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         Tlingit Native Americans:     more books (93)
  1. The Tlingit (New True Bk) by Alice Osinski, 1990-10
  2. To the Chukchi Peninsula and to the Tlingit Indians 1881/1882, Rasmuson Vol 3.: Journals and Letters by Aurel and Arthur Krause (The Rasmuson Library Historical , V) by Aurel Krause, 1993-10-01
  3. My Grandfather's House: Tlingit Songs of Death and Sorrow by David Cloutier, 1980-12
  4. Memory Eternal: Tlingit Culture and Russian Orthodox Christianity Through Two Centuries by Sergei Kan, 1999-10
  5. Social Economy of the Tlingit Indians by Kalervo Oberg, 1980-05
  6. Tlingit Indians of Alaska. Rasmuson Vol. 2. (The Rasmuson Library Historical Translation Series, Vol 2) by Anatolii Kamenskii, 1985-07-01
  7. Spirits of the Water: Native Art Collected on Expeditions to Alaska and British Columbia, 1774-1910
  8. Haa Kusteeyi (Classics of Tlingit Oral Literature)
  9. Tlingit Tales, Potlatch and Totem Pole by Lorie K. Harris, 1985-10
  10. The War Canoe by Jamie S Bryson, 2009-04-01
  11. The Tlingit Indians in Russian America, 1741-1867 by Andrei Val'terovich Grinev, 2008-12-01
  12. Native American Cuisine: Grits, Hominy, Sweet Corn, Corn Soup, Succotash, Maize, Pulque, Popcorn, Aztec Cuisine, Food of the Tlingit, Chicha
  13. The Tlingit Indians of Alaska: respect for nature and ancestors marked the Tlingit culture.(American History): An article from: Junior Scholastic by Deborah White, 2004-09-20
  14. A Story to Tell: Traditions of a Tlingit Community (We Are Still Here) by Richard Nichols, 1998-04

41. Marilee's Native Americans Resource
If you want to learn about native americans as they were before the Chilcotin, Chipewyan,Cree, Dogrib, Han, Hare, Holikachuk, Inland tlingit, Ingalik, Kaska
http://marilee.us/nativeamericans.html
Home Word Puzzles Picturebooks KidPix/KidWorks Projects ... Link-Backs
Marilee's Native Americans Resource
Cherokee
Comanche
Cree
Haida
Hopi
Inuit
Iroquois
Navajo
Nez Perce Pomo Sioux Ute Wampanoag Misc. Tribes Clothing Craft Projects Famous People Legends Recipes Songs, Dances, Games
Creation stories teach that Native Americans have been where they are since the world was created. It is also thought that First Americans migrated from Siberia over the Bering Strait about 14,000 years ago, or perhaps even earlier. The land bridge was dry ground for several thousand years before the sea level rose again and stopped migration. The hunters would have followed the migrating herds of large mammals as they moved south. As the glaciers melted, the First Americans spread to the North American coasts and across the entire continent. Native Americans adapted to the climates and terrains in which they lived and used whatever natural resources were available. The arrival of the Europeans in the 1500's began a change in the lives of the Indian people that continued through the next centuries. Sometimes the changes were good. The horses brought by the Spanish made bison hunting much easier and safer. But Vikings, Spanish, English and French explorers, colonists and missionaries spread diseases, made slaves of the people, forced relocations, claimed ownership of natural resources and land, and tried to stamp out the native cultures. Some of the Indian people survived, but not without making drastic changes in their life styles.

