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         Shuswap Indians Native Americans:     more detail
  1. Brotherhood to Nationhood: George Manuel and the Making of the Modern Indian Movement by Peter McFarlane, 1993-09
  2. A Complex Culture of the British Columbia Plateau: Traditional Stl'Atl'Imx Resource Use
  3. Maybe Tomorrow by Joan Weir, 2003-07
  4. Resistance and Renewal: Surviving the Indian Residential School by Celia Haig-Brown, 2002-07-01
  5. Glass Tepee by Garry Gottfriedson, 2002-10-10
  6. Wartime Images, Peacetime Wounds: The Media and the Gustafsen Lake Standoff by Sandra Lambertus, 2004-01-18
  7. Victims of Benevolence: The Dark Legacy of the Williams Lake Residential School by Elizabeth Furniss, 2002-07-01
  8. Skin Like Mine (Poetry By Individual Poets) by Garry Gottfriedson, 2010-04-15

1. St. John The Evangelist Catholic Church -- Native Americans And Catholicism
native americans and Catholicism Links to Information. Sekanais (Canada),Seneca indians. Setebo indians (Peru), shuswap indians (British Columbia).
http://www.globalthinking.com/stjohn/nativeamericans.htm
Native Americans and Catholicism - Links to Information This information has been collected as a reference by Virginia Giglio, Ph.D. Information from these links does not necessarily reflect the views of either the researcher, St. John the Evangelist Church , or the present day Roman Catholic Church. Catholic Encyclopedia Entries What is the Catholic Encyclopedia? The first volume appearing in 1907, ". . . the work was intended to show not only the inner life of the Church in organization, teaching, and practice, but also the manifold and far-reaching influence of Catholicism upon all that most deeply concerns mankind. Hence the introduction of many titles which are not specifically Catholic or even religious in the stricter sense, but under which some interest of the Church or some phase of its activity is recorded." Quoted from the web site. American Indians Alaska Angulo, Pedro Apaches ... Arawaks (Greater Antilles) Badin, Stephen Theodore

2. Awesome Library - Social_Studies
Seminole, Seneca, Shawnee, Shoshone, shuswap, Siksika, Siletz, Sioux of the ancientPlains indians of the Poetry and Stories of native americans (nativeTech.org
http://www.awesomelibrary.org/Classroom/Social_Studies/Multicultural/Native_Amer
Awesome Talking Library Examples ... U.S. Department of Peace
Here: Home Classroom Social Studies Multicultural > Native American
Native American
Also Try
  • Ancient History
  • Ancient Native Americans
  • Multicultural Toolkit
  • Native American Confederacies, Nations, and Tribes ...
  • Native American Languages by Confederacies, Nations, and Tribes
    Lesson Plans
  • History and Cultures of Native Americans - British Columbia First Nations (British Columbia Ministry of Education)
      Provides nine lesson plans regarding the history and cultures of Native Americans in North America. The materials are called an Integrated Resource Package. Grade 12. 2-01

  • Indian Removal Act (Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History)
      Provides lessons and Web resources for studying this Act and its important consequences in American history. 6-02

    Lists
  • -Native American Groups (Awesome Library)
      Provides sources of information on Confederacies, Nations, and Tribes, in alphabetic order by group. 1-01

  • -Tribes and Nations - First Nations (Matin)
      Provides a comprehensive set of resources, organized by subject. 2-01

