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         Navajo Indians Native Americans:     more books (100)
  1. Navajo Indians (Native Americans (Heinemann Library (Firm)).) by Caryn Yacowitz, 2003-06
  2. Denizens of the Desert: A Tale in Word and Picture of Life Among the Navaho Indians, the Letters of Elizabeth W. Forster
  3. Eagle Boy: A Traditional Navajo Legend by Gerald Hausman, Barry Moser, et all 1996-09
  4. Two Spirits: A Story of Life With the Navajo by Walter, L. Williams, Toby Johnson, 2005-06-12
  5. Songs from the Loom: A Navajo Girl Learns to Weave (We Are Still Here : Native Americans Today) by Monty Roessel, 1995-08
  6. The Navajos (Native American Histories) by Liz Sonneborn, 2005-01
  7. Between Sacred Mountains: Navajo Stories and Lessons from the Land (Sun Tracks, Vol.11)
  8. Kinaalda: A Navajo Girl Grows Up (We Are Still Here : Native Americans Today) by Monty Roessel, 1993-09
  9. The Navajo Weaving Tradition: 1650 to the Present by Alice Kaufman, Christopher Selser, 1999-03-01
  10. Indian Basket Weaving by Navajo School of Indian Basketry, 1971-06-01
  11. Native Roads: The Complete Motoring Guide to the Navajo and Hopi Nations, Newly Revised Edition by Fran Kosik, 2005-04-21
  12. Two Spirits: A Story of Life With the Navajo by Ph.D. Walter L. Williams, Ph.D. Toby Johnson, 2005-06-11
  13. Four Corners, Where the Holy Spirit Touches Navajo Hearts: The Story of the Four Corners Native American Ministry of The United Methodist Church by Stan Sager, 2007-04-02
  14. The Long Walk: The Forced Navajo Exile (Landmark Events in Native American History) by Jennifer Denetdale, 2007-11-30

1. American Indians Cherokee, Apache, Navajo, Cheyenne, Pueblo
And understand the religions of the Blackfoot Indians and the Cheyenne, who Kachinas are, and the background of The People (Navajo history).
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

2. The Navajo Nation - Home Page
Navajo Nation. Navajo Area Indian Health Services. Navajo Tribal Utility Authority. Navajo Housing Authority
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

3. NAVAJO INDIANS
NAVAJO INDIANS Navajo, or Dine they call themselves, is the largest tribe of North American Indians.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

4. Swest
SOUTHWEST NATIVE AMERICANS HISTORY INFORMATION The main tribes that come from the Southwest area are the Apache, Hopi, Navajo, Pueblo,
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

5. First Americans, Native American Indian Studies For Grade Schoolers.
Grade schoolers work puzzels and play cards to learn about Navajo, Creek, Tlingit, Sioux and Iroquois.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

6. Navajo Indians (Native Americans (Heinemann Library (Firm)).) -
Navajo Indians (Native Americans (Heinemann Library (Firm)).) Hotel Resource Book Store
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

7. Native Americans - American Indians - The First People Of America;
Native Americans American Indians - The First People of America; Montagnais Mound Builders Music Narragansett Navajo Nations
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

8. Tlingit National Anthem, Alaska Natives And Native Americans Online
stays on Apache, Pueblo and Navajo reservations Raven clan attend The First Americans Festival are more than 12 000 American Indians
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

9. Hopi Indians
The Hopi Indians grew food similar to the Navajo Indians. Native Americans believed in constellations in many cases they believed in the same
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

10. Native American Home Pages - Nations
updated 8/10/98. Navajo Nation Home Page Added 8/27/96; Updated 10/16/98 WARM SPRINGS INDIANS. The Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

11. Native Americans - Navajo
native americans American indians, The First People of America The infamousemigration of navajo indians by the US government from their homeland.
http://www.nativeamericans.com/Navajo.htm
Navajo Navajo Boy
Navajo Medicine Man Navajo Code Talkers During World War II The Best Online Navajoland Tourist Guide!
This site provides news, services, a chatroom, a message board, and e-cards.
http://www.navajoland.com/

Explore the Navajo Nation
Learn about the Navajo people, their past and present, with interesting
overviews of all facets of their lives on the Navajoland they call home. The
great images are enlargeable with a click on the text links.
http://www.americanwest.com/pages/navajo2.htm

FAQs about Life on the Navajo Nation
You'll find an index listing the 200+ plus questions and answers which are spread out over three sections. The final set of questions, amazingly enough, is interspersed with many questions about the Mormon Church. Nevertheless, the Navajo information is quite good. http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/larry_dilucchio/faq2.htm

12. Native Americans: Navajo | EThemes | EMINTS
These sites focus on navajo indians and their hogan homes. native americansnavajo. Contact eThemes@emints.org if you have questions or comments about
http://www.emints.org/ethemes/resources/S00000456.shtml
About eMINTS Communities Equipment eThemes ... eThemes
Native Americans: Navajo
Contact eThemes@emints.org if you have questions or comments about this resource. Printer-friendly version Please preview all links before sharing in class with students. Title: Native Americans: Navajo Description: These sites focus on Navajo Indians and their hogan homes. The sites discuss the Navajo people, their culture, and their history. Grade Level: Resource Links: Dine(Navajo) Homepage
This Navajo page contains links to several Navajo works of literature.
Living in the Navajo Past