42. Native Americans
From the Northwest Coast tribes of tlingit, Haida, and Bella Bella, came a sixtyfive Presentat the Centennial were two contrasting views of native americans.
http://www.history.villanova.edu/centennial/paper.htm
THE NATIVE AMERICAN EXHIBIT AT THE CENTENNIAL By Michael Brilli The Smithsonian Institute shared the U.S. Government Building with the departments of War, Interior, Navy, Treasury, Agriculture, and the Post Office, but the Institution's plot was the largest. Spencer F. Baird, naturalist and and assistant secretary of the Smithsonian, was selected by Smithsonian secretary Joseph Henry to serve on the government board composed of executive department heads. One of Baird’s plans was to form an "exhaustive and complete" display to "illustrate the past and present condition of the native tribes of the United States, or its anthropology." (Rydell 23) Although the exhibit was a joint project of the Smithsonian and the Department of the Interior, the Smithsonian had control of the exhibit. To collect artifacts, Baird relied on James G. Swan, John Wesley Powell, and Steven Powers, who all headed expeditions to the Pacific Northwest, the West Coast, and the upper Rocky Mountains states. Baird also received artifacts from federal Indian agents on reservations. To aid the agents in deciding what to collect, the Indian Bureau of the Interior assigned Otis T. Mason, a professor at Columbia University, to devise a systematic set of "ethnological directions." Mason incorporated a plan of ethnological instructions by Gustav Friedrich Klemm into his instructions. Klemm was anthropologist and director of the royal library at Dresden. He developed a concept of culture involving social organization, technology, and belief, in his ten-volume work

43. Resources
PBS Online Lewis and Clark native americans; Shoshone Indian Girl; Tribal DakotaCulture and History; HOMELAND; First americans; Lakota Sioux-Volume 3; tlingit.
http://www.dist126.k12.il.us/powwow/resources.htm
A Gathering of Cultures
Native American Flags
Native American Culture
Native American Tribes
Algonquin
Apache
Arapaho
top
Blackfoot
Cherokee
Cheyenne
top
Chippewa
Comanche

44. Authority List For Cultural Area: Native Americans
Authority List for Cultural Area native americans Culture Group refers to the tribe WestMain Dogrib Han Hare Holikachuk Ingalik Inland tlingit Kaska Kolchan
http://imnh.isu.edu/digitalatlas/arch/db/tables/Culture.htm
Authority List for Cultural Area: Native Americans Culture Area
Use one of the following terms: Arctic
California 

Great Basin

Northeast
...
Other
Authority List for Cultural Area: Native Americans
Culture Group refers to the tribe, ethnic group, society, or culture associated with the item.  Generally, the term used should identify the culture of manufacture, but in some cases it may be more meaningful to record the culture of use. Arctic Aleut
Baffinland Eskimo
Bering Strait Eskimo
Caribou Eskimo
Copper Eskimo Greenland Eskimo Iglulik Innuit of Quebec Interior North Alaska Eskimo Kotzebue Sound Eskimo Labrador Coast Eskimo Mackenzie Delta Eskimo Netsilik North Alaska Coast Eskimo Nunivak Eskimo Pacific Eskimo Sallirmiut St. Lawrence Island Eskimo Siberian Eskimo Southwest Alaska Eskimo Unknown top Subartic Ahtna Attikamek Beaver Carrier Chilcotin Chipewyan Cree East Western Woods West Main Dogrib Han Hare Holikachuk Ingalik Inland Tlingit Kaska Kolchan Koyukon Lake Winnepeg Salteaux Montagnais Mountain Indians Naskapi

45. Native American Studies At Dartmouth
history of anthropology (including relations between native americans and anthropologists),and ethnographic and archival research among the tlingit people of
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~nas/html/faculty/kan.html
Name Sergei Kan
Title Professor of Anthropology and Native American Studies.
Education PhD Anthropology: University of Chicago
Courses Taught NAS 10 NAS 46 NAS 49
Please send your comments to webmaster

