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EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

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Page 1: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE

(Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Page 2: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE

(Copy the Outline below)

I. Hohokam

Page 3: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

HOHOKAM

Archaeologists believe the Hohokam came from modern-day Mexico and settled in present-day Arizona.

Page 4: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE

I. Hohokam

(Copy and complete)

A. Location: _______________

B. Climate: ________________

C. Most noted for agriculture. Farming was possible due to ________

Page 5: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Artist interpretation of irrigating fields.

Page 6: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE

I. Hohokam

A. Location: _______________

B. Climate: ________________

C. Most noted for agriculture. Farming was possible due to ________

(Copy)

D. Tools: wooden digging sticks, thin rock slab hoes, shoulder blades of large animals

Page 7: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Remains of a prehistoric Hohokam irrigation canal at "Park of the Canals", in Mesa, Arizona.

(photo source: Waterhistory.org). Over 1,000 miles of canals were dug, some as wide as 50 feet wide.

Page 8: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE

I. Hohokam

A. Location: _______________

B. Climate: ________________

C. Most noted for agriculture. Farming was possible due to ________

D. Tools: wooden digging sticks, thin rock slab hoes, shoulder blades of large animals

(Copy)

E. Crops: cotton, tobacco, maize (corn), beans and squash

Page 9: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE

I. Hohokam

A. Location: _______________

B. Climate: ________________

C. Most noted for agriculture. Farming was possible due to ________

D. Tools: wooden digging sticks, thin rock slab hoes, shoulder blades of large animals

E. Crops: cotton, tobacco, maize (corn), beans and squash

(Copy)

F. Other Food: cacti, seed grass, birds, reptiles, rodents, rabbits, deer, elk. They hunted with bow and arrow. They dried surplus meat and used hides for clothing, shelter, jewelry, and trade.

Page 10: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

The early Hohokam lived in rectangular pithouses.

.

                                           

Page 11: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Computer model of Pithouse

Page 12: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Pithouse Entryway

Page 13: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Inside View of Pithouse

Page 14: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Later, the Hohokam established extensive villages.

Page 15: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE

I. Hohokam

A. Location: _______________

B. Climate: ________________

C. Most noted for agriculture. Farming was possible due to ________

D. Tools: wooden digging sticks, thin rock slab hoes, shoulder blades of large animals

E. Crops: cotton, tobacco, maize (corn), beans and squash

F. Other Food: cacti, seed grass,birds, reptiles, rodents, rabbits, deer, elk. They hunted with bow and arrow. They dried meat and used hides for clothing, shelter, jewelry, and trade.

(Copy)

G. Shelter: at first, pit houses; later, large villages

Page 16: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Hohokam Etching, “Horned Toad”

What is unusual about this seashell etching that, along with other seashells, was found by archaeologists in ancient Hohokam sites?

Page 17: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE

I. Hohokam

A. Location: _______________

B. Climate: ________________

C. Most noted for agriculture. Farming was possible due to ________

D. Tools: wooden digging sticks, thin rock slab hoes, shoulder blades of large animals

E. Crops: cotton, tobacco, maize (corn), beans and squash

F. Other Food: cacti, seed grass,birds, reptiles, rodents, rabbits, deer, elk. They hunted with bow and arrow. They dried meat and used hides for clothing, shelter, jewelry, and trade.

G. Shelter: at first, pit houses; later, villages

(Copy)

H. Traded widely with other culture groups.

Page 18: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Each Hohokam village had at least one ball field. In addition to sport, the fields were used for dances and other ceremonies.

Page 19: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)
Page 20: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)
Page 21: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE

I. Hohokam

A. Location: _______________

B. Climate: ________________

C. Most noted for agriculture. Farming was possible due to ________

D. Tools: wooden digging sticks, thin rock slab hoes, shoulder blades of large animals

E. Crops: cotton, tobacco, maize (corn), beans and squash

F. Other Food: cacti, seed grass,birds, reptiles, rodents, rabbits, deer, elk. They hunted with bow and arrow. They dried meat and used hides for clothing, shelter, jewelry, and trade.

