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         Hopi Indians Native Americans:     more books (106)
  1. Walker Of Time by Helen Hughes Vick, 1993-04
  2. Is My Friend at Home? : Pueblo Fireside Tales by John Bierhorst, 2001-09-12
  3. Standing Flower by Robert Black, 2001-08-20
  4. No Turning Back : A Hopi Indian Woman's Struggle to Live in Two Worlds by Polingaysi Qoyawayma, Elizabeth Q. White, 1977-02-01
  5. Remembering Awatovi: The Story of an Archaeological Expedition in Northern Arizona, 1935-1939 (Peabody Museum) by Hester A. Davis, 2008-12-15
  6. Deliberate Acts: Changing Hopi Culture Through the Oraibi Split by Peter M. Whiteley, 1988-06
  7. Grand Canyon's West Rim Drive : CD by Walkabout Audio Tours, 2000-09-01
  8. Grand Canyon's East Rim Drive : cassette by Walkabout Audio Tours, 2000-09-01
  9. Grand Canyon's West Rim Drive : cassette by Walkabout Audio Tours, 2000-09-01
  10. Grand Canyon's East Rim Drive : Westbound CD by Walkabout Audio Tours, 2000-09-01
  11. Grand Canyon's East Rim Drive : Eastbound CD by Walkabout Audio Tours, 2000-09-01
  12. The Moki Snake Dance by Walter Hough, 1992-10
  13. From Hunters To Healers: Visionary Aspects of Human Transformation and the New Paradigm of Life by Patrick Cain, 2003-01-07
  14. The Touchstone: A Transcendent Adventure (Visionary Fiction) by Patrick Cain, 1997-06-16

81. Native American Sites
native American Shelters he enduring heritage of connections History's new AlcoaFoundation Hall of American indians. of the Northwest Coast, the hopi of the
http://www.oswego.org/staff/cchamber/resources/nativeamericans.cfm
American Indians and the Natural World
he enduring heritage of connections between American Indians and the natural universe are the focus of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History's new Alcoa Foundation Hall of American Indians. Through exploration of four different visions of living in and with the natural worldthose of the Tlingit of the Northwest Coast, the Hopi of the Southwest, the Iroquois of the Northeast, and the Lakota of the PlainsNorth, South, East, West: American Indians and the Natural World examines the belief systems, philosophies, and practical knowledge that guide Indian peoples' interactions with the natural world. [ Edit Cherokees of California
Cherokees of California, Inc., is a non-profit tribal organization. We are banded together as descendants of a common Cherokee heritage. Our primary purpose is to preserve and pass on to the next generation our traditions, history and language. We invite all interested people who want to re-new ties with their Cherokee heritage to come and join us. [ Edit Cheyenne/Grassland Vocabulary
This is a set of Quia games on the Cheyenne.The game was created by Cindy Murabito from the Oswego City School District. [

82. Native Americans Of The Southwest
More Southwestern United States native americans, southwestern cooking Apache IndiansApache history, culture, stories. are Mojave, Chemehuevi, hopi and Navajo
http://gocalifornia.about.com/cs/nativeamericans1/
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Native Americans of the Southwest
Guide picks Native Americans of the Southwest - Navajo, Apache, Hopi, Anasazi, primitive tribes, more.
The Southwest: menu

More Southwestern United States - native Americans, southwestern cooking, arts, history, the desert, plants and animals, jokes, clip art, travelogues, desert living. Akimel O'Odham - Pima - Akimel O'Othom
Reservations, history, events and culture of the Akimel O'Odham, Pima, in Arizona. Anasazi Anasazi history, timelines, disappearance theories. Apache Indians Apache history, culture, stories. Camp Verde Yavapai Apache Reservation The Camp Verde Yavapai Apache Reservation is between Phoenix and Flagstaff. Tribes are Yavapai and Apache. Cocopah Indian Reservation The Cocopah Tribe and Indian Reservation south of Yuma, Arizona.