46. A Repatriation Story From Alaska, By Anna Kiss - Page 1
Foundation in Juneau who is also a member of the tlingit Thunderbird clan For example,native americans believe that the spirits still reside in the body after
http://www.inspiritproductions.com/articles/kiss/introduction.html
Title Home Introduction It was a rainy September day. The Auk Kwaan clan's people gathered at the Evergreen cemetery in Juneau, Alaska, to bury their six relatives. None of the human remains were complete. One was a skull without a jaw, and others were ashes and pieces of bones. However, for Rosa Miller, the 74-year-old Auk Kwaan leader, the most important thing was to put these people finally to rest. During the ceremony she rhythmically hit her drum and chanted Auk Love Song. She recalled, "It was a such a good feeling and healing experience. I felt relieved."
The Auk Kwaans, who are the original settles in the Juneau area and belong to the Tlingit people of Southeast Alaska, got back the 200- to 400-year-old remains of their anonymous ancestors from the National Park Service under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, NAGPRA. As of summer 2000, they repatriated and reburied nine of their forebears.
For the past several years, many such reburial ceremonies have taken place across the nation. Under NAGPRA, Native Americans from over 760 federally recognized tribes can claim the remains of their ancestors as well as funerary objects that were part of death rites, sacred objects that were used during religious ceremonies, and cultural patrimony items that are of traditional or historical importance to the native people.
NAGPRA is a property law that applies to cultural resources. The Fifth Amendment to the Constitution states that no person shall "be deprived of life, liberty or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation."

47. Tlingit Indians Of The Pacific Northwest (Lesson Plan)
Explore outstanding lessons and activities in the native americans theme. or withpartners to create totem poles similar to the ones the tlingit people build.
http://teachervision.com/lesson-plans/lesson-5209.html
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Tlingit Indians of the Pacific Northwest
Objectives
  • Students will use vocabulary related to the lives of the Tlingit Indians of the Pacific Northwest. Students will appreciate how the natural environment affects the lives of the Tlingit people. Students will recognize how the environment affects their own daily lives.
Materials Procedures
  • Introduce key vocabulary canoe, climate, evergreen, lush, sacred, totem pole, vegetation Have students work with partners to complete the Tlingit Indians of the Pacific Northwest worksheet after they visit the websites.
  • 48. Native Americans Of The Northwest Coast Web Sites
    http//www.clpgh.org/cmnh/exhibits/northsouth-east-west/tlingit/trees.html. americans( Look for this link in the Big Picture page about native americans.
    http://www.mansfieldct.org/schools/vinton/NWsites/NWsites.htm
    Native Americans of the Northwest Coast Web Sites (Click on the address to link to the information) Haida (Art, Clothing, Ceremony, Myths, Shaman, Society, Potlatch) http://www.uwgb.edu/galta/mrr/haida/old site/index.htm Tlingit (Partners with Nature, Transformations, Trees, Heirlooms, Newcomers) http://www.clpgh.org/cmnh/exhibits/north-south-east-west/tlingit/trees.html Kwakiutl (Location, History, Language, Daily Life, Best Known Features-potlatch) http://134.29.9.229/cultural/northamerica/kwakiutl.html First Americans ( Look for this link in the Big Picture page about Native Americans. Then click on the Northwest region. It is a third grade project describing all regions and their culures) http://headlines.yahoo.com/Full_Coverage/Yahooligans/nativeamericans

    49. Native Americans Of The Pacific Northwest: An Introduction (Printable Version)
    For example, only certain groups the tlingit and Tsimshian of the Alaskan Panhandle Theimages of native americans made by outsiders often tell us as much
    http://content.lib.washington.edu/aipnw/buerge1/buerge1.html
    Home Search
    Collections
    Advanced ... UW Libraries Keyword Search all AIPNW Select a predefined search from the list: Arts Dwellings Education Potlatches Transportation Documents Work
    Native Americans of the Pacific Northwest: An Introduction
    David M. Buerge
    Introduction
    Near the northwest corner of the continent, the ice of the St. Elias Range leaves its high birthing fields and flows nearly four miles down to the ocean shore. In this cloud-shrouded refuge, ice and sea continue to sculpt the land as they have for untold thousands of years. The mark of their ancient work extends more than a thousand miles to the south: in the tangle of fjords and islands of the Alaskan panhandle, in the wide turbulent ocean entrances, teeming with life, separating the Queen Charlotte Islands, the Haida Gwaii, from the rain-lashed coast, and in the sinuous route of the Inside Passage between Vancouver Island and the rugged mainland. This is the world of Raven, powerful and immense, resplendent in sunlight, but more often hidden in mist and shadowed by gigantic forests. To the south, where the Fraser River surges into the Gulf of Georgia, the land assumes a gentler cast. Strong rivers exit their mountain fastnesses and wind through a lowland plain before emptying into the great, rich estuary known as Puget Sound. Here it only seems to be as rainy as it is further north: the Olympic rampart catches most of the precipitation on its western slope, leaving the country in its shadow relatively dry. Before they were cut away, the lowland forests were also immense, but intermingled with them were open areas covered with ferns and grasses and spangled with wildflowers. This is the land of the Changer, the Star Child who descended from the heavens to the fertile earth and, as Moon, married a daughter of the Salmon people, ensuring his human kin happiness and plenty if they would respect the family of his bride.

