Period 1

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Period 1 Native Peoples of America

description

Period 1. Native Peoples of America. The First Americans. Peopling New worlds. Pueblos and Navajos- Journey from other worlds Iroquois- Pregnant woman fell from the sky world Paleo- Indians- Nomadic, Hunter-Gatherers, followed principal of reciprocity, stone age type tools. Pueblos. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Period 1

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Period 1

Native Peoples of America

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The First Americans

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Peopling New worlds

• Pueblos and Navajos- Journey from other worlds

• Iroquois- Pregnant woman fell from the sky world

• Paleo- Indians- Nomadic, Hunter-Gatherers, followed principal of reciprocity, stone age type tools

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Pueblos

Navajos

Iroquois Mythology

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Results of Global Warming

• Extinction of Mammals• End of Ice Age• 2500 BC Societies- permanent settlements,

agricultural revolution changing diets and medicine, mainly Mesoamerica, Maize

• 1500AD- food surpluses, trade networks, religious and political systems, confederations

• Nomadic groups still persisted in areas where food was scarce

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Mesoamerica and South America

• Maize, Beans and Squash• Olmecs- Mesoamerica and Chavin de

Huantar- Andes– Urban Centers– Wealthy Elites– Hereditary Rulers– Theocracies– Temples, Palaces and Pyramids– Chiefdoms- Some Matrilineal

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Olmec

Chavin de Huantar

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Mesoamerica

• Monte Alban and Teotihuacan– Wars of conquest– Bureaucracies– Tax Collection– Public Works Projects– Religious Ceremonies and Hierarchies– Sun Pyramid of Teotihuacan

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Monte Alban

Teotihuacan

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Maya

• Influenced by Teotihuacan

• 600AD- 1400AD

• Calendar, numerical system, hieroglyphic writing, paper

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Aztecs

• 1420’s• Human sacrifice• Temple of Tenochtitlan• Calendar based upon the Mayan calendar• Drained swamp lands for farming,

collected taxes from surrounding tribes• Pochteca- armed traders for the Aztecs-

salt, jewelry, feathers, pelts, cotton, precious stones, gold, turquoise

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Incas

• 1480’s

• Cuzco

• Conquered territories throughout the Andes

• Maize, beans potatoes, meats

• Terraced Irrigation, roads, bridges, storehouses, freeze-dried foodstuffs

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Southwest

• Maize by 2500BC

• 400BC full time farming begins

• Hohokam Culture in Arizona– Irrigation canals, permanent towns,

coordinated workforce– Confederations for trade, religion, politics– Ball courts, mounds, rubber balls– Clay, stone, turquoise and shell artwork

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Southwest cont’

• Anasazi- 700AD– Harvesting crops– Permanent settlements– Pottery– Complex apartments– Kivas- underground areas for religious ceremonies– Chaco Canyon- 15,000 people, road network, dams

and terraces controlled rain water– Culture came to a close because of drought

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Eastern Woodlands

• Poverty Point– Two large mounds- solar observations contribute

religious beliefs and calendar– Quartz, copper, crystal and minerals– Olmec influence

• Adena– 400BC– Mound builders– Hopewell– Mainly hunter-gatherers, women grew small amounts

of Maize and Squash

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Eastern Woodlands cont’

• Mississippians- 700AD– Farmers– Sun worship, wives and servants

accompanied the chief into the afterlife– Trade– Chahokia- declines after 1200AD because of

warfare and scarce resources– Maize, beans, tools, controlled burn

techniques

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Non Farmers

• California tribes- fish and acorns

• Plains Indians- deer, elk, bear, buffalo, sheep for food clothing, shelter, tools

• Blackfeet and Pawnee built permanent lodges, farmed and hunted

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On the Eve of European Contact

• 75 million people by 1500AD• 7-10 Million North of Mesoamerica• Nomadic in the Plains and Arctic regions• Fishing and gathering in Pacific region• Agricultural based civilizations in East and along

river valleys• Many languages and dialects• Bound by trade, reciprocity, resources,

technology, ideas, art, religion

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On the Eve of European

Contact cont’• Nuclear families- Man, wife, children• Extended families- nuclear family plus relatives• Some Matrilineal, some Patrilineal• Family feuds and justice, warfare• Women were the farmers• Spirit in Nature- Manitou- source of unexplained• Spirit

– Dreams, Visions, Ordeals, Dances and Rituals