Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_A - Anasazi Native American Tribe

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 96    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Anasazi Native American Tribe:     more detail
  1. The Anasazi: Ancient Indian People of the American Southwest by J. Brody, 1991-07-15
  2. Indians of the Four Corners: The Anasazi and Their Pueblo Descendants by Alice Marriott, 1996-05
  3. Understanding the Anasazi of Mesa Verde and Hovenweep
  4. Anasazi Legends: Songs of the Wind Dancer by Lou Cuevas, 2000-08
  5. Stories and Stone: An Anasazi Reader
  6. Anasazi Coloring Book : The Story of the Ancient Ones by Sandra Stemmler, 1997-06
  7. Foundations of Anasazi Culture
  8. Anasazi: Ancient People of the Rock by Donald Pike, 1986-06-08
  9. Anasazi Ruins of the Southwest by William M. Ferguson, Arthur H. Rohn, 1987-03-01

41. Native American Drums - Southwest Art And Therapeutic Drums
and anasazi petroglyphs adorn these southwest art pieces and therapeutic drums.All One tribe prides itself on the quality of its native american drums and
http://www.southwesthomeandgarden.com/drums.html
Native American Drums
Note: A free drum beater comes with each drum.
Please click on any image to enlarge and order. All One Tribe
BJ Quintana Artist
" The Biting Bear Drum "
AO 1: 18" $256
AO 11: 16" $216
AO 12: 14" $176
" The Dance of the Serpents Drum "
AO 2: 18" $256
AO 21: 16" $216 AO 22: 14" $176 " The Keeper Drum " AO 3: 18" $256 AO 31: 16" $216 AO 32: 14" $176 " Kokopelli: The Joybringer Drum " AO 4: 18" $256 AO 41: 16" $216 AO 42: 14" $176 " The Dear Dance Drum " AO 5: 18" $256 AO 51: 16" $216 AO 52: 14" $176 "

42. Out Of Many: A History Of The American People, 2/E Chapter 1 -- Web Tracker
Star Knowledge Lakota / Sioux tribe stargazing folklore, including maps. This linksto a larger site dealing with native american culture. anasazi and native
http://cwx.prenhall.com/bookbind/pubbooks/faragher/chapter1/destinations1/deluxe
Chapter 1: A Continent of Villages, to 1500
Web tracker

  • Smithsonian Institution Research Information System (SIRIS)
    A serious research tool for finding books and documents in the Smithsonian Institution collections. Type "s=Indians of North America" for Native American resources.
  • Human Evolution
    An experimental software package demonstrating how humans evolved. Requires the free Macromedia Shockwave plug-in. Click on the link and you will be given a chance to install the plug-in on the computer you are using, if it does not already have it installed. Consult with your library or school administrator before installing the plug-in.
  • The West: Time Line, to 1500
    Part of the site to the PBS series "The West" first shown Sept. 1996.
  • THE WEST Episode One "The People (to 1806)"
    Brief summary of episode one of the PBS series, including pictures, text, and quotations.
  • Native vs. White American Values
    Three charts that summarize one author's view of how Indians and white-identified Euro-Americans differ in basic outlook. Opinionated, but thoughtful.
  • Natives in the Caribbean
    Copper plate engravings of Carribean tribal activities, produced by Theodore De Bry in the late 16th and early 17th centuries. Descriptions of the images are provided by De Bry himself.
  • 43. Native American Links
    The anasazi and Their Hopi Descendents Click Here. WOODLANDS INDIANS, Powhatan IndianGuide tribe Clothing of the Woodland Indians Click Here, native american
    http://homepage.mac.com/grade_5/nativeamer/natvamer.htm
    Native American
    Links

    Maya
    Aztec
    Inca
    Inuit
    Pueblo / Anasazi Various Native American Sites Delaware / Lenape
    Northeast Woodland

