Native American Cultures SW, Pacific Coast, Great Plains
I. The Southwest Zuni, Hopi, Apache, and Navajo descendants of Anasazi and Hohokam “Pueblo peoples” corn, squash, and beans
boys, 6, joined kachina cult kachina – good spirit kachinas supposedly visited town each year, messages from gods – wearing masks and dancing helped bring the spirits to town
Hopi House
II. The Pacific Coast coastal forests, lumber homes, canoes, totem poles
Redwood National Park
legends, cultural beliefs, art no restrictions on vertical order never objects of worship Totem Poles
These people did not practice agriculture, they fished in rivers like the Columbia for salmon.
Columbia River Gorge...Oregon
Nez Perce and Yakima occupied land between Cascades and Rockies Cascade Mountains
Shoshone Falls Shoshone and Ute, between Sierra Nevadas and Rockies, more nomadic because land was too dry and food scarce
III. The Great Plains influenced by Hopewell and Mississippian lived near Missouri and other rivers
Sioux – followed buffalo and lived in tepees
How did life change for the Sioux and others after the Spanish introduced horses?
Sioux warriors took scalps of enemies greater glory came with the “counting coup” – charge towards the enemy and touch one with a stick (humiliating)
Far North, NE, SE
IV. The Far North Aleut, Aleutian Islands Inuit (Eskimos), Alaska to Greenland
hunted seals and caribou kayaks and dogsleds lamps - whale oil for fuel
dwellings - igloos
V. The Northeast 2 language groups – Algonquian and Iroquoian among first to encounter English settlers Huron, Erie, Mohawk
slash-and-burn agriculture – cut forests, burned cleared land, left with rich soil
longhouses – barrel-shaped, covered with bark
wigwams – houses used by Algonquian Indians…means “house” in the Abenaki tribal language
wampum belts – designs recorded events
The Iroquois League war often erupted among Iroquoian groups late 1500s – Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida, and Mohawk formed this alliance, peace Great Binding Law – constitution that defined how confederacy worked chiefs were men, women who headed kinship groups selected them Hiawatha
VI. The Southeast most lived in towns central plaza, earthen walls
CCherokee was largest group wwestern N.C. and Tennessee 220,000 when Europeans arrived
Smoky Mountains
Statue of Sequoyah outside the Museum of the Cherokee Indians, Cherokee, North Carolina
The Natchez lived in the Southeast as well and now have a parkway named after them.
Natchez Trace Parkway