83. Native Americans, Homework Help, Carnegie Library Of Pittsburgh Resource Guide
An Arizona site with information about hopi Culture and War The war between the ModocIndians and the US native americans in North Georgia History of the Creek
http://www.carnegielibrary.org/subject/homework/nativeam.html
Select Library Area: Article Search Ask a Librarian Branches Careers at CLP Computer Classes Directions Employment Genealogy/History Homework Help Hours Kids' Site Library Subject Guide Renew a Book Request a Book Search Subject Departments Support the Library Teens' Site Web Resource Guide
Subject Search:
Web Site Catalog Internet Search
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Resource Guide:
... Homework Help
Native Americans
Pittsburgh Region Pennsylvania United States International
Pittsburgh Region
Allegheny-Kiske Valley: History - Native Peoples
Information on the old Indian town on the Kiskiminetas River, north of Pittsburgh, and on Guyasuta, the leading spirit of the Senecas in this part of the country, and was one of the most powerful chiefs of his time.
Carnegie Museum of Natural History: American Indians and the Natural World
An online exhibition of a new hall in this Pittsburgh museum that "emphasizes the interactions of American Indian people with the natural world. Through the arts and artifacts of five American Indian peoplesthe Lakota of the Plains, the Tlingit of the Northwest Coast, the Hopi of the Southwest, the Iroquois of the Northeast, and the American Indians living in urban areas the exhibition showcases the diversity and creativity of the native peoples of North America."
Native American Home Page
Created and maintained by Lisa Mitten, a mixed-blood Mohawk urban Indian, and a librarian at the University of Pittsburgh.

84. Homework Help--Countries & Native Peoples--Native Americans Today
Flags of the native Peoples of the United States of the Coeur d’Alene Tribe of Indiansprovides information hopi The hopi Tribe The official site of the hopi
http://www.kcls.org/hh/nativeamericanstoday.cfm
Library Services Find Your Library Ask a Librarian Reserve a PC Library Cards ... eBooks Good Reads Good Reads New Reads Book Clubs Youth Services Homework Help Kidspage TeenZone Library Resources eAudio Seniors ESL/Literacy Special Collections ... Email This
Native Americans Today
General
Tribes/Cultures General
American Indians

From Information Please, this Web site provides a variety of facts about American Indian tribes and reservations, and about Alaskan Natives and Eskimos.
American Indian and Alaskan Native Populations

From the U.S. Census Bureau, this Web site provides census statistics about American Indian and Alaskan Native populations.
Flags of the Native Peoples of the United States
Selected from a publication of the North American Vexillological Association, an organization dedicated to the scholarly study of flags. Choose a tribe, view their flag and read details about the flag and the tribe.
National Congress of American Indians

From the National Congress of American Indians, this Web site provides information about current issues related to American Indians and Alaskan Natives.

85. Fort Burgwin Library
native American (1989) State of native America Genocide Tribulations Misconceptionsabout American indians and their A History of the Navajohopi Land Dispute
http://www.smu.edu/cul/FBL/nativeamer.htm
Guides to
FBL Resources
Native Americans
Many books in the Fort Library relate to Native American history. For students and faculty in the SMU-in-Taos program, this guide lists some general sources but focuses on selected titles that cover late-19th century and 20th century periods and events. For pre-history, see the guide in this series on Archaeology Categories within this guide : Pueblos Reference Contemporary Issues Government Relations ... Selected Journal Articles See also other Library Guides in this series on
Anthropology, Archaeology, and Ethnology
Art: Architecture Art: Painting and Sculpture
Art: Photography
... Sciences: Botany Pueblos For information about a specific Pueblo group, search PONI under the specific name (e.g., Acoma Pueblo, Cochiti Indians, etc.) as Subject. For more general information, search Pueblo Indians as Subject. Also, review the lists below for relevant titles. Reference Books A to Z of Native American Women
Dictionary of Native American Mythology
Documents of United States Indian Policy
Encyclopedia of Native American Biography
Encyclopedia of North American Indians
Encyclopedia of Native American Religions
Encyclopedia of American Indian Costume
Great Documents in American Indian History Handbook of American Indian Religious Freedom Illustrated Atlas of Native American History Native American Almanac Native American History: A Chronology of a Culture’s Vast Achievements and Their Links to World Events Native Americans in the Twentieth Century: An Encyclopedia

86. Main Menu: Native American Indian PlentyStuff
300+ web pages of native American resource materials, original publications and organized Category Society Ethnicity native americans Directories...... Precontact native North American links to many informative essays. ND, SD, NY,AZ (linked-to AZ is historical background of Navajo-hopi Black Mountain land
http://www.kstrom.net/isk/mainmenu.html
N ATIVE A MERICAN I NDIAN R ESOURCES
M AIN M ENU
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Recent large increases in the amount of traffic to this website has caused the cost of keeping this site online to double again. Please help support this site with your contributions and book purchases.
How you can support this website!
There are over 300 web pages here. MainMenu leads to menus of independent topical sections . Page navigation buttons will always return you here. Down for revisions: TOOLS.
NATIVE MAPS from environmental threats to native Nations to GIS maps that "window" Native info where it's at. Pre-contact Native North American links to many informative essays. Active State maps for reservations in MN, WI, MI, CA, AK (whew!), ND, SD, NY, AZ (linked-to AZ is historical background of Navajo-Hopi Black Mountain land dispute and page of links on this dispute), NM. New: WA, OR; Canada treatymaps; Canadian Bands-by-provinces, contact info; Material culture maps; Pre-contact housing. AADIZOOKAANAG IDASH DIBAAJIMOWINAN: Stories Menu True stories by Native authors from many tribes for InterNet. Norma Jean Croy (prisoner for 20 years) and Leonard Peltier (19 years) have stories here; so do the Little People. Myths and legends with tellers and sources.Picture stories; Author bios; Cinderella feature; E-texts; Language learning resources, word for computer. Items below are all menus.

