chapter 1: native peoples of america to 1500
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Chapter 1: Native Peoples of America to 1500. Focus. Origin and migration of Native American people Similarities and differences between Native Am. Cultures Economic basis of various civilizations Religious and cultural beliefs, esp. concepts of land - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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Chapter 1: Native Peoples of America to 1500
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FocusOrigin and migration of Native
American peopleSimilarities and differences
between Native Am. CulturesEconomic basis of various
civilizationsReligious and cultural beliefs,
esp. concepts of landThe state of things prior to
European arrival
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Peopling New Worlds33,000-10,500 BC: Last Ice AgeSmall widely scattered groups (small
bands) that interacted through trade/travel. Few large possessions or permanent villages.
Theory 1◦ Siberian hunters following game
Theory 2◦ Arrived before 10,500 BC by boat with
patterned stops down the coastMost agree it was multiple migrations
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Three MigrationsMost Native Americans are
descendents of the 1st earliest migrations
Athapaskan – 7000 BC and settled in Alaska and NW Canada. Later migrate and become the Apache and Navajos
After 3000 BC Inuits and Aleuts
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Connection to Oral TraditionsPueblos/Navajos
◦arrival by way of a perilous journey through other worlds
Iroquois◦Pregnant woman who
fell from the sky world
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These earliest Indians are referred to as Paleo-Indians◦Hunters and gatherers
living in small bands of 15-50 individuals (several families)
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◦Traveled well defined hunting territories
◦Basic tool was the spear with a flint point
◦Arch. sites near perennial springs, watering holes, and river crossings
◦Left hunting grounds for quarries and encountered other bands
◦Creating a Broad Cultural Life
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This “Free Land” and skilled hunters creates an abundant diet and then a growth in population
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Around 9000 BC Megafauna becomes extinct◦2/3 of the species over 100 lbs.
at maturity◦Probably due to a warming
climate and overkill
◦This decline brings a change in humans
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Archaic SocietiesWarming climate until 4000
BCSea levels rise, flooding low
lying coastal areas, glacial runoff fills waterways
Deciduous forests and grassy plains
A range of Flora and Fauna emerges
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Archaic peoples live off of a wider/broader variety of smaller mammals, fish, plants (creation of the atlatl spear)
Communities require less land and can support larger populations (yr. round villages)◦Up to 10X as many people◦N. American pop. Increase to 1
million
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By 5000 BC farmers were planting selected seeds for future farming◦ Modification of the environment:
setting fires, weeding out inedible plants = the verge of horticulture
3000 BC – Maize in C. America (2500 BC in N. Mexico and squash/gourds in MO and KY
However, for over 1000 yrs. after farming, the diet is still meat, fish, wild plants
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Next Big ChangeDiversity
◦Farming takes over the majority of diet around 2000 BC
◦Officially a Horticultural society by 1500 BC with three great crops: Maize, Squash, and Beans
◦What’s the Impact?
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Altered environmentsIncreased populationMore sedentary lifeYet trade networksSpecializationPolitical systemsHierarchical societyNegative: diet may not be as
diverse, potential catastrophe, spread of disease
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Mesoamerica and South America
2500-2000: selective breeding of corn and beans (lysine)
After 2000 crop surpluses expand contacts through formal exchange networks
1200: Olmecs had urban centers, hereditary rulers, unequal society
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American Southwest Full time farming not until 400 BC
(water has always been an issue)Hohokam in southern Arizona
◦Farmed the Gila and Salt rivers◦Built irrigation◦Permanent towns (pueblos)◦Confederacies with central city
coordination◦Constant ritual exertion to maintain
balance (existential anxiety)
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Anasazi (Navajo for “ancient ones”)◦Four Corners during the 1st
century BC◦Apartments with kivas◦Height of culture: 900-1150
during an unusually wet period◦Chaco Canyon
12 towns with 15,000 people (satellite towns 65 miles away)
Connection to Central America Used Mesas to capture rainfall
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Downfall of these cultures◦Drought, malnutrition,
and feuds Defensive pueblos Skeletal remains depict
violent deaths, even cannibalism
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Eastern WoodlandsWith rain and forest,
populations predate farmingMound Builders: Poverty Point
in Mississippi and Adena in the Ohio Valley◦Rarely exceeded 400 people◦Most mounds contained graves◦Hopewell Mounds from the Ohio
Valley to the Illinois River
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1st full time farmers was the Mississippian Culture◦Around 700 AD◦Extensive craft production and
trade◦Plazas, sun worship, death of
chief ceremony◦Best example is Cahokia (St.
Louis) after 900 AD
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Cahokia20,000 people; 6 square
miles; 120 earth mounds125 square metro area
with 10 large towns and 50 farming villages
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Northwest coastal villages
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Plains Indians
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By 1500 Western Hemisphere had 75 million people
7-10 million north of Mesoamerica◦Unevenly distributed◦Hundreds of languages◦Hundreds of nations
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Broad common cultureBound by kinship
◦ Nuclear families never stood alone◦ Iroquois- extended families of the
women took precedence over those of men; primary male figure was mother’s oldest brother
Animism◦ Supernatural was a complex and
diverse web of power woven into every part of the world; spiritual and material
◦ Restraint out of fear or concern
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Social values◦Consensus◦Shaming children◦Custom-regulated life◦Reciprocity but not equality
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The EndEuropeans
◦The Tech◦Organizational capacity◦Imperial rivals◦Conducive religious
ideologies◦Domesticated animals◦System of long-distance
communication◦Shared microbes