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         Chinook Indians Native Americans:     more detail
  1. Chinook Indians (Native Americans) by Suzanne Morgan Williams, 2003-06
  2. Chinook Indians (Native Peoples) by Pamela Ross, 1998-12
  3. The Chinook Indians: Traders of the Lower Columbia River (Civilization of the American Indian Series) by Robert H. Ruby, John A. Brown, 1988-02
  4. The Chinook (Indians of North America) by Clifford Trafzer, 1989-12
  5. Chinook Texts by Franz Boas, 2008-02-21
  6. The Boy Who Lived with the Seals by Rafe Martin, 1993-04-21
  7. Tribes of Native America - Chinook (Tribes of Native America)
  8. The Chinook People (Native Peoples) by Pamela Ross, 1999-01
  9. People of The Dalles: The Indians of Wascopam Mission (Studies in the Anthropology of North Ame) by Robert Boyd, 1996-04-01
  10. Naked Against the Rain: The People of the Lower Columbia River 1770-1830 by Rick Rubin, 1999-09
  11. When Bear Stole the Chinook
  12. When the River Ran Wild! Indian Traditions on the Mid-Columbia and the Warm Springs Reservation by George W. Sr. Aguilar, 2005-06-30
  13. Circle Within a Circle by Monte Killingsworth, 1994-05-01
  14. Boston Jane: The Claim (Boston Jane) by Jennifer L. Holm, 2004-03

21. Indian Tribes Of The Pacific Northwest American Indian Social Studies
native americans . chinook indians PBS The chinook indians, relatives tothe Clatsop tribe, lived in the Northwest along the banks of the Columbia
http://www.archaeolink.com/indian_tribes_of_the_pacific_nor.htm
Native Americans of the Pacific Northwest Page 1 Home - To Pacific Northwest Indian Tribes Page 2 Native Americans - Canada/US General resources 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 Indian Tribes page 1 Eastern Woodland Indian Tribes page 2 Northern Plains Indian Tribes page 1 Northern Plains Indian Tribes page 2 ... Pacific Northwest Indian Tribes page2 Special Pages Native Americans in the Military Métis On this Page - Cayuse Chehalis Chinook Coeur D'Alene (Schitsu'umsh) ... Muckleshoot Cayuse Cayuse _ Grade 5 students researched and prepared this most excellent report on the Cayuse Indians. The focus is on events surrounding a massacre and the authors have included first hand comments from settlers and trappers. -Illustrated - From Edison Elementary School -
http://tech.wwps.org/Edison/Khaney/Web%20sites%20material/Cayuse_Site/cayuse.htm

Cayuse History
_ Very brief piece of information about this tribe and especially about its connection to horses. - Text only - From the Department of Linguistics, University of Oregon -
http://logos.uoregon.edu/explore/oregon/chistory.html

22. Selected Resources On Columbia Basin Native Americans
The chinook indians Traders of the Lower Columbia River. Index of NativeAmerican resources on the Internet WWW Virtual LibraryAmerican indians.
http://www.lib.pdx.edu/resources/pathfinders/basinmap.html
Selected Resources on Columbia Basin Native Americans
Plateau Map Northwest Coast Map Internet Resources Plateau Map Select a tribal territory to see related print resources. Not all tribal territories are linked. "Plateau: Key to Tribal Territories" Handbook of North American Indians. V.12: Plateau Edited by Deward W. Walker, Jr. Washington: Smithsonian Institution, 1998. Used with permission from the Smithsonian Institution and the Handbook of North American Indians.
Northwest Coast Map Select a tribal territory to see related print resources. Not all tribal territories are linked. Please note, territorial boundaries in this map represent generalized boundaries and should not be taken to represent authoritative boundaries of territory. Please consult "Northwest Coast : Key to Tribal Territories" Handbook of North American Indians. V.7: Plateau Edited by Wayne Suttles. Washington: Smithsonian Institution, 1990. p. ix Portion of "NorthwestCoast: Key to Tribal Territories" Handbook of North American Indians. V.7: Edited by Wayne Suttles. Washington: Smithsonian Institution, 1990. Used with permission from the Smithsonian Institution and the Handbook of North American Indians.

