Preserving and Using Resources BCFNS 12 Chapter 2 Ms. Inden.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Native People of the Plateau By: Moody. Keshav, Wisam.
Advertisements

Caddo Native Americans
The Kwakiutl Indians - Northwest
Northwest Native Americans by Josh, Matt D., Joshua, Nasser, and Matt L.
CHAPTER 3. MAP NORTHWEST COAST 3.2 Region: Northwest Coast (Color the trees) Tribes: Tlingits, Chinooks, Kwakiutls Artifacts: (possible answers) wood.
Aboriginal studies Tools and weapons By Tommy Fox.
Bea Thomas ,Chris Lee, Ahyun Seo, Evan Gold
The Miwok A Central California Coast
UTAH’S EARLY PEOPLE. PALEO-INDIANS 11,000-13,000 Years Ago.
GCSE SCHOOLS HISTORY THE AMERICAN WEST INTERACTIVE THE AMERICAN WEST INTERACTIVE Why did the Native Indians lose the Battle for the.
Bell Ringer – Dec 4 th 1)Tell me about any experience you have had with sewing. That could include hand sewing, sewing on a button, or sewing with the.
By: Nora, Simone, and Esti.  They wore animal skin as a disguise when they were hunting.  Right before they start to hunt they all yell at the same.
Vocab for Native Americans of The West and Southwest
LIVING ON THE LAND CHAPTER 2. HARVESTING RESOURCES wide variety of technologies developed and used high degree of skill to effectively use natural resources.
The Maidu A California Native American Tribe
The Plains Tribes.
Hunting/diet - Fishing Pacific Salmon Humpback Whale Oysters Crab Turtle women prepared fish in two ways: some fish was eaten fresh, but most of it was.
Far West Native Americans BY: RIYA KABRA. I chose the Far West Indians as my group throughout this unit. For my projects I chose naturalist and visual.
Indians of the Southeast. Their Area The southeast is a land of mountains, rivers and forests in the northern area.
The Fisherman Of The Pacific Northwest By: Amber Gump, Shawn Sergent, Shawn Braggs.
LESSON 2 - EARLY FARMERS Stone Age (Old and New) Old Stone Age: The period of time is very long, but little progress was made. Technology, or the way in.
Eastern Woodlands Ojibwa, Ottawa, Nipissing, Algonquin, Maliseet, Mi’kaq.
NATIVE AMERICANS Northwest Coast. Kwakiult  Lived along Pacific Ocean from Southern Alaska along the northwest coast of North America.  This area is.
By Liam, Lance, Bryan, Jack, and Sam.. This is how the Inuit Indians got clothing in the Arctic. One material they used is polar bear fur. Some other.
Plateau People Let’s learn about the plateau people of the Pacific Northwest. Food Tools Transportation Clothing Shelter Customs and Beliefs.
The People of the Plateau - Diana N,Taylor N, Anthony V.
Some plants in the Eastern Woodland are Birches, elms, maple trees Birches Elms.
Odawa Ethan Eren Eugenia.
Chapter 3.1 Hunter-Gatherers
Northwest 1. cold winters, cool summers, heavy rainfall, thick fir, spruce, and cedar forests 2. from the sea, clams, fish, seaweed, seals, sea lions,
What If There Were No Trees? How do people adapt to an environment where there are no trees?
The Plains Indians Sioux & Comanche.
Buffalo Facts Not really “buffalo” - they are actually “bison” Range: –Canadian border to Gulf of Mexico –As far east as Ohio Sizes –Bull (boy): 6 feet.
“the people”.  Lived in Alaska  Used the Bering Strait to come to Alaska  Lived in a very cold climate.
PEOPLES OF THE PLATEAU MADE BY NICK & BLAKE. SUBSISTENCE They mainly ate berries, roots, bulbs, salmon, deer, caribou and other small animals. They got.
By Arwyn, Annabel, Anders, Albert and Rohil
The Native Americans Can I use different sources to find out about Native American life?
Native Americans had a strong connection to their surroundings They viewed themselves as a part of the community of plants, animals, and other natural.
The Inuit Located along the Arctic Coast in Alaska and Canada.
PEOPLES OF THE NORTHWEST COAST
Paleolithic Age. Paleolithic: In Greek means “old stone.” Hunting and food gathering, use of fire, making clothing, acquisition of language and religion,
Maidu Indians By: Erika Lim.
The Native Americans of Georgia
Peoples of the Eastern Woodlands
By kuvin and christianna
Paleolithic and Neolithic Peoples
Peoples of the Northwest Coast By: Mikhael and Rhones Mae
Kwakiutl Native Americans
Salmon Brother Rick Peter.
BC First Nations Studies – Chp 2: Living on the Land
Early Humans Paleolithic Ages.
The Native People of the Plateau
Early humans and the rise of civlization
Peoples of the Subarctic
Iroquois Confederacy By Melissa Fish.
American Indian Cultural Regions
Native Americans Native Americans were the people who lived in America before people from other countries came here.
Inuit Indians The Arctic Region
Chapter 3 Early Humans and the Agricultural Revolution.
Native Americans Northwest Coast California Great Basin Plateau
The Wandering Hunters Of The Plains
Woodland and Plains Indians.
Native People In Northwest Coast
Caddo Native Americans
Clothing Summary The local natural resources used to fashion traditional clothing incorporated elements of function, identification, and practices for.
Chapter 2 Living on the Land
JEOPARDY Regions Resources Society
Metals come from the ________are found in between rocks. These metals such as _______, _______ and ________ are _______________ Some metals are made by.
Who are the Mi’kmaq? The Mi’kmaq are Aboriginal people who are known as the original inhabitants of the Atlantic provinces of Canada. They were known.
Chapter 3 Early Humans and the Agricultural Revolution.
Presentation transcript:

