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Early Native Americans

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These Stone Age hunters followed the herd migrations across the Beringia plain to North America. ... from earth, rather than stone, and lived in small villages. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Early Native Americans


1
Early Native Americans
  • Origins and early
  • Native Peoples

2
Land Bridge Origins Asia to America
  • A priest named Jose de Acost (1539-1600), was the
    first to propose the possibility of a temporary
    land bridge called Beringia by which early
    peoples crossed from Asia to the Americas. Later
    scientists also believe that during the
    Pleistocene era (approximately 20,000 years ago)
    large areas of the land were exposed and sea
    levels dropped because water was locked up in
    glaciers. This created a landmass ( land bridge
    or isthmus ) across the Bering Strait, between
    Siberia and Alaska.

3
  • The Beringia land bridge is widely accepted as
    the most probable migratory route of humans into
    the Americas.
  • These Stone Age hunters followed the herd
    migrations across the Beringia plain to North
    America. But evidence also suggests they ate sea
    mammals, fish, and vegetation. Peoples then moved
    south into North America by following possible
    unglaciated routes along the pacific coastline or
    an Alberta corridor. ( a long valley located
    between ice mountains )

4
Adapting to new environments
  • The large animals that the Natives hunted died
    out. The wandering hunters (nomads) had to find
    new kinds of food, so they hunted smaller
    animals, fished, and gathered fruits. They
    stopped moving from place to place and built
    small, permanent homes. After a while many began
    to plant their own food and became farmers. The
    groups they formed spoke different languages and
    had different ways of life.

5
Some Vocabulary
  • Glacier - A huge mass of ice slowly flowing over
    a land mass, formed from compacted snow in an
    area where snow accumulation is heavy and doesnt
    melt away..
  • Artifact - An object produced or shaped by human
    craft, especially a tool, weapon, or ornament of
    archaeological or historical interest.
  • Archaeology - The study of past human life and
    culture by the recovery and examination of
    remaining material evidence, such as graves,
    buildings, tools, and pottery.
  • Culture - the daily common beliefs, social forms,
    and material traits of a group.
  • Adobe - a brick or building material of sun-dried
    earth and straw
  • Pueblo - the group dwelling of an Indian village
    of Arizona, New Mexico, and nearby areas
    consisting of connected flat-roofed stone or
    adobe houses in groups sometimes several stories
    high
  • Drought - a long period of dryness ( no rain )
    that causes extensive damage to crops or prevents
    their successful growth

6
Mound Builders
  • Native Americans who lived along the Mississippi
    River and its tributaries were developing their
    own unique culture. These prehistoric Native
    Americans, who are called Mississippian Indians
    by archaeologists, lived in permanent towns which
    were built on a fairly standard pattern.
    Ceremonial buildings on large four sided
    flat-topped mounds faced a plaza. The villagers
    gathered in the plaza for important events,
    ceremonies, and to watch various games such as
    stickball and chunkey.

7
  • The earthen mounds were built over a period of
    years. Perhaps they began as a slight rise with
    an important building on it. After a time, the
    building burned. Whatever the cause of the fire,
    the people brought basketful after basketful of
    dirt to make a mound. When they were satisfied,
    they built a new building on top. Archeologists
    do not know what purpose these buildings
    fulfilled. The most widely accepted ideas are
    that these buildings were either religious
    structures, or the homes of chiefs or other
    important families.

8
  • The Hopewell Culture
  • Most of the Hopewell mounds were big and round.
    The biggest mound was about 20 feet high. There
    was also a perimeter mound, a long skinny mound
    around the outside of the other mounds. The
    Hopewell people made these mounds out of dirt
    which they got out of "borrow pits" nearby. They
    carried the dirt in baskets.

9
  • Each mound covered the remains of a charnel
    house, a wooden building used for meetings. The
    Hopewell people cremated the dead, burned the
    charnel house, and built a mound over the
    remains. They also placed artifacts, such as
    copper figures, mica, arrowheads, shells, and
    pipes in the mounds.
  • Most of the artifacts that have been found came
    from far away places. The Hopewell people traded
    with other Indians.