  • Aboriginal Peoples Worldwide Links (Henderson)
  • Native American Indian Resources (Giese)
      Provides sources of information on the cultures of Native Americans.
  • 3. Native American Indians
    native American indians. Ontalink, , native americans, , Abenaki 7, Goshute3, Mohican 2, Shawnee. Alabama Coushatta 4, Gwitchin 1, Moravian, shuswap18.
    http://www.ontalink.com/native_americans/
    Native American Indians Ontalink Native Americans
    Abenaki
    Goshute Mohican Shawnee ... Shinnecock Acoma Guajiro Muskogees Shoshoni Alabama Coushatta Gwitchin Moravian ... Nansemond Sicangu Alaska Haliwa Narragansett Siletz Algonquin Hawaiian Navajo ... Sioux Nation Anishinabe Hidatsa Nez Perce Skagit Apache Ho Chunk Nipmuc Sokoki Arapaho Hohokam Nisgaa Spokane ... Assiniboine Huron Ohlone Stockbridge Assiniboine Sioux hupa Ojibwe Chippewa Suquamish ... Illinois Oglala (Sioux) Swinomish Aztec Innu Ojibway Taino Blackfeet Inuit Okanagan Tarascan Blackfoot inupiaq Olmec Tewa Blood iowa Omaha Tlingit Caddo ... Tonkawa Cahuila Jemez Onondaga Tsilhqotin California Kalispel Osage Tuscarora Carrier Karuk Otoe Umpqua Cayuga Kaw Otomi Ute Chemehuevi Kiowa Ottawa Waccamaw Cherokee Nation Klallam ... Kootenai Papago Warm Springs Chicora Koyukon Passamaquoddy Wasco Chippewa Cree Laguna Paugussett Washoe Chitimacha Lakota Nation ... Choctaw Lenape Penoboscot Western Chumash Lumbee Peoria Wichita Coeur d' Alene Maidu Pequot Winnibago Coharie ... Wiyot Colville Mandan Pomo Wyandot Comanchee Mattaponi Potawatomi ... Yagua Conoy Maya Powhatan Yakama Costanoan Meherrin ... Quapaw Yaqui Cowlitz Menominee Quinault Yuchi Cree Mesquakie Ramapough Yumen Creek Metis Saanich Yupik Crow Miami Sac and Fox Yurok Dakota Micmac Salish Zuni Delaware (Lenape) Mingo Salteaux Dene Mission Santa Carla (Pueblo) Edisto Miwok Santa Domingo (Pueblo) Eskimo Modoc Santee (Sioux) Esselen Mohave Saponi Genealogy Mohawk Seminole Indian Wars Mohegan Seneca People

    4. Marilee's Native Americans Resource
    Perce, Nicola, Okanagan, Palus, Sanpoil, shuswap, Spokane, Tenino, Thompson, Umatilla, Yakima, Walla Tamim Ansary, 2001. California indians (native americans), by Mir Tamim Ansary,
    http://www.ameritech.net/users/macler/nativeamericans.html
    This webpage is moving to http://marilee.us/nativeamericans.html
    Please change your bookmarks and links as this site will no longer be updated.
    Home
    Word Puzzles Picturebooks KidPix/KidWorks Projects ... Link-Backs
    Marilee's Native Americans Resource
    Cherokee
    Comanche
    Cree
    Haida
    Hopi
    Inuit
    Iroquois Navajo NezPerce Pomo Sioux Ute Wampanoag Misc. Tribes Clothing Craft Projects FamousPeople Legends Recipes Songs, Dances, Games
    Creation stories teach that Native Americans have been where they are since the world was created. It is also thought that First Americans migrated from Siberia over the Bering Strait about 14,000 years ago, or perhaps even earlier. The land bridge was dry ground for several thousand years before the sea level rose again and stopped migration. The hunters would have followed the migrating herds of large mammals as they moved south. As the glaciers melted, the First Americans spread to the North American coasts and across the entire continent. Native Americans adapted to the climates and terrains in which they lived and used whatever natural resources were available. The arrival of the Europeans in the 1500's began a change in the lives of the Indian people that continued through the next centuries. Sometimes the changes were good. The horses brought by the Spanish made bison hunting much easier and safer. But Vikings, Spanish, English and French explorers, colonists and missionaries spread diseases, made slaves of the people, forced relocations, claimed ownership of natural resources and land, and tried to stamp out the native cultures. Some of the Indian people survived, but not without making drastic changes in their life styles.

