An Introduction to Native North AmericaAn Introduction to Native North America provides a basic introduction to the Native Peoples of North America, including both Eskimos and Indians. Beginning with a discussion of the geography of North America, this excellent text delves into the history of research, basic prehistory, the European invasion, and the impact of Europeans on Native cultures. A final chapter covers contemporary Native Americans, including issues of religion, health, and politics. Much of the book is also written from the perspective of the ethnographic present, and the various cultures are described as they were at the specific times noted in the text. |
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Page 36
... relatively large parasites , such as worms and flukes . For contagious diseases to develop , they require a relatively large host population so that the pathogen ( virus , bacterium , etc. ) can be transmitted , as most pathogens must ...
... relatively large parasites , such as worms and flukes . For contagious diseases to develop , they require a relatively large host population so that the pathogen ( virus , bacterium , etc. ) can be transmitted , as most pathogens must ...
Page 177
... relatively lit- tle of his work , sending his notes and samples back to Washington . In the 1980s , the Smithsonian transferred all of Harrington's notes ( some seven million pages ) to microfilm , providing an invaluable resource for ...
... relatively lit- tle of his work , sending his notes and samples back to Washington . In the 1980s , the Smithsonian transferred all of Harrington's notes ( some seven million pages ) to microfilm , providing an invaluable resource for ...
Page 332
... relatively little information is available on them . Thus , the records of the various early expedi- tions , including the Spanish explorers de Soto in 1540 and Pardo in 1566 , and the French explorer La Salle in 1682 ( when the ...
... relatively little information is available on them . Thus , the records of the various early expedi- tions , including the Spanish explorers de Soto in 1540 and Pardo in 1566 , and the French explorer La Salle in 1682 ( when the ...
Contents
Native North Americans | 5 |
A Brief History of Research on Native | 11 |
The Paleoindian Period | 18 |
Copyright | |
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agriculture Aleut and/or animals Arctic arrows bands Basin Basin groups became began bison California canoes ceremonies Cherokee Cheyenne chief Chumash clans clothing communal complex conducted corn Cree crops culture area Dance disease early eastern economic Eskimo European fish Handbook of North Hohokam Hopi horses hunter-gatherers hunting important Inuit Iroquois kachinas killed kiva Kwakiutl Lake land language large numbers lived located major male mammals marriage Mexico mountains moved Natchez Native American native groups Navajo Nez Perce North America North American Indians Northern Paiute Northwest Coast Orayvi organized Ottawa Owens Valley Owens Valley Paiute Paleoindian Pawnees Plains groups plants Plateau political population potlatch pronghorn Pueblo Quebec Inuit region relatively reservation River salmon shamans skins social society southern Southwest Spanish Subarctic supernatural Tarahumara territory tion Today town trade tribes United usually village warfare western winter women Woods Cree wore World Yokuts