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         Native American American Southwest Tribe:     more books (99)
  1. The Ute Indians of Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico by Virginia McConnell Simmons, 2000-10
  2. The Pueblo Revolt of 1680: Conquest and Resistance in Seventeenth-Century New Mexico by Andrew L. Knaut, 1995-05
  3. The Jicarilla Apache Tribe: A History by Veronica E. Velarde Tiller, 1992-12-31
  4. Three Years Among the Comanches: The Narrative of Nelson Lee, the Texas Ranger (Western Frontier Library) by Nelson Lee, 1991-02
  5. The Navajos in 1705: Roque Madrid's Campaign Journal by Roque Madrid, 1996-09
  6. Native Peoples of the Southwest by Trudy Griffin-Pierce, 2000-09-01
  7. The Anasazi: Ancient Indian People of the American Southwest by J. Brody, 1991-07-15
  8. Religion in the Prehispanic Southwest (Archaeology of Religion) by VanPool Christine S., 2007-01-28
  9. Puebloan Ruins of the Southwest by Arthur H. Rohn, William M. Ferguson, 2006-05-31
  10. The Choctaws in Oklahoma: From Tribe to Nation, 1855-1970 (American Indian Law and Policy Series) by Clara Sue Kidwell, 2007-08
  11. The Apaches: Eagles of the Southwest (Civilization of the American Indian Series) by Donald Emmet Worcester, 1992-02
  12. Contested Territory: Whites, Native Americans, and African Americans in Oklahoma 1865Ö1907 by Murray R. Wickett, 2000-10
  13. Southwestern Indian Tribes by Tom Bahti, 1975
  14. Southwestern Indian Tribes

21. Cultural Diversity - Art Of The Americas - Native American Art
native american Stories native american Art Northwest Coast southwest Myths and Legends for native american Youth Stories listed by tribe or region.
http://www.princetonol.com/groups/iad/lessons/middle/diversit.htm
Home Art Lessons Resources Listgroup ... Awards THE AMERICAS - HAITI
CULTURAL DIVERSITY Incredible @rt Dept

ART HOME
Program Goals Lesson Plans ... To top of page The Americas' Cultural Diversity . Web links to many
cultures of the "New World" A mix of wonderful folk art!
Native American Stories
Native American Art
Northwest Coast
Southwest ... Kuna Indians
"We could learn a lot from crayons: some are sharp, some are pretty,
some are dull, some have weird names. All are different colors, but they all have to learn to live in the same box."
See projects by Woody's students "Our colors might be different, but our hearts beat as one. Jesus will never leave us." ~ S.S. age 7, USA. Substitute any of the hundreds of thousands of names for God/Creator if you wish - and you will have the same quote made by a Native American I met in 1998. "God made people different because he sorted them." ~

22. NCRG : National Center Responsible Gaming
“Risk of Addiction in native America Personal and Environmental Vulnerabilities” native american population, and especially within the southwest tribe.
http://www.ncrg.org/events/risk_of_addiction_in_native_america.cfm

Conference Web Log
Upcoming Events Events Archive
Monday, December 6, 2004
Plenary Session
Moderator: Eileen Luna-Firebaugh, J.D., M.P.A., University of Arizona
Presenter: Spero Manson, Ph.D., Division of American Indian and Alaska Native Programs, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center
Manson began the session by noting that stereotypes of the Native American and alcohol use are well-known. He said most people believe Native Americans are more likely to drink than the average American, and that they are more likely to be alcoholics than the average American. Manson pointed out that unfortunately, much of this stereotype is true. The rate of alcoholism among Native Americans is 7.3 times higher than the national average. Additionally, chronic liver disease is 4.9 times more likely and motor vehicle accidents resulting from alcohol use are 3.3 times higher in Native American communities than the national average. Manson indicated the most comprehensive data set about alcohol use available from the Native American community deals with Native American adolescents. The study shows that Native American adolescents are just as likely to drink as other American adolescents. However, data also reveal that Native American adolescents begin drinking one and a half years earlier than non-Native adolescents. Furthermore, when they drink, Native American adolescents drink more than their counterparts, leading to greater negative consequences from alcohol use and more likely pathways to abuse.

