, Inuits, Aleuts
  • Crossed the Bering Sea to AK
  • Collectively called Paleo-Indian

8
Peopling New Worlds (cont.)
  • Lived in small hunting bands
  • Moved constantly
  • Pursuit of mammoths, mastodons, other big game
  • 9000 B.C. mammoths and mastodons became extinct
    (climatic warming)

9
Peopling New Worlds (cont.)
  • Groups of Paleo-Indians came together
  • Obtained flint for spear points and tools
  • Intermarried
  • Traded
  • Exchanged cultural traits
  • http//www.nps.gov/archive/amis/eatlatl.htm

10
Archaic Societies
  • Archaic peoples
  • Native Americans of the period 8000 to 2500 B.C.
  • Broadened their diets
  • Small mammals, fish, wild plants
  • Where there was an abundance of food, permanent
    villages were established

11
Archaic Societies (cont.)
  • Mens roles
  • Hunted and fished
  • Womens roles
  • Harvested and prepared wild plants
  • Early 5000 B.C. some Native Americans began to
    farm

12
Archaic Societies (cont.)
  • Mexico and Central America
  • By 3000 B.C.Indians grew squash, beans, some
    fruit, maize
  • By 2500 by B.C.maize cultivation spread as far
    north as New Mexico and as far south as Amazon
    River basin

13
Cultural Diversityc. 2500 B.C.-A.D. 1500
  • After 2500 B.C. many Native American cultures
    began to change
  • Farming
  • Religious systems
  • Political systems
  • Hierarchical states

14
Mesoamerica and South America
  • Mesoamerica
  • Southern Mexico and Central America
  • Food production (from farming) greatly increased
  • Olmecs
  • One of the most productive of these farming
    peoples
  • Established large urban centers
  • Hereditary rulers imposed their rule on small
    surrounding areas (chiefdoms)

15
Olmec Map
16
Mesoamerica and South America (cont.)
  • 1 and 500 A.D. some chiefdoms grew into
    full-fledged states
  • Teotihuacan
  • Capital of state
  • Over 100,000 people
  • Eventually over taken by Aztecs

17
(No Transcript)
18
Mesoamerica and South America (cont.)
  • These states built huge engineering and public
    works projects
  • Extensive trade
  • Sophisticated calendars
  • Writing and number systems
  • Aztec and Inca Empires were still expanding when
    the Spanish conquistadores arrived in the 16th
    century

19
The Southwest
  • Southwestern part of the U.S.A. and northern
    Mexico
  • Water was often scarce
  • Maize cultivation did not reach the area until
    2500 B.C.
  • Full-time farming was common only after 400 B.C.

20
The Southwest (cont.)
  • With agriculture, new Indian cultures arose
  • Hohokam people
  • Southern AZ
  • Built extensive canal systems for irrigation
  • Could harvest 2 crops a year
  • Permanent villages of several hundred people

21
The Southwest (cont.)
  • Anasazi people
  • Primarily by farming
  • Dominated Southwest for about 600 years
  • Confederations of towns
  • Chaco Canyon, New Mexico
  • 15,000 people

22
(No Transcript)
23
The Southwest (cont.)
  • By 13th century, Anasazi and Hohokam cultures
    declined
  • Long drought
  • People abandoned large settlements
  • Apaches and Navajo started arrive in Southwest

24
The Eastern Woodlands
  • Mississippi Valley to the Atlantic coast
  • Village life and political centralization
  • Poverty Point
  • 1200 B.C.
  • 5,000 people
  • Shore of Mississippi River in LA

25
The Eastern Woodlands (cont.)
  • Adena
  • Ohio Valley
  • Mound-building
  • Mounds often contained graves
  • 2nd century B.C. evolved into Hopewell
    civilization
  • More complex
  • More elaborate mounds

26
The Eastern Woodlands (cont.)
27
The Eastern Woodlands (cont.)
  • Agriculture
  • Not important until 7th century A.D.
  • 1st full-time farmers lived on flood plains of
    Mississippi River
  • Evolved into more sophisticated Mississippian
    civilization
  • Towns had thousands of inhabitants
  • Largest was Cahokia (near St. Louis)

