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         Tlingit Native Americans:     more books (93)
  1. Haa Aani, Our Land: Tlingit and Haida Land Rights and Use by Walter Rochs Goldschmidt, Theodore H. Haas, et all 1998-03
  2. Life Woven with Song (Sun Tracks, V. 41) by Nora Marks Dauenhauer, 2000-02-01
  3. First Americans 5: The Blackfeet / the Mandan / the Menominee / the Mohawk / the Tlingit / the Zuni by David C. King, Terry Allan Hicks, et all 2009-09
  4. Art of the Northern Tlingit by Aldona Jonaitis, 1986-05
  5. Haa Tuwunaagu Yis, for Healing Our Spirit (Classics of Tlingit Oral Literature)
  6. Two Southern Tlingit Tales; Contributions To Algonquian Linguistics; The Linguistic Position Of The Ashluslay Indians by H. V. Velten, Truman Michelson, et all 2007-03-01
  7. Tlingit Halibut Hooks: An Analysis of the Visual Symbols of a Rite of Passage by Aldona Jonaitas, 1981-12
  8. TLINGIT: An entry from Gale's <i>Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America</i> by Diane E. Benson, 2000
  9. Tlingit Wood Carving: How to Carve a Tlingit Tray (Volume 1) by Richard A. Beasley, 2009-12-28
  10. Tlingit Wood Carving: How to Carve a Tlingit Mask (Volume 3) by Richard A. Beasley, 2009-12-28
  11. Tlingit Wood Carving: How to Carve a Tlingit Hat (Volume 2) by Richard A. Beasley, 2009-12-28
  12. The Eagle's Shadow by Nora Martin, 1997-09
  13. Totem Tale: A Tall Story from Alaska by Deb Vanasse, 2006-02-13
  14. Central Council Tlingit and Haida status clarification: Hearing before the Subcommittee on Native American Affairs of the Committee on Natural Resources, ... held in Washington, DC, February 25, 1994 by United States, 1995

61. Native Americans: Northwest
Unlike many native americans, they had plenty of everything Other tribes in the PacificNorthwest were Chinook, Klikitat, Kwakiutl, Nootka,tlingit, and Tsimshian
http://www.esd.k12.ca.us/Matsumoto/TM30/history/na/nw/nw.html
Native Americans:
The Northwest
Social Structure
The Haida were one of the tribes who lived in the Pacific Northwest. Unlike many Native Americans, they had plenty of everything. Their culture was based on accumulating wealth. They had plenty of salmon, bear, seals, sea otters, elk, beaver, and deer. They had much small game.The Haida were nonagricultural. That means they were not farmers. They were hunters and gathers. The Haida had a organized society. That is interesting because that level of social and cultural organization is very rare in nonagricultural societies. The abundance of resources in their environment gave them the time for their arts and culture to develop. Other tribes in the Pacific Northwest were Chinook, Klikitat, Kwakiutl, Nootka,Tlingit, and Tsimshian.
Way of Life
Native Americans in the Northwest lived in well-made wooden houses. They built the houses out of ceder trees, and also had canoes called, a dugouts. One way to make a dugout was to carve out the inside of the tree. The other way was to burn the inside of the tree. They decorated the dugouts with special designs. They used the dugouts for slave hunting and exploring. The largest of these canoes could carry at least thirty people. The biggest canoe was sixty meters long and 2.5 meters wide. Totem poles were only made by Native Americans in the Northwest. Some people believe that totem poles have a religious meaning. That is not true. Totem poles tell a story about the family. They believed that their ancestors were the animal people. Animals, or totems, were carved on the totem pole.The totem poles were status symbols. The favorite colors they used to decorate with were red, white, and black.

62. Native Americans, Homework Help, Carnegie Library Of Pittsburgh Resource Guide
native americans. AlleghenyKiske Valley History - native Peoples Information onthe old Indian Indian peoplesthe Lakota of the Plains, the tlingit of the
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.