23. Native American Authors: Hoopa Tribe
the Internet Public Library. native american Authors Browsing by tribe For an example of the controversy, see american Indians of the southwest.
http://www.ipl.org/div/natam/bin/browse.pl/t34
the Internet Public Library
Native American Authors: Browsing by Tribe
Hoopa Tribe
Online resources about the Hoopa Tribe
Hupa
Author: E. S. Curtis
Type: tribal
Description: This site presents photos and text from The North American Indian , by Edward Sherrif Curtis, produced from1890-1930. These photos are controversial and may not be an accurate depiction of the tribes at that time, but are included here because it may be of interest to researchers. For an example of the controversy, see American Indians of the Southwest
URL: http://www.curtis-collection.com/tribe%20data/hupa.html Land to Hoopa Valley Reservation
Type: tribal
Description: Land to Hoopa Valley rez 104th Congress, 1996 report .
URL: http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d104:h.r.02710: Return to Native American Authors IPL Home

24. Center Of Southwest Studies Native American Honors Internships
Must be an enrolled tribal member of a US federally recognized tribe; this includes native american Honors Interns at the Center of southwest Studies
http://swcenter.fortlewis.edu/InternNA.htm
Native American Honors Internships
Paid internship opportunities in Durango, Colorado, for Native Americans
The Center's Native American Honors Internships program will provide select Native students with quality, mentored paid internships in the following areas: archives, library, museum, and historic preservation. Interns will be based at the Center of Southwest Studies at Fort Lewis College in Durango, Colorado, with outreach opportunities at institutions in the Four Corners Region. Internship categories Requirements To apply Application dates/ Selection process ... Interns
Internship cat egories:
Category 1: Professional Internship. Nine-month internship, 35 hours per week. For the final year of funding for this internship, beginning fall 2005 , a choice of two professional areas of work is available: archives and libraries (one internship in each area per year). Stipend: $2,000/month. Professional Interns will be considered exempt staff employees of the college and will work under an employment contract for their services. They will receive health insurance benefits and retirement benefits and will accrue leave at the rate of 16 hours per month for annual leave and 10 hours per month sick leave This internship category may also include travel funding for approved professional field trips.

25. Southwestern Crafts & Gifts Trading Post
southwestern native american themed art, crafts and jewelry inspired by the tribes of the southwest.
http://www.crafts-gifts.com/
Trading Post
We have many Beautiful Items
Carefully Crafted in the style of the Native American Indians.
  • Phone - 618-550-8939 Search Our Site Our Site Map Our Company Info.
    Dream Catchers
    ... Some Great Links
  • Our goal is to offer the Highest Quality Products at Affordable Prices.
    We have a "Money Back Guarantee".
    No Order is Too Large or Too Small.
    " Free Shipping " On Retail Orders Over $150.
    Orders are usually shipped within two days.
    We Sell At Very Low, Discount Prices To The Public.
    There will be an ongoing expansion of our product line... So, be sure to bookmark this page. Although Our Trading Post has many Carefully Crafted products That May Be Similar, They Are Not Indian Products or Indian Produced as defined by 26 USA-305 et Seq. All Orders Submitted On Our Shopping Cart Are " Secure " As you browse our site, remember, "This is a wonderful place to find that Unique Gift for Someone Special".

    26. NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURE
    native american Authors Browsing by tribe. Coharie tribe. Return to nativeamerican Authors IPL Home. www.ipl.org/div/natam/bin/browse.pl/t146
    http://www.greatdreams.com/native.htm
    updated 9-11-05 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@sbcglobal.net AND I WILL ADD IT TO THE DATABASE
    NOTE TO STUDENTS: DON'T WAIT UNTIL THE LAST MINUTE
    I CAN'T RESPOND THAT QUICKLY! 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 HOW TO MAKE A STAVE DRUM
    FOR ADULTS
    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:

