Eastern Woodlands By: Sheyla, Taylor, Haley, and Christyn Mohawk Nanticoke Onondaga.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Region Food Artifacts Shelter Transportation Clothing
Advertisements

By: Allyssa Bixler, Chloe McKenzie, Lindsey Stein, Abby Hammers.
Iroquoi Tribe By: Lauren & Emily.
The Woodland Indians. Where did they live??? They were moderate-climate regions roughly from the Atlantic to the Mississippi River and included the Great.
Unit 1, Chapter 2, Lesson 2 Pages 62 – 67
Eastern Woodlands Indians
Native Americans Cultural Groups Eastern Woodlands, Southeastern, Plains, Southwestern, and Pacific Northwestern.
Delaware Wampanoag Huron Narraganset Powhatan Iroquois
By: Ashley Morgan & Kendra McElhenny. Background It comes from the Shawnee word shawanwa. – which means "southerner." In history books, you can sometimes.
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.
What does Mohawk Mean?  The Mohawk name is what their Algonkian enemies used to call them, meaning "man-eaters."  In their own language, the Mohawk.
The Kwakiutl Indians - Northwest
Northeast Woodland Native Americans by Nicholas, Sarah, Niall, Bronson, and Emma.
TRACE A. KENNEMORE. THE CADDOE INDIANS SHELTER PROJECT.
Creek and Cherokee 2nd Grade.
Native American Tribes
Created by Jessica Ivey
Iroquois Native Americans
Native Americans of South Carolina
Algonquin Tribes by Mrs. Freire’s Class
Indians of the Southeast. Their Area The southeast is a land of mountains, rivers and forests in the northern area.
Native People By: Kate, Thea and Alex. Location In the USA….In Michigan and Ontario In Michigan….Mostly along the shores.
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.
By: Thomas Lindsay. Seminole Region The Seminoles lived in Florida. They started out in northern Florida, but when the Americans attacked them, the Seminole.
The Maidu California Native American Tribe
 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 Eastern Woodlands Iroquois Indians
Eastern Woodlands By: Shelby Helton.
The Shawnee By: Sri,Jenna,andShilpa. Name Meaning ~ Shawnee means southerner ~ Southerner is a native or inhabitant of the south (especially the U.S.)
By Eric A, Liam M, Julia J, and Janel A
WOW! There were five tribes that came together to form the Iroquois League. The five tribes were the Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida, and Mohawk.
The Potawatomi Tribe By: Lauren C. & Jack T..
Southeastern People Caddoes and Wichitas.
We are the Algonquian group and the Shinnecock tribe of New York. BY, SKYLAR, JONATHAN, SHAYNA,AND JORDAN.
The Five Indian Culture Areas  The map shows the five Indian culture areas.  In what area can you find the Cherokee?  In the Eastern Woodland culture.
P OTAWATOMI N ATIVE A MERICANS How did the Potawatomi adapt to there environment?
Texas Caddo Indians By Caven Fuentes. The Caddo Indians were farmers who lived in East Texas. There were 2 main groups of Caddo in Texas. There were the.
Wigwams are small houses, usually Wigwams are 8-10 feet tall. Wigwams are made of wooden frames which are covered with woven mats and sheets of birchbark.
Odawa Ethan Eren Eugenia.
How did the Iroquois adapt to there environment? by Lilly R. culum%20Info/NativeAmericans/ woodlandclothing.html.
Eastern Woodlands. Tribe A group of families bound together under a single leadership.
Native Americans of New York State
 They lived in wigwams.  The wigwams were 8-10 feet tall.  The frame was shaped like a dome, cone or a rectangle.  They were small houses.  Once.
6X Wednesday Objective: Describe the Ojibwe in Minnesota. Agenda: 1.Do Now: copy and define the vocabulary from Northern Lights chapter 4: The.
Iroquois of the Eastern Woodlands p Eastern Woodlands The Eastern Woodlands region covered the east coast of what is today known as the United.
Maidu 1. The Maidu tribe lived in the Valley of Northern California.
Potawatomi Location: Michigan and Wisconsin. Homes: Wigwam.
The Cherokee Indians The Cherokee name actually came from the Creek name “Chelokee”. This means “People of a different speech.” The Cherokee Indians where.
What do you recognize about this picture?
The six tribes of the Iroquois League: 1. Seneca 2. Cayuga 3. Onondaga 4. Oneida 5. Mohawk 6. Tuscarora.
Eastern Woodlands Shawnee
By: Alexis Phaniphon Nov.21, th grade Mrs.T.Johnson The Chippewa Indians of the Mid-west and Canada.
Shawnee Indians This presentation was created using information from the website of Laura Redish and Orrin Lewis. The title of the site is Native Languages.
Cherokee Indians Culture and Way of Life Ms. Shappley Monday, February 14, 2011.
By: Gil Alvarez & Cohen Dunson. Cherokee Tribe “Osiyo”(oh-si-yoh) “Greetings”
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
Peoples of the Eastern Woodlands
By kuvin and christianna
Northeast Woodland Iroquois
Thea,Kate and Alex ottowa.
Southeast Region Cherokee
Iroquois Native Americans
The Cherokee.
Cherokee Indians Recognize American territorial expansions and its effects on relations with European powers and Native Americans. f. Understand.
Native American Human-Environment Interaction
Presentation transcript:

Eastern Woodlands By: Sheyla, Taylor, Haley, and Christyn Mohawk Nanticoke Onondaga

FOOD The Mohawks, Onondaga, and the Nanticoke tribes all eat the same foods basically. corncorn bread Squashsoups and stews Beans Deer Elk Fishing Small game

TRANSPORTATION Both: Used carved dugout canoes, made from wood Used dogs on land The Onondaga prefer to travel on land with the dogs

ENVIRONMENT EASTERN WOODLANDS Nanticoke: DE, and Maryland. Flat land and on the coast near water Mohawks: St. Lawrence river, fertile soil for farming, and forests because they were hunters Onondaga: near lake Ontario, fertile soil, forest

RELIGION Nanticoke: believed in many spirits: nature, water, earth, lightning, fire stone, animals, and tree spirits. They made sacrifices to those spirits, such as the first food of the harvest and first game of fishing. They believed in life after death. Mohawk & Onondaga: There god was Hahgwehdiyu. They made personifications of everything like Gaol is the wind, Gahome is winter, Adekagagwag is summer, Onathan farmer of wheat, the giant Tarhuhyiawihku held up the sky and Jogah was the nature spirit.

Housing Nanticoke: Dome shaped homes called wigwams. These are made from branches and saplings driven into the ground and tied down with vines and hide strips. The outside frames were covered with tree bark, such as cedar, or woven bulrush mats. In the center of the earthen were fire pits. A hole in the roof allowed smoke to leave. Mohawk &Onondaga: Lived in long houses that could be as long as 100 feet and hold up to 60 people.

Clothing Nanticoke: Wore animal skins, animal fur, jewelry made from shells and quills, moccasins made with deer, and painted themselves with berries. Mohawk: Men wore breechcloth and leggings with no shirt. Also men wore headdress that had three eagle feathers on top. Women wore wraparound skirts and shorter leggings, poncho like tunics called overdress. Onondaga: Wore same as Mohawk but with deer skin moccasins and their headdress had on eagle feather straight up and one trailing behind.

Adaptations Nanticoke: Learned how to hunt, cook food, get clean water, build shelter and how to stay warm. Mohawks & Onondaga: They would fish with nets in summer and cut holes in the ice during winter. Also they would move to a new location when the soil was no longer fertile and then come back later when it was.