    5. Marilee's Native Americans Resource
    Modoc, Molala, Nez Perce, Nicola, Okanagan, Palus, Sanpoil, shuswap, Spokane, Tenino byMir Tamim Ansary, 2001 California indians (native americans), by Mir
    http://marilee.us/nativeamericans.html
    Home Word Puzzles Picturebooks KidPix/KidWorks Projects ... Link-Backs
    Marilee's Native Americans Resource
    Cherokee
    Comanche
    Cree
    Haida
    Hopi
    Inuit
    Iroquois
    Navajo
    Nez Perce Pomo Sioux Ute Wampanoag Misc. Tribes Clothing Craft Projects Famous People Legends Recipes Songs, Dances, Games
    Creation stories teach that Native Americans have been where they are since the world was created. It is also thought that First Americans migrated from Siberia over the Bering Strait about 14,000 years ago, or perhaps even earlier. The land bridge was dry ground for several thousand years before the sea level rose again and stopped migration. The hunters would have followed the migrating herds of large mammals as they moved south. As the glaciers melted, the First Americans spread to the North American coasts and across the entire continent. Native Americans adapted to the climates and terrains in which they lived and used whatever natural resources were available. The arrival of the Europeans in the 1500's began a change in the lives of the Indian people that continued through the next centuries. Sometimes the changes were good. The horses brought by the Spanish made bison hunting much easier and safer. But Vikings, Spanish, English and French explorers, colonists and missionaries spread diseases, made slaves of the people, forced relocations, claimed ownership of natural resources and land, and tried to stamp out the native cultures. Some of the Indian people survived, but not without making drastic changes in their life styles.

    6. The Native-American Links Page
    Sac and Fox Nation. shuswap Nation. The United Tribe of Shawnee indians. TheSinging Tuscaroras. Telecommunications Technology and native americans.
    http://we.got.net/docent/soquel/native.htm
    Search: All Products Books Popular Music Classical Music Video Electronics Software Kitchen Keywords: American Indian arts, culture and trade from Indianvillage.com Native Career Magazine Aboriginal Education Alaska Native Education Program ... Creek Indians (Welcome to North Georgia) Cherokee Indians (Welcome to North Georgia) Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation Cherokee Publications - Native American Indian books,... CODETALK - The Information Superhighway Running Through Indian Country
    California Indian Basketry
    ... Grand Council of the Crees (Eeyou Astchee) Great Lakes Regional American Indian Network Guidon Books - Native American Indian Books Hawaiian Sovereignty Election Council Hair Pipes in Plains Indian Adornment : a Study in Indian and White Ingenuity ... Land Cessions of Native Americans in Georgia (Welcome to North Georgia) Lakota Wowapi Oti Kin Lakota Link Leonard Peltier Defense Committee Moundbuilders- The Early Indians (Welcome to North Georgia) Maidu Mechoopda Tribe Home Page Mattaponi Indian Reservation Mark Franco's Native American Connection Maskwachees Cultural College ... PHIL KONSTANTIN Home Page (Phil is a proud member of the Cherokee Nation, and a highway patrol officer! Pyramid Lake Paiute Home Page Prairie Band Potawatomi Pueblo Cultural Center Repatriation and Reburial Issues ... Strat43z's Tri-Racial Genealogy Page (Great site for Native-American Links, and Genealogy!)

    7. World History Archives: Policies Affecting Native Americans In Canada
    Policies affecting native americans in Canada. in general of Canada Standoff betweenthe shuswap and the in the political arena by Canada's indians have left
    http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/44/index-bb.html
    Policies affecting Native Americans in Canada
    Hartford Web Publishing is not the author of the documents in World History Archives Contemporary political history in general of Canada
    Standoff between the Shuswap and the RCMP at Gustafsen Lake Nisga'a treaty isn't a settlement blueprint
    Editorial, The Vancouver Sun, 30 November 1998. The fear is that if the Nisga'a treaty is passed, it will be a blueprint for more than 50 treaties still to be negotiated. The Nass Valley, home to the Nisga'a, is an isolated and largely undeveloped area of northern B.C. The Nisga'a treaty began its slow journey a quarter-century ago and was negotiated outside the current treaty process.
    Generous rulings for Canada's natives spur backlash
    By Randall Palmer, Reuters News Service, 25 October 1999. Victories in the courts and in the political arena by Canada's Indians have left some non-natives seething. The courts have made it clear that agreements made with Indians should be interpreted generously, and the Liberal government insists that negotiating treaties is the only way to maintain peace and bring justice.
    Growing allegations of racism against natives rock Saskatoon
    By Michele Mandel

