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Settling the Americas. How did early people adapt to life in North America?. Page 20. Settling the Americas – Lesson 1. How did the first Native Americans arrive in North America? Water routes Land routes Why did hunter-gatherers settle in the Americas? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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How did early people adapt to life in North America?

Settling the Americas

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Glaciers trapped water to expose the floor of the Bering Sea between Siberia and Alaska. This formed a land bridge called Beringia.

Hunter-gatherers crossed a land bridge following animals and picked berries, grasses, and mushrooms.

How did the first Native Americans arrive in North America?

Water routesLand routes

Why did hunter-gatherers settle in the Americas?

They were following game that supplied their food and clothing.

SETTLING THE AMERICAS – LESSON 1

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Surpluses in food allowed people time to specialize in trade, building, and pottery.

What are the three main reasons civilizations develop?

FarmingSurplusSpecialization

SETTLING THE AMERICAS

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The Olmec were the first to use chocolate, develop a calendar, and understand the idea of zero.Teotihuacán was the first major city in the Americas. Its temples and streets were laid out according to the position of the sunThe Maya had a calendar, developed a mathematics system, built pyramids, created a system of writing, and studied the stars.

What are two of the earliest civilizations in Mexico?

OlmecMaya What led to the decline of the Maya civilization?

The people could not produce enough food for everyone.

Page 23Movie 45:52 – 53:06

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The Hohokam farmed using irrigation and built homes from adobe. Irrigation supplies land with water through a series of pipes and ditches.The Ancestral Pueblo built homes into the sides of cliffs and used dry farming. Dry farming uses collected rainwater and melted snow.Homes had special rooms, called kivas, for meetings and religious purposes.Cahokia was the greatest Mississippian city. In 1100 A.D., it was one of the largest cities in the world.

What are three early North American civilizations and where did they settle?Hohokam (present-day Arizona)Ancestral Pueblo (the Southwest)Mound Builders (the Midwest) Why did some early people build mounds?The Hopewell used mounds for burials and religious ceremonies.

Mississippians used mounds for burial and to watch the sun and stars.

Page 25Movie 37:38 – 45:45

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How did the availability of natural resources affect people’s decisions to settle.

What are two factors that affect the way that cultures developed?

Climate Natural resources What three crops were important to the Hohokam and the Ancestral Pueblo?

maizebeanssquash

SETTLING THE AMERICAS

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NATIVE AMERICANS OF THE WEST – LESSON 2

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How did environments of the West affect the lives of Native Americans?

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Inuit were hunters who used different parts of animals for food, clothing, tools, and weapons.

The Tlingit and other Pacific Northwestern groups used waterways to hunt and trade.

Pacific Northwest groups made totem poles to tell stories about important family members and to celebrate special events.

Potlatches are feasts at which guests receive gifts from the host.

NATIVE AMERICANS OF THE WEST

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Tlingit Inuitconserved

natural resources

got most food from sea

made tools and shelter from natural resources

wealthy traders

known for crafts

built plank houses

hunters

lived in Arctic

built pit houses, igloos, tents

Alike

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NATIVE AMERICANS OF THE WEST

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Movie 30:10-37:38

PEOPLE OF THE SOUTHWEST – LESSON 3

How did the Pueblo and Navajo adapt to a desert environment?

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Pueblo The Pueblo used dry farming and built homes from adobe. Homes were secured by raising ladders so intruders could not enter. They also made jewelry. NavajoThe Navajo were hunter-gatherers who migrated to the Southwest.They borrowed ideas from the Pueblo to adapt to the desert environment. They used dry farming, wove cotton to make cloth, and made jewelry from silver and turquoise.They lived in hogans, which are dome shaped homes made from log or stick frames then covered with mud or sod.The Navajo captured sheep and became shepherds.They used the meat for food and they used wool to make clothes and blankets.

