NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURE cheyenne Chickaloon Chickasaw Chicora Chicorra Waccamaw Chinook Chilcotin ChippewaChoctaw Chitimacha native People of the indians of the Southwest http://www.greatdreams.com/native.htm
Extractions: 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:
Native American Canadian First Nation Social Studies native Americans American indians / First Nations Social Studies And understandthe religions of the Blackfoot indians and the cheyenne, who Kachinas http://www.archaeolink.com/native_americans_american_indian_general_resources.ht
Extractions: Native American s American Indians / First Nations Social Studies General Resources Home To General Resources - Africa, African Anthropology To General Resources - Australia Aboriginal People To General Resources - Native Americans To African Tribal Resources To Native American Tribal Resources To Native South Americans To Indigenous Asian General Resources To Anthropology General Index Native Americans - Canada/US General resources - Native Americans/First Nations Lesson Plans By peoples, tribes, associations Abenaki Social Studies Acolapissa Social Studies Acoma Pueblo ( Sky City ) Social Studies Alabama-Coushatta Social Studies ... Zuni Pueblo Social Studies By Regions Eastern Woodland page 1 Eastern Woodland page 2 Northern Plains page 1 Northern Plains page 2 ... Pacific Northwest page2 Special Pages Native Americans in the Military Métis Native Americans By State Alabama Indian Tribes Alaska Indian Tribes Arizona Indian Tribes Arkansas Indian Tribes ... Wyoming Indian Tribes First Nations by Province and Territory Alberta British Columbia General Resources Manitoba ... Yukon 500 Nations This is a website jam packed with news about Native Americans. You will find history, anthropology, current events, even casino news, just about everything you can imagine relating to Native Americans. You will find information broken down by US states and Canadian Provinces. - illustrated - From 500 Nations -
Upper Plains Sites native amercan and First Nations Community The cheyenne River Sioux TribeWild Horses american Indian and Alaska native (AIAN) Date and Links http://www.bluecloud.org/upperplainslinks.html
Extractions: see Note below authors name The Standing Rock Sioux Nation http://www.standingrock.org/ http://www.standingrock.org/government.htm http://www.mnisose.org/profiles/strock.htm http://travelsd.com/history/sioux/srock.asp ... http://www.fema.gov/regions/viii/tribal/standingrockbg.shtm Sitting Bull College http://www.sittingbull.edu/aboutus/transportation/ http://www.anmsi.org/committees/internet_conn/sitting_bull_solicitation.pdf Fort Mandan Foundation http://www.fortmandan.com/ Dreams of the Great Earth Changers http://www.greatdreams.com/native.htm The Journey Museum http://www.journeymuseum.org/english/ The Crazy Horse Foundation http://www.crazyhorse.org/ An Online Newsletter Celebrating Native Americans http://www.turtletrack.org/ InterTribal Bison Cooperative http://www.intertribalbison.org/ Native Amer[can and First Nations Community http://www.native-american-online.org/ Native Clothing http://www.civilisations.ca/aborig/stones/clothing/clmenu.htm
Native Americans - Internet Resources. Creek indians and other bibliographies. native American Book Centre religion,wisdom of Cherokee, Apache, Navajo, cheyenne, Pueblo, Sioux, Blackfoot http://falcon.jmu.edu/~ramseyil/native.htm
Extractions: Welcome to the Internet School Library Media Center Native American page. You will find bibliographies, directories to pages of individual tribes, history and historical documents, periodicals and general links. The ISLMC is a preview site for teachers, librarians, students and parents. You can search this site, use an index or sitemap . The following sites have useful information on Native Americans. This page revised 1/22/00. NOTE: The Internet is being overwhelmed by viruses and spam. Please protect your computer with appropriate software. Also, many worthwhile sites have "pop-ups" which may change to include content unknown to me. Use preview sites before using with children.