    27. NATIVE AMERICAN -ART AND TECHNOLOGY - THE ATROCITIES AGAINST THE
    Map of native american Tribes, Culture Areas, and Linguistic Stocks SmithsonianInstitution Art of the southwest Sandpaintings of the Navajo american !
    http://www.greatdreams.com/nalinks.htm
    NATIVE AMERICAN ART AND TECHNOLOGY THE ATROCITIES
    AGAINST THE NATIVE AMERICAN NATIVE AMERICAN NEWSLETTERS For specific Native American Tribe Links Go Here: NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURE For specific Native American Chiefs Go Here NATIVE AMERICAN WISDOM NATIVE AMERICAN MOUNDS
    The Native American Tradition - from a Navajo Wedding Ceremony Now you have lit a fire and that fire should not go out. The two of you now have a fire that represents love, understanding and a philosophy of life. It will give you heat, food, warmth and happiness. The new fire represents a new beginning - a new life and a new family. The fire should keep burning; you should stay together. You have lit the fire for life, until old age separates you. 'Words of Power'; Voices from Indian America NATIVE AMERICAN NEWSLETTERS Coyote Press TURTLE TRACKS - NEWSLETTER FOR KIDS Wotanging Ikche - Newsletters News From Indian Country: Nations Native Journal Noah's News Native Media - Organizations, Journals and Newspapers, Radio and Television Indian Voices Radio Show ... The American Experience / Wayback:
    Monthly online magazine aimed at middle school students American Comments Web Magazine
    American Indian Radio on-line NATIVE AMERICAN LAW American Indian Law Scientist Directory of Tribes - in the Lower 48 The Aboriginal Law and Legislation The Indian Child Welfare Act Links ... Senator Daniel K. Inouye Home Page

    28. Maine Indian Tribes
    native tradition brings the Penobscot from the southwest. They were encounteredby French and English Early native american Tribes and Culture Areas
    http://www.accessgenealogy.com/native/maine/
    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 Maine Indian Tribes Abnaki . Properly Wabanaki, "those living at the sunrise," "those living at the east," "easterners." Also called: Aln nba , own name, meaning "Indians," or "men." Aquannaque, Wabanaki as pronounced by Huron. Bashabas, name given them from a principal chief.

    29. Native American Sites - Homework Center - Multnomah County Library
    native american Megasites Individual Tribes Northwest Tribes about thenorthwest, plains, California, southwest and Woodland native american cultures.
    http://www.multcolib.org/homework/natamhc.html
    skip navigation links

    30. Native Americans - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
    Although many native american tribes have casinos, they are a source of conflict . In the american southwest, especially New Mexico, a syncretism between
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_American
    Native Americans
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
    (Redirected from Native American Native Americans is a term which has several different common meanings and scope, according to regional use and context. See the below articles, which describe the various indigenous peoples in the contexts of:

    31. Native Americans
    native american Tribes Click on the links for information on each of the tribes . Annie and the Old One - An integrated unit on the american southwest.
    http://edtech.kennesaw.edu/web/natam.html
    Native Americans Research/Informational Sites

    32. NativeWeb Resources: Native American Languages
    California Linguistic Tribal Groups, US southwest, 1507 native AmericanLanguage Center - UC Davis, US - southwest, 2923
    http://www.nativeweb.org/resources/languages_linguistics/native_american_languag

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    Resource Database
    Native American Languages
    Resources:
    49 listings Name and Description Nation Location Hits
    Alaskan Orthodox texts (Aleut, Tlingit, Yup'ik) Yupik Canada
    Alaskan Orthodox Christian texts (Aleut, Tlingit, Yup'ik-language) in digital transcription, from St. Innocent (Veniaminov), St. Jacob Netsvetov, and others.
    Alaska Native Language Center US - Alaska
    Established in 1972 by state legislation as a center for documentation and cultivation of the state's 20 Native languages. Located at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks.
    American Language Reprints homepage
    Our web site focuses on early primary source material relating to the languages of the Eastern Woodland tribes such as the Nanticoke, Powhatan, Mohegan-Pequot, Mohawk, Wyandot, and many others. It includes a listing of our reprinted books on the subject as well as many free services, including a searchable database of Native American words, and a prototype linguistic atlas.
    Anishinaabe Language Resources Anishinaabe
    More sites on www.fdl.cc.mn.us

