objective: to examine the peoples of the north, the northwest coast, and the great plains. inuit...

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Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe; people of the Great Plains Chief Anotklosh of the Taku Tribe, ca. 1913 ; people of the Northwest Coast

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Page 1: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains.

Inuit child; people of the

Arctic

Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe; people of the Great Plains

Chief Anotklosh of the Taku Tribe, ca. 1913 ; people of the Northwest Coast

Page 2: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

Peoples of the North

• The Inuits live in the Arctic, a land of frozen icy seas and treeless plains.

Arctic National Wildlife Refuge

Page 3: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

• Traditionally, the Inuits made their homes out of driftwood.

An iceberg floats by an Inuit village on the coast of East Greenland.

Page 4: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

(left) Here are homes of Inuit living in Indian Point, Siberia in 1897.

(right) This photograph, from around 1899, shows an Inuit summer hut. It is made of animal skins stretched over a frame. Traditionally, Inuit lived in huts like these during the warmer summer months.

Page 5: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

• In the winter, many lived in igloos, which are houses of snow and ice.

(right) This picture shows several Inuit constructing an igloo with blocks of snow. Traditionally, Inuit lived in igloos during the coldest months and tent like huts during the warmer months.

(left) Eskimo (Inuit) family inside an igloo lit by a kudlik (soapstone oil lamp).

Page 7: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

Total indigenous populations of the Arctic

The proportion of indigenous people (orange) within the Arctic portions of the countries in the early 1990s.

Page 8: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

• The Inuits traveled each season to new locations in order to find food.

Examples:

winter – hunted seals and fish near the sea

Page 9: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

spring – used kayaks, or small skin boats, to hunt seals and whales

Hunter with a Killing Lance and Club

Page 10: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

summer – moved inland to hunt caribou and fish inland lakes and rivers

Inuit caribou hunt, Alaska, 1936

caribou

Page 11: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

This Inuit woman is carrying her baby on her back, the traditional Inuit way to carry a baby. The hoods of women's parkas were made extra large to fit an infant if needed. (1906)

Page 12: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

These three little Inuit girls are each carrying a puppy. Dogs were, and continue to be an important part of Inuit life. For example, dogs provided the energy and strength to move sleds across the snow and ice. These little puppies may have grown up to pull a sled! (Nome, Alaska, 1904)

Page 13: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

This portrait of an Inuit man wearing a fur jacket with hood was most likely taken at the beginning of the 20th century.

Traditional Inuit clothing is made from animal skins.

Large thick warm coats with big hoods called parkas are worn as an outer layer.

Page 14: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

This man in Alaska is carving ivory, an Inuit tradition. (1912)

Page 15: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

Peoples of the Northwest Coast

• The peoples of the Northwest Coast lived in an area filled with resources.

Examples: trees - wood used to make houses- inner bark used to make baskets, rope and clothes

Gabe Gobin, an Indian logger, in front of his home. Tulalip Reservation, Washington. Photographed by Lee Muck, 1916.

Page 16: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

fish – the area is abundant with salmon

animals - deer, moose, and bear were hunted for their meat and hides

"Spirit of the Sockeye“ (pen & ink / acrylic 11x13) Salmon are very important to the cultures of the Northwest coast tribes and figure prominently in their lives, their history, and their legends. Natives believed the salmon to be a separate people, living beneath the ocean.

Video: Salmon Hunt

Page 17: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

• Because food was plentiful the peoples of the Northwest Coast built permanent villages.

• Within each village, the more families owned, the more they were respected.

Haida Village in the Queen Charlotte Islands

Page 18: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

• Families held potlatches, or ceremonial dinners, where they showed off their wealth by giving gifts to the guests, such as canoes, animal skins, and jewelry.

Potlatch figure welcoming guests

Page 19: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

Items lined up for a potlatch near Victoria, British Columbia, 1865

Page 21: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

Peoples of the Great Plains

Original range of the Plains Indians

Page 22: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

• Because there were few trees, the people of the Great Plains made homes out of sod, or thickly matted grass.

Apparently deserted sod house, but in relatively good shape, showing door, two windows and stove pipe. It is built in two sections with two different roof lines. To left in background is a windmill. Kansas, early 1900’s

Page 23: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

• They also used buffalo hides to make cone-shaped tents called tepees.

Tepees of the Shoshone tribe.

Page 24: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

• Plains men hunted animals such as buffalo, antelope, elk, deer, and bighorn sheep.

• Plains women planted crops such as corn, beans and squash.

BUFFALO HUNT, UNDER THE WOLF SKIN by George Catlin 1830's

Page 25: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

• The people of the Great Plains used dogs, and later horses, to haul supplies on a sled known as a travois.

Lakota Woman And Dog Travois, Rosebud Reservation

Page 27: Objective: To examine the peoples of the North, the Northwest Coast, and the Great Plains. Inuit child; people of the Arctic Sacajawea, Shoshone tribe;

• Horses, introduced to the people of the Great Plains in the 1700’s, made hunting easier and decreased their reliance on agriculture.

"Assiniboine hunting buffalo", painting by Paul Kane (1810-1871). Oil on canvas, Painted between 1851 and 1856.