Preserving and Using Resources BCFNS 12 Chapter 2 Ms. Inden

Drying A Tahltan lodge for smoking Some items were dried by the air in places where the air is dry and warm (Fraser Valley) Some were partially dried, others thoroughly dried Tahltan lodge for smoking salmon, Salmon Creek, c Source: Boas Anniversary Volume (1906)

Storing food People on the Coast stored food in bentwood boxes beneath the floor and around the edges of the longhouses In the interior, food was also stored in pits in the ground

Storing Food Food caches kept the food high off the ground in the Interior This is an example of a cache the Tahltan used in the Stikine area Sometimes a cache was just a bag hung high up in a tree

Animal Hides Before the hide is tanned, it is called raw hide –This is good for cord and drums

Animal Hides Tanned hide is used for footwear, clothing and also for shelters like tipis –The method is complex and required great skill Skin animal, scrape hair and fat off Must know the chemical processes Timing of each stage is important

Textiles – cloth and clothing Plant fibres are woven to make clothing, mats for the floor, twine, rope, and baskets Twine and rope was used to make traps or nets for fishing and hunting Strong fibres were taken from the stems and used to make twine Indian Hemp - Interior Stinging Nettle - Coast

More on Textiles Baskets were also woven from cedar bark, spruce roots, reeds or grasses Some were used to carry water or liquids and had to be woven very, very tightly and sometimes sealed by resin Others were made loosely, to allow water to flow out

Birch Bark Basket In many areas of the Province of BC, birch bark baskets are common Birch barks is chosen because it is water proof and does not easily rot (rot-resistant) Baskets are sewn together by spruce roots Water tight baskets! A difficult skill to learn!

An useful object, but also valued as art! Almost always carried out by women Baskets were useful, and beautiful Fine textiles (fabric) was used to create ceremonial robes, robes that showed high social status or great power ach/galler07/frames/int_peop.htm

Dog and Mountain Goat hair Coast Salish women raised a breed of dog especially for its hair, which was made into thread and woven into cloth Mountain Goat wool was also used in blankets, but only for very special occasions as it was rare hanindiansweaters.html

Cedar and wool together Chilkat Blanket Collected from the Haida (wool and cedar bark trimmed with other fur; yellow, black, blue, white), pre-1870 (courtesy UBC Museum of Anthropology).

Tools and Household Goods People were responsible for making the tools they would need for their tasks While the hide of a moose was tanned, the sinew was made into thread, the stomach into a bag, and the meat eaten, bones would be made into knives and scrapers, awls and needles for sewing

Most important tool: Bow and Arrows A hunter must understand the properties of wood and stone to make bows and arrow heads – a sophisticated skill However, if it isn’t learned well, the hunt won’t go well