By: Kai Anderson; Shianne Sparrow; & Deonise Mondestin.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Jeopardy My Land My Fridge My Crib My Threads My Goodness Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
Advertisements

Native Americans Cultural Groups Eastern Woodlands, Southeastern, Plains, Southwestern, and Pacific Northwestern.
Delaware Wampanoag Huron Narraganset Powhatan Iroquois
Wapwallopen (Pa.) Indians Tribes
The Native People of the Plateau By: Moody. Keshav, Wisam.
BY: REECE MORRIS AND RASHAWN HITCHENS-INGRAM. THE INDIANS OF THE EASTERN WOODLANDS HAD TO ADAPT TO THEIR ENVIRONMENT IN ORDER TO SURVIVE, AN ADAPTION.
Native American Indian Geographical Regions Land, Climate, Plants, Animals Revised in 2013 Next.
Native American Indians Geographical Regions Land, Climate, Plants, Animals 2014 Next.
The Iroquois tribe By Brittany, Kinley, Jorge, and Emiliano.
Northeast Woodland Native Americans by Nicholas, Sarah, Niall, Bronson, and Emma.
The First Americans: Native Americans. Northwest Indians The Northwest Indians Culture was in what is today the states of Washington, Oregon, and northern.
The Woodland Cree The Woodland Cree are one of many tribes in Canada. They lived in the harsh conditions that we today have resolved with inventions,
CHEROKEE INDIANS AND THEIR ENVIRONMENT Selena Johnson SS4H1 The students will describe how early Native American cultures developed in North America B.
The First Americans. Arrival ●Between 10, ,000 years ago, glaciers covered the earth ●A land bridge was formed between Siberia and Alaska.
PENOBSCOT LUIS GUILLERMO BUITRAGO ISABELA MARTIN MATEO POSSO NOVEMBER 11, 2008.
First Americans of Virginia
HOW DID THE CAT LAKE PEOPLE HUNT AND GATHER? BY: LIAM SIMPSON.
The Sub Arctic Indians By Zackary R.. Sub Arctic Region The Great Bear Lake is the biggest lake in Canada. The Sub Arctic Indians live where there’s flat.
The First Americans Native/Indians. The First Americans Native Americans were the first people to live in America. The believed that the land was for.
EASTERN WOODLANDS ALGONQUIAN TRIBES By Sabey Smith.
SSH1a. Locate where the Native Americans settled with emphasis on Inuit(Arctic Region), Kwakiutl(Northwest region), Nez Perce(Plateau Region), Hopi(Southwest.
NATIVE AMERICANS OF THE NORTHEAST: THE WOODLANDS.
 By The Eastern Woodlands Group  Madilyn Coulson, Hailey Krinn, Tony Washington, Christian Ceneskie, and Wyatt Bennett.
Eastern Woodland Indians Tribes. Tribes The group of Native American known as the Woodland Indians is made up of several tribes. These are some of the.
The Seneca's by: Emi and Grace.
Eastern Woodlands Ojibwa, Ottawa, Nipissing, Algonquin, Maliseet, Mi’kaq.
Eastern Woodlands By: Shelby Helton.
Woodland Indians The Way They Lived. Clothing The clothing was usually made out of mammal, bird, fish skins, pelts, or hides. The skins were then tanned.
American Indian Culture Regions. American Indians are diverse! When Europeans first arrived in America, they noticed that the Natives were very diverse.
The Potawatomi Tribe By: Lauren C. & Jack T..
Some plants in the Eastern Woodland are Birches, elms, maple trees Birches Elms.
The Powhatan Indians of the Eastern Woodland Region
Native Americans Background Information. The Eastern Woodlands  Where did they live?  North & South Carolina, Tennessee, Georgia, Florida, Kentucky,
P OTAWATOMI N ATIVE A MERICANS How did the Potawatomi adapt to there environment?
By: Jenna Duke and Dustin Barr. Chumash Indians ate seals and sea otters they also planted food.