    50. Tlingit National Anthem Alaska Natives Online
    Online cultural center presents Alaska native and American Indian history, art, culture, flags, celebriti Category Society Ethnicity Tribes, Nations and Bands T tlingit...... Alaska native Brotherhood Sisterhood, featured tlingit Authors, Alaska Schools Online,Education Resource Sites on native americans , Environmental links
    http://cooday8.tripod.com/alaska.htm
    Tlingit National Anthem Alaska Natives Online
    Alaska Native and Native American Anthems, Flags Art, Celebrities Culture, Dance, Storytelling History ... Native American issues Betty Marvin Click above photo for larger image. Anthems and Flags Tlingit National Anthem - "This is the story of the Tlingit National Anthem, a song that entwines our people with their past and keeps our ancient heritage alive. At potlatch ceremonies, Tlingit elders sing the anthem and tell how it came about-for many years in secret, for this ritual was long forbidden by the government-always passing the story on to the new generations." Robert Willard Jr. (Raven/Beaver Clan Elder) "Star Spangled Banner" wav. (244k) by Jimi Hendrix (Official Jimi Hendrix web site) The National Anthem - "The Star Spangle Banner " the national anthem of the United States. National Anthems of the World The Flags of the Native Peoples of the United States American Indian flags. Over 180 Native Nations have their own flags. Their are over 500 nations in North American. Also covers flags of Canadian Native People, south of U.S. and Australia.

    51. Alaska Recognized Native Americans
    Alaska native americans. native Village of Teller; native Village of Tetlin;Central Council of the tlingit Haida Indian Tribes;
    http://www.500nations.com/tribes/Tribes_Alaska.asp

    Events
    Casinos Places Nations Tribes
    Alabama

    Alaska

    Alberta

    Arizona
    ... Contact Us
    Alaska Native Americans
    U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
    Bureau of Indian Affairs
    INDIAN TRIBAL ENTITIES WITHIN ALASKA RECOGNIZED AND ELIGIBLE TO RECEIVE SERVICES FROM THE UNITED STATES BUREAU OF INDIAN AFFAIRS For addresses and phone numbers, click here
    • Village of Afognak Native Village of Akhiok Akiachak Native Community Akiak Native Community Native Village of Akutan Village of Alakanuk Alatna Village Native Village of Aleknagik Algaaciq Native Village (St. Mary's) Allakaket Village Native Village of Ambler Village of Anaktuvuk Pass Yupiit of Andreafski Angoon Community Association Village of Aniak Anvik Village Arctic Village (See Native Village of Venetie Tribal Government) Native Village of Atka Asa'carsarmiut Tribe (formerly Native Village of Mountain Village) Atqasuk Village (Atkasook) Village of Atmautluak Native Village of Barrow Inupiat Traditional Government (formerly Native Village of Barrow) Beaver Village Native Village of Belkofski Village of Bill Moore's Slough Birch Creek Village Native Village of Brevig Mission Native Village of Buckland Native Village of Cantwell Native Village of Chanega (aka Chenega) Chalkyitsik Village Village of Chefornak Chevak Native Village Chickaloon Native Village Native Village of Chignik Native Village of Chignik Lagoon Chignik Lake Village Chilkat Indian Village (Kluckwan) Chilkoot Indian Association (Haines) Chinik Eskimo Community (Golovin) Native Village of Chistochina Native Village of Chitina Native Village of Chuathbaluk (Russian Mission, Kuskokwim)