G. Shelter: at first, pit houses; later, villages

H. Traded widely with other culture groups.

(Copy and complete)

I. Entertainment: ________________________

Page 22: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE

I. Hohokam

A. Location: _______________

B. Climate: ________________

C. Most noted for agriculture. Farming was possible due to ________

D. Tools: wooden digging sticks, thin rock slab hoes, shoulder blades of large animals

E. Crops: cotton, tobacco, maize (corn), beans and squash

F. Other Food: cacti, seed grass,birds, reptiles, rodents, rabbits, deer, elk. They hunted with bow and arrow. They dried meat and used hides for clothing, shelter, jewelry, and trade.

G. Shelter: at first, pit houses; later, villages

H. Traded widely with other culture groups.

I. Entertainment: ________________________

Page 23: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE

I. Hohokam

A. Location: _______________

B. Climate: ________________

C. Most noted for agriculture. Farming was possible due to ________

D. Tools: wooden digging sticks, thin rock slab hoes, shoulder blades of large animals

E. Crops: cotton, tobacco, maize (corn), beans and squash

F. Other Food: cacti, seed grass,birds, reptiles, rodents, rabbits, deer, elk. They hunted with bow and arrow. They dried meat and used hides for clothing, shelter, jewelry, and trade.

G. Shelter: at first, pit houses; later, villages

H. Traded widely with other culture groups.

I. Entertainment: ________________________

(Copy)

II. Anasazi

Page 24: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)
Page 25: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

II. Anasazi

(Copy)

A.Location: Modern-day Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado.

B. Climate: Dry; hot summers, cold winters, snow in Utah and Colorado

Page 26: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Cliff Palace, Mesa Verde National Park

Page 27: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

II. AnasaziA. Location: Modern-day Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado.

B. Climate: Dry; hot summers, cold winters, snow in Utah and Colorado

(Copy)

C. Noted for pueblo “houses” reached by entry ladders. During enemy attack, the ladders could be lifted.

Page 28: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

White House Ruins, Canyon de Chelly National Monument

Page 29: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Doorways, Pueblo Bonito in Chaco Canyon, New Mexico

Page 30: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

II. AnasaziA. Location: Modern-day Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado.

B. Climate: Dry; hot summers, cold winters, snow in Utah and Colorado

C. Noted for pueblo “houses” reached by entry ladders. During enemy attack,

the ladders could be lifted.

(Copy)

D. Crops/Food: corn, beans, and squash.

Enough corn was being raised to create a surplus. They domesticated turkeys and used bows/arrows for hunting.

Page 31: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

                           Anasazi Basket - Mesa Verde NP

Page 32: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)
Page 33: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)
Page 34: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)
Page 36: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Anasazi Cup - Mesa Verde NP

Page 37: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Anasazi Pot

Page 38: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

II. AnasaziA. Location: Modern-day Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado.

B. Climate: Dry; hot summers, cold winters, snow in Utah and Colorado

C. Noted for pueblo “houses” reached by entry ladders. During enemy attack,

the ladders could be lifted.D. Crops/Food: corn, beans, and squash. Enough corn was being raised to

create a surplus. They domesticated turkeys and used bows/arrows for hunting.

(Copy)

E. Also noted for baskets and pottery. Purpose: ________

Page 39: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Reconstructed Mesa Verde “Jackal,” or Storage Area

Page 40: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)
Page 41: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)
Page 42: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

These storage bins are hidden under overhanging rock ledges, possibly to protect the contents from the sun and probably to guard the food stores from non-farming nomadic groups that travelled in the same area.

Page 43: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

II. AnasaziA. Location: Modern-day Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado.

B. Climate: Dry; hot summers, cold winters, snow in Utah and Colorado

C. Noted for pueblo “houses” reached by entry ladders. During enemy attack,

the ladders could be lifted.D. Crops/Food: corn, beans, and squash. Enough corn was being raised to

create a surplus. They domesticated turkeys and used bows/arrows for hunting.

