A Closer Look.  RegionFoodHousingClothing Northwest CoastFishRectangular houses made of wood Animal hide, fur, plants materials CaliforniaBalance of.

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Presentation transcript:

A Closer Look

 RegionFoodHousingClothing Northwest CoastFishRectangular houses made of wood Animal hide, fur, plants materials CaliforniaBalance of wild Plants, animals, fish. Dome (Northern) or cone shaped (Southern) made of leaves, mats, hides etc. (See Northwest) SouthwestBalance of wild plants and animals Cone/dome shaped homes made of bark, leaves, hides Animal Hide Map Exercise

 RegionFoodHousingClothing PlateauFishPit Houses built partially underground Animal hide, fur, Plant Material Great BasinAnimals & Wild Plants Cone-shaped teepees (See Plateau) Great PlainsAnimals and cultivated plants Teepees of animal hide Animal Hide and Fur SoutheastCultivated plants, fish by the coast, Rectangular/Bar rel shaped Animal hide/fur Eastern Woodlands Animals, cultivated plants, fish along coast Cone/barrel roofed houses Hide/fur/some plant Map Exercise Cont.

 LocationFoodExtrasMore Extras - Extends from southern Oregon into Canada - Physical Characteristics: Thick forests of fir, spruce, and cedar trees; Mountains; -Climate: Winters along the coast are cold but not icy; Summers are cool; heavy rainfall -The Sea was the main food source; clams, shellfish, seaweed, seals, sea lions, whales. -The forests provided deer, moose, bear, elk, beaver, and mountain goat. -** Salmon in the Summer!! -Weapons: Harpoons and spears to catch seals & fences to catch salmon -Tools: Wedges, stone-headed sledgehammers, bone drills, stone chisels, stone knives, -They used these sledgehammers to cut long thin boards for houses -Used bark to make baskets, mats, and rope -Crafts: Decorative shell buttons, animal masks, wooden bowls Northwest Coast

 Northwest Pics.

 LocationFoodHouses/Clothin g Extras -Stretches from Southern Oregon to Baja California (lower) - Winter rain; hot/dry summers -Coasts, valleys, & deserts -Coastal: SALMON -Southern: Shellfish -Inland: Deer, Rabbit, Ducks -Gatherers: Berries, roots, pine nuts, acorns* -Clothing: Grass skirts/aprons; animal hides, -Housing: Simple homes made out of deer antlers, and bark, shaped into a large cone. -In marshy areas they wove mats of reeds to drape over a cone shaped framework of poles. - Crafts: Made baskets, sifters, & fish traps out of woven plant materials. They decorated their work with clamshells and bird feathers. Tools: Used deer antlers & elk California

 LocationFoodExtras -East of the California Basin between Sierra Nevada and the Rocky Mountains - Arid (dry) Desert -Low grasses, sagebrush, rabbits, lizards -Experienced extreme heat & cold temperatures -Followed food source. -Spring: Camped by Valley Lakes and streams for duck and plants. -Summer: The lakes and valley dried up so they enjoyed snakes/grasshoppers - Mostly Plant Eaters!! - Would store food in preparation for winter! -People of the Great Basin mostly traveled in search of food. -Lived in cone-shaped homes made of reeds and willow poles. -In cold temperatures they would make robes out of rabbit hides (100 hides/robe!) -Used Seed Beaters to knock seeds loose from plants. Great Basin

 LocationFoodHouses/Clothing -North of the Great Basin -Mountains/Dense Forests -Central area consists of flat land and grasses -Long/cold winters -2 River Systems: Columbia & Fraser -Hunted/gathered with the seasons. -Plentiful Food-people could live in villages year-round. -Homes were built partially underground - Deer/Antelope in Winter -Built villages along major rivers -Rivers provided fish, drinking water, driftwood for houses -Created baskets/hats with their weaving skills. -Women used skinds from the hunt for dresses/leggings/ shirts that they decorated with seeds and shells Plateau (“Fashionistas”)

 Plateau Style

 LocationFoodMesa People (high flat areas) -Present-day AZ, NM, S. UT, CO, & parts of TX -Multiple environments: canyons, mountains, deserts, flat-topped mesas -Rivers: Colorado, Rio Grande -Dry, arid land -Grew Corn, beans, squash -Farmers would plans near natural flood areas. -Some were Nomadic -Some hunter-gatherers -Mesa people were more agricultural -Homes were made of Adobe (sun baked clay) -A single village could house 100 people -* grew, spun and wove cotton for clothes and would use plants and minerals to dye them Southwest

 LocationsFoodExtras -Stretches 2,000 miles from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico -Eastern portion has more water and softer water -Western portion is drier with short, dense grasses perfect for BUFFALO -Eastern Portion people mostly farmed land -Western Plains People followed the buffalo herds year round. -In the Spring/Summer Plains people traveled in small groups to hunt -During the Fall they traveled in larger groups to hunt the bigger herds -Used arrows arrayed with feathers for better accuracy to kill buffalo -Plains People used every part of the buffalo. Hides were used as shields, containers, robes/bedding etc. -Buffalo tendons were used as thread. Plains people would sew the skins together and drape them over poles to form a tipi or dwelling. Great Plains (Buffalo)

 Plains People

 Eastern Woodlands(Iroquois) LocationFood Extra -Stretches from Mississippi River to the Atlantic Ocean & from Canada to North Carolina - Plentiful Forests, Lakes, streams - Deer/Bears/Beavers/B irds/Fish -Gathered greens/nuts/berries -Made syrup from sap -2 language groups: Algonquin & Iroquois -Used canoes to travel along the rivers -Sturdy log-framed houses -Women did all the farming! -Used deerskin for capes, skirts, moccasins -Stored their harvest in bark bins -Crops: sunflowers, tobacco, vegies.

 Log-Framed Structures

 LocationsFoodMounds -Stretches from the Southern part of the Ohio Valley to the Gulf of Mexico & from TX to the Atlantic Ocean. -Fertile coastal plains, river valleys, mountains, and swamps - -Grew two crops of corn a year --Squash pumpkins, sunflowers, & other edible plants. -Used blowguns to hunt squirrels, rabbits, turkeys and bows and arrows for deer, turkey etc. - Towns of large earthen mounds -The first mounds were burial sites and eventually temples -Building mounds took several months/years because they would move dirt one basket at a time mounds/town and people would build rectangular homes around them South East (Mounds)