87. Tribal Index
Comprehensive 20-volume work of fact sheets and images for 80 native American tribes collected by Category Society Ethnicity Tribes, Nations and Bands...... Foreward by George P. Horse Capture to native Nations First natives as hopi Rain(Snake) Dance. The indians of OklahomaPart 1, a Comprehensive History- Five
http://curtis-collection.com/tribalindex.html
INDEX OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIAN This page is a gateway to information concerning approximately 80 western Native American tribes, visited and photographed by Edward S. Curtis from 1890 to 1930, taken from The North American Indian , Curtis' massive lifework. The North American Indian consists of 20 volumes of text, describing in detail all aspects of each Native American tribe's life and customs. Due to the large amount of information contained in The North American Indian , this portion of The Curtis Collection website will have to be constantly updated in order to provide more detail. Therefore, this site will be in "continuous construction" starting with basic tribal information. More detailed information, photographs/gravure images, and special items will be added on a regular basis. Please continue to visit the site for information concerning the tribe(s) in which you have an interest. The decision to group certain tribes together in single description was made by the author, Curtis, based on his evaluation of the similarities of language and customs, and, in no way, reduces the importance of any one singular tribe. The selection(s) made for the quote(s) for each tribe is not meant to be definitive or compete, but informative, regarding not only the specific tribe, but of all tribes. The Curtis Collection takes no responsibility for the accuracy of the statements or quotes, made in The North American Indian , but merely reflects them for your information.

88. Native Americans
pictures, that outside the Midwest, indians lived in collect information about theHopi culture, and 5g/51006054.html Western native americans Map Students
http://www.smcoe.k12.ca.us/ssfusd/do/DOResources/nativeAm.html
Native Americans Ohlone http://www.belmont.gov/hist/disc/ohlone.html Muwekma Ohlone Tribe http://www.belmont.gov/hist/disc/ohlone.html Ohlone http://sipapu.gsu.edu/html/architecture.html Anasazi Architecture - View three-dimensional models of prehistoric Anasazi buildings at this site. Try clicking on various parts of the model to see different views of the buildings. http://www.cr.nps.gov/aad/feature/feature.htm Ancient Architects of the Mississippi Explore this National Parks Service site to learn about the Mississippi moundbuilders. What was the purpose of the mounds that they built? How was the river an important part of their community? http://www.nmnh.si.edu/naa/fletcher/fletcher.htm Camping with the Sioux - Fieldwork diary of Alice Cunningham fletcher in 1881 (South Dakota Territory) http://ancientimages.org/index.html This site was created by fifth graders. It tracks the culture of the Cherokee tribe. http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/omhhtml/omhhome.html Omaha Indian Music" offers a sampling of traditional Omaha Indian music. The sound recordings include wax cylinder recordings made in the 1890s, as well as songs & spoken-word segments from the 1983 Omaha harvest celebration pow-wow, segments from an interview with an Omaha elder in 1983, songs & speeches from a performance by members of the Hethu'shka Society in 1985, & portions of an interview with an Omaha musician in 1999. Photos, fieldnotes, & more from the 1983 pow-wow are included. http://www.germantown.k12.il.us/html/homes.html

89. U.S. Department Of The Interior Library: Internet Sources On American Indians An
site has links to the Navajohopi Land Commission American Historical Images On FileThe native American Experience. American indians of the Pacific Northwest.
http://library.doi.gov/internet/native.html

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Here's a selection of news sites. See the Information Guides, below, for links to other news sources. NativeWeb Native American Tribal Pages is a list of links to tribal government web sites. The Bureau of Indian Affairs maintains a list of Federally recognized Indian tribes. American Indian Reservations and Trust Areas This site offers a compendium of information about the governments and economic infrastructures of these areas. The material is arranged geographically, and is presented in small files based on location. Troy Johnson, a professor at California State University at Long Beach, maintains a list of tribes not recognized by the Federal government . It is arranged by the states in which the tribes are located. The Bureau of Indian Affairs also maintains a list of non-Federally recognized Indian tribes that have applied for Federal acknowledgment