SAIL Ser.1, 5.2B amer. Indian Culture and Research Jour., american Indian Translation Issue, 41 2 (1980), Dorsey, George A. The cheyenne indians The Sun Dance. http://oncampus.richmond.edu/faculty/ASAIL/SAILns/52B.html
Extractions: VI. LITERARY SCHOLARSHIP AND CRITICISM GENERAL Allen, Paula Gunn (Laguna-Sioux). "A Stranger in My Own Life: Alienation in American Indian Prose and Poetry." MELUS , 7:2 (Summer 1980), 3-19. Expanded and revised version of paper which appeared in ASAIL , N.S. 3:1 (Winter 1979), 1-9; 3:2 (Spring 1979), 16-23. Analysis of alienation theme in broad range of contemporary poetry and in the fiction of N. Scott Momaday, Leslie Marmon Silko, and James Welch. Baker, Nora Baker. "The Bear's Son Folk Tale in When the Legends Die and House Made of Dawn." Western American Literature , 12:4 (Winter 1978), 275-87. Interesting analysis of how this motif from European and Asian folk tales provides a structural framework for the novels by Hal Borland and N. Scott Momaday. Beidler, Peter G. "Animals and Human Development in the Contemporary American Indian Novel." Western American Literature , 14:2 (Summer 1979), 133-48. Discusses N. Scott Momaday's House Made of Dawn , Welch's Winter in the Blood, and Silko's Ceremony.
Choctaw Choctaw indians Choctaw Treaties Flying Freedman Web Site native Land native Studies Departments Indian Student Organizations of all native amer http://saint-johns-brunswick.pvt.k12.me.us/student/projects/Indians/choctaw.htm
Oberlin College Conservatory Library CanadianIndian folklore. FG 3502. 770.1 A3 C3 vol. 1-3. Chants native Am.Church of 770.1 A3 H3. Healing Songs of amer. indians. FE 4251. 770.1 A3 M56 http://www.oberlin.edu/faculty/rknight/LPcollection/Lists/6a.Nativeam.html
Extractions: Be sure to ask for them. Call Number Title Company Number American Indian Ceremonial and War Dances Everest 3336 American Indians of Southwest FW 8850 American Indian Music of the Southwest FE 4420 Am. Ind. Music of Choctaw Cent. HS. USR 6763 Anth N. Amer. Indian/Eskimo music FE 4541 Auth. Mus of American Indian Canadian-Indian folklore FG 3502 770.1 A3 C3 vol. 1-3 Chants: Native Am. Church of N. America ARP 6063 Dances of N. American Indians FD 6510 ARP 6052 Healing Songs of Amer. Indians FE 4251 KCMS 1204-1205 Northwest Puget Sound AAFS L34 Powwow Songs: Mus of the Plain Indians NW 343 Songs/Dances Gr. Lakes Indians: Algonquians FE 4003 Songs and Dances of the Eastern Indians: Medicine Spring and Allegany NW 337 Songs of Earth, Water, Fire, Sky NW 246 Songs of the Warm Springs Indian Reservation Canyon 6123 Sounds Ind.America: Plains/Southwest
Encyclopedia: Cree native americans (also indians, Aboriginal Peoples, american indians, as indians, native Canadians, Aboriginal americans, amerindians, or Aboriginals, http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Cree
Extractions: Related Articles People who viewed "Cree" also viewed: First Nation Ted Moses Cree language Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics ... Assembly of First Nations What's new? Our next offering Latest newsletter Student area Lesson plans Recent Updates You forgot Poland Yasunori Matsumoto Yarmouth, Nova Scotia YM ... More Recent Articles Top Graphs Richest Most Murderous Most Taxed Most Populous ... More Stats Updated 1 day 8 hours 18 minutes ago. Other descriptions of Cree Cree camp near Vermilion, Alberta The Cree are an indigenous people of North America whose people range from the Rocky Mountains to the Atlantic Ocean in both Canada and the United States . They now constitute the largest group of First Nations people in Canada, and are referred to as Native Americans in the United States. Their Cree language is an Algonquian language , and was once the most widely spoken in northern North America. However, currently not all Crees are fluent in it, and English or French are more commonly used. Vermilion is a district located in the eastern part of Central Alberta, Canada. ...
