1 / 114

Native Americans of Arkansas

Native Americans of Arkansas. Paleo Indian Era. People from northeast Asia Expert hunters Fire Dressed in skin clothing. Mastodon skull found in the Red River Valley in 1986. Historic period. How are petroglyphs made?

Télécharger la présentation

Native Americans of Arkansas

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. Native Americans of Arkansas

  2. Paleo Indian Era • People from northeast Asia • Expert hunters • Fire • Dressed in skin clothing

  3. Mastodon skull found in the Red River Valley in 1986

  4. Historic period

  5. How are petroglyphs made?                                                                         Many

  6. How are pictographs made? Some pictographs in Arkansas were made by "finger painting" while others appear to have been brush painted. Human hand images were made with paint-covered hands or by blowing paint around a hand pressed against a rock surface to create a stenciled effect. Paints were made by mixing ground-up pigments (such as hematite, magnetite, or charcoal) with an organic binder such as blood, animal fat, egg white, fish oil, or plant oil. Pitted stones used to grind mineral pigments were found at The Narrows, a rock art site in northwest Arkansas, and frayed twig brushes have been found at many other dry rock shelter sites.

  7. Atl-Atl

  8. Clovis Point discoveries found in Arkansas

  9. Dalton People

  10. Dalton scrapers were used to remove flesh from hides so they could be tanned

  11. The Dalton people had the adz, a woodworking tool not found on earlier sites..

  12. Archaic Era 8000 B.C. 500 B.C.

  13. Archaic Era Hunters and Gathers

  14. White tailed deer

  15. Hammer stones

  16. Fish Hook

  17. Stone axe of the Tom’s Brooks people

  18. Poverty Point 2000 b.c. 500 b.c.

  19. Builders of: first town first important mounds Center of civilization for eastern North America 1000 b.c. First users of tobacco in North America

  20. Effigy of Poverty Point Culture

  21. Poverty Point people used magnetite And hematite from Magnet Cove Arkanas To make heavy, highly polished plummet-shaped Bola weights

  22. Novaculite quarry Hot Springs

  23. Hot Stones used in cooking

  24. Woodland Era 500 b.c.- a.d. 900

  25. Widespread use of pottery • Development of gardening • Bow and arrow appear in the Southeast

  26. Woodland era

  27. Gathering seeds

  28. Pots of the Woodland Era people

  29. Pipes of the Woodland era

  30. Gary points ,early stages of the Fourche Maline Southwest Arkansas

  31. Stone hoe, Woodland era

  32. Baby carrier of the Woodland era

  33. Cord woven from grass

  34. Sickle of the Woodland era

  35. Hopewellian style log tomb Like that found beneath one Of the mounds near Helena

  36. Markville culture of Woodlands era

  37. A.D. 700 flat topped temple mounds

  38. Toltec mounds

  39. Mound B at Toltec, 41 feet high

  40. Toltec mound

More Related