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North America Before Columbus

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North America Before Columbus 15,000 BC to 1492 The First People in North America Who were the first? It s hard to say 12,000 to 16,000 years ago are widely ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: North America Before Columbus


1
North America Before Columbus
  • 15,000 BC to 1492

2
The First People in North America
  • Who were the first? Its hard to say
  • 12,000 to 16,000 years ago are widely accepted
    time frames
  • Recent Evidence suggests people may have been
    here for 50,000 years

3
Most Accepted Theory to Date
  • Theory people from Asia crossed the Bering Land
    Bridge to get to North America
  • This bridge was Open between 25,000 and 11,000
    years ago

4
Clovis People
  • Is the name given to the first peoples to settle
    North America
  • Dates from 13,000 to 11,000 for their arrival
  • Clovis people left behind many artifacts that
    have been scientifically dated

5
Clovis People Continued
  • There are many sites throughout North America
    Identified as Clovis sites
  • Sites are identified usually by the types of
    arrowheads found
  • They lived by hunting big game, most of which is
    now extinct

6
Pre-Clovis People?
  • There have been sites found that date earlier
    than Clovis People15,000 years ago in South
    America
  • Evidence is found in arrowheads that are not as
    well made as Clovis
  • They are thought to have survived by hunting,
    gathering and fishing
  • Pre-Clovis sites have caused a great deal of
    controversy

7
Megafuana
  • This is the name given to the many large animals
    that went extinct at the end of the last ice
    ageabout 10,000 years ago
  • These large animals went extinct at the same time
    humans arrived in North Americacoincidence?

8
Mastodon
  • Similar to Wooly Mammoth, but had different teeth
    and tusks
  • Lived in cold forests

9
Wooly Mammoth
  • Lived in colder climates
  • Had thick, greasy hair
  • Probably used tusks to shovel snow off of
    vegetation
  • Many frozen specimens have been found
  • It is rumored that members of the National
    Geographic's Society once ate preserved mammoth
  • Some scientists are trying to create one using
    preserved DNA

10
Saber Tooth Tiger
  • While its in the cat family, its not really a
    tiger
  • Probably did not run very fast
  • Most likely a social animal that lived in groups,
    as do lions and tigers
  • Could open its mouth 120 degree (modern cats can
    only go 60 degrees)

11
Giant Beaver
  • Can you imagine the dam a 900 pound beaver could
    make?

12
Giant Ground Sloth
  • One of the largest land mammals ever
  • Could get to 20 feet tall and weighed 8 tons
    (same as an African Bull Elephant)
  • Was a vegetarian
  • Had no real enemiestheir huge claws could easily
    fend off Saber ToothTigers
  • Human hunters could have easily caused their
    extinction

13
Glyptodon
  • Large relative of the armadillo
  • About the size of a Volkswagen Beetle
  • They were herbivores that grazed on grasses
  • It is believed that humans hunted them and used
    their shells for shelter

14
Hagerman Horse
  • Related to the African Zebra
  • Was a grazer, just like modern horses

15
Camelops
  • You guessed it, it was just like the camels alive
    today
  • Many Clovis sites show signs that these animals
    were frequently butched

16
After Clovis
  • Prevailing theory is that Clovis People are the
    ancestors of all Native American groups
  • The Clovis way of life ended with the extinction
    of the animals they hunted
  • Different groups split off from one another,
    forming their own cultures in different locations
    throughout North America
  • Genetic study suggests that all Native American
    groups can be linked to a single founding
    population

17
It is Worth Noting
  • While scientific evidence points in favor of the
    Bering Land Bridge and Clovis-first theories,
    most present-day Native Americans do not accept
    these theories
  • Native Americans generally believe that they have
    always been in North America
  • Their evidenceall Native American groups have
    rich oral traditions
  • There are no known Native American oral histories
    that refer to ancestors crossing a land bridge or
    leaving Asia by other means to come to North
    America

18
Native American Before Columbus
  • Today there are 562 Federally recognized Native
    American tribes
  • There were probably many more before Columbus
  • We will now look at the major groupings of Native
    American tribes throughout the United States