    52. Nativeamericanspage1
    Indians and the Natural World, The Carnegie Mellon Museum of Natural History presentsan exploration of four tribes of native americans the tlingit of the
    http://www.tjlibrary.org/1pagenativeamericans.html
    THOMAS JEFFERSON MIDDLE SCHOOL
    LIBRARY NATIVE AMERICANS
    SEARCH INDEXES
    NATIVE AMERICAN NATIONS SOME INTERESTING SITES INDIVIDUAL NATIONS
    SEARCH INDEXES KidsClick!
    an index of websites selected by the librarians from the Ramapo Catskill Library System in Middletown, New York. Each site listed has a short summary and the grade level it is appropriate for. There are 74 sites listed for Native Americans. The best list of sites is found here. Type Native Americans in the search window Offers thousands of websites that have been selected by subject experts. Enter the name of your Native American nation in the search window
    NATIVE AMERICANS
    THOMAS JEFFERSON MIDDLE SCHOOL LIBRARY

    NATIVE AMERICAN NATIONS Native American Nations compiled and maintained by Lisa Mitten, a Native American and an editor of CHOICE Magazine , this frequently updated site which provides links to pages set up by or about a particular nation. Pages marked with the drum graphic are maintained by the particular nation. Native Americans Twin Groves Middle School in Buffalo Grove, Illinois provides an interesting web site on Native Americans. A brief paragraph about each nation is given along with geographic, dwelling, language, and subgroup information and links to relevant web sites.

    53. American West - Native Americans
    native americans. native American Nations Homepages. 11. ILT History native AmericanTribes. 12. 14. The tlingit National Anthem from Alaska's Tongass. 15.
    http://www.americanwest.com/pages/nathom.htm
    NATIVE AMERICANS
    Native American Nations Homepages
    TABLE OF CONTENTS General Native American Resources Native American Nations Homepages Education Organizations And Government Sources ... Six Nations - Insights from the first tribes to make contact with Europeans. Eastern Delaware Nations NAVAJO NATION'S MAIN HOME PAGE
    We designed this web-page for the Navajo Nation. The Navajo Office of Tourism in Window Rock, AZ., submitted the content. History of the Cherokee Cherokee Messenger United Keetoowa Band of Cherokee Indians WWW 7. Ethnobotany of the Cherokee Indians American Indian Tribal Directory (link was formerly: Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians) North Georgia's Cherokee Indians The Hopi Way - Cloud Dancing ILT History: Native American Tribes A Guide to the Great Sioux Nation - South Dakota Lenapi Delaware Tribe of Indians The Tlingit National Anthem from Alaska's Tongass Miami Nation Homepage Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe ... The Stockbridge Munse Tribe of Mohican Indians
    The Muh-He-Ka-Ne-Ok
    Return to the top...
    Return to the AmericanWest Home Page.

    54. Homework Helper - Native Americans
    www.clpgh.org/cmnh/exhibits/northsouth-east-west/tlingit/index.html. Legislation Treaties native americans Laws and Treaties http//www.bloorstreet.com
    http://www.mcallen.lib.tx.us/library/child/homework/natams.htm
    McAllen Memorial Library
    Homework Helper
    Native Americans
  • Alphabetical List of Individual Tribes Native American History Sites Texas Indians Native Americans Today
  • Alphabetical List of Individual Tribes A B C D ... Z <== For Texas Indians information, look for TEXAS A
    [Abenaki]
    Abenaki Home Page
    http://millennianet.com/slmiller/abenaki/index.htm
    [Abenaki]
    Cowasuck Band of the Pennacook-Abenaki People: Home Page
    http://www.cowasuck.org/
    [Accohannock]
    Accohannock: A Living Village
    http://skipjack.net/le_shore/accohannock/
    [Achomawi]
    The Achomawi of Northern California
    http://curtis-collection.com/tribe%20data/achamawi.html
    [Acoma] See The Keres Tribes of the Rio Grande [Akokisas] See The Atakapan Indian Groups [Akwesasne]
    Akwesasne Branch of the Mohawk Indians
    http://www.oswego.edu/other_campus/ers/booklet.html
    [Akwesasne]
    The Mohawk Nation of Akwesasne
    http://www.peacetree.com/akwesasne/home.htm
    [Alabama-Coushatta]
    Alabama-Coushatta Indians
    http://www.texasindians.com/albam.htm
    [Alabama-Coushatta]
    The Alabama-Coushatta Tribes of Texas
    http://www.alabama-coushatta.com