NATIVE PEOPLE OF THE SOUTHWEST

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Pueblo Navajo

used dry farming

wove cotton cloth

made silver and turquoise jewelry

built adobe apartments

grew maize

built single-family hogans

raised sheep

“walked in beauty”

Alike

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NATIVE PEOPLE OF THE SOUTHWEST

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NATIVE AMERICANS OF THE PLAINS – LESSON 4

How did Native Americans of the Plains use natural resources to survive?

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Native Americans of the Plains hunted bison for food, clothing, and to make teepees.

Teepees are cone-shaped homes made with long poles and covered with animal hides.

The Lakota kept records of important events of each year. These records are called winter counts.

Boys and girls were taught different skills to prepare them for adulthood.

NATIVE AMERICANS OF THE PLAINS

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List two ways life changed for Native Americans on the Plains after the arrival of horses. 

Hunted on horsebackTraded with faraway groups

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PEOPLE OF THE EASTERN WOODLANDS – LESSON 5

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How did groups of the Eastern Woodlands live?

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Eastern Woodlands groups used materials from the forest for food and clothing. for example, they ate muskrat and deer meat.

Slash-and-burn farming is when people cut down, or slash, trees to allow rays of sunlight to reach a plot of land. Then they burn the undergrowth to clear room for crops.

After the harvest, they leave the plot of land empty for several years. This prevents the soil from wearing out.

PEOPLE OF THE EASTERN WOODLANDS

Identify two major Native American groups that lived in the Eastern Woodlands.

CreekIroquois What kind of farming did they use and why?

They used slash-and-burn farming because the forests were so thick.

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CreekThe Creek built wattle-and-daub huts for individual families. Huts were made from poles and covered with grass, mud, or thatch.

They arranged the town around a council house or Chokofa.

They also decorated pots with stamps.

IroquoisThe Iroquois built homes on top of steep-sided hills with wood. These homes are called longhouses.

The used high log fences to protect their villages

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PEOPLE OF THE EASTERN WOODLANDS

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Creek Iroquois

grew corn

celebrated Green Corn

Festival

played lacrosse

had huts for individual families

used wattle-and-daub

arranged around a council hut

stamped designs on pottery

had longhouses for several families

built of wood

protected village with fence

made wampum

Alike

PEOPLE OF THE EASTERN WOODLANDS

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Government in the Woodlands

PEOPLE OF THE EASTERN WOODLANDS

Creek

Formed a confederacy

Divided towns into two types

War towns (red)—declared war, planned battles, and held meetings with enemy groups

Peace towns (white)—passed laws and held prisoners

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The League of Six Nations is an example of an early democracy.

Benjamin Franklin borrowed some of its ideas to include in the U.S. Constitution.

Government in the Woodlands

PEOPLE OF THE EASTERN WOODLANDS

Iroquois

Women led the clans and appointed male leaders.

Formed the Iroquois Confederacy

Became known as the League of Six Nations after the six Iroquois groups that formed it

Purpose of the confederacy was to promote peace among Iroquois groups.

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REVIEW

They used the sea to hunt and trade.

In which areas of North America did native people settle and develop their cultures?WestSouthwestPlainsEastern Woodlands

What are three farming techniques that native people used?Irrigation – West in California desertDry Farming – SouthwestSlash-and-burn – Eastern Woodlands

How did people in the Pacific Northwest use the sea?

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Describe some of the homes of native people and who built them.

Adobe – bricks made from mud and straw; protects from extreme heat and cold (Hohokam and Pueblos)

Cliffs – built into the sides of cliffs (Ancestral Pueblos)

Hogans – dome-shaped homes made from log or stick frames and covered with mud or sod (Navajo)

Teepees – cone-shaped homes made with long poles and covered with animal hides (Plains)

Wattle-and-daub huts – made from poles and covered with grass, mud, or thatch (Creek)

Longhouses – built with wood on tops of steep-sided hills (Iroquois)

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Which Native American group formed the League of Six Nations?

The Iroquois formed the League of Six Nations.

How did Native Americans on the Great Plains adapt to the environment?

They hunted bison and built lodges from grass, sticks, and soil.

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