23. Selected Resources On Columbia Basin Native Americans
Oregon indians II American Indian Ethnohistory indians of the Northwest. The chinook indians Traders of the Lower Columbia River.
http://www.lib.pdx.edu/instruction/basinmap.html
Selected Resources on Columbia Basin Native Americans
Plateau Map Northwest Coast Map Internet Resources Plateau Map Select a tribal territory to see related print resources. Not all tribal territories are linked. "Plateau: Key to Tribal Territories" Handbook of North American Indians. V.12: Plateau Edited by Deward W. Walker, Jr. Washington: Smithsonian Institution, 1998. Used with permission from the Smithsonian Institution and the Handbook of North American Indians.
Northwest Coast Map Select a tribal territory to see related print resources. Not all tribal territories are linked. Please note, territorial boundaries in this map represent generalized boundaries and should not be taken to represent authoritative boundaries of territory. Please consult "Northwest Coast : Key to Tribal Territories" Handbook of North American Indians. V.7: Plateau Edited by Wayne Suttles. Washington: Smithsonian Institution, 1990. p. ix Portion of "NorthwestCoast: Key to Tribal Territories" Handbook of North American Indians. V.7: Edited by Wayne Suttles. Washington: Smithsonian Institution, 1990. Used with permission from the Smithsonian Institution and the Handbook of North American Indians.

24. Native American Authors: Chinook Tribe
This page on the tribe is part of a native North American Culturesonline PBS Online Lewis and Clark native americans chinook indians......
http://www.ipl.org/div/natam/bin/browse.pl/t143
the Internet Public Library
Native American Authors: Browsing by Tribe
Chinook Tribe
Online resources about the Chinook Tribe
Chinook
Author: Andrew Hedlund
Type: tribal
Description: This page on the tribe is part of a Native North American Cultures online exhibit created by Minnesota State University - Mankato.
URL: http://www.anthro.mankato.msus.edu/cultural/northamerica/chinook.html Discover Cathlapotle!
Author: Darin Molnar
Type: tribal
Description: "Discover Cathlapotle!, (is) an environmental and heritage education World Wide Web Home Page which focuses on
the cultural and natural history of the Chinook people. " It is an educational project produced by an anthropology graduate student at Portland State University. The site provides history, culture and current issues facing the Chinook, and an account of the anthropological site of Cathlapotle, a Chinook town visited by Lewis and Clark.
URL: http://www-adm.pdx.edu/user/anth/cathla/default.htm PBS Online - Lewis and Clark: Native Americans: Chinook Indians
Author: PBS Online Type: tribal Description: Background information on the Chinook Indians, and Lewis and Clark's encounters with them.

25. Native Americans
American indians of the Pacific Northwest this Library of Congress exhibit focuses on native American Navigator Information about Nez Perce, chinook,
http://www.chenowith.k12.or.us/tech/subject/social/natam.html
Native Americans
Native Americans of Oregon Native American Shelters Indian Homes Oregon Native American Home Models by Ms. Wilks' 4th Grade Class ...
  • The First Americans a site designed by middle school teachers with facts, pictures, and links about the cultures of the North American Indian tribes. American Indians of the Pacific Northwest this Library of Congress exhibit focuses on Native Americans from two cultural areas of the Pacific Northwest, the Northwest Coast and Plateau. View their large collection of photos and text descriptions and step into another culture. First Nations' Histories concise histories of native tribes from the U.S. and Canada. This is a work in progress. Map - "Location of the Indian Nations..." prior to European Settlement, Index of Native American Resources on the Net - extensive categorized links to information on the web. Native American Shelters read about and see pictures of the different structures Native Americans used for shelter. from Carnegie Mellon University American Indian Studies From the California State University, Long Beach Liberal Arts Department. Has links to sites about the culture and history of people indigenous to North and South America. Some excellent art sites are listed.

26. Native Americans Of The Willamette Valley, A Bibliography
The Kalapuya indians native americans, French Canadians and Intermarriage (mainlygenealogy) The chinook Jargon indians of the Northwest Coast
http://www.usgennet.org/alhnorus/ahorclak/indiobiblio.html
Native Americans of the Willamette Valley, a Bibliography of Books and Links Ames, Kenneth M. and Herbert G.D. Maschner, Archaeology of the Northwest Coast: Dec. 15, 1995 (Draft for Anth 364, Portland State University), published in spiral bind by Clean Copy, Portland, OR. Available Spring 1999 by Ames and Maschner, Peoples of the Northwest Coast: Their Archeology and Pre-History, Thames Hudson, publisher. Becham, Stephen Dow, The Indians of Western Oregon: This Land Was Theirs, 1977, Arago Books, Coos Bay, OR. Berreman, Joel V., "Tribal Distribution in Oregon," Memoirs of the American Anthropological Association: 1969, Menasha, WI, printed by Kraus Reprint Co., NY. Buan, Carolyn M., and Richard Lewis, editors, The First Oregonians, 1991, Oregon Council for the Humanities, Portland, OR. Ruby, Robert H. and John A. Brown, Indians of the Pacific Northwest: 1981, University of Oklahoma Press, Norman. And, also by Ruby and Brown, A Guide to the Indian Tribes of the Pacific Northwest, 1986, University of Oklahoma Press, London and Norman. Sanders, Judith A., Mary K. Weber, and David R. Brauner, Willamette Mission Archeological Project (Phase III Assessment): 1983, (also Anthropology Northwest: Number 1), for the State Historic Preservation Office, by the Department of Anthropology, Oregon State University, Corvalis, pp. 42-48.