    55. Education World® : Special Theme: Native Americans
    about native americans, their beliefs, and their customs. Each main section takesan indepth look at one of four tribes of American Indians the tlingit of
    http://www.education-world.com/a_special/native_americans_2000.shtml

    Special Theme Articles
    Archives: VIEW ALL ARTICLES The Arts ... Social Sciences Special Themes Page S P E C I A L T H E M E P A G E Last Updated 11/14/2002
    Native Americans
    Explore Education World's resources on the history and culture of America's original inhabitants!
    Comparing Cinderella and The Rough-Face Girl
    Kellie Replogle, a soon-to-be teacher, submitted this week’s lesson. Students use a Venn diagram to compare two popular children’s stories Cinderella and the native tale The Rough-Face Girl. Activities to Celebrate Native American Heritage!
    November is National American Indian Heritage Month. This week, Education World offers 12 lessons to help students learn about Native American history and cultures. Included: Activities that involve students in dramatizing folktales, learning new words, preparing traditional foods, and much more! Great Sites for Teaching About... Native Americans
    Each week, the Education World Great Sites for Teaching About… page highlights Web sites to help educators work timely themes into their lessons. This week's sites are among the best on the Web for teaching about Native Americans. Exploring Native Americans Across the Curriculum
    Blast stereotypes with across-the-curriculum activities for students of all ages.

    56. Web Sitings: Black History Month
    to sites that look at whether native americans were the html This spectacular sitefeatures four native American nations Hopi, tlingit, Lakota, and
    http://teacher.scholastic.com/products/instructor/websitings/native_americans.ht
    Web Sitings: Native Americans
    Sites loaded with lessons, activities and primary sources for
    Native American studies. By Francine Cabreja Discovery School Lesson Plans
    school.discovery.com/lessonplans/

    McREL
    . Everything in one neat package. American Indians and the Natural World
    www.carnegiemuseums.org/cmnh/exhibits/ north-south-east-west/index.html

    www.pbs.org/lewisandclark

    Native American Women
    gowest.coalliance.org/exhib/gallery4/leadin.htm

    Native American Craft Unit
    www.teachersfirst.com/summer/nativecrafts.htm
    Celebrate Native American culture by making easy crafts from this Web site. Each project includes a list of materials, illustrations, techniques, and step-by-step instructions for activities such as making a dreamcatcher, a corn husk doll, or a pinch pot. The crafts listed here have historical value and they make a Native American unit fun. This site also includes some traditional Native American recipes for dishes such as boiled corn and pemmican. Francine Cabreja is the publishing coordinator of Instructor Teacher Resource Center Online Activities Center Book Fairs Product Info ... Teacher Store Read our

    57. Alaska Journal Of Commerce: Tlingit Helps With Bond Sale 09/16/02
    a tlingit, has owned and run Raven Asset Management in Juneau for three years. Banksand brokerages have trouble finding experienced native americans to hire
    http://www.alaskajournal.com/stories/091602/loc_tlingit.shtml

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    S M T W T F S S M T W T F Web posted Monday, September 16, 2002 Tlingit helps with bond sale By Kristan Hutchison Morris News Service-Alaska Fluetsch JUNEAU Natives are developing new trade routes to keep money within the tribes. Juneau investment adviser Brad Fluetsch was part of the first-ever all-Native bond purchase last month. "This is truly a groundbreaking event in Indian country," said Derrick Watchman, board member of the Native American Bank. "Millions of trades like this occur on a daily basis, but what sets this one apart from all the others is the money stayed in Indian country." The transaction itself was ordinary enough. As investment adviser, Fluetsch assisted his client, Native American Bank, in purchasing a Fannie Mae two-year bond from the Native American Financial Services Co. brokerage firm.

