Indians of Wisconsin: Past and PresentSomerset Publishers, Inc., 1999 M01 1 - 400 páginas There is a great deal of information on the native peoples of the United States, which exists largely in national publications. Since much of Native American history occurred before statehood, there is a need for information on Native Americans of the region to fully understand the history and culture of the native peoples that occupied Wisconsin and the surrounding areas. The first section is contains an overview of early history of the state and region. The second section contains an A to Z dictionary of tribal articles and biographies of noteworthy Native Americans that have contributed to the history of Wisconsin. |
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Página 1
... began about 10,500 B.C. - 6000 B.C. Paleo Indians at that time were hunters, and their environment encompassed the tundra or park-tundra that adjoined the southern edge of the Wisconsin ice sheet. When ice began to withdraw from the ...
... began about 10,500 B.C. - 6000 B.C. Paleo Indians at that time were hunters, and their environment encompassed the tundra or park-tundra that adjoined the southern edge of the Wisconsin ice sheet. When ice began to withdraw from the ...
Página 5
... began utilizing additional resources, especially shellfish. The newcomers may have originated in the Canadian Shield and slowly spread into the open pine and spruce forest of Maine and Atlantic Provinces. Evidence suggests that the ...
... began utilizing additional resources, especially shellfish. The newcomers may have originated in the Canadian Shield and slowly spread into the open pine and spruce forest of Maine and Atlantic Provinces. Evidence suggests that the ...
Página 11
... began before 3000 B.C. Excluding a late Paleo-Indian site in Wisconsin and early burial mounds on the Labrador coast that dated before 5000 B.C., burial ceremonies did not become important in the Northeast until the third millennium ...
... began before 3000 B.C. Excluding a late Paleo-Indian site in Wisconsin and early burial mounds on the Labrador coast that dated before 5000 B.C., burial ceremonies did not become important in the Northeast until the third millennium ...
Página 12
... began to be achieved. Small climatic changes in the Northeast shifted environmental and cultural patterns. These changes were small, yet they eventually necessitated a change in the entire culture. Climatic changes during the period of ...
... began to be achieved. Small climatic changes in the Northeast shifted environmental and cultural patterns. These changes were small, yet they eventually necessitated a change in the entire culture. Climatic changes during the period of ...
Página 18
... began to move forward with maritime adventures across the Atlantic. In 1497, five years after Christopher Columbus discovered the Bahamas, John Cabot took possession of Newfoundland in the name of the English crown. Although he probably ...
... began to move forward with maritime adventures across the Atlantic. In 1497, five years after Christopher Columbus discovered the Bahamas, John Cabot took possession of Newfoundland in the name of the English crown. Although he probably ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Algonquian allies American Arapaho Archaic Assiniboin attack bands became began Black Beaver British Canada Cayuga ceded century ceremonies Cherokees Cheyennes chief Chippewa clans coastal colonial colonists Conestoga confederacy Connecticut council culture Delaware Dutch early eastern English Erie Esopus European families federal fishing Five Nations forced French Government groups Hackensack Handsome Lake Haverstraw hostile hunting Huron Illinois included Indian Territory Iowa Iroquoian Iroquois tribes Jesuits joined Kansas killed known Lake land later lived Long Island longhouse Mahican Mascouten Massapequa Matinecock Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Mohawk Mohegan moved Narragansett natives neighbors Neutral Nez Perces northern Ohio Oklahoma Oneida Onondaga Ontario Ottawa peace Pennsylvania Pequot Petun Ponca population Potawatomi region remained reservation sachem Saint Lawrence Saint Lawrence River Sauk Seneca settled settlements Shawnee Sioux southern Susquehanna Susquehannock tion traditional treaty Uncas United upper villages Wampanoag wampum Wappinger warriors western Winnebago Wisconsin women Woodland Wyandotte York