    Indians
    ...
    Explorers / Discoverers
    NATIVE AMERICANS
    MayaLords.org (see section on North American Indians) Click Here Pueblo Indians Aztec National National Monument Click Here Conquistadors: The First Americans and Culture Is Everything Click Here Carnegie Museum of Natural History: American Indians and the Natural World Click Here A Study and Timeline of the Lakota Nation Click here Native American Group/Tribe Chart (Gives Info on Habitat, Home, Dress, Tools/Weapons, Food, and Customs) Click Here Southwest Indian Crafts Kachina Doll Click Here A School Website Dealing with The Five North American Indian Cultures Click Here Native American Page with Links to Many Tribes and Topics Click Here Internet Resources on Native Americans Click Here Native American Sites Click Here The Soiux Heritage Click Here DELAWARE / LENAPE Delaware Tribe of Indians Info on Numerous Topics (with audio for language pages) Lenni Lenape Historical Society Click Here DELAWARE HISTORY Click Here DELAWARE HISTORY Click Here The Lenni-Lenape The "Original People" of the Schuylkill Watershed

    44. Odin's Castle Of Dreams & Legends
    Celtic Button The anasazi. Celtic Button Indian Ruins in the Southwest. CelticButton The Southern Ute tribe. native american Resources on the Net
    http://www.odinscastle.org/odin14.html

      eet the proud and noble race of people who populated the New World long before the coming of the white man. Here are the Native Americans, both North and South, and here also is their story. A story which ranges from the very dawn of man, to those dark days when the white man "found" this new world. Unfortunately for them, this was the beginning of the end of their way of life. Here you'll meet Crazy Horse and Montezuma as well as Sitting Bull and the Inuit. You'll find Cheyenne and Aztec, Apache and Inca, Sioux and Maya and all the other tribes. From the cold, snow covered lands of the far north to the cold and wind blown shores of Tierra del Fuego in the south, this is their story. It was their land before it was ours, and we owe them much..................
      Native Americans, Pre-Columbian:
      The Land Called Beringia The History of the Conquest of Mexico The Chronology of Mesoamerican Archaeology End of an Empire: The Spanish Conquest of Mexico Pre-Columbian Archaeology Related Links Maps of the Americas Mesoweb - Exploration of Mesoamerican Culture Mystery of the Maya Ancient Mayan The Mayan Epigraphic Database Project Mayan Hieroglyphic Syllalary The Aztec Account of the Spanish Conquest of Mexico Mexico: It's History Lords of the Earth: Maya/Aztec/Inca Center Spaniards vs. Incas and the Fall of the Inca Empire

    45. Hopi Indians, Native American Indian, Southwest American Indian, Hollow Earth, I
    He's been missing since 1972, lost to the tribe while walking to a valley (The Hopireject the name anasazi which is Tibetans and native american Pueblo people
    http://www.livinginthelightms.com/hopi
    Hopi Legend of Shambhala and the Sacred Mountain Mount Meru.
    The White Brotherhood , Serpents and UFO's
    Hopi People and their customs
    What Do These Two Areas Have In Common?

    Hopis call themselves Hopitu - The Peacable People.
    Hopis, meaning good, peaceful or wise, live in northeastern Arizona at the southern end of the Black Mesa . A mesa is the name given to a small isolated flat-topped hill with three steep sides called the 1st Mesa, 2nd Mesa, and the 3rd Mesa. On the mesa tops are the Hopi villages called pueblos. The pueblo of Oraibi on the 3rd Mesa started in 1050, and is the oldest in North America that was lived in continuously. Click here to Read about Black Mesa and Holy Mountain , Mt. Meru.
    ANCESTRY
    Evidence suggest that the Hopi consist of the descendants of various groups that entered the country from the north, the east, and the south, and that a series of movements covered a period of probably three centuries, and perhaps considerably longer.
    Related to people of the various Pueblos to the east, the Hopis never actually had a single group identitythey were independent villages, sharing with the Zuni and other Pueblos a basic culture and view of the sacred, while sharing among themselves their own (Uto-Aztecan) language base.
    ASTRONOMY - ET'S - UFO'S
    Native Americans believed in constellations in many cases they believed in the same formations for stars that we do. Their constellations seemed to be marked by the same knowledge that western civilizations on theother part of the globe was aware of. They call them by different names but the star arrangements were very similar.

