wasemann notes jacob ritter

14
America In The Beginning Who were the first Americans? How and why did they come here? 30,000 years ago During a period of low temperatures called an ice age The world was covered in glaciers or sheets of ice. This caused ocean levels to lower and expose land In the Bering straight a bridge appeared connecting Siberia & Asia _______________ This land bridge is known as beringia. Animals like mammoths crossed the bridge or migrated to the America's.

Transcript of wasemann notes jacob ritter

Page 1: wasemann notes jacob ritter

America In The

BeginningWho were

the first

Americans?

How and

why did they

come here?

30,000 years ago

During a period of

low temperatures

called an ice age

The world was

covered in glaciers

or sheets of ice.

This caused

ocean levels to

lower

and expose land

In the Bering

straight a bridge

appeared

connecting

Siberia & Asia

_______________

This land bridge

is known as

beringia.

Animals like

mammoths

crossed the

bridge or

migrated to the

America's.

Page 2: wasemann notes jacob ritter

Hunter's in Asia

who moved from

place to place to

find food or

nomads followed

the mammoths and

spread out or

migrated to the

America's

The ice age

ended covering

up glaciers

causing water

levels to rise

covering up the

bridge.

Some animals

died off like.

Living in many

different parts of the

Americas the

Natives needed to

adjust or adapt to

every thing in the

new surrounds that

made up each of

their own

environment

in order to survive.

What

happened

when they

came to

America?

How did they

meet their new

needs?

America In The

Beginning

Page 3: wasemann notes jacob ritter

America In The

Beginning

Living in many different

parts of the Americas

the Natives used the

different natural

resources in their own

different environments

for food, clothing, and

shelter.

Different groups in

different

environments

developed their own

beliefs and ways of

life or culture.

Groups in the same

environments

adapted similar life

styles, and language

creating cultural

region.

Many Native

American have these

things in common.

1. Nature has a spirit.

2. No one can own

land.

4. Only use what is

needed.

5. trade was important

to most societies

How did

Native

Americans

adjust to the

new

environments

?

What did they

have in

common?

Page 4: wasemann notes jacob ritter

8 Cultural

Regions

North West Coast

California

Plateau

Great Basin

South West

Great Plains

Eastern

Woodlands

South East

Page 5: wasemann notes jacob ritter

8 Cultural Regions

Page 6: wasemann notes jacob ritter
Page 7: wasemann notes jacob ritter

North West CoastWeather:

long cold winters

cool summers

heavy rainfall

Natural Resources:

ocean/beaches

thick forests of fir,

spruce, and cedar

rugged mountains

seafood/salmon

deer, moose, bear, elk,

beaver, mountain goats

Used cedar canoes to hunt

Fenced in salmon laying eggs

used cedar to make rope, mats and

baskets

shell needles

used wedges, sledge hammers,

drills, and knifes to carve wooden

masks

Clothing:

Cedar water proof clothing like

capes with

decorative shell buttons

Shelter: lived near the coast

Cedar Long Houses with cedar bark

roofs

Page 8: wasemann notes jacob ritter

CaliforniaWeather:

rainy winters

hot dry summers

Natural Resources:

ocean/coast

foothills

valley's

deserts

mountains

acorns, oak trees

grass, and plants

redwood trees

salmon/seafood/shellfish

deer, rabbits, ducks,

roots berries, pine nuts

Used Bows& arrows, snares, and nets, used

cooking stones to heat acorn meal

tools from antlers

Clothing: grass/leather aprons and skirts

Shelter: Cone shaped made of redwood

bark, pole, and reeds woven into mats

Page 9: wasemann notes jacob ritter

Great BasinWeather:

little rain

hot during the day

cold at night

Natural Resources:

mostly dessert

low areas surrounded by

mountains at the edges

with valleys that had

seasonal lakes and streams

plants that need little water like

grasses, sagebrush, pinon trees,

at the outer edges pine trees, and willow

small animals rabbits, lizards,

grasshoppers, snakes

sometimes ducks , duck eggs during certain

seasons

seeds,berries pine nuts, roots, cattail

Tools: water baskets sealed with

tree sap

Floating duck decoys, nets, sharp

sticks, flat baskets for catching

seeds

Clothing: rabbit robes in winter

Shelter: Nomadic temporary cone

shelters of willow, brush and

reeds

Page 10: wasemann notes jacob ritter

PlateauWeather:

long cold winters

comfortable summers

Natural Resources:

mountains with

dense forests in areas

flatter in the center with

drier grass lands

rivers

driftwood, mud, dirt,

grass and sage brush

fish, antelope, deer, seeds

onions, carrots, camas roots,

salmon

Tools: woven baskets, willow digging sticks,

wooden fishing platforms, nets, and spears for

salmon

Clothing: antelope and deer hides leggings,

dresses and skirts, woven hats, seed and shell

designs

Shelter: near rivers, partly under ground out of

driftwood, mud, sap, and reeds

Page 11: wasemann notes jacob ritter

Great PlainsWeather:

cold winters

hot summers

Natural Resources:

mountains surrounding edges

treeless grasslands in the

center

east more water and softer

soil

west drier dense grass

Buffalo and smaller animals

Page 12: wasemann notes jacob ritter

South WestWeather:

high temperatures

little rain

dry/arid

Natural Resources:

mountains, canyons

desserts, flat top mesas

rivers, little water

clay, brightly colored plants, cotton

corn, beans, squash, peppers,

rabbits

Large thick walled houses made of bricks of

adobe(sun baked clay). Up to 4 stories and

had hundreds of rooms.

Clothes were made of cotton that they grew.

Using plants and minerals, they dyed the

fabric

Lived near naturally flooded areas. Men dug

irrigation ditches, and also built dams to

hold summer rain.

Women spend most the day grinding corn

kernels into cornmeal. They used clay pots

to cook stews

Page 13: wasemann notes jacob ritter

Eastern WoodlandsWeather:

snowy winters , rain

Natural Resources:

rivers, ocean/coast

lots of lakes and streams

Forests, plants,

maple trees, elm,

deer, bears, beavers, birds, fish

corn, sunflowers, tobacco,

vegetables,

nuts, berries

Long House: Sturdy, log-framed houses

covered with elm bark, about 20 feet wide

and over 100 feet long. Several related

families live in sections of the house.

Skirts, capes, and moccasins were made out

of deer skins.

Women ground corn with wooden sticks .

Men often paddled on the rivers and streams

in log and bark canoes . They trapped

beavers, hunted deer, bear, caught birds,

and speared fish.

For farming land, men burnt small sections

of trees and underbrush. Women did the

hoeing and planting. They planted many

different types of corn, beans and squash.

Made maple syrup and wooden storage

canisters.

Page 14: wasemann notes jacob ritter

South EastWeather:

long warm humid summers

mild winters

Natural Resources:

rivers, ocean/coast

Fertile coastal plains

mountains,

swamps

Trees, clay, shells,

corn, beans, squash, pumpkins

,

sunflowers, sweet potatoes

squirrels, rabbits, turkeys,

deer, alligators, turtles,

wild rice, persimmons

Houses were made from strips of young trees woven into a

rectangular frame, then plastered with clay. These houses had

pointed roofs made of leaves.

Towns included many mounds, first mounds were burial sights, but

others were larger, and used as platforms for temples. It took many

months, even years, to build these mounds, because they moved the

dirt 1 basket full at a time.

Simple clothing was made of deer skin. Jewelry made of stones,

shells, feathers, pearls, bones, and clay.

Women used hoes made of stone, shell or animal shoulder blades.

Men hunted using small blow guns, and bows and arrows.