How does the Environment effect where you live? w-a-colonial-era-error-put-the-carolinas-at- odds?utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=us.

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Presentation transcript:

How does the Environment effect where you live? w-a-colonial-era-error-put-the-carolinas-at- odds?utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=us

  Divided into regional groups based on:  Living location  Language spoken  First Native American to encounter European settlers in North America:  Eastern Woodland Natives Native American Nations

 Vocabulary

  Native Americans that lived east of the Mississippi River in the United States  lived in present day South Carolina  Forest Dwellers – lived in forests  First Native Americans to encounter European settler in N. America Eastern Woodlands Indians

  Way of life  Includes all beliefs, social characteristics & material goods of a group of people Culture

  Original people living in a region Indigenous population

  People who come to a new land to live Immigrant population

  Plant life Flora

  Animal life Fauna

  Native American technique used to clear land Slash & burn

  Wall of pointed poles around village for protection Palisade

  Mixture of grass and clay used to make thick walls Daub

  Bark and branches used for roofing Wattle

  Type of home made of natural resources Wigwam

 How did geography affect the Eastern Woodland Indians?

 Eastern Woodland Natives Geography of the region affected:  Culture  Political systems  Daily Life Geographic Features:  Waterways  Flora  Fauna

 Rivers  Used for:  Transportation  Fishing  Used tree trunks for dugout canoes

  Used Natural Resources to create tools for hunting, farming, making clothes  rocks  wood  animal pelts  MEN used sharp points carved from rocks & animal bones for hunting as well as bows and arrows Tools

  Made from Natural Resources  Tree bark  Animal hides  Wigwam, long house & chickee were some types of shelters Housing

  Fertile land, rolling hills & clay soil  develop farming  Farming led to more permanent villages  Nation worked land together  NO PRIVATE OWNERSHIP!  Slash and burn: used to clear farmland and drive out animals Agriculture

  Crops: corn, pole beans, squash, pumpkins, bottle gourds  Planted together using corn stalks as poles for beans  Tobacco Agriculture

  Gathered fruits and nuts  Were the main farmers  Used simple hoes made of bone Role of Women

 Three Principle Eastern Woodlands Tribes of South Carolina Cherokee CatawbaYemassee

 Cherokee Lived in the mountains

  Called themselves “the real people”  were a powerful nation  Lived in villages of up to 600 people  Surrounded by palisade for protection  Each village had a holy man or woman Culture

  Leaders, including women, met as a council to make rules  White leader – times of peace  Red leader – times of war Political Systems

  Men fished by poisoning water with walnut bark  This stunned fish  rise in water to be gathered  Different homes per season:  Summer: open to air  Winter: round with thick walls made of grass and clay (daub) Daily Life

 Catawba Lived in Piedmont region near rivers

  Called themselves “river people”  lived in villages near river surrounded by palisade  Great potters  used clay that shaped into pots Culture

  Had council houses in their villages where leaders made rules for the people Political Systems

  Lived in wigwams made of sapling frames covered with bark or mats made of grasses and reeds Daily Life

 Yemassee Lived in Coastal Zone region

  Originally from Spanish Florida (present day GA) but moved to coast of SC near mouth of Savannah River to escape Spanish governor Culture

  Had councils; sometimes included women Political Systems

  Summer: lived in wigwams on beach covered with palmetto leaves  Fall/Winter/Spring: lived farther inland in wattle and daub homes like Cherokee with roof of palmetto leaves  Ate clams and oysters Daily Life

  How did the environment effect (help and hurt) one of the Native American Tribes? 3-5 sentences. Closing