E. Also noted for baskets and pottery. Purpose: ________

Copy:

F. Baskets and pottery full of surplus food were put in storage areas.

Page 44: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

II. AnasaziA. Location: Modern-day Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado.

B. Climate: Dry; hot summers, cold winters, snow in Utah and Colorado

C. Noted for pueblo “houses” reached by entry ladders. During enemy attack,

the ladders could be lifted.D. Crops/Food: corn, beans, and squash. Enough corn was being raised to

create a surplus. They domesticated turkeys and used bows/arrows for hunting.

E. Also noted for baskets and pottery. Purpose: ________

F. Baskets and pottery full of surplus food were put in storage areas.

Page 45: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Canyonlands Granary

Page 46: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)
Page 47: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)
Page 48: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

II. AnasaziA. Location: Modern-day Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado.

B. Climate: Dry; hot summers, cold winters, snow in Utah and Colorado

C. Noted for pueblo “houses” reached by entry ladders. During enemy attack,

the ladders could be lifted.D. Crops/Food: corn, beans, and squash. Enough corn was being raised to

create a surplus. They domesticated turkeys and used bows/arrows for hunting.

E. Also noted for baskets and pottery. Purpose: ________

F. Baskets and pottery full of surplus food were put in storage areas.

(Copy)

III. Moundbuilders

Page 49: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)
Page 50: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

III. Moundbuilders

(Copy)

A.Location: modern-day Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois.

B. Food sources: hunting, foraging, trading and agriculture.

Page 51: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Monks Mound, located at the Cahokia Mounds UNESCO World Heritage Site near Collinsville, Illinois, is the largest Pre-Columbian earthwork in America north of Mesoamerica. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mound_builder_(people)

Page 52: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Grave Creek Mound, located in Moundsville, West Virginia, is one of the largest conical mounds in the United States. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mound_builder_(people)

Page 53: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

III. Moundbuilders

A. Location: modern-day Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois.

B. Food sources: hunting, foraging, trading and agriculture.

(Copy)

C. Most noted for huge mounds. Purposes: burials and religious ceremonies, including human sacrifice. People were buried with their possessions.

Page 54: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Copper Spearpoints

Page 55: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Strings of small and large copper beads, shell beads, a crescent-shaped earring and finely polished stone artifacts from the Moundbuilders.

Page 56: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Serpent made of the mineral mica

Page 57: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Copper falcon effigy

Page 58: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Copper breastplate

Page 59: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Human effigy carved from stone

Page 60: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)
Page 61: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Limestone human head effigy

Page 62: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

Carved ceremonial pipes

Page 63: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

A human head effigy craftedfrom sandstone.- Ohio

Page 64: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

III. Moundbuilders

A. Location: modern-day Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois.

B. Most noted for huge mounds. Purposes: burials and religious ceremonies.

(Source of art images: http://www.burlingtonnews.net/centerindiansa.html)

C. Most noted for huge mounds. Purposes: burials and religious ceremonies, including human sacrifice. People were buried with their possessions.

(Copy)

D. Also noted for skilled use of shells, stone, copper, mica, and other minerals for carving and making tools, jewelry, and effigies.

Page 65: EARLY PREHISTORIC NORTH AMERICAN CULTURE GROUPS, CA. 1200 BCE – CA. 1400 CE (Copy the title of the outline shown below.)

III. Moundbuilders

A. Location: modern-day Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois.

B. Most noted for huge mounds. Purposes: burials and religious ceremonies.

(Source of art images: http://www.burlingtonnews.net/centerindiansa.html)

C. Most noted for huge mounds. Purposes: burials and religious ceremonies, including human sacrifice. People were buried with their possessions.

D. Also noted for skilled use of shells, stone, copper, mica, and other minerals for carving and making tools, jewelry, and effigies.

(Copy)

IV. Other information about early cultures

(Directions: Read pp. 28-31 in your text. For letters A-E, write important/interesting facts about the culture groups not already in your notes. You may use information on the Cahokia, but do not move on to “Other Native North Americans.” Write in clear, complete, specific sentences that make sense all by themselves. Example: DO write “The Mogollon style of pottery is still popular among Southwest artists today. DO NOT write “Their style of pottery is still popular.”