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Native American Tribes
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Inuit Arctic
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Inuit Food Seals, whales, walrus, caribou, polar bear, muskoxen, birds, and artic fox Website :)
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Animal Skins sewn together made from needles made of animal bones
Inuit Clothing Animal Skins sewn together made from needles made of animal bones
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Igloos – Houses made of ice and snow
Inuit Shelter Igloos – Houses made of ice and snow
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Kwakiutl Pacific Northwest
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Kwakiutl - Food The Kwakiutl Indians were fishing people.
Men caught fish and sea mammals from their canoes. They also hunted deer, birds, and small game. Women gathered clams and shellfish, seaweed, berries, and roots
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Kwakiutl - Clothing Men typically did not wear anything
Women wore cedar bark Both wore moccasins made from deer hide
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Kwakiutl - Shelter Made from large redwood trees called LONGHOUSES
Also built from sod, animal skins, and bark
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Nez Perce Plateau “Pierced Nose”
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Nez Perce - FOOD Hunted by horseback due to the terrain
Found food in forests Fished in small rivers, hunted small game, and picked vegetation
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Nez Perce - CLOTHING Nez Perce women wore long deerskin dresses.
Nez Perce men wore breechcloths with leather leggings and buckskin shirts.
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Nez Perce - SHELTER Earth houses.
They made these homes by digging an underground room, then building a wooden frame over it and covering the frame with earth, cedar bark, and tule mats.
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Hopi Southwest/Desert “Peaceful Person”
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Hopi – Food The Hopis were expert farming people.
They planted crops of corn, beans, and squash, as well as cotton and tobacco, and raised turkeys for their meat.
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Hopi - Clothing Hopi men didn't wear much clothing-- only breechcloths or short kilts (men's skirts). Hopi women wore knee-length cotton dresses called mantas. A manta fastened at a woman's right shoulder, leaving her left shoulder bare.
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Hopi - Shelter Pueblos Adobe pueblos are modular, multi- story houses made of adobe (clay and straw baked into hard bricks) or of large stones cemented together with adobe. First “apartments”
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Pawnee Plains
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Buffalo & other easily farmed foods
Pawnee - Food Buffalo & other easily farmed foods
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Pawnee - Clothing Buffalo hides
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Pawnee - Shelter A tepee is made of a cone-shaped wooden frame with a covering of buffalo hide.
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Seminole Southeast “Wild”
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Seminole - Food The Seminoles were farming people.
Seminole women harvested crops of corn, beans, and squash. Seminole men did most of the hunting and fishing, catching game such as deer, wild turkeys, rabbits, turtles, and alligators.
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Seminole - Clothing Seminole men wore breechcloths.
Seminole women wore wraparound skirts, usually woven from palmetto. Shirts were not necessary
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Seminole - Shelter Chickee houses consisted of thick posts supporting a thatched roof and a flat wooden platform raised several feet off the ground.
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