27. Native Americans, French Canadians And Intermarriage
native americans. Snapshot View of Indian Tribes in Oregon Today About 90 per American indians of the Pacific Northwest The chinook Jargon At Grand
http://www.usgennet.org/alhnorus/ahorclak/indiancensus.html
Native Americans, French Canadians, and Intermarriage Early records present a special challenge for people researching Native American or mixed-race ancestors. Prior to 1870, excepting head-counts on reservations, censuses enumerated only whites, and usually only adult males at that. Until 1900 the US Census failed to accurately reflect the names and numbers of Oregon's Native American population. Censuses taken to record "on" and "off" reservation Indians also omitted many tribal members; until quite late in the 19th Century, many people easily traveled between reservations and more familiar homelands. The following sources are especially useful for the names of Metis (part-Indian/ part-white, usually French Canadian) people as well as for Native Oregonians associated with the missions or the fur trade:
Hudson's Bay Company Archives
Mountain Men and the Fur Trade Jesuit Oregon Province Archives Catholic Church Records Harriet Munick began publishing the Catholic Church Records from the Archdiocese of Portland in Oregon in 1972. She completed seven volumes, indexing some 14 parishes. This website offers a cumulative index to all seven books under the categories of baptisms, marriages and deaths. The database includes over 22,000 names and is searchable. Catholic Church Records of the Pacific Northwest Munick's Vancouver volumes, a record of baptisms, marriages, and burials during travel to Ft. Vancouver (1838), at Vancouver (1838-1844), at St. James Church (1842-1856) and at Stellamaris Mission (1848-1860) are indexed for biographies by Connie Lenzen . The Church records were kept by priests Francois Norbert Blanchet and Modeste Demers who traveled from Canada to Oregon with the Hudson's Bay Company and began their missionary work with a service at Ft. Vancouver.

28. Film Questions Native Homelands Along The L C Trail Tribal
While the native americans have been portrayed to be people of whom the white people For the chinook indians, what was the role of women in society?
http://www.trailtribes.org/films/questions.html
Native Homelands DVD Film Questions Tribal Homelands:
2. Homelands of the Blackfeet
3. Homelands of the Shoshone
4. Homelands of the Salish
5. Homelands of the Shaptin-speaking tribes of the Columbia Plateau
6. Homelands of the Upper Chinookan Tribes
7. Homelands of the Lower Chinookan Tribes Questions for teaching purposes: 1. Why was the beaver such a significant and revered animal among the Native American communities? 2. While the Native Americans have been portrayed to be people of whom the white people were afraid, from the Native American perspective, why was this the case? According to Narcisse Blood, what were the Native Americans simply trying to do? 3. How did the Salish Indians greet Lewis and Clark? In what conditions did the Salish find the members of the expedition to be upon meeting them? 4. For the Nez Perce Indians, when is the New Year and why is it so important? 5. According to Armand Minthorn, how do the Native American tribes keep their past a part of their everyday life? 6. What was unique about the sources of food for the Wasco Indians, and why was salmon so important to them?