Encyclopedia: Native American native americans â also indians, american indians, First Nations, also beenknown as indians, native Canadians, Aboriginal americans, amerindians, http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Native-American
Extractions: Related Articles People who viewed "Native American" also viewed: Native american American Native American Indian Native America ... Native American pottery What's new? Our next offering Latest newsletter Student area Lesson plans Recent Updates You forgot Poland Yasunori Matsumoto Yarmouth, Nova Scotia YM ... More Recent Articles Top Graphs Richest Most Murderous Most Taxed Most Populous ... More Stats Updated 69 days 8 hours 3 minutes ago. Other descriptions of Native American A Sioux in traditional dress including war bonnet, about 1908 Native Americans Indians American Indians First Nations First Peoples Indigenous Peoples of America Aboriginal Peoples Aboriginal Americans Amerindians Amerind Native Canadians indigenous to the Americas , living there prior to European colonization . This term encompasses a large number of distinct tribes states , and ethnic groups , many of them still enduring as political communities. A comprehensive tribal list can be found under " Classification of Native Americans Download high resolution version (818x1024, 125 KB) Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ...
Native American Research MOUND BUILDERS; N. amer. Settlements East and Southwest BLACKFOOT, cheyenne.TIPIS Plains Indian Housing http//www.kstrom.net/isk/maps/houses/tipi. http://members.carol.net/~josh/natam.html
Extractions: Lots of information about the Anasazi (Pueblo) people. Artifacts Click on the photos of the artifacts for more information. BLM Colorado-AHC:Ancestral Pueblos of the Anasazi Anasazi http://www.anthro.mankato.msus.edu/cultural/northamerica/anasazi.html Defiance House http://www.nps.gov/glca/dhouse.htm MOUND BUILDERS N. Amer. Settlements East and Southwest http://www.anthro.mankato.msus.edu/prehistory/settlements/regions/east_and_southeast.html Ancient Architects of the Mississippi http://www.cr.nps.gov/aad/feature/
Extractions: AllRefer Channels :: Health Yellow Pages Reference Weather September 19, 2005 Medicine People Places History ... Maps Web AllRefer.com You are here : AllRefer.com Reference North America Gazetteer United States ... South Dakota South Dakota, South Dakota (SD), United States Place Name South Dakota Place Status (Type) state Capital is PIERRE Population Location South Dakota, United States, North America Latitude unknown Longitude unknown South Dakota Pierre . The largest cities are Sioux Falls and Rapid City Wounded Knee Armstrong Aurora Beadle Bennett Bon Homme Brookings Brown Brule Buffalo Butte Campbell Charles Mix Clark Clay Codington Corson Custer Davison Day Deuel Dewey Douglas Edmunds Fall River Faulk Grant Gregory Haakon Hamlin Hand Hanson Harding Hughes Hutchinson Hyde Jackson Jerauld Jones Kingsbury Lake Lawrence Lincoln Lyman McCook McPherson Marshall Meade Mellette Miner Minnehaha Moody Pennington Perkins Potter Roberts Sanborn Shannon Spink Stanley Sully Todd Tripp Turner Union Walworth Yankton Ziebach.,
Extractions: AllRefer Channels :: Health Yellow Pages Reference Weather September 19, 2005 Medicine People Places History ... Maps Web AllRefer.com You are here : AllRefer.com Reference North America Gazetteer United States ... Oklahoma Oklahoma, Oklahoma (OK), United States Place Name Oklahoma Place Status (Type) state Capital is OKLAHOMA CITY Population Location Oklahoma, United States, North America Latitude unknown Longitude unknown Oklahoma Oklahoma City Tulsa Great Plains Indian Territory ... Chisholm Trail Dust Bowl of the 1930s. Farm tenancy increased in the 1920s, and in both the E and W the farms tended more and more to be held by large interests and to be consolidated in large blocks. A great number of tenant farmers were compelled to leave their dust-stricken farms and went W as migrant laborers; the tragic plight of these Okies, many of whom took Route 66 (the Highway of the Okies) to Calif., is the theme of John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath Adair Alfalfa Atoka Beaver ... Cherokee Choctaw Cimarron Cleveland Coal Comanche ... Murray Muskogee Noble Nowata Okfuskee Oklahoma Okmulgee Osage Ottawa Pawnee Payne Pittsburg Pontotoc Pottawatomie ... Tillman Tulsa Wagoner Washington Washita Woods Woodward.