63. Native Americans And The Environment: Cultural And Historical Issues
So their gallery on the tlingit includes a page on their relationship to ClimacticChange on the Northern Great Plains Starts with native americans and covers
http://www.cnie.org/NAE/culture.html
Cultural and Historical Issues
Aboriginal Overkill and Native Burning: Implications for Modern Ecosystem Management
Discusses the importance of American Indian burning techniques, and the supposed overkilling of certain game animals, for how scientists think about ecosystem stability. (Charles E. Kay, Archive: Department of Anthropology, SUNY Buffalo, 1994). American Indians and the Natural World
A presentation of the Carnegie Museum's collections using the theme of the relationship of the various Native American nations to the natural world around them. So their gallery on the Tlingit includes a page on their relationship to trees, for example. (Carnegie Museum of Natural History, 1998). Chief Seattle (1786 - 1866)
Includes the most authentic transcription of Chief Seattle's famous 1854 speech, considered "one of the greatest statements ever made concerning the relationship between a people and the earth." (Suquamish Tribe). Chief Seattle's Reply
Chief Seattle's famous speech. However, this version came into existence around 1972 and bears little resemblance to Chief Seattle's original intentions when he gave his speech before the Governor of Washington Territory. (Archive: NAE). Hopi Message to the United Nations
(Thomas Banyacya, December 10. Archive: Hopi Information Network, 1992).

64. Native Americans And The Environment: North America/International
So their gallery on the tlingit includes a page on their relationship to trees Meteorsand native americans Reports of meteors in native American oral history.
http://www.cnie.org/NAE/inter.html
North America/International
A Line in the Sand
This is an excellent site, with several sections on land and related issues. Aboriginal Law and Legislation Online
A large list of international, Canadian and US legal documents pertaining to aboriginal people, including legislation and court decisions. Aboriginal Overkill and Native Burning: Implications for Modern Ecosystem Management
Discusses the importance of American Indian burning techniques, and the supposed overkilling of certain game animals, for how scientists think about ecosystem stability. (Charles E. Kay, Archive: Department of Anthropology, SUNY Buffalo, 1994). Alternative Treaty between NGOS and Indigenous Peoples
This "Copenhagen Alternative Declaration" was issued by the NGO Forum at the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development, 3-14 June 1992, Rio de Janeiro. One section addresses specific actions to be taken by NGOs relative to indigenous peoples and their concerns with development. (NGO Forum, United Nations Conference on Environment and Development, 3-14 June 1992, Rio de Janeiro, 1992). Alternatives to Development: Environmental Values of Indigenous Peoples
Describes differences between native and industrial nations and make the recommendation that indigenous people should be in control of the rate and nature of change in their territories and societies. (Northwest Regional Conference on the Emerging International Economic Order, Archive: Fourth World Documentation Project, 1979).

65. Birds And Native Americans
Raven caused trouble, but also, according to tlingit (pronounced KlingEET) andother even two birds (that I know of) whose names come from native americans.
http://www.cvco.org/science/audubon/Jan2003article.html
Birds And Native Americans by Michael Shapiro For thousands of years, Native Americans throughout North and South America have been keen observers of nature. They have observed the cycles of the seasons and the migrations of many animals, including birds. Tribes that were hunters needed to know the migration patterns of the buffalo if they were to get meat for themselves and their tribe. They didn't have calendars, so they had to pay attention to what was going on around them in nature to know when this happened. Some of the most important animals to the Native Americans are birds. Many stories and various birds can be found throughout Native folklore. Birds that were of particular importance depended on the tribe, but the most commonly mentioned bird in Native folklore was the eagle. Many tribes considered that the eagle would take their prayers to the Great Spirit for them. Eagles, and all of nature, were greatly respected. Eagle feathers, in particular, were special to them, and many Native Americans today still use them on their traditional costumes. The Lakota (or Sioux - pronounced SOO) believe that there was once a race between the buffalo and man to see who would hunt whom. All (or nearly all) the four-legged animals sided with the buffalo and all the birds sided with the People. (Most native tribes call themselves "the People" in their own language). The buffalo were way out in front, but a magpie that had been perched on a buffalo's back flew up as they neared the finish line. Magpie then dove down ahead of Buffalo and crossed the finish line first. Ever since then, according to the Lakota, the People have hunted the buffalo, rather than the other way around.

