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Zoom-In Inquiry Using Primary Sources to help focus instruction
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How can primary sources help us investigate how early Pueblo cultures met their basic needs?
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Describe what you see. Is this a natural formation or man-made?
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What is this made of? Where could it be?
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What are these used for? Are they a modern invention?
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Who do you think uses these? Describe their lifestyle.
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Do these buildings look similar to modern buildings? How are the same? How are they different?
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Taos Pueblo, New Mexico Farm Security Administration - Office of War Information Photograph Collection Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, DC 20540
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These are Hornos or ovens. They are used for baking bread. What do you think this tells you about the Pueblo lifestyle? How did the Pueblo get their food?
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The Pueblo people often farmed. Crops included cotton, beans, squash and corn.
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These are examples of adobe dwellings. How long do you think it would take to build these? How long do you think people lived in these dwellings? After looking at these dwellings, do you think these people were nomadic or not?
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The Pueblo met their basic needs with:
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food
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The Pueblo met their basic needs with: food
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The Pueblo met their basic needs with: food shelter
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The Pueblo met their basic needs with: food shelter
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The Pueblo met their basic needs with: food shelter What else do they need?
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Water
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Collier, J. (1941). It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope at beautiful New England, Savoy Mountains area near North Adams, Massachusetts. Library of Congress: Prints & Photographs, FSA/OWI - Black and White Negatives.It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope at beautiful New England, Savoy Mountains area near North Adams, Massachusetts. Curtis, E. (1900). Nunipayo decorating pottery. Library of Congress: Prints & Photographs, Edward S Curtis Collection.Nunipayo decorating pottery. Curtis, E. S. (1905). A Nambe girl. Library of Congress: Prints & Photographs, Edward S Curtis Collection.A Nambe girl. Duckwall, D.T. (c1902). Indian playmates. Library of Congress: Prints & Photographs.Indian playmates. Hollem, H. R. (1942). Agricultural. Mexican cotton pickers. Surrounded by the soft white cotton blossoms whose harvesting is essential to America's war effort, this Mexican girl takes a moment's rest from her strenuous picking job. She's one of hundreds of Good Neighbors who gave a helping hand to the farmers near Corpus Christi, Texas, by harvesting the summer. Library of Congress: Prints & Photographs, Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection.Agricultural. Mexican cotton pickers. Surrounded by the soft white cotton blossoms whose harvesting is essential to America's war effort, this Mexican girl takes a moment's rest from her strenuous picking job. She's one of hundreds of Good Neighbors who gave a helping hand to the farmers near Corpus Christi, Texas, by harvesting the summer.
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Horydczak, T. (1920-1950). Corn blossoms. Closeup of corn blossoms I. Library of Congress: Prints & Photographs, Horydczak Collection.Corn blossoms. Closeup of corn blossoms I. Rothstein, A. (1936). Taos Pueblo, New Mexico. Library of Congress: Prints & Photographs, Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection.Taos Pueblo, New Mexico. Rothstein, A. (1936). Taos Pueblo, New Mexico. Library of Congress: American Memory, America from the Great Depression to World War II: Photographs from the FSA and OWI, ca. 1935-1945.Taos Pueblo, New Mexico. Rothstein, A. (1936). Taos Pueblo, New Mexico. Rio de Taos in foreground. Library of Congress: Prints & Photographs, Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection.Taos Pueblo, New Mexico. Rio de Taos in foreground. unknown (1917). Cliff Palace. Library of Congress: Prints & Photographs.Cliff Palace.
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