10
  • The grandest of the mounds is the depiction of an
    writhing snake, perhaps a stylized rattlesnake,
    in Adams County, Ohio, known as the Great Serpent
    Mound. Over 1,300 feet long, with an average
    height of four to five feet and a width of 20 to
    25 feet

11
  • The Cahokia Mounds were bigger. The base of the
    biggest mound, Monk's Mound, covers 14 acres. and
    is 100 feet high. Monk's Mound is a platform
    mound and is flat on top. There was a large house
    on the top that the king and his servants lived
    in. Other mounds were conical. They were used for
    burials. There were also ridgetop mounds used to
    mark the borders of the mound area. There were
    over 120 mounds in this area.
  • The Mississippian Culture's Cahokia in Modern
    day Illinois

12
  • Like the Hopewells, the Mississippians traded for
    many things.
  • The Indians at Cahokia grew corn. Because of
    corn, many people could live in one place. As
    many as 20,000 people lived at Cahokia. They
    lived in houses made of wood, mud daub, and
    thatch.
  • A two-mile long stockade surrounded the city. It
    was made of 20,000 logs which were stripped of
    bark and burned at both ends to keep out insects.
  • There were sun calendars made out of logs in a
    circle, called Woodhenges. The Indians used these
    circles to tell what season it was, and when to
    plant and harvest corn.
  • Both Hopewell Mound City and Cahokia are still
    sacred sites to Native Americans.

13
Southwest Native Cultures
  • The Hohokam and the Anasazi were peoples who
    settled in the American Southwest.
  • The Hohokam Indians settled in the Gila and Salt
    River valleys of southern Arizona.
  • They built rectangular pit houses from earth,
    rather than stone, and lived in small villages.
    They cremated their dead and placed the ashes in
    a specially prepared pit.
  • Although the Hohokam relied a great deal on
    hunting and gathering, they also were skilled
    farmers and excellent engineers. They were a
    peaceful people who built large irrigation canal
    networks. Some were over ten miles long and used
    gravity to control water flow to their corn crops
    and homes.

14
  • The Anasazi settled on a mile-high plateau, an
    area much different from the rest of the
    Southwest.
  • The early Anasazi lived in pit houses, which were
    shallow depressions in the ground covered by a
    canopy of brush and mud. Fire was always a
    threat, as the roof was only about six feet above
    the fire pit. The Anasazi did not have pottery.
    They used vessels of fine basketry instead, some
    woven so tightly that they could have held water.
  • The Anasazi later formed villages of multi-room
    one story buildings, which were surrounded by
    large cultivated fields. Evidence shows that by
    400 AD the Anasazi had learned to grow two crops
    a year of cotton, beans, or maize.

15
  • Around 900 AD the Anasazi began to control their
    water supply by building shallow channels to
    divert run-off into small fields. They also built
    very small dams to hold water and to retain
    eroding soil.
  • Just after 900 AD the Anasazi started to build
    multi-story pueblos using techniques imported
    from the Aztecs of Central Mexico. The pueblos
    were made out of sandstone blocks covered with
    mud. Roof beams supported the ceilings.
  • Some pueblos were five stories high, although
    usually they were only two stories high. Some
    dwellings housed as many as 350 people in 220
    rooms.

16
  • Life was short and hard for the Anasazi pueblo
    people.
  • A third of the Anasazi children died by the age
    of five. By the age of 40 people were old, many
    suffered from arthritis and their teeth were worn
    to the gums. Few saw the age of 50.
  • An interesting aspect of the Anasazi is that they
    built 200 miles of perfectly straight roads, 30
    feet wide. These roads go up and over any hills,
    ignoring the land's natural contours.

17
Where are the Anasazi?
  • Suddenly, 650 years ago, their entire
    civilization vanished, leaving behind a few
    mumified bodies, all of their earthly possessions
    and a mystery.
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