66. Mid Hudson Library System - Lifelines - Native Americans
The First americans Nicely illustrated and well written native American Shelters Adobe,Longhouses, Igloos, Tepees Simliar sites for tlingit (Northwest), Hopi
http://midhudson.org/lifelines/lifelines1/nat_am.html
Homework help resources for grades K - 4 Biographies Communities Earth Science Endangered Species ... Weather More help for parents: Homework Help Sites Homework Tips Raising a Reader Science Projects ... About Lifelines Lifelines was chosen by School Library Journal as the Site of the Month in the October 2002 issue. Lifelines is a project by:
Dutchess County BOCES
and Mid-Hudson Library System
Poughkeepsie, NY
Magazine Articles from Searchasaurus
Enter library card number when asked. Don't have a library card? Get one - it's free!

67. Native Americans: Student Resources
J003353/ Dine, Muscogee, Lakota, Iriquois, tlingit, http//www arizona.edu/ic/kmartin/School/native American Shelters index.shtml The First americans http//www
http://www.cccoe.net/tribes/studres.htm
Native Americans
Home Student Project Student Resources
Student Resources
Click on the Native American representing your region to access research resources.
North America Regions
Northwest Coast Intermountain Plains Southwest Eastern Woodlands Southeast Pacific Islands
California Regions
Northwest Coast S hasta San Joaquin Valley and Sierra Foothills E astern Sierra Southern Desert Southern Coast
General Native American Resources
Informational Websites
American Indians and the Natural World http://www.carnegiemuseums.org/cmnh/exhibits/north-south-east-west/
North American Indians http://library.thinkquest.org/J003353/
Navajo, Sioux, Irioquois, Cherokee http://library.thinkquest.org/J003353/
Dine, Muscogee, Lakota, Iriquois, Tlingit, http://www.u.arizona.edu/ic/kmartin/School/
Native American Shelters http://www.anthro.mankato.msus.edu/prehistory/settlements/index.shtml
The First Americans http://www.germantown.k12.il.us/html/intro.html

68. State Tax Withholding For Native Americans
Form 20582 is available, the PERSRU will have eligible native americans sign DD nativeVillage of Tetlin. Central Council of the tlingit Haida Indian Tribes.
http://www.uscg.mil/hq/hrsic/Manuals-Pubs-Newsletters/alpersru/t01.htm
E-Mail ALPERSRU T/01
27 September 2001 E-Mail ALPERSRU T/01 Personnel and Pay Procedures Manual, HRSICINST M1000.2A Introduction
This E-mail ALPERSRU announces new procedures for eligible Native American service members to claim exemption from state tax withholding.
Discussion The Department of Justice has concluded that the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Civil Relief Act prohibits states from taxing the military compensation of a Native American service member who claims a tribal reservation as their residence and earns military compensation off the reservation by virtue of compliance with military orders.
Eligibility Native Americans who meet all of the following requirements are exempt from state income tax:
  • Claim a federally recognized tribal reservation/or Indian Country as their domicile. A list of federally recognized tribes is found in Enclosure (1) Be enrolled as a member of that federally recognized Native American tribe. Have an assigned Minority Designation Code of "3", American Indian (including Alaskan Natives). The Minority Designation code can be viewed in the PMIS database on Inquiry Screen 1.

Notification HRSIC will print an LES remark on the end-month October LES notifying members that Native Americans who claim a federally recognized tribal reservation as their domicile should contact their PERSRU to learn how they may stop state income tax withholding from their military compensation.

69. SHI Wins ANA Grant
EMPIRE The Administration for native americans has awarded Sealaska Heritage Institutefor native language immersion forward for SHI's tlingit language program
http://www.sealaskaheritage.org/new_page_11.htm
Sealaska Heritage Institute
"To Perpetuate and Enhance Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian Culture"

Web posted Wednesday, September 18, 2002
Sealaska Heritage Institute wins $600,000 for language programs
FOR THE JUNEAU EMPIRE
The Administration for Native Americans has awarded a grant to Sealaska Heritage Institute for Native language immersion programs in Southeast Alaska. The funding bodes a major step forward for SHI's Tlingit language program, said SHI President Rosita Worl. "This is a significant step toward perpetuating Native languages - a priority for the institute," Worl said. SHI will use the three-year grant to help fund Tlingit language immersion camps tailored to Native language students in Juneau, Hoonah and Sitka. SHI will hold two 10-day camps each in 2003, 2004 and 2005. The Juneau-Hoonah camp will be held at Glacier Bay Lodge in Glacier Bay National Park and the Sitka camp at Dog Point Fish Camp in Sitka. The $606,948 grant includes $446,058 in federal funds plus $160,890 in donations from Southeast Alaska Native organizations. The purpose of the camps is to increase Tlingit language fluency in students and to train aspiring Native language teachers to operate immersion programs. The project is an outgrowth of SHI's Sealaska Kusteeyí Program, an annual Native languages workshop led by SHI Sociolinguist Roy Iutzi-Mitchell.