28
The Eastern Woodlands (cont.)
  • Mississippian artists
  • Clay, stone, shell, copper
  • Religion was based on sun worship
  • Political system
  • Centralized and hierarchical

29
The Eastern Woodlands (cont.)
30
The Eastern Woodlands (cont.)
  • 13th century A.D.Mississippian culture had
    declined
  • Most Eastern Woodlands Indians had abandoned
    large settlements and centralized political power
  • Continued to engage in agriculture
  • Slash-and-burn method of land clearing
  • Grew corn and beans

31
Nonfarming Societies
  • Pacific coast
  • Southern Alaska to northern Calf.
  • Fished for salmon
  • Dry and store their catch year-round
  • Permanent villages
  • Several hundred people

32
Nonfarming Societies (cont.)
  • Further south Calf. Indians
  • Lived in permanent villages
  • Collect and grind acorns for meals
  • Both groups engaged in trade and warfare
  • United under the leadership of chiefs

33
Nonfarming Societies (cont.)
  • Great Plains and Great Basin
  • Uncertain rainfall
  • Did not have permanent settlements
  • Roamed over large areas
  • Hunted variety of animals (mostly bison)
  • Wild seeds and nuts

34
Nonfarming Societies (cont.)
  • Eskimos and Aleuts
  • Arrived in western AK from Siberia
  • Advanced hunting tools
  • Harpoons and spears
  • Hunted sea mammals and caribou
  • Spread across northern Canada
  • 980-1100limited contact with Noresmen trying to
    colonize in Greenland and Newfoundland

35
Nonfarming Societies (cont.)
  • Mostly the peoples of the Americas developed in
    isolation form those on other continents
  • Evolution of the American cultures paralleled
    those in Europe, Asia, and Africa

36
North American Peoples on the Eve of Contact
  • By 1500about 75 million people lived in the
    Western Hemisphere
  • 7-10 million inhabited land north of Mesoamerica
  • Divided into several hundred nations and tribes
  • Spoke diverse languages

37
North American Peoples on the Eve of Contact
(cont.)
  • Common characteristics
  • Bows and arrows
  • Ceramic pottery
  • Some common religious beliefs, practices, and
    rituals
  • Living in kinship-based communities
  • Agreeing to communal control of resources

38
Kinship and Gender
  • Kinshipextended family
  • Held Indian society together
  • More important than nuclear family (husband,
    wife, children)

39
Kinship and Gender (cont.)
  • Gender
  • Women did the farming (except among the tribes of
    the Southwest, where both sexes were cultivators)
  • Fighting among kinship groups and tribes over
    scarce resources and other conflicts
  • Rarely did they try to kill large numbers of the
    enemy

40
Spiritual and Social Values
  • All nature, including humanity, was interrelated
    and had spiritual powers (manitou)
  • Wanted to be in tune with these spiritual forces
  • Dreaming
  • Altering their state of consciousness by acts of
    physical endurance and self-torture (Sun Dance of
    the Plains Indians)
  • Medicine men and women

41
Spiritual and Social Values (cont.)
  • To smooth relations between persons of unequal
    status and power and to hold their societies
    together, Indians relied on reciprocity.
  • Giving of gifts and trading of goods in return
    for receiving prestige, submission, and authority

42
Spiritual and Social Values (cont.)
  • Indian communities generally demanded conformity
    and close cooperation of their members

43
Conclusion
  • Human history in the Western Hemisphere did not
    begin with the arrival of Columbus
  • Thousands of years before 1492, Native Americans
    hunted gathered farmed built communities,
    roads, and trails and created complex societies

44
Conclusion (cont.)
  • Not always good conservationists, Indians did,
    for the most part, respect the land and used it
    in ways that allowed natural resources to renew
    themselves.
  • Europeans arriving in North America after 1500
    showed no self-restraint
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com