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 Homework: Choose which lands to focus on for Village Project. Look through chapter 2, each lesson is a different area  Do Now: please take out your.

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Presentation on theme: " Homework: Choose which lands to focus on for Village Project. Look through chapter 2, each lesson is a different area  Do Now: please take out your."— Presentation transcript:

1  Homework: Choose which lands to focus on for Village Project. Look through chapter 2, each lesson is a different area  Do Now: please take out your homework from Wednesday (Page 76)

2  Homework: Start thinking about your project and the materials you may need  Do Now: Read "You Are There" page 76. This story of Hiawatha inspired the Iroquois to try living peacefully. Predict how the groups may have gotten along years after Hiawatha's death

3  The legends about Deganawidah and Hiawatha are part of the early history told by the Iroquois people.  The Iroquois League was made up of 5 tribes:  Mohawk  Oneida  Onondaga  Cayuga  Seneca  Later, a 6 th tribe joined the league: Tuscarora

4  The 5 tribes sent 50 representatives (all men) to form the Great Council  The council made decisions for the League as a whole  These representatives were chosen by the older women in the tribes – they had the power to appoint and remove anyone

5  The Iroquois lived in this region of North America  Native American tribes in this region developed similar culture and used the resources of the environment

6  Homework:  vocabulary and places page 82  Sign and return tests  Do Now: Page 80 questions 2-5 (you will have 10 minutes)  REMEMBER: use complete sentences!

7  Homework: Read Lesson 2 Chapter 2 (pages 82-85)  Do Now: Please have out your completed Iroquois Worksheet (last night’s homework)

8  The Great Plains region was and still is a relatively flat area with few trees as opposed to the woodland regions  In the plains, people followed a hunting and farming type of life  Settled near rivers to help with water for their crops  Corn, beans, squash, pumpkins

9  Lodges were built to live in  Large, round huts over a deep hole  The walls were made with packed earth over a wood frame  Buffalo grazed in this region and were essential to the people who lived here  Major source of meat  Hides were used to make blankets and clothing  Horns were used to make bowls  Stomachs were used to be cooking pots for stew

10  Groups of plains tribes traveled to hunt the massive buffalos  Hunters were on foot, so it was difficult to get close to the animal  While on the hunt, people lived in tepees set up by large poles wrapped in buffalo hide

11  In the 1500s, people from Spain brought the horse to the regions of the Aztec and Maya in Mexico  Some horses broke free and wandered north  200 years later, the Cheyenne tamed horses that had become wild

12  The Cheyenne made hunting Buffalo much easier  Now, a single hunter (instead of a group) could ride a horse up to a herd of buffalo and use his bow and arrow  Horse allowed the Cheyenne to become more mobile  A horse drawn travois moved faster and could hold 4 times more than a dog pulled travois

13  Horses became so important to the Cheyenne that they became a measurement of wealth  Sometimes tribes raided other tribes to capture the horses  Riders became skilled in war and in hunting

14  About 12,000 Cheyenne live in the state of Montana on a reservation  Cheyennes still follow traditions by keeping their language and ceremonies alive  Every July 4, the Cheyenne have a powwow where visitors can see traditional dances and games

15  Homework: Read pages 90-91, Describe life for the Hopi (minimum 1 paragraph). This will be collected, please use pen or type it.  Do Now: Page 88 vocabulary and places

16  The Southwest Desert cultural region is mostly hot and dry  Tribes who settled here include the Hopi and the Zuni, developing a village way of life based on farming  As a result, they became known as the Pueblo Indians  Pueblo is the Spanish word for village

17  Other tribes did not become farmers  Apache became hunters  Navajo raised sheep  Pueblos are thought to be descended from the Anasazi (“Old Ones”)  Pueblos followed Anasazi ways  Developed irrigation to grow corn, beans, squash, cotton  Housing customs that look like today’s apartment buildings

18  Placed their villages at the top of a high mesa to help defend themselves against enemies  Men governed villages, but women owned all the property  Men wove cloth, women wove baskets

19  Homework:  Village Project due Thursday!  Chapter 2 test next Wednesday!  Do Now: have out your Hopi homework

20  Tribes in this area include:  Chinook  Kwakiuti  Tlingit  Haida  Nootka  They held parties called potlatches, which means “to give away”

21  Homework:  Chapter 2 test Wednesday!  Native American Indian Villages due tomorrow!! Use the rubric as a checklist  Hopi rewrite due Friday!  Do Now: Open to your notes from yesterday

22  Forests contain many tall, sturdy cedar trees  Rich for hunting  Coastal waters and rivers were filled with fish and seals  There was no need to grow food, instead the people of the Northwest Coast could get all they needed from hunting and gathering

23  Tribes such as the Kwakiutl felt that since they were so rich in natural resources, they must display wealth and generosity  Copper shields and stacks of blankets were common gifts at the potlatches  A carved post with animals and images representing a person’s ancestors was another way to show wealth  This is called a totem pole

24  People displayed totem poles proudly, some as high as a four-story building  Some became master carvers because of the abundance of wood available  Canoes were dug out of single cedar logs to help hunt on the sea


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