70. Native American Studies - Local And Tribal Resources - Academic Info
in and with the natural world—those of the tlingit of the Fort Collins PublicLibrary Local History Archive native americans This paper will provide a
http://www.academicinfo.net/nativeamlocal.html
Home Keyword Search Index Reference Desk ... Student Center A cademic Info
Native American Studies
Native American Studies Tribal Histories We Need Your Help
Please take a minute to make a $10 tax-deductible donation. Academic Info is made possible by the generous financial support of users like you.
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Email us at madin@academicinfo.net for details. American Indians of the Pacific Northwest
"This digital collection integrates over 2,300 photographs and 7,700 pages of text relating to the American Indians in two cultural areas of the Pacific Northwest, the Northwest Coast and Plateau. These resources illustrate many aspects of life and work, including housing, clothing, crafts, transportation, education, and employment. The materials are drawn from the extensive collections of the University of Washington Libraries, the Cheney Cowles Museum/Eastern Washington State Historical Society in Spokane, and the Museum of History and Industry in Seattle."
Arizona State Museum
University of Arizona "...is the oldest and largest anthropology museum in the region and brings to life the culture history of the Greater Southwest, from the mammoth hunters to the present, through many ongoing research projects. The museum's rich and varied collections are among the most significant resources in the nation for the study of Southwest anthropology."

71. Native Americans
Ritual limited edition print tlingit Shaman - limited edition print Kwakiutl McNeilRiver Bears native americans Alaskan Collection Paradise Collection Site
http://www.rickschancheartist.com/americannatives.htm

Gallery
Artist Inspiration Click on any image
for larger view and
details. McNeil River Bears Native Americans Alaskan Collection Paradise Collection ... Site Map
var site="sm5bigbears" © All content Rick Schanche Rick Schanche
Anchorage, AK 99516
info@RickSchancheArtist.com contact webmistress

72. Native American Support Group Of New York City
Indigenous activist and native American and Alaskan native resource links. Current projects include Category Society Ethnicity native americans Issues and Activism...... the lives, languages, history, and arts of native americans. Western Band Cherokee)and Jesse Cooday (tlingit). native American Support Group of New York City
http://graywolf94.tripod.com/
Native American Support Group of New York City
Indigenous Issues
Activist Books and Sites Political Prisoners Native American Right's Organizations ... "Welcome" to our site in my Language.wav file - Graywolf (Western Band Cherokee)
Featured New York City American Indian Event American Indian Community House presents Indian Summer 2003 -(Check Calendar section) April 23 thru May 17, 2003 Indigenous Issues We Support Big Mountain Issue Alaska Landless Sovereignty and Subsistence Hawaii Indigenous People Sandy Lake Band of Ojibwe Apache - Mt Graham ... Makah Whaling: Questions and Answers from Makah Nation Welcome to Native American Political Issues Russell Means AIM ... Back to top American Indian -Political Prisoners Eddie Hatcher - Many people, including senators, congressmen, actors and actresses as well as the National Council of Churches and Amnesty International had demanded Eddie's release prior to May 1995. In 1993, the North Carolina Council of Churches voted to officially recognize Eddie as a political prisoner. This was the first time this had been done by the NCCOC. The International Office of the Leonard Peltier Defense Committee Sign the Online Clemency Petition for Peltier The Trial of Leonard Peltier - by Jim Messerschmidt, William M. Kunstler

73. Native Americans
Principal native American Tribes. Timucua, E. Woodland, Muskogean, 10,000,Florida, (Extinct). tlingit, NW Fishermen, tlingit, 10,000, Alaska, Alaska.
http://www.geocities.com/Axiom43/nativeamericans.html
Principal Native American Tribes.
Tribe Culture GroupLanguage Early
Population Earliest Known Locality Present Locality