29. John Day Fossil Beds NM: Native Americans
Bibliography. indians of Eastern Oregon by Kathyrn Lee The Upper chinooklived on most chinook territory and were the only chinook east of The Cascades.
http://www.nps.gov/joda/lee/lee.htm
AMERICAN INDIANS CONTENTS
Chinookan
Sahaptian Shoshonean Salishan ... Bibliography Indians of Eastern Oregon
by Kathyrn Lee CHINOOKAN Wasco-Wishram and Watlala
The speakers of the Chinookan linguistic stock stretched from the mouth of the Columbia River to around the region of Celilo Falls near The Dalles, Oregon. The Upper Chinook lived on most Chinook territory and were the only Chinook east of The Cascades. The Wasco on the Oregon side of the Columbia and the closely related Wishram on the Washington side were the easternmost of the Upper Chinook. They lived east to Celilo Falls and the Five Mile Rapids area. More anthropological study has been done on the Wishram than the Wasco, and much information about the latter is inferred from the former (French 1961:339). Below the Wasco, from Hood River to The Cascades, was the Watlala (Barry 1927:53) or Hood River of which little is written. The Wasco-Wishram were intermediate between the Plateau and Northwest Coast cultural areas. They maintained trading partnerships with both Northwest Coast groups and those of the Plateau. From the Klamath they obtained slaves that were raided from northern California, from the east they received skins and Plains traits, from the west seafood and shells, and they traded with peoples from the north. As middlemen in a vast trade network they were extremely important. Salmon was the staple item of trade and their main food source. Perhaps the most excellent spot on the Columbia River for these anadromous fish was at Celilo Falls in the midst of the Wasco-Wishram.

30. Whitney Holt
The chinook indians, relatives of the Clatsop tribe, were skilled craftsmen “The native americans had lived in the Columbia River area for an estimated
http://www2.ups.edu/faculty/wkupinse/ENGL132AFA04HistDrafts/Whitney.htm
Whitney Holt
The Columbia and Sandy Rivers
How We Use Them and Abuse Them
As rain falls from dense gray clouds, a single drop is deposited atop the “high slopes of Mt. Hood”. Coaxed by gravity, a small stream is born and trickles down the face of a potential volcano. More drops begin to accumulate and a river transformed flows through “rugged canyons, and observes over time the “disintegration and regeneration of huge conifer forests.”
A path blazed by lava flows and flood waters thousand of years ago has been designated the Columbia River by Robert Gray, named for his ship while exploring in 1782, in what later became the Oregon Territory and finally, the state of Oregon.
Prior to Robert Gray’s westward expedition the only inhabitants of the Pacific Northwest were Native American Indian Tribes as. The Chinook Indian Tribe is recorded as having lived alongside the Columbia River, additionally the Sandy River, a tributary of the Columbia, for upwards of 9,000 years. The Chinook Indians, relatives of the Clatsop tribe, were skilled craftsmen and eager fishermen and planters. Relying on the Columbia River for a large quantity of their food they crafted exquisite canoes from the trunks of Western Red Cedar Trees. Hundreds of years ago the basins of the Sandy and Columbia Rivers were laden with Steelhead trout, Coho and Chinook salmon. The Chinook Indians would use nets and spears to capture the magnificent river creatures in order to consume them, whether it was to be eaten fresh or preserved for later in the season.

31. - The Creation Of Chinook Indians -Native American Indian Tribes - Over 1,200 Ar
American Indian culture and traditions, the study of American Indian languages,native american history from the tribal perspective, native arts and crafts,
http://www.aaanativearts.com/article244.html

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32. Native Americans - American Indians - The First People Of America; History Of Na
An Explanation of the Terms Indian and native American native Americanssometimes use the term Indian or American Indian to describe themselves.
http://www.nativeamericans.com/
Native Americans - American Indians - The First People of America; History of Native American Tribes
Tribute To A Hero Lt. John F. Kennedy receives the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps medal for heroic conduct from Capt. Frederic L. Conklin June 12, 1944. JFK used his father's connections to get assigned to active duty. Says Dallek, "He was determined to get into combat. It was part of the culture at the time, patriotism. But he was heroic in doing that." Listen to the Legend of the White Buffalo Where Will Our Children Live...
A lonesome warrior stands in fear of what the future brings,
he will never hear the beating drums or the songs his brothers sing.
Our many nations once stood tall and ranged from shore to shore
but most are gone and few remain and the buffalo roam no more.

33. Homework Help--Countries & Native Peoples--NativeAmericans In History
American Historical Images on File The native American Experience A basicreport on the chinook indians from a student at Westside Elementary School in
http://www.kcls.org/hh/nativeamericans.cfm
Library Services Find Your Library Ask a Librarian Library Cards Reserve a PC ... eBooks Reading Book Alert Book Clubs eBooks-Audio eBooks-Text ... TeenZone Library Resources ESL/Literacy New Music Traveling Library Center Special Collections ... Search/Site Map About KCLS Board of Trustees Friends Foundation KCLS Employment ... Email This
Search the Web with Google Search KCLS Homework Help
Native Americans in History General Regions Tribes/Cultures General
American Historical Images on File: The Native American Experience

From California State University, Long Beach this site provides links to a collection of images of Native Americans including narrative descriptions. It is arranged chronologically from the prehistoric period through 1990.
American Indian History and Related Issues

From the American Indian Studies Program at California State University, Long Beach, this site provides links to information about history and culture of Native Americans in North America.
Clothing

From the Canadian Museum of Civilization this site provides images of clothing from native Indian tribes in Canada detailing type, date made, and culture. Tribes include Haida, Inuit, Ojibwa, Tsimshian, and others.