    46. Native American Lands
    began long ago, with the Hohokam, anasazi and the After years of battle, the NativeAmerican's were forced onto The term honors the tribe's ownership in their
    http://www.arizonan.com/Indianlands/
    West USA Realty The Chapman Team Serving the Entire Scottsdale-Phoenix Real Estate Market Call 623-362-9023 Arizona New Homes Arizona Real Estate Arizona Rentals Phoenix Real Estate ... Scottsdale Real Estate West USA Realty Subscribe to our Real Estate Market Newsletter. Each month we will send you information about current market conditions as well as a list of home specials. Register Now! Ak Chin
    Chinle
    ... Youngtown Real Estate West USA Realty Carl Chapman, Realtor Arizona Real Estate Agent West USA Realty Scottsdale - Phoenix carl@chapman.tv Arizona's Native American history began long ago, with the Hohokam, Anasazi and the Sinagua people. These cultures can be traced back hundreds and hundreds of years. Some of these tribes simply disappeared and others have evolved into the Indian Tribes we see today. Since that long ago beginning, the Indian community has been through its share of difficult times. When settlers and miners first arrived in Arizona, many of the Native American's did not approve of their infringement on the land. Wars and raiding broke out across the region. After years of battle, the Native American's were forced onto Indian Reservations. In 1859, Congress established the first Indian Land in Arizona and named it the Gila River Indian Land. Between 1859 and 1934, Indians were mistreated and their land was taken away from them and then portions returned. Finally in 1934, Congress passed the Indian Reorganization Act. This Act did several things for the Indian culture. First of all, it ended the allotment of land, gave Indians the right and limited means to hire counsel and banned compulsory religion. It also promoted traditional Indian handicrafts and encouraged tribes to set up governments and form corporate business charters. However, it wasn't until 1948 that the Indians were allowed to vote, provided the individual knew English.

    47. TeacherSource . Concepts Across The Curriculum . Native American Heritage | PBS
    Did the anasazi culture become cannibalistic, or did cannibals element to the successof native american tribes on councils, were healers and tribe leaderswho
    http://www.pbs.org/teachersource/thismonth/nov01/index3.shtm
    April 3, 2003
    November 2001: Native American Heritage
    Notes From The Author Younger Students Older Students Calendar of Features ... Archives Sites and Programs
    Related PBS Television Programs in November
    Check local listings for most accurate date and time.) AMERICAN ROOTS MUSIC
    This series concludes with an episode titled "All My Children of the Sun." The final episode explores how the influences of different ethnic groups came to make up "American roots music." It looks at Cajun culture, Tejano music and Native American music. HOMELAND
    Recording four Lakota families over three years, HOMELAND explores what it takes for the Lakota community to build a better future in the face of tribal and government corruption, scarce housing, unemployment and alcoholism. Intimate interviews with a spiritual leader, a grandmother, an artist and a community activist from South Dakota's Pine Ridge Indian Reservation reveal how each survives with help from family ties, cultural tradition, humor and a palpable yearning for self-reliance and personal freedom. SECRETS OF THE DEAD “Cannibalism in the Canyon”
    For 1000 years, the Anasazi, as the ancient Pueblo people are commonly called flourished in what is now New Mexico. A democratic people with rich achievements in architecture, agriculture, astronomy and art, the Anasazi were, in the eyes of many anthropologists, a model society. Yet around 1200 A.D., something brought their utopia to a sudden and mysterious end. Was it drought, disease, famine? Or was it something much more radical? In the shadow of a debate that's both scientific and political, huge questions remain. Did the Anasazi culture become cannibalistic, or did cannibals from afar stumble across the perfect victims?

    48. All About Native Americans
    native american Poetry, The Cherokee Nation, anasazi. Cherokee Nation OfficialSite, Blackfeet Nation, Chocktaw Nation. The Hopi tribe, Kaw Nation, Mohegan tribe.
    http://www.suelebeau.com/nativeamericans.htm
    All About Native Americans
    Websites compiled by Sue LeBeau About Native Americans The First Americans First Nations Histories Native American Tribes Native American Resource ...
    MS. LEBEAU'S HOMEPAGE

    49. GORP - Capitol Reef National Park, Utah - Native American Culture
    Capitol Reef National Park native american Culture and the absence of domesticatedanimals (the anasazi kept dogs does not like them with any tribe or group of
    http://gorp.away.com/gorp/resource/US_National_Park/ut/namr_cap.htm