Abnaki E. Woodland Algonquian Maine Maine Aleut Eskimo Aleut Aleutian Islands
Unalaska Aleutian Islands
Unalaska Algonquin and Ottawa E. Woodland Algonquian Quebec
Ontario Quebec Apache Plains-Southwest (Mixed) Athabascan Colorado
Kansas
New Mexico
Driven southward by Comanche in18th century. Arizona
New Mexico Oklahoma Arapaho Plains Algonquian Colorado Wyoming Wyoming Oklahoma Assiniboin Plains Siouan Manitoba Mimmesota Montana Alberta Saskatchewan Beaver M-Y Basin* Athabascan Alberta Alberta Beothuk E. Woodland Beothuk Newfoundland (Extinct) Blackfeet Plains Algonquian Alberta Saskatchewan. Moved southwestward 18th to 19th centuries. Montana Alberta Caddo E. Woodland-Plains Caddoan Louisiana Arkasas Texas Oklahoma Oklahoma (Mixed) Calusa E. Woodland Muskogean (?) Florida (Extinct) Catawba E. Woodland Siouan North Carolina South Carolina South Carolina Cherokee E. Woodland Iroquoian Tennessee North Carolina South Carolina Oklahoma North Carolina Cheyenne Plains Algonquian North Dakota.

74. Hiya
native americans In The Census A First People's Almanac November are American Indianor Alaska native alone or tlingit is the most populous Alaska native tribe
http://www.nativevillage.org/Messages from the People/Native Americans in the Ce

Native Americans In The Census: A First People's Almanac
November is American Indian/Alaska Native Heritage Month. The U.S. Census Bureau Shares the following facts from its surveys on the American Indian and Alaska Native population. Most figures come from the April 2000 census. tribes and nations
said they are American Indian or Alaska Native alone or in combination with one or more races.
of the total U.S. population composed this ethnic group.
said they belonged to a specific tribe.
American Indian tribes with or more individuals were Cherokee, Navajo, Choctaw, Blackfeet, Chippewa, Muskogee, Apache and Lumbee.
Tlingit is the most populous Alaska Native tribe. claim to be Tlingit alone or in combination with one or more other races or American Indian or Alaska Native tribes. Alaska Native tribes with or more responses are Tlingit, Alaska Athabaskan, Eskimo and Yup'ik.
Families Number of American Indian and Alaska Native families at the time of the 2000 census. Of them:
consisted of married couples.

75. Teacher Created Materials: Native Americans (Exploring History Through Primary S
Custer Massacre; Declaration of Allegiance signed by native americans; Aleutian boatsketches; Cherokee alphabet; Senate Bill 102 from 1830; tlingit totem pole
http://www.buyteachercreated.com/estore/product/3926
Home
Page
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Level
: Intermediate, Challenging Grades : 5 - 12, Middle School, Secondary
TCM3926 Native Americans (Exploring History Through Primary Sources)
Use original documents and photographs as well as letters, maps, cartoons, and posters to help students explore the past. Primary sources provide unique insight into the lives of people in different time periods.
Each kit includes: 16 photographs and primary source documentsphoto cards with background information, discussion questions, and suggested activities printed on the back; CD with photographs, other primary sources student activity sheets, and extension activities; and 80 page Teacher's Guide including lesson plans, background information, a wide variety of student activities, and a document-based assessment section to help students prepare for essays found on many standardized tests.
Each kit also meets the NCSS standards for primary source documents.
Photographs: Indian chiefs and U.S. officials after the Battle of Wounded Knee; Men and women performing the Corn Dance in San Felipe Pueblo, New Mexico; Navajo blanket weaver using a loom; Sun-dried meat hanging in front of a teepee; Indian beehive oven in front of an adobe pueblo; Navajo hogan; A woman cutting wood on a Flathead Indian Reservation; Portrait of Yellow Dog.

