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Published byEdgar Chapman Modified over 8 years ago
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By Natalie and Erik and Daniel
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Ojibwa people lived in wigwams made of birchbark.Wigwams were 8-10 feet tall. Wigwams were made of wooden frams.With sheets corved with birch bark. Some wigwams were shaped like a dome and have a half oval and rectangular and some of the other wigwams look like a cone. Its not a tipi it’s a cone shaped wigwam
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What did they eat Ojibwa tribes ate wild rice, corn, grains and meat deer raccoon squirrels and fish and vetabls and fruits. How did they get it They got there wild rice when they where in there canoes and past the wild rice they would tap it with there ores and harvest it. To get the fish they where some ways they get the fish cold stab the fish or build traps. They grow corn then after that they harvest the corn then eat it. Ojibwa was known for growing and gardening vegetables and fruits. They got there wild meat by traps but they usually used there weapons like bows arose spears and clubs
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What did men wear? Leggings and breechcloths. A breechcloth is a long rectangular piece of tanned deerskin What did women wear? Women wore long presses Long presses Where made from Wool, yarn and string they where decorated with beadwork
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Adults Men where hunters and sometimes they fighted with other families to protect their own and the men went to fight when the mother stayed home with the children. Children hunting and fishing with there farther
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They lived in Minnesota Wisconsin and Michigan they also live in Sothern Canada Ontario Manitoba and Saskatchewan
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Ojibwa (kid)mostly play it string game They where known for planting /gardening. The type of game hunting and they did Ojibwa string game.
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Their art work could be beadwork. Some Ojibwa arts are made from birch bark like a baskets, Boxes and dream catchers.
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Erik newengham-Member of the Odawa tribe Michigan Social Mitten-September 2001 issue The Studies Weekly-Vol. 8 Issue 1, First Quarter Week 7 Great State Michigan-October 2004 issue Ottawa Indian Fact Sheet- http://www.bigorrin.org/ottawa_kids.htm
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