Extractions: MC #147 NOTE: Portions of this collection are currently being microfilmed. Please consult with an Archivist to confirm the availability of boxes before visiting the library. Size : 175 linear feet (411 archival boxes, 3 half-size boxes, 11 photographic boxes, and 7 oversize boxes). Provenance : The AAIA donated its Archives to Princeton University Library in 1971. The records of the Association have been transferred to the Library on an irregular basis over the years. The material in Series 3 is distinct in that it consists of the personal files of five men and women who played prominent roles in the Association. The AAIA-related papers of Henry S. Forbes were donated in 1970, those of Hildegarde B. Forbes in 1987, those of Oliver La Farge in 1986, those of Corinna Lindon S mith in 1979, and those of Alden Stevens in 1971. Each of these donations was made by the family of the papers' creator or, in the case of Mrs. Forbes, by the creator herself. Restrictions : Under the terms of an access agreement concluded with the AAIA in 1996, the records of the AAIA are closed for a period of 20 years following the date of their creation. For practical purposes, any folder containing material dated within the past 20 years is deemed to be closed. Exceptions to this rule are as follows:
PERCEVAL PRESS - We Recommend - Book List It seems that each generation of whites and indians will have to read and God Is Red A native View of Religion by Deloria Vine, Jr. North amer Press http://www.percevalpress.com/rec_booklist.html
Extractions: On a hot June morning in 1975, a desperate shoot-out between FBI agents and Native Americans near Wounded Knee, South Dakota, left an Indian and two federal agents dead. Behind this violent chain of events lie issues of great complexity and profound historical resonance, brilliantly explicated by Peter Matthiessen in this controversial book. In a comprehensive history of the desperate Indian efforts to maintain their traditions, Matthiessen reveals the Lakota tribe's long struggle with the U.S. government, from Red Cloud's War and Little Big Horn in the nineteenth century to the shameful discrimination that led to the new Indian wars of the 1970s. Moon of Popping Trees by Rex Alan Smith The last significant clash of arms in the American Indian Wars took place on December 29, 1890, on the banks of Wounded Knee Creek in South Dakota. Wounded Knee has excited contradictory accounts and heated emotions. To answer whether it was a battle or a massacre, Rex Alan Smith goes further into the historical records and cultural traditions of the combatants than anyone has gone before.
BHH Selected Videos cheyenne indians of the Plains Optional. (2002 New Dimension Media) The native Americans Recommended for teacher background http://www.bringinghistoryhome.org/genres/selectVideos.html
Extractions: BHH Selected Videos The selected videos are categorized as follows: ÒRecommended for the unitÓ Ð These videos are embedded in the BHH lesson plan activities for student viewing in the classroom. ÒRecommended for teacher backgroundÓ Ð These videos are resources for teacher background; teachers may view them to become familiar with historic themes relevant to the units. ÒOptionalÓ Ð These videos may be substituted when recommended videos are unavailable, or may be used as additional teacher or classroom resources. Kindergarten The History of Me Me and My Family Ð Recommended for unit (Nickelodeon Jr, 2001, Distributed by TeacherÕs Video Company) I Like Being Me Ð Optional for unit (1997, Distributed by TeacherÕs Video Company) Children Long Ago All About Families Ð Recommended for unit (1999, Altschul) st Grade My History at School ArthurÕs Best School Days Optional (2001, Distributed by TeacherÕs Video) What I did at school Optional (Nickelodeon, 2001, Distributed by TeacherÕs Video Company)
Timeline American Indians 1878 cheyenne indians fled to the Powder River home in Wyoming. American Indianand Alaska native Heritage Month originated in 1915 when the president http://timelines.ws/countries/AMERIND_B.HTML
Extractions: 750 Native peoples in southwest Colorado started building stone houses above ground, first one-story, then two. Ruins of these are scattered over the landscape and have the look of ones the Pueblo Indians-Hopi, Zuni and others of the Southwest live in today. They added beans, an important source of protein, to their diets, and began making simple grayware pots. They had bows and arrows.