76. Native Americans
OR TRIBAL AREAS Indians of California native americans in North Early Inuit HistoryThe native Trail First Nations and Inuit in Quebec tlingit National Anthem
http://www.teacheroz.com/Native_Americans.htm
Updated February 14, 2002
PRIMARY DOCUMENTS

Treaties Between the United States and Native Americans

The Avalon Project : Statutes of the United States Concerning Native Americans

World History Archives: Indigenous Peoples of the Americas

KAPPLER'S INDIAN AFFAIRS: LAWS AND TREATIES
...
IMAGES: The Illustrating Traveler: Customs of the Country

More primary documents are available within some of the sites listed below.
Alphabetical Listing of Reservations

THIS WEEK IN NORTH "AMERICAN INDIAN" HISTORY by PHIL KONSTANTIN

Native Ways..A journey through modern Native America
Encyclopedia Smithsonian: Native American Resources ... Linkpage: Native Web Pages Listings For info on the Maya, Inca, Aztec and other Central and South American native cultures, please visit my Meso and Latin America page. NATIVE AMERICANS - LEGISLATION - ISSUES - AGENCIES CODETALK: Code Talk is the official website of HUD's ONAP Legislation Affecting the American Indian Community Legislation Impacting American Indians American Indian Liaison Office ... American Indian Gambling and Casino Information Center TIMELINES TIMELINE: Native American History Native American Timeline TIMELINE: Canadian St. Lawrence River Valley Native Tribes

77. Heritage Kits Set Record Straight About Native Americans
that debunk myths and stereotypes of native americans and give who is a member ofthe tlingit/Lakota tribes. As an example, he noted that native children will
http://umns.umc.org/01/aug/352.htm

Heritage kits set record straight about Native Americans
Aug. 16, 2001 News media contact: Linda Green Nashville, Tenn. NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UMNS)—Resources that debunk myths and stereotypes of Native Americans and give guidance for teaching Vacation Bible School to native children are being released in a heritage kit and sent to all annual conferences and resource centers of the United Methodist Church. The Native American Communication Office, a unit of United Methodist Communications, has produced a "Sharing the Heritage Kit" that contains facts about native people, booklets, cassettes, videos, computer diskettes and other information and materials. Dancing With a Brave Spirit: Telling the Truth About Native America , is one of the kit’s offerings. This revised publication seeks to clarify many of the widely held myths and beliefs about native people. Dancing was first produced in 1999 as a response by native organizations and tribes to the amount of misinformation surrounding native people, said Ray Buckley, director of the Native American Communications Office. The first booklet was distributed to members of the U.S Congress, tribal offices, several denominations, delegates to the 2000 United Methodist General Conference and to the press.

78. Native Americans
Northwest. Northwest Indians. Northwest Culture. The tlingit. Southwest. SouthwestNative americans. Southwest Culture. The Dine. Plains. The Plains Indians.
http://www.ayersville.k12.oh.us/rath/natamer.html
Native Americans
Read about one of the four Native American groups below. Use the information to plan a children's book. Think about what kind of pictures you will include and what kind of information would be interesting enough to include in your book.
Northwest
Northwest Indians
Northwest Culture
The Tlingit
Southwest
Southwest Native Americans
Southwest Culture
The Dine
Plains
The Plains Indians
Plains Indian Culture
The Lakota
Northeast
Eastern Woodland Indians
The Muscogee
The Iroquois
American Arts Check out this site to see samples of Navajo rugs and blankets. Pay attention to the geometric patterns that are used. Begin to get some ideas for designing your own blanket using graph paper.
HOME

79. Homework Help--Countries & Native Peoples--Native Americans Today
Countries native Peoples native americans Today. the Central Council of the Tlingitand Haida Inupiaq Inupiaq Inupiat – Alaska native Cultural Profile
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.

80. Homework Help--Countries & Native Peoples--NativeAmericans In History
Tribes include Haida, Ojibwa, Tsimshian, tlingit, Nootka, and others The native AmericansFrom PBS this site includes background information on the tribes Lewis
http://www.kcls.org/hh/nativeamericans.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 in History General Regions Tribes/Cultures General
American Historical Images on File: The Native American Experience

From California State University, Long Beach this site provides links to a collection of images of Native Americans including narrative descriptions. It is arranged chronologically from the prehistoric period through 1990.
American Indian History and Related Issues

From the American Indian Studies Program at California State University, Long Beach, this site provides links to information about history and culture of Native Americans in North America.
Clothing

From the Canadian Museum of Civilization this site provides images of clothing from native Indian tribes in Canada detailing type, date made, and culture. Tribes include Haida, Inuit, Ojibwa, Tsimshian, and others.

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