34. Washington Indian Tribes
Early native American Tribes and Culture Areas. $ Ancestry.com Indian Records $ Axwe lapc, people of the Willapa, by the chinook and Quinault indians.
http://www.accessgenealogy.com/native/washington/
Free Genealogy Indian Genealogy Genealogy Records
Biographies

Cemetery Records

Census Records

Free Family Tree Website
...
World Genealogy
Free Indian Records
Index and Database of Rolls

Indian Cemeteries

Indian Census Records

Indian Chiefs
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How to Register
Native American Research Dawes: Getting Organized Indian Tribes of the Frontier Your American Indian Ancestors ... Early Native American Tribes and Culture Areas $ Ancestry.com Indian Records $ 1900 Indian Territory Census Dawes Commission Index, 1896 The Dawes Commission Allotment Cherokee Connections ... Indian Affairs, Laws and Treaties Washington Indian Tribes The above sketch will show enough of the history of most of the tribes in this area, though some details have been added in certain cases (i. e., in connection with the Cayuse, Chilluckittequaw, Chimakum, Chinook, Klickitat, and Yakima. (See Ray, 1932, and Spier and Sapir, 1930.) Cathlamet . Significance unknown. Also called: Guas mas, or Guithlamethl, by the Clackamas.

35. Oregon Indian Tribes
Early native American Tribes and Culture Areas. $ Ancestry.com Indian Records $ Cascade indians, the popular English name. Gila xicatck, by the chinook.
http://www.accessgenealogy.com/native/oregon/
Free Genealogy Indian Genealogy Genealogy Records
Biographies

Cemetery Records

Census Records

Free Family Tree Website
...
World Genealogy
Free Indian Records
Index and Database of Rolls

Indian Cemeteries

Indian Census Records

Indian Chiefs
...
How to Register
Native American Research Dawes: Getting Organized Indian Tribes of the Frontier Your American Indian Ancestors ... Early Native American Tribes and Culture Areas $ Ancestry.com Indian Records $ 1900 Indian Territory Census Dawes Commission Index, 1896 The Dawes Commission Allotment Cherokee Connections ... Indian Affairs, Laws and Treaties Oregon Indian Tribes The history of the Oregon Indians was similar to that of the Indians of Washington. The coast tribes seem to have been affected little or not at all by the settlements of the Spaniards in California, and those of the interior were influenced only in slightly greater measure by them through the introduction of the horse. Nor were these tribes reached so extensively by the employees of the great fur companies. Contact with such advance agents of civilization was principally along the valley of the Columbia River, and Astoria will always be remembered as bearing witness to the transient attempts of the American Fur Company to establish a permanent trading organization in this region under the American flag. As in the case of Washington, Oregon and its tribes were first brought to the acquaintance of our Eastern States in an intimate way by the expedition of Lewis and Clark in 1805-6.

36. Native Americans
Indian Stories How native americans Saw Their World Disappear chinook (PacificNorthwest) The chinook Trade Jargon Introduction CHOCTAW
http://www.teacheroz.com/Native_Americans.htm
Updated July 19, 2003
PRIMARY DOCUMENTS

Treaties Between the United States and Native Americans

The Avalon Project : Statutes of the United States Concerning Native Americans

World History Archives: Indigenous Peoples of the Americas

KAPPLER'S INDIAN AFFAIRS: LAWS AND TREATIES
...
IMAGES: The Illustrating Traveler: Customs of the Country

More primary documents are available within some of the sites listed below.
Alphabetical Listing of Reservations