90. American Indian Studies
Dedicated to the presentation of artwork, photographs, video, and sound recordings, which reflect Category Science Social Sciences Visual Anthropology...... indians of North America. prison and focuses on the imprisonment of a number of NativeAmericans from 1873 to Alcatraz The Story of the hopi Inmates, Part 1.
http://www.csulb.edu/projects/ais/
This site received over 1,000,000 hits in 1999 from 50 countries throughout the world.
American Indian History and Related Issues
American Indian Studies programs were created at a number of universities throughout the United States beginning in the late 1960s. The American Indian Studies Program at California State University, Long Beach celebrated its 25th anniversary in 1994 and is the oldest continuous existing program. This world wide site is a developing site supervised by Professor Troy Johnson and is dedicated to the presentation of unique artwork, photographs, video and sound recordings which accurately reflect the history, culture and richness of the Native American experience in North America and has been expanded to include Indian people of Central America and Mexico. Contributions and comments may be made by contacting Professor Johnson See the various books Troy Johnson has written on the American Indian Culture.
Indians of North America
Alcatraz Occupation: The Story The 1969 occupation of Alcatraz Island is seen as a watershed event in contemporary Native American history. This site provides a brief history of the occupation as documented in my book, "The Occupation of Alcatraz Island, Indian Self-determination and The Rise of Indian Activism Alcatraz Occupaion in photographs This collection of photographs and descriptions by Ilka Hartmann tell the story of the American Indian occupation of Alcatraz Island through the eyes of those who made up the occupation force.

91. Index Of Native American History Resources On The Internet
Press and the National Archives hopi photographs of Adam of the Northern Great PlainsIndians of the Picture Book , 1896 Oklahoma native American Photographs
http://www.hanksville.org/NAresources/indices/NAhistory.html
WWW Virtual Library - American Indians
Index of Native American History Resources on the Internet
F requently A sked ... uestions for this site
This document must be read before sending any email!
Search this site
3/15/03 - New I am now entering new additions each day. The site is now run from a database. It will be about a week until the last new pages appears online. All new or updated links will be noted on the page where they appear. The What's New page is no longer updated. Trust Fund Filing , A New York Times, 1/07/03 Fed up with Spam?
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Oral History
American Indian Oral History Collection on 30 audiocassettes, Norman Ross Publishing American Society for Ethnohistory Comments On Carving Soapstone Dehcho: "Mom, We've Been Discovered!" Interviewing Inuit Elders ... Memories Come To Us in the Rain and the Wind , (Extracts from) Oral Histories and Oral Histories of the Mi'kmaq People Oral Narratives and Aboriginal Pasts:
An Interdisciplinary Review of the Literatures on Oral Traditions and Oral Histories
Our Elders , Interviews with Saskatchewan Elders

92. Native Americans Legends Index
native american lore, stories, fables, tales and legends
http://home.no.net/norweagl/lore/index0.htm
White man with multicoloured heart in search of a better earth.
Index of the collection,
alphabetical and by theme Native
american
lore Alpha-index
A Cheyenne blanket (Pawnee)
A contest for wives
(Cochiti)
A Fish Story
(Tewa)
A gust of wind
(Ojibway)
Adventures of Great Rabbit
(Algonquian)
Ancient One
Apache Chief punishes his wife (Tiwa) Arrow Boy (Cheyenne) Basket Woman, Mother of the Stars Bear and his Indian wife, the (Haida) Big Long Man's Corn Patch Blood Clot (South. Ute) Bluebird and the Coyote (Pima) Brave Woman Counts Coup (White R.Sioux) Bridal Veil Falls Buffalo and Eagle Wing Buffalo Woman, A Story of Magic (Caddo ?) Butterflies (Papago) Changing of Mikcheech, the (Wabenaki) Chief Mountain (Siksika) Chinook wind (Yakima) Chipmunk and Bear Case of the severed head (Cheyenne) Coming of Thunder, the (Miwok) Comrades, the Corn Mother (Penobscot) Corn Spirit, the (Tuscarora) Coyote (Shoshoni/Paiute) Coyote and Multnomah Falls Coyote and the Another One ("C.P.Whitedog") Coyote and the Hen, the