    8. Syllabus: Legalization Of American Indians (Spring 2001)
    COURSE PACKET Peter d'Errico, native americans in American Lake The Honor of All native American Public dramatization of how the shuswap indians of British
    http://www.umass.edu/legal/derrico/syllabus.html
    Syllabus: Legalization of American Indians (Spring 2001)
    Professor Peter d'Errico
    Course description
    "Federal Indian law," as it is called in the cases and statutes, is a framework imposed by the United States government for its own purposes on peoples who were present before the United States and who are still present. In this context, the difference between "American Indian" and "Native-American" is nonexistent. Both are names given by outsiders. There are no American Indians or Native Americans. There are many different peoples, hundreds, bearing their own names. "Legalization" is a name for the process of incorporating into a legal system that which exists outside and independent of the system. "Legalization of American Indians" means the process by which United States law reached the lives of peoples who were in existence prior to that law. The Western system of government by law is the product of long and bloody struggles among the peoples who came to colonize this land and later imposed "federal Indian law" on the indigenous peoples. Some say the system developed into its present form by incorporating information indigenous peoples offered to the colonists. In any event, the legal system that created "federal Indian law" did not come full-blown into the world. It has a history and that history is still happening. A study of the "legalization of American Indians" sheds light on that history as it is intertwined with the ongoing histories of the indigenous peoples to whom it is directed.

    9. NativeWeb Resources: Native American Tribal Pages
    Of all the various groups of native americans in the the Navajo Nation, the largestnative American tribe Secwepemc Nation/shuswap indians, Secwepemc, Canada, 198.
    http://www.nativeweb.com/resources/nations_web_sites_information/native_american

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    Native American Tribal Pages
    Listings here are restricted to web sites with specific information about tribal governments, reservations, and contacts. The BIA maintains a list of U.S. Federaly Recognized Nations Resources: 155 listings Name and Description Nation Location Hits
    Affiliated Tribes of Northwest Indians US - Northwest
    ATNI is a nonprofit organization representing 43 Northwest tribal governments from Oregon, Idaho, Washington, southeast Alaska, Northern California and Western Montana.
    More sites on www.atni.org
    Amonsoquath Tribe of Cherokee Cherokee US - Central
    The Sovereign Amonsoquath Tribe of Cherokee, descendants of Pocahontas through her father Powhatan and Cherokee wife Amopotuskee, have lived in what is now Missouri since before 1652.
    Arapaho Business Council Arapaho US - Northwest
    More sites on tlc.wtp.net
  • 10. Bill's Aboriginal Links: Canada And US
    1) (2) (3) Secwepemc (shuswap) Land, Resource Osage Research Home Page indians ofCalifornia native americans and the Environment Fishing Wampanoag Fishing
    http://www.bloorstreet.com/300block/aborcan.htm
    Canadian Links
    US Links
    Canadian Links
    Assembly of First Nations First Nations Web Site
    First Nations Online
    Resources for Indian Schools: First Nations of Canada ...
    Henderson's Annotated Indian Act
    (180 K)
    Indian Act

    Regulations
    (download)
    Treaty of 1693
    ...
    Nisga'a Treaty AIP (264K)
    and (Highlights)
    Map of Proposed Nisga'a Lands

    BC Treaty Commission Act

    BC Treaty Commission Web Site
    ... Summary Report: Social and Economic Impacts of Claims Settlements in BC or (Full Report - 93K) Eco-Thoughts on Aboriginal Land Issues Aboriginal Rights Coalition (BC) Settlers in Support of Indigenous Sovereignty ... BC First Nations also Directory of Bands and Tribal Councils and Other Organizations Neskonlith (Shuswap Nation) Nisga'a (Schoolnet) Ts'ks'aylaxw First Nation ... Ont. MNR Intent to Impose Two ACF Licences (1996) and Negotiations Continue (1998) Ont. Agrees to Co-Management and Funding for Non-Native Commercial Fishers (1998) Concerns About Ont. MNR Fisheries Management AFS Position: Introduction of Fish Species ... The State of Canada's Forest (1997)
    Note Chapter on Traditional Ecological Knowledge ( Adobe Format) First Nations Forests National Aboriginal Forestry Association First Nation Forestry Program (Can) Canadian Forests Homepage ... Article: A Futures Market in Constitutional Rights?