19
Cherokee
  • The Cherokee lived in the mountains and valleys
    of the southern Appalachian Mountains
  • Lived in domed houses in villages along
    riverbanks
  • They were farmers, hunters, and fishermen
  • Held festivals to celebrate planting and
    harvesting of corn
  • Invented Lacross

20
Algonquin
  • These are Great Lakes tribes that include Ojibwa,
    Delaware, Powhatan, and Massachusetts tribes
  • Lived in wigwams
  • Wore very little clothes in summer, dressed in
    animal skins in the winter
  • They were hunters, gatherers, trappers, and
    planters
  • Traveled in birch bark canoes

21
Iroquois
  • Included Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, and
    Seneca tribes
  • Lived in what is now New York state along the St
    Lawrence River
  • They lived in Long Houses that held 30 to 60
    people
  • Wore mostly buckskin clothes
  • They grew The Three Sisterscorn, squash, and
    beans
  • They used snowshoes in the winter

22
Seminoles
  • They settled in the Southeast, mostly in Florida
  • Their lived in Chikee homes, the homes were
    usually placed in swamplands
  • They wore clothing woven from Palmetto
  • They were hunters and gatherers who traveled in
    dugout canoes

23
Navajo
  • Included in this group are the Pueblo, Zuni, Rio,
    and Hopi tribes, as all had similar cultures and
    beliefs
  • Lived in what is now New Mexico and Northeastern
    Arizona
  • Their homes were called Hogansthese were round
    houses built with forked sticks and covered with
    brush, packed earth, hides, and whatever they
    could find
  • Their clothing was made from rabbit skins and the
    Yuka plant
  • They were raiders (they usually stole crops from
    the Pueblos), gatherers, and hunters, and
    eventually farmed for themselves
  • They are well known for their turquoise jewelry

24
Apache
  • Also lived in what is now New Mexico and Arizona
  • They were nomads who did not stay in one place
    for very long
  • They lived in Wickiups, small dome-shaped homes
    that were not very sturdy, and women made them in
    a few hours
  • They wore deerskin clothes
  • They did not farm, but women gathered plants,
    mostly yucca and mescaline (tasted like cabbage)
  • They are known for their well-made and intricate
    baskets

25
Northwest Coastal Native Americans
  • Includes tribes such as the Tlingit and Chicook
  • Lived along the Northwest coast from Alaska to
    Northern California
  • The Northwest Coastal Indians wore little
    clothing. They wore fiber rain capes and skin
    robes
  • They lived in large plank houses in groups of 30
    or so
  • The men tattooed their arms and hands for
    measuring dentalium. Dentalium was a shell that
    was strung together and used as money
  • Of all tribal groups, these people enjoyed the
    most abundant natural resources
  • They were hunters, gatherers, and fishermen, and
    they took slaves. Slaves were a sign of wealth.
    Children were kept close to their camp for fear
    that they would be stolen by another tribe and
    become a slave.

26
Plains Native Americans
  • Group includes Sauk, Fox, Cheyenne, Arapaho,
    Sioux, Blackfeet, Comanche, and Pawnee tribes
  • They lived in the area from the Mississippi River
    to the Rocky Mountains and from Canada to Mexico
  • Most lived in Teepee
  • They wore buffalo skins
  • They used Peace Pipes in ceremonies

27
Inuit
  • Lived in the Arctic region of North America
  • Their homes were igloos in the winter and skin,
    wood, mud, or sod homes in the summer
  • Their clothing was sealskin in the summer and in
    the winter they wore caribou skin
  • They made the most out of very limited resources,
    particularly of use were all parts of whales and
    seals
  • Never in Angerthey were a very peaceful people

28
Map of Pre-Columbus Tribes
29
About Pre-Columbian Native Societies
  • Native Americans spoke over 300 languages
  • Many Native societies had urban settlements,
    farming, architecture, and complex societies
  • Native Americans domesticated plants that
    constitute 50-60 of all crops now grown
    world-wide
  • Prior to Columbus arrival, there were between 10
    and 100 million people who live in the Americas
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