THIS WEEK IN NORTH "AMERICAN INDIAN" HISTORY by PHIL KONSTANTIN

Native Ways..A journey through modern Native America
Encyclopedia Smithsonian: Native American Resources ... Linkpage: Native Web Pages Listings For info on the Maya, Inca, Aztec and other Central and South American native cultures, please visit my Meso and Latin America page. NATIVE AMERICANS - LEGISLATION - ISSUES - AGENCIES CODETALK: Code Talk is the official website of HUD's ONAP Legislation Affecting the American Indian Community Legislation Impacting American Indians American Indian Liaison Office ... American Indian Gambling and Casino Information Center TIMELINES TIMELINE: Native American History Native American Timeline TIMELINE: Canadian St. Lawrence River Valley Native Tribes

37. Oregon Zoo Conservation: Native American History
The Condor and native American History The Chehalis and chinook indians havea story about the Thunderbird saying it originated out of a little whale.
http://www.oregonzoo.org/Condors/NativeAmericanHistory.htm

Oregon Zoo - Portland, OR - www.oregonzoo.org
Visit Us About Our Zoo Animals ... Get Involved Oregon Zoo's California Condors
Condor Home
Fall and Rise History Recovery Program ... Videos You are here: Home Condors The Condor and Native American History
    The Thunderbird is used in one form or another by most northwest tribes. It was believed that it brought storms, rain, lightning, and thunder to the people. While each tribe interpreted it a little differently, it was used in art and decorations as a way to protect individuals and tribes from evil spirits.
    The Thunderbird was usually a friend to humans, a benevolent spirit seen as the source of wisdom. The Kwakiutl said the Thunderbird taught them how to build houses.
    • The Wasco tribe along the Columbia River has always revered condors, believing them capable of protecting humans against natural disasters such as storms. They used to raise chicks in the villages to adulthood, and used their feathers in ceremony. They also have designs representing them on their basketry.

38. Indian Legend - Native American Sites Of Interest
Oklahoma and native American Microfilm The native North americans Links More on chinook Jargon chinook Jargon History chinook and Wisham Indian
http://www.indianlegend.com/links.htm
HOME ALGONQUIN CALIFORNIA CHEROKEE ... FORUM
NATIVE AMERICAN SITES OF INTEREST
Contact: webmaster@indianlegend.com
Design and layout © 2003 http://www.indianlegend.com All legends have been
edited from historical documents and are believed to be in the public domain.
Last modified: May 13, 2003

39. Native Americans
Easier native americans, sometimes called American indians, First, visitsites like native American Indian Powwows for the Beginner and Pow wow
http://annettelamb.com/42explore/native.htm
The Topic:
Native Americans
This project on Native Americans includes tons of resources - - too many to fit onto just this one page! Connect to the project's three other companion pages for lots more ideas and information: (1) Biographies of Native Americans - A to Z Native American Tribes and Cultures , and (3)
Easier - Native Americans, sometimes called American Indians, are descendants of the first people to live in the Americas. They had been living there for thousands of years before any Europeans arrived. Harder - When Columbus landed in what is now known as the West Indies, he incorrectly thought he had reached the Indies. He called the native people he met Indians. The Indians of the Americas spoke hundreds of different languages, had many varied ways of life, and each group had its own name. Some lived in large cities and others in small villages. Still others kept moving throughout the year, hunting animals and gathering wild plants.
First Americans by K. Martin (Grades 4-8)

40. Teacher Guide To List Of Native American Contributions
Teacher Guide/Resource for the native American Contributions to the Lewis and Clark Nov 20, 1805 (chinook indians give food to the expedition;
http://www.libarts.wsu.edu/history/Lewis_Clark/LCEXP_Act_Contrib_Tchr.htm
Teacher Guide/Resource for the Native American Contributions to the Lewis and Clark Expedition Activity Purpose: This assignment provides students with the opportunity to explore the extent to which the Lewis and Clark expedition was a multicultural endeavor. In addition, this activity seeks to expose students to a perspective on the role played by Native Americans in the Lewis and Clark Expedition that is realistic and often overlooked. Objectives: EALR 1.3 – Examine the influence of culture on US, world and Washington State History; Benchmark 3 – Examine and discuss historical contributions to US society of various individuals and groups from different cultural, racial, and linguistic backgrounds. EALR 2.2 – Analyze historical information; Benchmark 3 – organize and record information, and separate relevant from irrelevant information. EALR 2.3 – Synthesize information and reflect on findings; Benchmark 3 – evaluate information and develop a statement of the significance of the findings, defend own analysis. Historical Background: Although this assignment deals primarily with Pacific Northwest history, you may want to discuss with students the experiences of the Expedition with the Mandan and Hidatsa Indians during the winter of 1804-5, as a means of illustrating the types of aid that Indians provided.

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