    58. Pacific Northwest Native American Information Resources
    tlingit Culture Find information about the culture of the tlingit people, includingfolklore, arts, language, and history. return to native americans of the
    http://seattle.about.com/cs/nativegeneral/
    zfp=-1 About Seattle/Tacoma, WA Search in this topic on About on the Web in Products Web Hosting
    Seattle/Tacoma, WA
    with Angela M. Brown
    Your Guide to one of hundreds of sites Home Articles Forums ... Help zmhp('style="color:#fff"') Subjects ESSENTIALS Pacific Northwest Travel Planners Relocation Resources Mount St. Helens ... All articles on this topic Stay up-to-date!
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    Information - NW Native Americans
    Guide picks Reference resources that provide a broad range of information concerning the status, culture and history of Native American's in the Pacific Northwest.
    American Indians of the Pacific Northwest Collection

    A digital compilation of Pacific Northwest Native American documentation and photographs addressing art, essays, work, dwellings, transportation, potlatches, treaties, and education, prepared by the University of Washington. Library of Congress - Indians of the Pacific Northwest
    The Library of Congress provides access to a large number of photographs and pages of text "relating to the American Indians in two cultural areas of the Pacific Northwest, the Northwest Coast and Plateau". Native Religion of the Pacific Northwest An article from the Fort Vancouver Historical Society, titled "The Spirits: Native Religion of the Pacific Northwest."

    59. NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURE
    native americans THE LIES. a site for the Haida, tlingit, and Tsimshian peoplesof southeast Alaska tlingit National Anthem Alaska native Online, by a
    http://www.greatdreams.com/native.htm
    updated 11-20-02 PLEASE BE PATIENT WHILE THIS PAGE LOADS IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR INFORMATION ON A PARTICULAR TRIBE
    AND YOU DON'T SEE IT HERE,
    E-MAIL Dee777@aol.com AND I WILL ADD IT TO THE DATABASE THIS PAGE HAS BEEN DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS
    TO SPEED LOADING. A THRU N - PAGE 1
    O THRU Z - PAGE 2
    FOR STUDENTS NATIVE AMERICAN HOUSING TEEPEE, TIPI, WICKIUP, WIGWAM, LONGHOUSE
    PIT, MOUND WORKING WITH A NATIVE HAND DRILL CLASSES IN CALIFORNIA NATIVE SKILLS HOW TO MAKE A WICKIUP HOW TO MAKE A CANOE
    NOTE! THIS IS NOT A ONE PERSON JOB
    NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURE
    Mitakuye oyasin! We are all related! It isn't too late. We still have time to recreate and change the value system of the present. We must! Survival will depend on it. Our Earth is our original mother. She is in deep labor now. There will be a new birth soon! The old value system will suffer and die. It cannot survive as our mother earth strains under the pressure put on her. She will not let man kill her. The First Nation's Peoples had a value system. There were only four commandments from the Great Spirits: 1.Respect Mother Earth

    60. Native Americans
    page from James Madison University with many links to information about native americansin Virginia. First americans Dine`, Muscogee, tlingit, Lakota, Iroquis
    http://www.fcps.k12.va.us/LondonTowneES/Resources/NativeAmericans/NativeAmerican
    This web page contains links listed below that lead to web pages that are outside the FCPS network. FCPS does not control the content or relevancy of these pages: Native American Webquest for Second Grade
    Native Americans

    Page of links created by FCPS School Based Technology Specialist Linda Gaudreault. Virginia Indians - Past and Present
    This is page from James Madison University with many links to information about Native Americans in Virginia First Americans
    Dine`, Muscogee, Tlingit, Lakota, Iroquis

    Very well done site with good information and an inviting interface (although the colors are light - it has great "mouseovers." ) There is an interesting activity matrix with Shockwave games. (Your classroom computers will support Shockwave - go ahead and download it.) American Indian Kids
    A brief history from a child's point of view. There are not a lot of words on each page. It is an interesting point of view. There aren't any outside links. Homes of the Past: Explore a Longhouse
    This is an interesting site from the Royal Ontario Musuem. Native American Website for Children
    This is a graphic heavy (but good graphics) site with not much text. What there is is easy reading. A great resource for younger kids. (K-2).

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