    11. Native American Genealogy
    Secwepmc shuswap Nation. to Documents Scattered Throughout the US Code Relating toAmerican indians, Alaska natives Genealogy and native americans Bulletin Board.
    http://home.ptd.net/~nikki/nativeam.htm

    Guest Book
    Native American Genealogy Books and More A Tribute to Heroes Standing With Israel World Terrorism ... Genealogy Book Shop General

    12. Program Files\WS_FTP\native
    You Are Invited To Visit The Villages Of native americans Eighmey Ltd. returnto-think-tank SeminoleZone The United Tribe of Shawnee indians shuswap Nation
    http://www.kckps.k12.ks.us/harmon/teachers/native.html
    You Are Invited To Visit The Villages Of Native Americans Eighmey Ltd. return-to-think-tank Alphabatized Listing, Note: Wyandot Site Cherokee History Page Cherokee National Historical Society Eastern Band of Cherokees ... Wiyot Tribe of California K.C.K. Teachers Note The Wyandot Nation Wyandot Nation of Kansas Huron-Wendat Nation return to top)

    13. Program Files\WS_FTP\native
    Eighmey's Think Tank native americans Photo B. Eighmey Going To The Sun Pueblo,New Mexico Will you take The United Tribe of Shawnee indians shuswap Nation
    http://kancrn.kckps.k12.ks.us/Harmon/breighm/native.html
    Eighmey's Think Tank
    Native Americans

    Photo: B. Eighmey
    Going To The Sun Pueblo, New Mexico
    Will you take the time to visit those who are indigenous to the
    country we live in?
    Eighmey Ltd.
    return-to-directory

    Alphabetized Listing
    Note:
    Wyandot Site
    Cherokee History Page Cherokee National Historical Society Eastern Band of Cherokees ... Wiyot Tribe of California K.C.K. Teachers Note The Wyandot Nation Wyandot Nation of Kansas Huron-Wendat Nation Return-to-Apex

    14. Native American Studies Resources At Northern Kentucky University
    Creek, Cheyenne, Pomo, Shoshone, shuswap, Kwakiutl, Cree Indian prehistory; contemporaryNative americans in the of Mesoamerican and South American indians.
    http://www.nku.edu/~nas/resources.html
    NKU NATIVE AMERICAN STUDIES RESOURCE PEOPLE O-shee-o!
    Bezon!
    Ya`at`eeh!
    Hipitkasha!
    Pave-esheeva!
    Pasip-inyi!
    Haa!
    Yeytk!
    Gila-kasla!
    Tanisi!
    Waqaa! "Hello" in the Cherokee, Shawnee, Navajo, Creek, Cheyenne, Pomo, Shoshone, Shuswap, Kwakiutl, Cree, and Yupik languages just a few of the hundreds of native languages (from more than two dozen language families) spoken in what are now the USA and Canada It was the White Buffalo Woman who brought the pipe to the people and taught them how to live. Lame Deer (Lakota) There are more than two dozen NKU faculty, staff, alumni, students, and friends who have specialized areas of expertise in Native American Studies and are willing to serve as resources. They can be reached at the following email addresses and welcome your questions:
  • Kristin Appleby , Part-time Anthropology Professor applebyk@nku.edu North American archaeology, Ohio Valley prehistory
  • Prince Brown , Associate Professor of Sociology brownp@nku.edu Native American-African American ethnic relations
  • JoEllenBurkholder , Assistant Professor of Anthropology burkholderj@nku.edu
  • 15. PSCS Newsletter Spring 02 - Hiroshima Flame Peace Walk
    At the grave site, many local native americans spoke and whom assured us that thenative American spirit In February, a group of shuswap indians from British
    http://www.pscs.org/newsletters/spring02/dave.html

    16. Authority List For Cultural Area: Native Americans
    List for Cultural Area native americans Culture Group refers Salteaux MontagnaisMountain indians Naskapi Sekani Palus (Palouse) Sanpoil shuswap Spokan Tenino
    http://imnh.isu.edu/digitalatlas/arch/db/tables/Culture.htm
    Authority List for Cultural Area: Native Americans Culture Area
    Use one of the following terms: Arctic
    California 

