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Origins of a New Society to 1783

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Historians theorize that the first Natives arrived in North and South America as ... tribes like the Chinook and the Cayuse fished rivers and dug for edible roots. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Origins of a New Society to 1783


1
Origins of a New Societyto 1783
  • Unit 1

2
Three Cultures CollideBefore and After the 1400s
  • Chapter 1

3
The Native American World
  • Section 1

4
Ancient Roots of Native Culture
  • Historians theorize that the first Natives
    arrived in North and South America as early as
    28,000 years ago.
  • Traveling from Siberia in Russia across a Land
    Bridge to Alaska, several waves of Asiatic people
    migrated south settling in both North and South
    America.
  • Some scholars believe that when natives first
    encountered Europeans in the 1400s, their
    population totaled as much as ten million.

5
Land Bridge
6
Natives Adapted to Land and Climate
  • As natives settled the different regions of
    America, they skillfully adapted to their
    environment to ensure survival.
  • The North
  • The inhospitable northern climates offered
    Natives a challenge, groups like the Ingalik
    encouraging them to hunt on ice and snow and
    remain nomadic.

7
Igloo

8
The Northwest Coast
  • Fishing and gathering along the many waterways,
    these natives such as the Coo and Salish added
    salmon and seal to their diets

9
Totem Pole
10
California
  • Living in mountain valleys the Chumash and
    Serrano spoke more than one hundred variations of
    basic languages and varied their diets from fish
    to beans and shrubs.
  • The Plateau
  • On the flatlands between the Cascade and Rocky
    Mountains, tribes like the Chinook and the Cayuse
    fished rivers and dug for edible roots. Their
    villages were built on the highlands overlooking
    the waters below.

11
The Great Basin
  • Between the Sierra Nevada and Rocky Mountains
    lies this dry terrain were the Ute and Shoshoni
    gathered pine nuts and hunted rabbits and
    insects.
  • The Southwest
  • Basically a desert region, tribes like the Hopi
    and Zuni adapted to this terrain and relied on
    trade and developed special farming techniques.

12
Religion
  • According to Natives, the most powerful forces in
    the world were spiritual.
  • Like Europeans and Africans, Natives believed
    that misfortunes such as military defeat,
    disease, or bad harvests happened to people who
    ignored rituals.
  • Natives passed on these cultural norms through
    oral tradition.
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