Timeline American Indians By Tribe c1750 The Blackfeet indians were among the last native American tribes to acquirehorses. Crook destroyed cheyenne and OgallalaSioux Indian camps. http://timelines.ws/countries/AMERIND_A.HTML
American Indians/Bibliography The compilers searched for native American(s) or American Indian(s) or cheyenne, Wyo. US Dept. of the Interior, US Geological Survey ; Denver, Colo. http://www.usda.gov/news/pubs/indians/bios.htm
Extractions: National Agricultural Library Native Americans: A Resource Guide , by Laura R. Nauta and Shirley King Evans, published by the National Agricultural Library in 1992. The last line of each citation refers to the call numbers in the NAL system. If you want to obtain a document listed in this bibliography, contact your local, University or other library. If they do not have the particular item, they may be able to obtain it for you on inter-library loan. Ahrens, Robert J., and United States. Natural Resources Conservation Service. Soil Survey of Hopi Area, Arizona, Parts of Coconino and Navajo Counties. [Washington, D.C.] : The Service, [1996] 1 Case (1 v., 53 folded p. of Plates).
Great Basin Societies Main groupings of Great Basin indians noted in ethnographic literature Main ceremonial activity centered around shamanism (widespread in native amer.) http://courses.washington.edu/anth310/basin.htm
Extractions: GREAT BASIN INDIANS INTRODUCTION Great Basin = large area of intermountain West, bounded by Sierra Nevada on W, Rockies on E, Blue & Bitterroot Mts. on N, and Colorado Plateau on S; termed "basin" because of shape, interior drainage Overall, extremely arid region (5-7" yr in many locales) with low resource density (both plants and animals rare) and very erratic resource availability Environmental situation varies tremendously over very short distances, due to large changes in topography ("vertical zonation") and sporadic surface water (rivers, lakes = rare but important oases) These env. features, in conjunction with pre-industrial technology, strongly shaped Basin Indian society (as discussed further below) Main groupings of Great Basin Indians noted in ethnographic literature = Western Shoshone, Northern Shoshone, Northern Paiute, Southern Paiute, Ute, Gosiute, Bannock, and Washo (see map shown on slide in lecture) These named units = ethnolinguistic groups; were not organized into tribes in sociopolitical sense until after Euroamerican contact All but Washo (Lake Tahoe area) spoke closely related Numic languages (Uto-Aztecan family) Most of my lecture material based on Steward's ethnography of W. Shoshone (central Basin, arguably the least influenced by other culture areas or EuroAmer. contact in early historic period), but will periodically note regional variation and contrasts (e.g., Owens Valley Paiute)
International Masters Of Gaming Law ... Native American Gaming Feinstein, Marc S., Note cheyenne River Sioux Tribe v. Wilkinson, Charles F .American indians, Time and Law native Societies in a Modern http://www.gaminglawmasters.com/bibliography/bibio_native_american_gaming.htm
Extractions: Ahola, Amber J., "'Call It The Revenge Of The Pequots,' Or How American Indian Tribes Can Sue States Under The Indian Gaming Regulatory Act Without Violating The Eleventh Amendment," University of San Francisco Law Review , Vol. 27, Summer, 1993: 907. American Indian Gaming and Gambling: A Bibliography. Monticello , Ill : Vance Bibliographies, Inc. 1991. E 98 .G2 A43 1991 Anders, Gary and Siegel, Donald, "An Economic Analysis of Substitution between Arizona Indian Casinos and the State Lottery," Gaming Law Review , Vol. 2, 1998: 609. Anders, Gary C., "Indian Gaming: Financial and Regulatory Issues," The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science , Vol. 556, March 1998. Anders, Gary C., Siegel, Donald, and Yacoub, Munther. Does Indian Casino Gambling Reduce State Revenues? Evidence From Arizona . Contemporary Economic Policy (July 1998). Bacon, C. Shannon, "The Indian Gaming Regulatory Act: What Congress Giveth, The Court Taketh Away -Seminole Tribe Of Florida V. Florida ," Creighton Law Review , February, 1997: 569. Barnes, Richard L., "Indian Gaming: Congress Sends The Tribes Into A Constitutional Fray, But Did It Intend To?" Mississippi Law Journal , Vol. 64, 1995: 591.