    50. Native American Pottery
    native american POTTERY. INTRODUCTION. Pottery is made from all the NavajoNation.anasazi, Adobe, Hopi, Pueblo, ect. These tribe all made pottery.
    http://www.si.umich.edu/chpi/navajo/crownpoint/cppottery.html
    NATIVE AMERICAN POTTERY INTRODUCTION This is Navajo pottery that was made from scratch. Were all students from CrownpointJr./Sr. high school that made this scratch pottery. On this page you'll find out how to make a pottery, tools you need,taboos about pottery,and ,and few information about pottery. Edsel Brown is demonstrating to us how to grind. Pottery is made from all the Navajo Nation.Anasazi, Adobe, Hopi, Pueblo, ect. These tribe all made pottery. Till this day they still make pottery! Pottery is used for Navajo Ceremonies. Some pottery is made from rocks, sand, Anasazi shards, and water. Anasazi pottery are still here from back then. you can find them at Canyon de Chelly This is us working. We are making pottery. Right now we are grinding the rock Shaun is making his clay. He used the ingredients below. Edsel Brown is demonstrating to us how to grind. This is the pinon sap. You use this to make the pottery shiny. Materials: Gravel rocks Ground dirt Anasazi shards Water Saps How to make a pottery:
  • Get some gravel rocks
  • Get a big rock and one small rock to grind the rocks
  • Grind the rocks into dirt
  • Mix the grind rock with ground dirt, Anasazi shards and water
  • 51. Native American Links @MATO.COM
    anasazi. Arctic Circle. Blackfoot Toze's Lil' Ole HomePage. native Californiansof Siskiyou County. Delaware tribe. United american Indians of Delaware Valley.
    http://www.mato.com/links/nalinks.html
    Native American Links
    Native American Art

    Native American Crafts and Suppliers

    Native American Language Links

    Native American Music Links
    ...
    Native American Stories and Legends

    Native American Art Links AICAP - American Indian Cultural Arts Project - Native American Artists' Home Page.
    Artists' Views of Native Americans

    Coalition to Save the Institute of American Indian studies
    ...
    Back To Index

    Crafts and Supplies American Craft Malls AnnieBee's Bead Place Austin Bead Society Library A World of Crafts Home Page ... Back To Index Native American Language Links Algonquian Place Names Conservation of Endangered Languages Cree Language Home Joes Cherokee Fonts ... Back To Index Native American Peoples Abenaki Abenaki Indian Center, Inc. Anasazi Arctic Circle ... Back To Index Web Gallery Resources Indian Country Today NativeTech Redhawk Publishing Lakota Star Knowledge ... Back To Index Native American Stories Abnaki Literature American Indian Oral History Collection Creation Stories and Traditional Wisdom - Little People - Geow-lud-mo-sis-eg Hollywood Illusions and Indian Realities ... Back To Index

    52. World
    The history of scalping; The native american anasazi Indians; native Indians; Whatis the native american Grave Protection The Haida tribe; Information on the Zuni
    http://www.indianchild.com/world_cultures.htm
    web hosting provided by Direct i World Cultures Links Culture:Africa Culture:Asian Culture:Eastern Europe History of Ottoman empire in Turkey Culture:General Culture:Middle East Culture:Native American Culture:South/Central America Culture:Western Europe