    33. Untitled
    The regions include southwest, Plains, and Northwest. native american VideoPresentations by Diane Dwenger and Pam Eck, IUPUI
    http://inkido.indiana.edu/w310work/romac/native.htm
    THE STUDY OF NATIVE AMERICANS "Dialogue of Respect" At The Orchard School in Indianapolis, Indiana, second grade students study Native Americans. Each classroom has a different region on which to focus. The regions include Southwest, Plains, and Northwest. One of the schools goals is to get a historical as well as current day perspective on Native Americans. The children read fiction and nonfiction material, study patterns, geometry and time (looking into Native American art, family life, decorations, etc.). Project work includes constructing pueblos, hogans, and tools, writing poetry, legends, reports, and designing HyperStudio projects.
    Map of Indian Boundaries
    S outhwest Plains ...
    Native American Video Presentations

    by Diane Dwenger and Pam Eck, IUPUI Technology Based Lesson on Totem Poles
    by Rachel McDonough and Bridgette Zellers, IUB Software Evaluation
    Criteria for Evaluating Software

    created on February 11, 1998 edited on April 22, 1998
    by Diane Dwenger, IUPUI

    34. The Southwest Culture
    Some southwest native americans believed the first people were created in a cavernbelow the surface of the earth. native american Cultural Regions Map
    http://www.u-s-history.com/pages/h949.html
    Search ( Enter the name of an
    historical figure, event or issue)
    Native Americans
    The Southwest Culture
    Some scholars date the origin of native cultures in the southwestern United States to immigrants who crossed the Bering land bridge from Siberia to Alaska, approximately 10,000 B.C. Others maintain that native cultures came to the Americas as early as 25,000 B.C. These immigrants settled in what is present-day southern Utah and Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico and northern Mexico. This culture area is contiguous with the Far West Culture , the Plains Culture (to the northeast) and the southern part of the Eastern Woodland Culture The Southwest's climate is generally hot and arid. Much of the land is desert dotted with cacti and other water-miser plants. Some areas are characterized by plateaus, spectacular rock formations and mineral wealth. There are forests at higher elevations. The land is graced by a few green river valleys; summer rains in some areas allowed farming by peoples of remote times. Three significant cultures emerged in the region around 300 B.C. All three were based on a farming society augmented by hunting and gathering. They included the Anasazi, who erected cliff houses in northern Arizona and New Mexico, Utah and Colorado; the Hohokam, who dug complex irrigation systems in central Arizona; and the Mogollon, who hunted and farmed along the rivers of western New Mexico and eastern Arizona. Water was a precious natural resource in Southwestern societies, which kept strict rules about its use down to the youngest child. Some argue that these cultures were the most sophisticated of any Native American society north of present-day Mexico during the first 1,200 years A.D.

    35. Native Americans
    History and Information about native american Tribes Kid Info - rich resource southwest native americans
    http://www.kathimitchell.com/Natam.htm

    36. NativeTech Native American Food And Recipes By Type Of Dish
    native american Food Recipes submitted by visitors to nativeTech. OR Clickhere to Sort by Region tribe. Please do not reproduce these recipes
    http://www.nativetech.org/food/

    37. Calendar Of Native American Events And Dances In Central New Mexico
    Enjoy traditional native american Events and Dances offered by various native Zuni Pueblo Annual Zuni Tribal Fair. August 21 22 southwest american
    http://www.santaana.org/calendar.htm
    Calendar of Native American Events and Dances January February March April ... Ongoing There are eighteen Pueblos in addition to Santa Ana within the state of New Mexico. Visitors are usually welcome during annual events and feast days. Easy to reach especially in the Albuquerque area, between Albuquerque and Santa Fe, and between Albuquerque and Grants, New Mexico. The following is a listing of celebrations that may be of interest to traveler and local visitors alike. January January 1
    Taos Pueblo - Turtle Dance
    Santo Domingo Pueblo - Corn Dance
    San Juan Pueblo - Cloud or Basket Dance January 6 - Kings Day Celebration
    Picuris Pueblo - various dances
    Nambe Pueblo - Buffalo, Deer and Antelope Dances
    Sandia Pueblo - Various Dances
    Taos Pueblo - Deer or Buffalo Dances
    Most pueblos have dances on Jan. 6th January 22
    San Ildefonso Pueblo - Vespers Evening with firelight procession 6 pm - call to confirm.

