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CHAPTER 7
Peoples of North America
SETTING THE SCENE
Climate and natural resources had profound effects
on the daily life for the first people in North America
 The impact of the environment stretched far beyond
the southwest
 Hundreds of cultural groups emerged in presentday United States and Canada
 Early people lived by hunting, fishing, and gathering
 The success of farming led to large populations and
permanent settlements

EARLY TRIBES
THE DESERT SOUTHWEST---HOHOKAMS









More than 1,000 years ago, fields of corn, beans, and
squash bloomed in the desert southwest
These crops were raised by the Hohokams (“Vanished
Ones”)
To farm the desert, they built complex irrigation systems
The Hohokams lived near the Gila River in present-day
Arizona
They may have acquired skills such as irrigation from
the civilizations of Middle America
They built temple mounds and ball courts
The Hohokams survived until about 1500 AD, when a
drought forced them from their settlements
GILA RIVER
HOHOKAM IRRIGATION DITCHES
THE DESERT SOUTHWEST---ANASAZIS
The best-known society of the southwest was that
of the Anasazi
 They lived in what is known as the Four Corners
region of Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, and Utah
 Between about 900-1300 AD, the Anasazi built
large villages called pueblos (named by the
Spanish)
 Kivas (large underground chambers) were used for
religious ceremonies
 Paintings on walls show their concern with
weather, including storms that might damage crops

FOUR CORNERS REGION
FOUR CORNERS MONUMENT
FOUR CORNERS MONUMENT
FOUR CORNERS MONUMENT
VISITING FOUR STATES AT ONE TIME!!!
ANASAZI PEOPLE
PUEBLO
PUEBLO
THE DESERT SOUTHWEST---ANASAZIS












In the late 1100s, the Anasazi began building housing
complexes in the shadow of canyon walls, where the
cliffs offered protection from raiders
The largest of these cliff dwellings at Mesa Verde, in
present-day Colorado, had over 200 rooms
People had to climb ladders to reach their fields on the
flatlands above or the canyon floor below
In the late 1200s, a long drought forced the Anasazi to
abandon their land
Attacks by Navajos and Apaches may have contributed
further to their decline
Anasazi traditions survive among the Hopis and other
Pueblo Indians of the present-day southwestern U.S.
MESA VERDE
MESA VERDE
MESA VERDE
MESA VERDE
THE MOUND BUILDERS
In the Mississippi and Ohio valleys, other farming
cultures emerged as early as 700 BC
 The Adena and Hopewell peoples left behind giant
earthen mounds
 The Mississippian people also built great earthen
mounds
 Their greatest center, Cahokia in present-day
Illinois, housed as many as 40,000 people by about
1200 AD
 Cahokia boasted at least 60 mounds

MAP OF MOUND BUILDERS
MISSISSIPPIAN TOWN
CAHOKIA MOUNDS
MOUND
CAHOKIA MOUNDS
DIVERSE REGIONAL CULTURES
Modern scholars have identified 10 culture areas in
North America based on the environments in which
people lived: Arctic, Subarctic, Northwest Coast,
California, Great Basin, Plateau, Southwest, Great
Plains, Eastern Woodlands, and Southeast
 In each area, people adapted to geographic
conditions that influenced their ways of life

A FROZEN WORLD
In the frozen north, the Inuits (Eskimos) adapted to
a harsh climate using limited resources of the
frozen land to survive
 Seals and other sea mammals provided them with
food, skins for clothing, bones for needles and
tools, and oil for cooking
 The used kayaks in open waters or dog sleds to
transport goods across ice
 Inuits also constructed igloos, or dome-shaped
homes made from snow and ice

INUITS (ESKIMOS)
KAYAK AND DOGLSEDS
POLAR BEARS
IGLOOS
A LAND OF PLENTY










The people of the Northwest Coast lived in a far richer
environment than the Inuits
Rivers teemed with salmon, and the Pacific Ocean
offered other fish and sea mammals
Hunters tracked deer, wolves, and bears in forests
People built large, permanent villages with homes made
of wood
They traded surplus goods, gaining wealth that was
shared at a potlatch
At this ceremony, which continues in Canada today, a
person of rank and wealth distributes lavish gifts to a
large number of guests
By accepting the gifts, the guests acknowledge the
host’s high status
PACIFIC NORTHWEST TRIBES (WASHINGTON)
CANOE
WILD SALMON
GRILLED SALMON
PACIFIC NORTHWEST NATIVES
THE IROQUOIS LEAGUE
The Iroquois lived in the Eastern Woodlands, which
stretched from the Atlantic Coast to the Great Lakes
 According to Iroquois tradition, the prophet
Dekanawidah urged rival Iroquois nations to stop
their constant wars
 Out of that grew the Iroquois League---an alliance
of five nations who spoke the same language and
shared similar traditions
 Member nations governed their own villages but
met jointly in a council when they needed to
address larger issues