    53. Native Americans
    anasazi Indians, Ancestral Pueblos , Spirit of the anasazi,. Marie tribe. Clip Art,Dream Catchers, Kid's Domain native american Icons , native american Icons,.
    http://www.gp.k12.mi.us/ci/ce/multi/amerin.htm
    Resources for Native American History and Culture Student Activities and Projects
  • First Americans First Americans for Grade Schoolers Ohio's Indian Heritage for Kids Native Americans WebQuest (grades 4-5) Story Collection
  • Anasazi Indians
  • Ancestral Pueblos Spirit of the Anasazi
  • Clip Art
  • Clip Art Native American Icons
  • General Links and Portals Chief Tecumseh
  • Awesome Library Battle of Horseshoe Bend Bureau of Indian Affairs Creek Nation ... Timeline of Indian History: Frontier
  • Hopewell Indians/
    Moundbuilders
  • Daily Life of the Hopewells Life Along the River Mound Builders in America Norton Mound Group in Michigan
  • Iroquois Confederacy (Six Nations)
  • Iroquois Oral Traditions Iroquois History Mohawk People Building a Long Hou ... Tuscarora
  • Museums
  • Iroquois Indian Museum Heard Museum National Museum of the American Indian
  • Native Americans of Michigan, Indiana, and Ohio Chief Pontiac
  • Genealog y of People of the Three Fires Native American Research in Michigan Native Americans of Indiana ... Walpole Island
  • Chippewa, Ojibwa, and Algonquin Tribes
  • Algonkin History Chippewa Authors Ojibwa Art Saginaw Chippewa Tribe ... Sault St. Marie Tribe
  • 54. Indian Resource Page
    anasazi Prehistoric native americans native american tribe Finder nativeamerican Housing native americansInternet Resources Indians.Org.
    http://www.venus.net/~dschweit/indian/indian.htm
    " Bacussua" ( Crow Tobacco Society Initiation Lodge), drawing by L. Jeffries 99 Welcome to the Native American Resource Page, Native American Links. This
    website was developed at the request of Jefferson County Public Schools, Gheens
    Academy,Curriculum Resource Center for the use of teachers and students in Louisville,
    Kentucky and learners on the world wide web. Native American Links: Indian Links
    Native American Links

    Indian Country Today

    North American Newspapers

    Native American Links
    ...
    Tichkematse
    Indians of North America
    Alcatraz Occupation: The Story
    The 1969 occupation of Alcatraz Island is seen as a watershed event in contemporary Native American history. This site provides a brief history of the occupation as documented in my book, "The Occupation of Alcatraz Island, Indian Self-determination and The Rise of Indian Activism
    Alcatraz Occupaion in photographs
    This collection of photographs and descriptions by Ilka Hartmann tell the story of the American Indian occupation of Alcatraz Island through the eyes of those who made up the occupation force.

    55. NAGPRA NOTICES OF INVENTORY COMPLETION: Human Remains And Associated Funerary Ob
    in accordance with provisions of the native american Graves Protection in the possessionof the anasazi Heritage Center of the Southern Ute Indian tribe of the
    http://www.cast.uark.edu/other/nps/nagpra/DOCS/nic0218.html
    Back to the top Back to National-NAGPRA Back to the top Back to National-NAGPRA