    38. Native American Art (First Nations, Inuit, And American Indian
    featuring kachinas, basketry, and other native american art of the southwest . native american Cultures View our pages for individual Indian tribes,
    http://www.native-languages.org/art.htm
    Native American Languages Native American Tribes What's new on our site today!
    Native American Arts and Crafts
    We get a lot of mail asking us to recommend websites where people can buy authentic American Indian arts and crafts. There are many imitations of Native American artwork out there, and it can be hard to tell the wheat from the chaff. It doesn't help that most Native American artists don't have websites, whereas every marketer of Chinese-made dreamcatcher knockoffs has at least twenty different URLs trying to sell their stuff.
    So if you're looking for arts and crafts that were actually made by Native Americans, either because it's important to you to have the real thing or because you want to support native people with your purchase, here is our directory of American Indian artists whose work is available online. If you have a website of Native American art (traditional, contemporary, or mixed) to add to this list, let us know . We gladly advertise any individual native artist or native-owned art store here free of charge, provided that all arts and crafts were made by tribally recognized American Indian, Inuit, or First Nations artists.
    Thank you for your interest in American Indian art!

    39. Native American Jewelry
    Information about traditional and contemporary native american jewelry, North american tribes imported in recent times from the southwest Indian artists
    http://www.native-languages.org/jewelry.htm
    Native American Art > Native American Jewelry Native American Languages Native American Tribes What's new on our site today!
    American Indian Jewelry
    Jewelry styles were different in every American Indian tribe, but the differences were less marked than with other arts and crafts, because jewelry and the materials used for making it (beads, shells, copper and silver, ivory, amber, turquoise and other stones) were major trade items long before European arrival in America. After colonization, Native American jewelry-making traditions remained strong, incorporating, rather than being replaced by, new materials and techniques such as glass beads and more advanced metalworking techniques. There are two very general categories of Native American jewelry metalwork, and beadwork. Before Europeans came native metalwork was fairly simple, consisting primarily of hammering and etching copper into pendants or earrings and fashioning copper and silver into beads. After Navajo, Hopi and Pueblo artists learned silversmithing from the Spanish in the 1800's, metal jewelry arts blossomed in the Southwest, and distinctive native jewelry like the squash blossom necklace , Hopi silver overlay bracelets, and Navajo turquoise inlay rings developed from the fusion of the new techniques with traditional designs. Native beadwork, on the other hand, was already extremely advanced in pre-Columbian times, including the fine grinding of turquoise, coral, and shell beads into smooth heishi necklaces, the delicate carving of individual wood and bone beads, the soaking and piecing of porcupine quills, and the intricate stitching of thousands of beads together. Porcupine quillwork has nearly died out (though some young artists are taking a renewed interest in it) but all of these other forms of beadwork are still going strong, though imported Czech seed beads have been the favored medium among many Indian artists for centuries now. You can see our

    40. Links To Federally Recognized Native American Indian Tribes
    Alphabetical List of Federally Recognized native american Tribes 1 worked andstudied in Europe and the Orient as well as the american southwest.
    http://www.healing-arts.org/tribelinks.htm
    Please help this healing fire to burn brighter
    by bringing a piece of kindling to this site! Here is how you may do this!
    A lphabetical List of Federally Recognized Native American Tribes
    This page not only lists all the federally recognized tribes of Native Americans, but also has links from those tribes for their official websites, stories and legends, books, photographs and artwork. This is a work very much in progress and will take a long while to complete [unless you all help with this resource]. Right now I have links to over 150 website locations from about 26 different tribes on this page. I will try to add comprehensive links to an additional one or two tribes each month (moon).
    Latest Update: Southern Ute lndian Tribe of the Southern Ute Reservation, Colorado; 2 December, 2004
    To use this website, scroll down the page to the listing of tribes , use the Quick Index below, or the Searching Tip to see if the tribe you are interested in has been researched for links. Also see:

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