This page has lots of information on the history and culture of the Navajo people. You can also find information on the Navajo government and pictures of their flag and seal. The link for Navajo Language has audio so you can hear the language.
Navajo Culture

This page is dedicated to Navajo homes, also known as "hogans". On the page you will find a description of hogans as well as a few illustrations.
Navajo Hogan

This page teaches about the Navajo hogan. On the page you will find a thorough description of the establishments as well as a few pictures.
Navajo Rugs

This page introduces Navajo art and Navajo rugs. The site has numerous pictures of contemporary and historic Navajo art. Click on "Historic Navajo Textiles" for older rugs.

13. Native Americans
native americans. Research/Informational Sites. American indians Learn traditional navajo Dwelling; Internet Resources for native American Studies
http://edtech.kennesaw.edu/web/natam.html
Native Americans Research/Informational Sites

14. The Movies And Ethnic Representation: Native Americans
A Time reviewer refers to the indians in the film as the same navajo The Hollywood Indian versus native americans Tell Them Willie Boy Is Here (1969)
http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/MRC/imagesnatives.html

  • Bibliography of books and articles on Native American representation in the movies in the UCB Library
  • Listing of Westerns in the MRC collection
    Adventures of Tom Sawyer
    A television adaptation of Mark Twain's classic tale of youthful adventure along the Mississippi, filmed on location at a restored 19th century Canadian village that closely duplicates Twain's Hannibal, Missouri. Featuring that old boogy man, "Injun Joe."
    Credits and other information from the Internet Movie Database
    Apaches (Apachen)
    Directed by Gottfried Kolditz. In the 1960's East German "Indianerfilms," were introduced. Based upon original documents director Gottfied Kolditz together with the leading actor Gojko Mitic wrote the script based on the Mexican War of 1846-1848, when small bands of American scouts were dispatched to Mexico to plot the conquest of targeted regions. Precious metals are discovered on the Mimbreno-Apache reservation so it is decided to annex this territory to the U.S., then expel and exterminate the Indians, but the young warrior Ulzana is out for revenge for his tribe... 90 min.
    Credits and other information from the Internet Movie Database
  • Gem?nden, Gerd. "Between Karl May and Karl Marx: the DEFA indianerfilms (1965-1983."
  • 15. NARA - ALIC - Indians/Native Americans
    The original twentynine navajo code talkers received the Congressional Gold American indians/native americans University of Louisville libraries have
    http://www.archives.gov/research/alic/reference/native-americans.html
    var sectionSearchOn = true; @import url("/includes/css/main-import.css"); @import url("/research/alic/!css-section.css"); Skip Navigation
    NARA
    Search Search All NARA Web Pages Search Current Section Only Advanced Search Form
    Archives Library Information Center (ALIC)
    Home Research ... Reference Indians/Native Americans
    About ALIC
    Reference at Your Desk
    Research Tools
    Other Resources
    Indians/Native Americans
    This page contains links to American history relating to Native Americans. During November we celebrate Native American/Alaskan Native Heritage Month. Check out these statistics from the U.S. Census Bureau , as well as the reference links below. Poster of Sioux Indian from the Library of Congress's American Memory Project NARA Resources
    American Indians: Select Catalog of NARA Microfilm Publications
    Microfilm publications of NARA collections from records relating to American Indians, including records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, census rolls, and treaties relating to territories.

    16. Hopi Indians
    The Hopi indians grew food similar to the navajo indians. They raised corn ormaize as The Hopi indians are the Record Keepers of the native americans.
    http://www.crystalinks.com/hopi1.html
    HOPI CIVILIZATION
    The Hopi Indians, which means good, peaceful, or wise, come from a group of Southwestern people called Pueblo. Hopis call themselves Hopitu The Peacable People. Hopis live in northeast Arizona at the southern end of the Black Mesa. A mesa is the name given to a small isolated flat-topped hill with three steep sides called the 1 st Mesa, 2 nd Mesa, and the 3 rd Mesa. On the mesa tops are the Hopi villages called pueblos. The pueblo of Oraibi on the 3 rd Mesa started in 1050, and is the oldest in North America that was lived in continuously.
    ANCESTRY Evidence suggest that the Hopi consist of the descendants of various groups that entered the country from the north, the east, and the south, and that a series of movements covered a period of probably three centuries, and perhaps considerably longer. Their ancestors, the Anasazi, appear to have been related to the Aztecs of Mexico, and may have arrived in their current location 5 to 10 thousand years ago. In that time, they have developed an intricate ceremonial calendar that has helped them survive and be strong in a place that would not seem to have enough reliable water to sustain life. Related to people of the various Pueblos to the east, the Hopis never actually had a single group identitythey were independent villages, sharing with the Zuni and other Pueblos a basic culture and view of the sacred, while sharing among themselves their own (Uto-Aztecan) language base.