DEKANAWIDAH
IROQUOIS LEAGUE

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Chapter 7 Peoples of North America

  • 1. CHAPTER 7 Peoples of North America
  • 2. SETTING THE SCENE Climate and natural resources had profound effects on the daily life for the first people in North America  The impact of the environment stretched far beyond the southwest  Hundreds of cultural groups emerged in presentday United States and Canada  Early people lived by hunting, fishing, and gathering  The success of farming led to large populations and permanent settlements 
  • 4. THE DESERT SOUTHWEST---HOHOKAMS        More than 1,000 years ago, fields of corn, beans, and squash bloomed in the desert southwest These crops were raised by the Hohokams (“Vanished Ones”) To farm the desert, they built complex irrigation systems The Hohokams lived near the Gila River in present-day Arizona They may have acquired skills such as irrigation from the civilizations of Middle America They built temple mounds and ball courts The Hohokams survived until about 1500 AD, when a drought forced them from their settlements
  • 7. THE DESERT SOUTHWEST---ANASAZIS The best-known society of the southwest was that of the Anasazi  They lived in what is known as the Four Corners region of Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, and Utah  Between about 900-1300 AD, the Anasazi built large villages called pueblos (named by the Spanish)  Kivas (large underground chambers) were used for religious ceremonies  Paintings on walls show their concern with weather, including storms that might damage crops 
  • 12. VISITING FOUR STATES AT ONE TIME!!!
  • 16. THE DESERT SOUTHWEST---ANASAZIS       In the late 1100s, the Anasazi began building housing complexes in the shadow of canyon walls, where the cliffs offered protection from raiders The largest of these cliff dwellings at Mesa Verde, in present-day Colorado, had over 200 rooms People had to climb ladders to reach their fields on the flatlands above or the canyon floor below In the late 1200s, a long drought forced the Anasazi to abandon their land Attacks by Navajos and Apaches may have contributed further to their decline Anasazi traditions survive among the Hopis and other Pueblo Indians of the present-day southwestern U.S.
  • 21. THE MOUND BUILDERS In the Mississippi and Ohio valleys, other farming cultures emerged as early as 700 BC  The Adena and Hopewell peoples left behind giant earthen mounds  The Mississippian people also built great earthen mounds  Their greatest center, Cahokia in present-day Illinois, housed as many as 40,000 people by about 1200 AD  Cahokia boasted at least 60 mounds 
  • 22. MAP OF MOUND BUILDERS
  • 25. MOUND
  • 27. DIVERSE REGIONAL CULTURES Modern scholars have identified 10 culture areas in North America based on the environments in which people lived: Arctic, Subarctic, Northwest Coast, California, Great Basin, Plateau, Southwest, Great Plains, Eastern Woodlands, and Southeast  In each area, people adapted to geographic conditions that influenced their ways of life 
  • 28. A FROZEN WORLD In the frozen north, the Inuits (Eskimos) adapted to a harsh climate using limited resources of the frozen land to survive  Seals and other sea mammals provided them with food, skins for clothing, bones for needles and tools, and oil for cooking  The used kayaks in open waters or dog sleds to transport goods across ice  Inuits also constructed igloos, or dome-shaped homes made from snow and ice 
  • 33. A LAND OF PLENTY        The people of the Northwest Coast lived in a far richer environment than the Inuits Rivers teemed with salmon, and the Pacific Ocean offered other fish and sea mammals Hunters tracked deer, wolves, and bears in forests People built large, permanent villages with homes made of wood They traded surplus goods, gaining wealth that was shared at a potlatch At this ceremony, which continues in Canada today, a person of rank and wealth distributes lavish gifts to a large number of guests By accepting the gifts, the guests acknowledge the host’s high status
  • 34. PACIFIC NORTHWEST TRIBES (WASHINGTON)
  • 35. CANOE
  • 39. THE IROQUOIS LEAGUE The Iroquois lived in the Eastern Woodlands, which stretched from the Atlantic Coast to the Great Lakes  According to Iroquois tradition, the prophet Dekanawidah urged rival Iroquois nations to stop their constant wars  Out of that grew the Iroquois League---an alliance of five nations who spoke the same language and shared similar traditions  Member nations governed their own villages but met jointly in a council when they needed to address larger issues 