    Great Basin

    Northeast
    ...
    Other
    Authority List for Cultural Area: Native Americans
    Culture Group refers to the tribe, ethnic group, society, or culture associated with the item.  Generally, the term used should identify the culture of manufacture, but in some cases it may be more meaningful to record the culture of use. Arctic Aleut
    Baffinland Eskimo
    Bering Strait Eskimo
    Caribou Eskimo
    Copper Eskimo Greenland Eskimo Iglulik Innuit of Quebec Interior North Alaska Eskimo Kotzebue Sound Eskimo Labrador Coast Eskimo Mackenzie Delta Eskimo Netsilik North Alaska Coast Eskimo Nunivak Eskimo Pacific Eskimo Sallirmiut St. Lawrence Island Eskimo Siberian Eskimo Southwest Alaska Eskimo Unknown top Subartic Ahtna Attikamek Beaver Carrier Chilcotin Chipewyan Cree East Western Woods West Main Dogrib Han Hare Holikachuk Ingalik Inland Tlingit Kaska Kolchan Koyukon Lake Winnepeg Salteaux Montagnais Mountain Indians Naskapi

    17. NA Indian Web-Sites S-Z
    shuswap Nation Neskonlith Indian Reservation, Canada. NA, indians, Indian, indian,indians, treaties, tribe, tribes, native americans, indigenous Peoples
    http://www.geocities.com/RainForest/7694/websites4.html
    Red Nation of the Cherokee,Inc
    Click on stop if you prefer a quiet tour . Acts 10:34 Remember to reload page if you have been here before
    In alphabetical order A through E F through M N through R Text Only Version
    My son, Dakota Jesse has just released his 2nd CD. To hear samples of his music or buy the CD for only $5.99 plus shipping go to: http://www.mp3.com/artists/43/dissociative_identity_diso.html - CD Titled "Defeating the Purpose" http://artists.mp3s.com/artists/51/dakota_jesse.html - CD Titled: "Pretentious" S Sac and Fox Nation Sacred Earth Gallery Sacred SpacNT SIZE=+0> Shoshone Sundance ... Sean Kellogg's Home Page (University of Michigan) Seminole Tribe of Florida Seneca Nation of Indians Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell Sen'klip Native Theatre Company ... Shawn Michael Perry Actor w/handsome photos Shawnee Indians Shawnee's Reservation (For Your Info ) Shawnee Tribe Shea Grimm's Shea's Native Place Sheets Page ... Silver Turtle jeweler Ojibwe and Menniconjou Sioux Sioux Heritage ~Sioux Lady~ Sisseton-Wahpeton Dakota Nation Sisterhood of the Wolf ... The Spike this should be your first stop.
    If you are interested in the American Indian culture then, in the interests of hereditary authenticity and derived authority!

    18. Indian Rodeo Horses Cowboys And Indians Culture Sports Recreation
    Montana Bull RidingDavid Alexander (shuswap)Douglas Lake contemporary culture ofAmerican indians, particularly how related to either native americans or rodeo
    http://www.turtleisland.org/culture/culture-rodeo.htm
    SPOTLIGHT on Traditional and
    Contemporary SPORTS
    Native Rodeo - An Introduction Contemporary Indian Culture The Rodeo is Big Fun, Big Business and in North America it is Very Big with Indians. While it is usually referred to as Indian Rodeo, in fact other Aboriginal people, like the Metis also are big rodeo riders... The Indian National Finals Rodeo has announced the dates for INFR at the Soboba Casino San Jacinto California October 16, 17, 18, and 19th, 2003 Last Full Weekend in July
    Annual Chief Joseph Days Rodeo

    Here are a few web sites with useful information. Indian Rodeo News Indian National Finals Rodeo Prairie Indian Rodeo Association PIRA ... Indian ProRodeo
    Looking back
    List of Previous Years Champions

    2001 Indian Nationals Finals Rodeo

    Indian National Finals Rodeo Albuquerque, New Mexico
    December 6 -9, 2000
    Katrina Williams, Williams Lake, BC,captured the All Around Cowgirl Title representing the Prairie Indian Rodeo Association at the 25th INFR. Canadian Indian Finals Rodeo C.I.F.R 2000 November 16-19, 2000 It was a great success at the 2000 CIFR we're looking forward to a bigger and better Third Annual CIFR 2001 Canadian Indian finals Rodeo 2000 The second annual CIFR was Held at the Panee Multiplex in Hobbema Alberta on November 16-19,2000.