93. The Changing Physical Environment Of The Hopi Indians Of Arizona
ResearchThe Changing Physical Environment of the hopi indians of Arizona. TheChanging Physical Environment of the hopi indians of Arizona.
http://www.cpluhna.nau.edu/Research/hack.htm
Search the CP-LUHNA Web pages Paleobotany and Paleoclimate of the Southern Colorado Plateau Packrat Midden Research in the Grand Canyon Environmental Change in the Upper Gunnison Basin The Spread of Maize to the Colorado Plateau ... Fire-Southern Oscillation Relations in the Southwest
The Changing Physical Environment of the Hopi Indians of Arizona
Source: Hack, J.T. 1942. The Changing Physical Environment of the Hopi Indians of Arizona. Papers of the Peabody Museum 35(1) . Harvard University, Cambridge. The following is the abstract from the above report, a classic of southwestern land cover and land use history which has withstood the test of time. A paperback reprint edition of the complete paper is published by Periodicals Service Co ; ISBN: 0527012882. The Hopi country [ map ] lies on the southern escarpment of Black Mesa , a dissected highland about 60 miles in diameter underlain by resistant Upper Cretaceous sandstone. This mesa is drained by the southwestward-flowing, ephemeral streams of the Tusayan Washes, which separate the fingering prongs of the escarpment and thence flow into the barren plains leading to the Little Colorado River . These streams bring sand and silt from Black Mesa to the lower plains where the prevailing southwest winds separate them and carry the sand back northward to bank it against the escarpments of that part of Black Mesa which is the Hopi country. Because of the relatively large quantities of dune sand resulting from this process, the Hopi country has a lower runoff after rain and more permanent springs than areas of similar climate nearby.

94. Frank Dukepoo Biographical Sketch
his other research interests include the study of birth defects in Southwest NativeAmericans and, albinism and inbreeding among the hopi indians of Northern
http://members.aol.com/natamcan2/fm10.htm
Biographical Sketch
Frank C. Dukepoo
Frank C. Dukepoo is a full-blooded American Indian of Hopi and Laguna heritage. Born on the Mohave Indian reservation, in Arizona, he received his early education in the Phoenix area, In 1973 he graduated from Arizona State University with a Ph.D. in zoology (genetics). He, is the first Hopi to have earned a doctorate and one of six Indians nationally who hold earned doctorates in the sciences. He is one of only two Native American geneticists in the country. His background includes teaching at San Diego State University, administrative executive positions with the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health, Washington, D.C. He is the former Director of Indian Education at Northern Arizona University (NAU), Flagstaff. Presently, he is a faculty member in the Department of Biological Sciences and Special Assistant to the Academic Vice President at NAU. For the past I years he has expanded his interest in the area of retention and motivation. In recent years he has gained considerable reputation as one of the country's outstanding motivators of Indian students. He is the former Director of a NSF-supported science program that has gained national recognition for 100% retention of Indian students. Dr. Dukepoo is the founder, incorporator and Director of the National Native American Honor Society. This nationally-recognized exemplary program includes about 2,000 straight-A Native American students representing some 190 schools in the continental United States, Alaska and Canada.

95. Sasquatch And Native Americans
Indian legends about the Sasquatch.Category Science Anomalies and Alternative Science Bigfoot......
http://www.ncf.carleton.ca/~bz050/HomePage.bfna.html
Credit: Henry Franzoni I met Gayle Highpine, a Kootenai Indian, at a monthly meeting of the Western Bigfoot Society. She had published the following paper in a very early Track Record, and gave me permission to reprint it here on the conference. Gayle has traveled extensively among the various reservations and enclaves of North American Indians for the last 30 years. She was a member of A.I.M., the American Indian Movement, during the '70s. A female Indian who was always interested in the old ways, she was and is very interested in learning more about Sasquatch, and she has listened attentively to many medicine men's Sasquatch stories as she traveled from reservation to reservation. I think her paper gives a good basic survey of Native American thought on the subject, and I find her obervation of the apparent division between "Flesh and Blood", thinkers and "Spiritual/Mystical" thinkers highly enlightening. P.S. The Kootenai tribe's home basically is southeast British Columbia. Attitudes Toward Bigfoot in Many North American Cultures
By Gayle Highpine "But, special being as he is, I have never heard anyone from a Northwestern tribe suggest that Bigfoot is anything other than a physical being, living in the same physical dimensions as humans and other animals. He eats, he sleeps, he poops, he cares for his family members. However, among many Indians elsewhere in North America... as widely separated at the Hopi, the Sioux, the Iroquois, and the Northern Athabascan Bigfoot is seen more as a sort of supernatural or spirit being, whose appearance to humans is always meant to convey some kind of message."

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