    56. NAGPRA NOTICES OF INVENTORY COMPLETION: Human Remains And Associated Funerary Ob
    listed above are determined to be native american. archeologicallydefined VirginBranch anasazi Culture, dated the Southern Paiute tribe, joint consultations
    http://www.cast.uark.edu/other/nps/nagpra/DOCS/nic0406.html
    Back to the top
    Back to National NAGPRA
    [Federal Register: November 21, 2000 (Volume 65, Number 225)] [Notices] [Page 69960-69961] From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov] [DOCID:fr21no00-117] - DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR National Park Service Notice of Inventory Completion for Native American Human Remains and Associated Funerary Objects in the Possession of the Lost City Museum, Overton, NV AGENCY: National Park Service, Interior. ACTION: Notice. - Notice is hereby given in accordance with provisions of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), 43 CFR 10.9, of the completion of an inventory of human remains and associated funerary objects in the possession of the Lost City Museum, Overton, NV. This notice is published as part of the National Park Service's administrative responsibilities under NAGPRA, 43 CFR 10.2(c). The determinations within this notice are the sole responsibility of the museum, institution, or Federal agency that has control of these Native American human remains and associated funerary objects. The National Park Service is not responsible for the determinations within this notice. A detailed assessment of the human remains was made by Lost City Museum professional staff in consultation with Nevada State Museum staff, representatives of the Moapa Band of the Southern Paiute Tribe, and representatives of the Hopi Tribe of Arizona, in coordination with the Southern Paiute Consortium. At an unknown date before 1970, human remains representing two individuals were removed from an unknown location in the vicinity of Overton, NV, by an unknown person. These remains were donated to the Lost City Museum at an unknown time after 1970 by an unknown person. No known individuals were identified. No associated funerary objects are present. At an unknown date, human remains representing six individuals were removed from an unknown location in the vicinity of Overton, NV, by an unknown person. At an unknown time, these remains were donated to the Lost City Museum by an unknown person. No known individuals were identified. No associated funerary objects are present. In the 1980's, human remains representing one individual and two associated funerary objects were removed from the Lewis Site (26CK2036), Sand Beach, Overton, NV, by Lost City Museum staff. The landowner donated the remains and objects to the Lost City Museum at the time of excavation. No known individual was identified. The two associated funerary objects are a pot and a projectile point. Archeological investigations have identified the Lewis Site (also known as Anasazi number 1) as a known Anasazi site. The remains were found in a room in a house. In 1987, human remains representing 4 individuals and 32 associated funerary objects were removed during salvage excavations during construction at the Bunker Hill Site (26CK020), Sand Beach, Overton, NV, by Lost City Museum staff. The remains were donated to the Lost City Museum by the landowner. No known individuals were identified. The associated funerary objects are shell pendant beads, a stone drill, a projectile point, Puebloan pottery, and turquoise beads. Archeological investigations have identified the Bunker Hill Site as a known Anasazi site. In 1992, human remains representing one individual were removed from the Park-Perkins number 9 Site (26CK029), Overton, NV, by the landowner during trenching activity on his land. In 1995, the landowner donated these remains to the Lost City Museum. No known individual was identified. No associated funerary objects are present. Archeological investigations have identified the Park-Perkins number 9 Site as a known Anasazi site. In 1992, human remains representing one individual and three associated funerary objects were removed during salvage excavations by Lost City Museum staff at a quarry on private property at the Mill Point number 1 Site (26CK2003), Sand Beach, Overton, NV. No known individual was identified. The associated funerary objects are a ceramic vessel, a bead, and a stone. Stylistic attributes of the associated ceramic vessel identify the burial as characteristic of the Anasazi culture. In 1982, human remains representing one individual were removed during salvage excavations at the Adam 2 Site (26CK2059), Overton, NV, by University of Nevada, Las Vegas staff. The remains were returned to the Lost City Museum, which owns the property on which the site is located, in 2000. No known individual was identified. No associated funerary objects are present. Archeological investigations have identified the Adam 2 Site as affiliated with the Anasazi culture. On the basis of archeological context, the human remains listed above are determined to be Native American. Based on the geographical locality and probable age of the burials, the remains are determined to be affiliated with the archeologically-defined Virgin Branch Anasazi Culture, dated to circa 300 B.C.-A.D. 1300. Although the locations from which these remains were removed are within the historic territory of the Moapa Band of the Southern Paiute Tribe, joint consultations with representatives of the Moapa Band of the Southern Paiute Tribe and with representatives of the Hopi Tribe of Arizona produced evidence agreed to by both parties that the Anasazi remains from this area are ancestral to the modern Hopi Tribe of Arizona. Archaeological evidence supports this conclusion. Based on the above-mentioned information, officials of the Lost City Museum have determined that, pursuant to 43 CFR 10.2(d)(1), the human remains listed above represent the physical remains of 16 individuals of Native American ancestry. Officials of the Lost City Museum also have determined that, pursuant to 43 CFR [[Page 69961]] 10.2(d)(2), the 37 objects listed above are reasonably believed to have been placed with or near individual human remains at the time of death or later as part of the death rite or ceremony. Lastly, officials of the Lost City Museum have determined that, pursuant to 43 CFR 10.2(e), there is a relationship of shared group identity that can be reasonably traced between these Native American human remains and associated funerary objects and the Hopi Tribe of Arizona. This notice has been sent to officials of the the Moapa Band of the Southern Paiute Tribe and the Hopi Tribe of Arizona. Representatives of any other Indian tribe that believes itself to be culturally affiliated with these human remains and associated funerary objects should contact Kathryne Olson, Curator, Lost City Museum, P.O. Box 807, 721 South Moapa Valley Boulevard, Overton, NV 89040, telephone (702) 397-2193, before December 21, 2000. Repatriation of the human remains and associated funerary objects to the Hopi Tribe of Arizona may begin after that date if no additional claimants come forward. Dated: November 14, 2000. John Robbins, Assistant Director, Cultural Resources, Stewardship, and Partnerships. [FR Doc. 00-29807 Filed 11-20-00; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 4310-70-F Back to the top
    Back to National NAGPRA

