hopi & kwakiutl - native american tribes (social studies, 6th grade)
DESCRIPTION
This is a slideshow that accompanies a lesson on two Native American tribes (Southeast and Northwest), based loosely on Building a Nation, social studies textbookTRANSCRIPT
Class 306Social Studies
4.29.2013
The Southwest
Desert- Pueblo people
The Southwest Cultural Region
ARID
(of land or a climate) Having little or no rain; too dry
The Rio Grande, Arizona, New Mexico
PuebloIn Spanish, it means “village”.
Around
1050, Hopi
village of
Oraibi was
built.
ADOBETYPE OF CLAY
RESEMBLELook like,Be Like
Hopi Village
Hopi
Home
Kivas, ceremonial chambers
Irrigation system
Kachinas dolls
Hopi belived that kachinas could help bring rain.
Rattle-snake dance
Today 7000 Hopi live on a reservation in
Arizona
Hopi ceremonial clothes
The Northwest Coast- Kwakiutl
The Northwest Coast
15000 Kwakiutl around 1700s
PotlatchGift-giving festival;A family leader hosts guests in their family's house and holds a feast for their guests, along with gift giving.Gifts could be: Chiklat blankets, dried foods, sugar, flour, or other material things, and sometimes money.
Kwakiutl potlatch
Plentiful Sturdy
RichAbundant
Strongly and solidly built
Cedar tree
Kawakiutl houses and canoes
Kawakiutl hunting
Shaman took care
of the Kwakiutl
tribe health needs.
Totem poles
Chilkatblanket