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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > North American Indigenous Peoples > Natives, North American
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Natives, North American, North American Indigenous Peoples

Related Category: North American Indigenous Peoples


The Southwest area generally extended over Arizona, New Mexico, and parts of Colorado and Utah. The Uto-Aztecan branch of the Aztec-Tanoan linguistic stock was the main language group of the area. Here a seminomadic people called the Basket Makers, who hunted with a spear thrower, or atlatl, acquired (c.1000 B.C.) the art of cultivating beans and squash, probably from their southern neighbors. They also learned to make unfired pottery. They wove baskets, sandals, and bags. By c.700 B.C. they had initiated intensive agriculture, made true pottery, and hunted with bow and arrow. They lived in pit dwellings, which were partly underground and were lined with slabs of stone : the so-called slab houses. A new people came into the area some two centuries later; these were the ancestors of the Pueblo Indians. They lived in large, terraced community houses set on ledges of cliffs or canyons for protection (see cliff dwellers) and developed a ceremonial chamber (the kiva) out of what had been the living room of the pit dwellings. This period of development ended c.1300, after a severe drought and the beginnings of the invasions from the north by the Athabascan-speaking Navajo and Apache. The known historic Pueblo cultures of such sedentary farming peoples as the Hopi and the Zuni then came into being. They cultivated corn, beans, squash, cotton, and tobacco, killed rabbits with a wooden throwing stick, and traded cotton textiles and corn for buffalo meat from nomadic tribes. The men wove cotton textiles and cultivated the fields, while women made fine polychrome pottery. The mythology and religious ceremonies were complex.



The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press.
Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.




Topics that might be of interest to you:

Americas, antiquity and prehistory of the
Athabascan
atlatl
Bannock
Basket Makers
cliff dwellers
coup
Dawes Act
Eskimo
Eastern Woodlands culture
Haida
Kalispel
kiva
Mound Builders
Narragansett
Native American languages
Neutral Nation
Nootka
Osage, indigenous people of North America
Ottawa, indigenous people of North America
Pennacook
Pequot
Pontiac's Rebellion
Potawatomi
potlatch
Sac and Fox
Salish
shaman
Spokan
tepee
Tlingit
totem
travois
Tsimshian
Ute
Wampanoag
Wappinger
Winnebago
Yakima, indigenous people of North America
Yurok

Related Categories:

Social Sciences and the Law > Anthropology and Archaeology
History > United States and Canada


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