    57. Michigan Native American Legends
    granite.k12.ut.us/Curriculum/anasazi/anasazi2.htm. Southwest native american Culturehttp//www.germantown.k12.il.us/html/southwest.html. Hopi tribe http//www
    http://web.pccs.k12.mi.us/fiegel/earliestinhabitants/earliestinhabitants.html
    Earliest Inhabitants of the United States
    Created by Patricia Hackney Fiegel Elementary Plymouth, Michigan
    Scenario
    You are a curator for the Plymouth Historical Society. You have been asked to develop a display and presentation about a Native American tribe for the museum. The display will be viewed by residents of local communities. You are asked to choose a tribe and create an interactive presentation that explains how the environment influenced the culture of these Native Americans. Plains Indians Southwest Indians Northwest Pacific Indians Eastern Woodland Indians
    Task
    In your research groups, you will "surf the net" and "hit the books" in a quest for the answer to the essential question, "How does the environment influence the culture of your tribe?" Justify your answer." In order to conduct an appropriate search, several questions must be answered ( and included in your final product). Those questions are:
    • What is culture? What is environment? What does influence mean? What major landforms are found where your tribe lives?

    58. Lesson Plans - Xpeditions @ Nationalgeographic.com
    a story about what was going on in their tribe at the Rock Art anasazi Rock Art PanelsBLM, anasazi Heritage Center native american Petroglyphs Rock
    http://www.nationalgeographic.com/xpeditions/lessons/12/gk2/rockart.html
    Check out:
    X12: Paris Scope

    Standard #12:
    The Processes, Patterns, and Functions of Human Settlement
    Complete Index

    Interpreting Rock Art of the Anasazi Traditional Towns and Modern Suburbs Complete Index Interpreting Rock Art of the Anasazi Overview: Students are introduced to the ancient Anasazi people through samples of rock art preserved in the public lands of the Four Corners region. The national parks, which protect this land from vandalism and neglect, serve as a showcase for this Native American rock art. By studying these archaeological remains, students will understand more about the history and culture of these ancient pueblo farmers. Connections to the Curriculum: history, geography, art Connections to the National Geography Standards:
    Time: one hour Materials Required:
    • Internet connection
    • map of the United States
    • photocopies and transparencies of images of Anasazi rock art (reproduced from Web sites found under Related Links)
    • paint or markers, paper
    Objectives: Students will:
    • Identify key terms related to rock art
    • Convey the significance of rock art as it depicts elements of culture
    • Locate the Four Corners region of the United States on a map
    • Understand the cultural heritage of the Anasazi as depicted through rock art
    • Create an individual pictograph that depicts elements of their own cultures
    Geographic Skills:
    Answering Geographic Questions
    Analyzing Geographic Information
    S u g g e s t e d P r o c e d u r e Opening: Tell the students that they will be learning about the culture of one group of Native Americans, the Anasazi, by studying their rock art. Explain that Native Americans decorated rocks with pictures that told a story about what was going on in their tribe at the time. By examining the pictures on these rocks, students will learn about the beliefs, customs, and everyday lives of the Anasazi.

    59. Native American Tribal Links A WVC Library Research By Subject
    native american Tribal Links. anasazi Heritage Center; Cherokee Nation; Cheyenne Arapaho tribes; Home Page; Oneida Indian Nation; Osage tribe's Homepage; Pawnee
    http://134.39.150.204/wvclib/Research/Cultures/RBCultureNativeAmerTribal.html

    60. Native American Egemonye
    http//www.anthro.mankato.msus.edu/cultural/northamerica/anasazi.html; Museum andHall of Fame History of native american Lacrosse; United tribe of Shawnee
    http://mccants.anderson5.net/library/natam.html
    Eighth Grade Native American Report Research Links
    Click on the tribe or topic in the table for a list of links.
    Abenaki
    Anasazi Apaches Arapaho ... Dakota (Sioux) Haida Hopis Huron Inca ... Nakota (Sioux) Navajos Nez Perce Osage Paiute ... Zuni Pueblo ABENAKI POTAWATOMI

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 3     41-60 of 96    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

    free hit counter