By: Ben and Mary. Food Men hunted deer, ducks, elk, wild birds, and other wild animals. They farmed wild rice, squash, corn, melons, tobacco, and beans.
Aboriginal Groups in Canada
Cultures of North America
Odawa Ethan Eren Eugenia.
Menominee By Ian and Shade.
Hope you like it.. Grope 8 Potawatomi (younger brother)
How did the Iroquois adapt to there environment? by Lilly R. culum%20Info/NativeAmericans/ woodlandclothing.html.
Great Plains Sioux Sophia S, Jarratt, Owen All about the Natural Resources Land They lived in the Black Hills of South Dakota and the woodlands and flat.
Eastern Woodlands. Tribe A group of families bound together under a single leadership.
Ojibwa They didn’t eat the same food. They harvested wild rice and corn. They fished small game. Most of the Ojibwa tribe lived in Minnesota, Wisconsin,
This morning, I woke up very tired. I was up all night because my brother was snoring at the other end of our wigwam. A wigwam is what we call our house.
Northeast Woodland Iroquois By: Addison, Devin, Olivia, Jacob, and A.J.
Eastern Woodlands Shawnee
Kwakiutl "kwah-kee-oo-tl."
Warm-Up Questions 1.Apply- If you had the choice between the coast and the plains for your settlement, which would you choose and why? (DOK 2) 2.Prediction-
CATAWBA By: Amelia Hinson-Pitts Nori Grant Dominique Gant Will Watson Sam Oblinger.
Before the Arrival of Europeans Native People of Canada.
By: Alexis Phaniphon Nov.21, th grade Mrs.T.Johnson The Chippewa Indians of the Mid-west and Canada.
USI.3 Early North American Cultures
Native Americans had a strong connection to their surroundings They viewed themselves as a part of the community of plants, animals, and other natural.
Alia Ahmadi, Correna Tate, and Gabby Romines
Eastern Woodland Indians Culture
Eastern Woodlands. Tribe A group of families bound together under a single leadership.
Eastern Woodland Tribes 5 th – 6 th Grade Native American Unit Lesson 1.
The Native Americans of Georgia
Northeast Woodland Iroquois
Native Americans of Pennsylvania
Iroquois Native Americans
Northeast and Northwest Native Americans
Eastern Woodlands Plains Region Southwest Region Northwest Region
Aboriginal Groups in Canada
Native Americans Of Virginia.
1.2: Cultures of North America
Native Americans Northwest Coast California Great Basin Plateau
The Eastern Woodland Native Americans Chapter 2- lesson 1
Presentation transcript:

By: Kai Anderson; Shianne Sparrow; & Deonise Mondestin

Iroquois Algonquins Huron

Elk Deer Plants Kastoweh Moccasins Feathers (in hair) Nose rings and other jewelry Cape Sash (around the waist) Breech cloth Leggings

Forrest hills Streams Rivers Moderate seasons

Winter (hunted birds and animals) Spring (fished and picked berries) Summer (grew crops such as: beans, corn, and squash) Fall (harvested crops)

Long Houses Wigwams

Eastern Algonquin: they believed that there was a spiritual world that interacted constantly with the physical world. There was a belief in a primary spirit or animating force that encompassed all existence. Algonquins called this animating spirit kitchie manitou’or or the great spirit.

Clams Nuts Tobacco Moose White tailed deer Caribou Raccoon Bear Beans Squash Beaver Squirrel Seal Whale Eel Mantic salmon Wild rice Oyster Lobster

Maliseet canoe Toboggan ‘bear paw’ snow shoes (heavier loads) Narrow snow shoes Slender birch bark canoe Sleds

lok.woodland.htm lok.woodland.htm h1.html h1.html hezipper/easternwoodland.htm hezipper/easternwoodland.htm ml ml 20Indians.html 20Indians.html