    19. Internettet Og De Nordamerikanske Indianere
    fra Plateau og bassinområderne i America shuswap. det sydøstlige America CherokeeCherokee indians Think Quest. The Apache, 1872 native americans and Pueblos
    http://born.natmus.dk/born/findind.htm
    SE OGSÅ
    OLDTID

    VIKINGETID

    MIDDELALDER

    NYERE TID
    ...
    HVIS DU VIL VIDE MERE?

    INTERNETTET
    NORDAMERIKANSKE INDIANERE
    Retur til internettet
    INDHOLD Generelt
    Stammer
    Dans, musik og kunst Madopskrifter ... Det vilde vesten Generelt om de nordamerikanske indianere De nordamerikanske indianere Den dansk-indianske side Native American Nations Native american Overview ... Native American Indian Resources Indianske stammer Prærieindianerne Montana Indian Nations Blackfeet Cheyenne The Comanche People ... The Battle Of The Little Bighorn, 1876 Indianerne fra Plateau og bassinområderne i America Shuswap Indianerne fra det nordøstlige America One Circle Home/Besøg en wigwam Delaware Mohawk Mohican ... Oneida Indianerne fra det sydøstlige America Cherokee Cherokee Indians - Think Quest Indianerne fra det sydvestlige Amerika The apache Battle With The Apache, 1872 Native Americans and Pueblos in New Mexico Canadiske indianere Et Iroquiansk langhus Indianerne fra det arktiske Amerika Village of First Nations Innu Dans, musik og kunst Pow Wow Pow Wow Dancing Pow Wow Music and Dance Traditions Madopskrifter Native Recipes/Indianske madopskrifter Andet Chucalissa archaeological museum and reconstructed village/Besøg en rekonstrueret indianerlandsby Indianer - Kendte Indianere (svensk) Det vilde vesten The American West/Det vilde vesten Old West Lewis and Clark/På ekspedition med Lewis og Clark Gunslingers and Outlaws/Revolvermænd og fredløse ... Skoletjenesten

    20. Alexian Brothers Health System - Mission And Spiritual Services
    to the natives there as “indians.” This term Flathead, Kukenai, Nez Perce, Okanogan,shuswap, Spokan, Yakima Even more groups of native americans could be
    http://www.alexianhealthsystem.org/mission/culture/nativeamericans.html
    site menu
    Leadership Mission and Values Health Information Accepted Health Plans Corporate Health Services Facilities Employment Opportunities Contact Us Site Guide Home
    Native Americans Native Americans walked to North America from Asia, crossing the Bering Land Bridge that once connected Siberia, part of the Eastern Hemisphere, and Alaska, part of the Western Hemisphere, about 20,000 years ago. Estimates of the number of Native Americans in the Western Hemisphere at the time Europeans started arriving range from a low of 8.4 million to as many as 112 million people. The Native American Peoples
    Different Native American cultures were established in different parts of the Western Hemisphere. This section will deal only with the Native Americans who settled in the territory now known as the United States. In the so-called Arctic and sub-Arctic areas, the major Native American group is the Inuit, or Eskimos. The Native American cultures, or tribes, that settled in the Great Lakes area include the Cree, Ojibwa, and others. The more important groups that settled along the Pacific northwest were the Tlingit, Haida, Tsimshian, Kwakiuti, Nootka, Salish, Hupa, Yurok, and Karok. Continuing to move eastward, Native American tribes along the Great Plains area - from southern Canada to the Gulf of Mexico and from the Rockies to the Mississippi - included the Arapaho, Arikara, Blackfoot, Cheyenne, Crow, Hidatsa, Iowa, Mandan, Osage, Pawnee, Sioux, Wichita, Kiowa-Apache, Plains Cree, Sarci, Potawatomi, and Chippewa.

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