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Tulalip Tribe. The Tulalip tribe is made from three tribes Skokomish, Snoqualmie, and Snohomish. The Tulalip tribe is made of four thousand people. They.

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Presentation on theme: "Tulalip Tribe. The Tulalip tribe is made from three tribes Skokomish, Snoqualmie, and Snohomish. The Tulalip tribe is made of four thousand people. They."— Presentation transcript:

1 Tulalip Tribe

2 The Tulalip tribe is made from three tribes Skokomish, Snoqualmie, and Snohomish. The Tulalip tribe is made of four thousand people. They used most resources to help them survive, but the Tulalip tribe used their tools, transportation, food, shelter, and clothing. All these things helped the Tulalip tribe come together. Introduction

3 The Way to Live Tools:

4 Adze: The adze was an axe like tool with an arched blade at right angles to the handle and is used for cutting or shaping large pieces of wood. It was made from natural resources such as stone, bone, and wood.

5 Hammer: The hammer stone or stone maul was a very important tool of the Tulalip tribe. The hammer was made of stone and used for hitting the end of another tool. The stone maul was also used for grinding.

6 Wedges: Wedges were used to help cut down trees. They were also used to split trees and any other type of wood. These helpful tools also assisted the Tulalip tribe by carving wood. Native Americans made artifacts by carving with wedges.

7 Transportation: Tribe On The Go

8 Troll Canoe : The troll canoe is mostly used for hunting and fishing. It can hold two to three people. The troll canoe are also called as the swift canoe.

9 Old Man Canoe : The Old Man canoe is used for fishing and hunting ducks. Mostly one person is on the boat at a time. for one person. The old man canoe was also called the swift canoe.

10 Large Canoe: The Biggest canoe of the Tulalip tribe can hold six to fifteen people. It is mostly used for traveling.

11 Food and Diet: Salmon People

12 Salmon: Salmon is and important food to all the tribes. Every year when the first king salmon is caught there is a ceremony to honor the salmon for coming to feed their tribe. The annual Tulalip Salmon Ceremony is when the tribes honor the first king salmon of the season, bless the fishermen that will work the tribal fisheries and welcome guests from as far away as Alaska and Colorado to a traditional feast. Then the first salmon caught the people of the tribe will put the bones back in the ocean. After that the Native Americans smoke the salmon to store for the winter. The Tulalip tribes built walls in the river out of logs to catch salmon.

13 Berries: The Tulalip tribe ate salmon berries, huckleberries, elderberries, salal berries, blackcaps, blackberries, wild strawberries, and wild raspberries. Some of these berries are eaten raw and some are eaten cooked with other ingredients. Others are used for medicine. People in the Tulalip tribe also used these berries to trade with other tribes. Salal berries Huckleberries Elderberries Salmon berry

14 The Native Americans ate and mixed roots, bulbs, brake fern, wood fern, dandelion, cattail, camas, and tiger lily. Some of the plants and roots are used as spices, like some bulbs and camas. Most of them are eaten in salads. Roots and Plants: Camas Tiger lily Dandelion Wood fern

15 Clothing: What are you wearing?

16 What They Used For Clothing The Tulalip tribes hunters go and hunt for animals to kill, and take their skin and other members take the skin and turn it into clothing, these are some animals that they hunted deer, bear, seals, or other animal fur. They used it for shirts, leggings, and capes. Cedar bark was the common material that was used for the clothes in there tribe. Accessories were made out of animals teeth and bones.

17 How The Tulalip Tribe Made Clothing The hides were scraped, tanned, dried and rubbed. They were used for shirts, leggings and capes. Clothes of fur and capes of bearskin, sealskin were also made. Cedar bark clothing was made from prepared cedar bark. Caps of basketry, wolf, otter, beaver or bear skins were worn.

18 Traditional Clothing traditional clothing Just like all other native people, the people of the Pacific Northwest dressed in materials found in the region where they lived. When it got cold and rainy in the winter they added animal skin or woven cedar shirts and leggings. Women wore skirts and capes of woven cedar strips. Even in winter, people often went barefoot.

19 Homes and Shelters Living In The Tribe

20 Long house: The long house was about one hundred to two hundred feet long. Cedar planks were taken from tree trunks and smoothed with an adze then they were ready to be added to the foundation. Fires pits ran along the sides next to the seating areas on the wall.

21 Mat House: Mat houses were mostly used in the summers for hunting or fishing trips. Mat houses were made from cattail mats. The mats were made to be waterproof to keep the inside dry. The mats provided a quick way to make a shelter.

22 Conclusion Now that you learned a lot about the Tulalip tribe, learn more and impress everyone about what you learned. You learned about their culture of the Tulalip tribes. You have also learned how they hunted, used transportation, what they ate, and what they dressed in. These tribes were very fortunate to have so much food and resources close to them.

23 http://www.tulaliptribes-nsn.gov/Home/WhoWeAre/Heritage.aspxhttp://www.tulaliptribes-nsn.gov/Home/WhoWeAre/Heritage.aspx info http://www.hibulbculturalcenter.org/http://www.hibulbculturalcenter.org/ info http://www.tulalipnews.com/wp/http://www.tulalipnews.com/wp/info http://lastrealindians.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/tulaliptribes_logo.jpghttp://lastrealindians.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/tulaliptribes_logo.jpg picture Internet www.tulalipnews.com https://www.google.com/search?q=traditional+tulalip+tribe+foods&espv=2&biw=1094&bi h=615&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0CAYQ_AUoAWoVChMImKnZpJHZyAIVTz eICh1OtQ_R&dpr=1 - imgdii=xhIo-58fpj_WyM%3A%3BxhIo- 58fpj_WyM%3A%3BDMHszHRa1M5BmM%3A&imgrc=xhIo-58fpj_WyM%3A Heritage, 2014 http://www.tulaliptribes-nsn.gov/Home/WhoWeAre/Heritage.aspx.http://www.tulaliptribes-nsn.gov/Home/WhoWeAre/Heritage.aspx https://www.google.com/search?q=salal+berries&espv=2&biw=1280&bih=633&source=l nms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0CAYQ_AUoAWoVChMI1MDz58X8yAIVF_NjCh0BGQGW - imgrc=m34nsWbscxKoMM%3A https://www.google.com/search?q=salmonberries&espv=2&biw=1119&bih=633&source= lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0CAYQ_AUoAWoVChMIrtfd2cb8yAIVDP1jCh3FdAad https://www.google.com/search?q=elderberries&espv=2&biw=1280&bih=633&site=webh p&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0CAYQ_AUoAWoVChMI3q6Bg8j8yAIVCOpjCh1 obAXJ - imgrc=fNLp7j-pJAePkM%3A NWIC Traditional Plants and Foods Program http://nwicplantsandfoods.com/traditional- foodshttp://nwicplantsandfoods.com/traditional- foods Books Tulalips welcome first king salmon http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20150613/NEWS01/150619602 http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20150613/NEWS01/150619602 6350136_orig.jpg (450#2D4931

24 Nina Editor Michelle Proofreader Anirudh Proofreader Sahashra Graphics Editor Matthew Citation


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