NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURES - Kentucky Department of …
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NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURES
EARLY SOCIETIES
NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURE AREAS
SHARED BELEIFS
I CAN
Identify 2 types of Early Societies in North America and Explain where and
how they lived
Define totems
List 3 cultural regions of Native North Americans
State 2 examples of shared beliefs between Native North Americans
EARLY SOCIETIES
Earliest people in N America- hunters & gathers
After about 5000 BC some learned to farm and lived in villages
Not as populated as South America and Mesoamerica; they were complex
societies before Europeans
EARLY SOCIETIES
Anasazi
Present day Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah
Dry environment, but grew maize, squash & beans
Learned how to use irrigation to increase food production
EARLY SOCIETIES
Anasazi Dwellings
Early lived in pit houses dug into the ground
After 750 AD began to build pueblos (aboveground houses made of heavy clay
called adobe)
Built them on top of each other, multi-storied (some housed about 1000 people)
Cliff Dwellers- built houses in canyon walls, only be reached by ladder. WHY?
Protection from enemies
Cliff Dwellers
DECLINE OF THE ANASAZI
Drought
Disease
Or invasions from nomadic tribes from the North
Might have caused them to move
MOUND BUILDERS
Eastern part of North America
Farming societies
Hopewell
Lived along the Mississippi, Ohio, and lower Missouri River valleys
Agriculture and Trade
Built large burial mounds to honor their dead
Declined around 700AD
MOUND BUILDERS
Mississippian- same area as the Hopewell
Skilled farmers and traders
Built large settlements; largest city Cahokia, near present day St. Louis
(30,000)
Mounds- had flat tops and temples were built on top of the mound.
Mounds could be up to 100ft tall and cover 16 acres
Mound builders had declined by time Europeans arrived
Mound Builders
NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURE AREAS
Sub-artic
Followed seasonal migrations of deer
Lived in shelters from animal skins and log homes
Further south they had a rich supply of fish, plants, and animals. So developed
large villages, without the need to farm
NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURE AREAS
SEE MAP on PG 13
Pacific Northwest
Carved images of totems– ancestor or
animal spirits, on tall wooden poles
Great religious and historical
signficance
West and Southwest California Region
* Food sources were plentiful
* lived in large families or groups 50300
* over 100 different languages spoken
Great Basin
Little Rain, so they gathered
seeds, dug roots, trapped small
animals
Southwest
Pueblo groups, like the Anasazi,
irrigated. Focused on Rain
and successful maize. Large
towns
NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURE AREAS
Great Plains
Mainly grasslands, home to buffalo,
deer, elk, and more
Nomadic hunters– used bow and
arrows, would often chase over cliffs,
or into a corral
Used buffalo hides for teepees, and
used almost all of the buffalo for
something.
Some tribes were matrilineal-traced
ancestry through mothers.
Northeast and Southeast
Eastern N America rich in resources
Animals, plants, wood, fish,
Cherokee, Creek, Seminole lived in
farming villages governed by village
councils
Northern groups did more hunting
Southern Groups- more farmers,
hunters, and traders
NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURE AREAS
Northeast and Southeast
Iroquois
Created the Iroquois league
An alliance or confederation, that protected each other from non-iroquois
groups.
The league helped them to become one of the most powerful Native
Americans peoples in North America
SHARED BELEIFS
RELIGION
PROPERTY
LINKED TO NATURE
INVIDUAL OWNERSHIP ONLY TO CROPS
YOU GREW
SPRIRITUAL FORCES WERE
EVERYWHERE- HEAVENLY BODIES
AND ON EARTH
LAND ITSELF WAS EVERYONE. RIGHT
TO USE IT WAS TEMPORARY
HONORED SPIRITS DAILY
PRESERVE LAND FOR FUTURE
GENERATIONS (not like Europeans)
CEREMONIES MAINTAINED THE
GROUP’S RELATIONSHIP TO EARTH
AND SKY
LITTLE INTEREST- IN LG POLITICAL
UNITS. SO NO LG EMPIRES LIKE AZTECS
OR INCA OF MESOAMERICA