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Pre-Columbian Indian Civilizations

Pre-Columbian Indian Civilizations. Continental Diversity. Diverse landscapes create distinct habitats, social structures, and cultural patterns 10 million people speaking 400 languages by the time of Columbus. Indigenous Societies. Extensive trade networks spread ideas and innovations

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Pre-Columbian Indian Civilizations

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  1. Pre-Columbian Indian Civilizations

  2. Continental Diversity • Diverse landscapes create distinct habitats, social structures, and cultural patterns • 10 million people speaking 400 languages by the time of Columbus

  3. Indigenous Societies • Extensive trade networks spread ideas and innovations • Connections also bred warfare

  4. Early Cultures • The first settlers of North America were nomadic subsistence hunter-gatherers • As the environment changed, people adapted • Permanent settlements • Developed religions • Mastered use of fire • Improved technology • Domesticated small animals • Domesticated plants

  5. Early Cultures • Agricultural Revolution • Staple crops: • Maize • Beans • Squash • Avocados • Pumpkins • Enabled societies to grow larger and more complex • Led to distinct social, economic, and political institutions

  6. Mesoamerican Cultures • The Mayas • Western Mexico and northern Guatemala • Highly developed society • Sophisticated calendars • Hierarchical government • Terraced farms

  7. Mesoamerican Cultures • The Mayas • Overpopulation • “Too many farmers grew too many crops on too much of the landscape.”

  8. Mesoamerican Cultures • The Aztecs • Northwest and central Mexico • Founded Tenochtitlan in 1325 (Mexico City today) • Highly developed commerce in precious metals and agriculture • By 1519, the Aztec Empire was composed of approximately 5 million people connected by a vast network of roads

  9. Mesoamerican Cultures • The Incas • Empire stretched along the Andes from Ecuador to Chile • Empire included 12 million people, speaking 20 different languages • Empire grew through diplomacy, marriage alliances with rivals, and military conquest

  10. North American Cultures • Common fundamental beliefs • Sacredness of nature • Necessity of communal living • Respect for elders • Despite these shared beliefs, war between tribes was common • 240 different tribes in North America when Europeans arrived

  11. North American Cultures • Pacific Northwest • Fish, whales, game, and wild plants were so plentiful that there was little need for agriculture • Plank houses and large canoes built from cedar trees • Social hierarchy • Chiefs • Commoners • Slaves • Raids to gain slaves were the primary causes of warfare

  12. North American Cultures • Adena-Hopewell • Ohio River Valley (Midwest) • Hunter-gatherers who lived in small, isolated communities • Intricate kinship networks formed social alliances • Complex social structure with specialized division of labor • Trade networks spanned the continent

  13. North American Cultures • Mississippian • Southern Mississippi River valley • Flourished between 900 and 1350 • Specialized labor system • Effective government structure • Expansive trade networks • Cleared land for agriculture • Met their demise due to climate change and European diseases

  14. North American Cultures • Southwest • Hopis, Zunis, Anasazi, etc. • Irrigation-based cultures • Cliff dwellings • Anasazi lacked the rigid class structure of other American cultures • Anasazi only engaged in warfare as a means of self-defense

  15. North American Cultures • Southwest • Drought and migration of tribes from other areas eventually led to the decline of the Anasazi

  16. North American Cultures • Eastern Woodlands • Algonquin, Iroquoian, Muskogean • Settled along rivers • Northeastern seaboard, Great Lakes, Carolinas • Matriarchal societies • Great Plains • Blackfeet, Cheyenne, Arapaho, Comanche, Apache, Sioux • Nomadic hunters • Western • Tillamook, Chinook, Pomo, Chumash • Fishing, sealing, whaling

  17. Written Response How did cultural and environmental diversity impact trade among the various Native American groups? Explain citing evidence.

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