    17. Siol Nan Gaidheal - Native Americans.
    native americans. navajo Nation. The navajo are the largest tribe in the United The name navajo is not so much a name as a place. The Pueblo indians
    http://www.siol-nan-gaidheal.com/tday1.htm
    Siol nan Gaidheal
    NATIVE AMERICANS
    The Navajo are the largest tribe in the United States. They account for almost fifteen percent of the Native American population in the 1990 census and number in excess of 250,000 members. They occupy a vast area of the southwest spreading across parts of Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado and Utah. The lands of the Navajo encompass an area larger than the states of Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut and New Jersey combined! The name Navajo is not so much a name as a place. The Pueblo Indians referred to the area of the southwest from which the Navajo came. The Spanish referred to them as the Apaches de Navajo which eventually was shortened to simply Navajo. The Navajo refer to themselves as Dine (Dee-Nay), which means "the people". Their vast land is called Dinetah. The four colors of the mountains are a recurring theme in the stories and legends of the Navajo. One of the primary occurrences of the four colors is in the Navajo story of creation. In that legend the world began as a black island floating in the mist. Above it were four clouds, black, white, blue and yellow.

    18. New Mexico Magazine | Native Americans
    Learn about the Pueblo, navajo and Apache indians of New Mexico by IndianEtiquette. New Mexico s various native American tribes welcome guests onto
    http://www.nmmagazine.com/NMGUIDE/nativeam.html

    In this month's issue...
    Pueblos and Reservations Acoma Pueblo
    Isleta Pueblo
    ...
    Zuni Pueblo
    Native Americans
    Pueblo Cultural Center, Albuquerque Nearly everything about New Mexico's diverse Native American people is legendary, from their distinct lifestyles and traditions to their beliefs and architecture to their arts and food. In fact, there isn't one corner of the state that isn't influenced by Native American history and culture. Indian cultural traditions permeate many aspects of contemporary life in the state. Perhaps the most obvious is the architectural style of the typical pueblo village, which is routinely imitated statewide and often combined with other historic and contemporary building styles. The mystique of New Mexico's various tribes is powerful. Their unique dialects, colorful dances, unparalleled arts and crafts, and cultural stories and traditions handed down through scores of generations are like that of no other human group on the planet. Archaeologists believe this distinct blend of Native Americana began evolving from 12,000 to 30,000 years ago, when many bands of prehistoric Indians wandered throughout New Mexico, some possibly from across the Bering Strait. Some of these nomads developed into farmers and began this region's first agrarian communities, whose fruits and labors still thrive today on many of New Mexico's farmlands. The descendants of these early people belong to as many as 22 distinct pueblos and tribes, each of which maintains separate, sovereign governments and makes it a high priority to preserve ancient traditions and language.

    19. Marilee's Native Americans Resource - Individual Tribes
    The navajo (True Books American indians) by Andrew Santella Melissa Stewart, 2002 Seminole indians (native americans) by Caryn Yacowitz, 2003
    http://marilee.us/nativeamericans2.html
    Home Native Americans I
    Marilee's Native Americans Resource II
    Individual Tribes
    Cherokee
    Comanche
    Cree
    Haida
    Hopi
    Inuit
    Iroquois
    Navajo Nez Perce Pomo Sioux Tlingit Ute Wampanoag
    Cherokee (Southeast)

    20. Swarthmore College Library: World Music - Native Americans
    H MCD 902 Authentic music of the American Indian. native American war dances,honor songs, navajo indians Songs and music) PM Begay and Robby Bee.
    http://www.swarthmore.edu/Library/underhill/Music/natives.html
    World Music by Country or Region : NATIVES OF NORTH AMERICA
    H MCD 2430 Alnobak : the Dawnland Singers. 1994. H MCD 1367 American pow-wow. Cathedral Lakes Singers. Sound of America Records, 1993. H MCD 2194 American warriors: songs for Indian veterans. Various Native American Indian performers. 1997. Authentic music of the American Indian. 3 LPs. Everest 3450. 1970. H MCD 902 Authentic music of the American Indian. Native American war dances, honor songs, social, folk and ceremonial songs and chants. Legacy International, 1988? H MCD 2186 The Badland Singers live at Santa Fe . Badland Singers from the Great Plains tradition. 1994. CD- Big medicine. R. Carlos Nakai Quartet. 1998. H MCD 2191 Black Hills dreamer . Written and performed by Buddy Red Bow, vocals, guitar. 1991. H MCD 1672 Caution to the wind . Pura Fe.1995. H MCD 896 Changes: native American flute music . R. Carlos Nakai. Canyon Records. 1983. H MCD 2198 Circle dance songs of the Paiute and Shoshone. Performed by Judy Trejo with Delgadina Gonzalez and Christina Gonzalez. 1997. H MCD 1560 Common ground.

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