1 / 13

Peoples of North America

Peoples of North America. Pages 168-171. The Desert Southwest. More than 1,000 years ago fields of corn, beans, & squash bloomed in the desert southwest The Hohokams Means vanished ones planted these fields Built a complex irrigation system to farm desert

ivi
Télécharger la présentation

Peoples of North America

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Peoples of North America Pages 168-171

  2. The Desert Southwest • More than 1,000 years ago fields of corn, beans, & squash bloomed in the desert southwest • The Hohokams • Means vanished ones planted these fields • Built a complex irrigation system to farm desert • Lived near Gila River in present-day Arizona • Built temple mounds & ball courts like the Mayans • Survived until 1500

  3. The Desert Southwest Cont. • Anasazi • Best-known society of the southwest • Lived in Four Corners region of Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, & Utah • Built pueblos between 900-1300 AD • Pueblo Bonito • Pueblo village consisted of a huge complex with 800 rooms that housed about 6,000 people • At the center was a plaza where they dug their kiva which is a large underground chamber for religious ceremonies • Cliff Dwellings • Late 1100’s Anasazi built housing in the shadow of canyon walls • Mesa Verde largest of these is located in Colorado & had over 200 rooms • Late 1200’s long drought forced the Anasazi to abandon these • Their traditions survived among the Hopi & Pueblo tribes

  4. The Mound Builders • Mississippi & Ohio valleys other farming cultures emerged in 700 BC • The Adena & Hopewells left behind giant earthen mounds • Some cone shaped others animal shaped • Great Serpent Mound in Ohio wiggles & twist for ¼ mile • Objects in these show that traders extended their influence over a wide area. They brought back shells & shark teeth from the Gulf of Mexico & copper from the Great Lakes region.

  5. The Great Serpent Mound

  6. The Mound Builders Cont. • Cahokia • 800 AD early cultures disappeared & Mississippians gained influence • Cahokia was their greatest center in present-day Illinois & housed over 40,000 people around 1200 AD • It had at least 60 mounds • Largest mound had a temple on its summit where priests held ceremonies. • Archaeologists think that this temple mound shows influence of Middle American civilizations • Heirs of the Mound Builders • Mississippians left no written records & cities disappeared by European arrival • Natchez people carried on their traditions

  7. Cahokia

  8. Diverse Regional Cultures • 10 culture areas based on environments lived in prior to 1500 each one had to adapt ways of life to the environment • Arctic • Subarctic • Northwest Coast • California • Great Basin • Plateau • Southwest • Great Plains • Eastern Woodlands • Southeast

  9. Regions of North America

  10. Inuits • Late immigrants from Siberia called Eskimos (eaters of raw flesh) by Native Americans they called themselves Inuits (the People) • Lived in small bands surviving by hunting & fishing • Seals & other sea mammals gave them food, clothing, tools, & oils for cooking • Built kayaks, igloos, dog sleds,& partially underground sod dwellings

  11. Northwest Coast • Had a far richer environment that the Inuits • Rivers contained plenty of salmon • Hunters tracked deer, wolves, & bears in the forest • People built large permanent villages with wooden homes • Shared surplus goods in a potlatch ceremony • Held in Canada today person of wealth distributes lavish gifts to large numbers of guests.

  12. Iroquois League • Eastern Woodlands stretched from the Atlantic Coast to the Great Lakes & was home to the Iroquios • They cleared land & built villages in the forest • Late 1500’s Dekanawidah urged rival Iroquois to stop their fighting • He became one of the founders of the political system known as the Iroquois League • 5 Nation alliance shared traditions & spoke same language • Only men sat on the council, but each clan had a clan mother to name or depose council members • League emerged right when Europeans arrived • Encounters with the Europeans took a toll on North American peoples & toppled the Aztecs & Incans

More Related