The Four Prehistoric Indian Periods

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The Four Prehistoric Indian Periods. Archaeologists dig for artifacts that tell us about people of the past. Artifacts are objects that were made, modified, or used by humans of past cultures. They help us. Looking into the Past. Paleo Archaic Archaic. Woodland Mississippian. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Four Prehistoric Indian Periods

Page 1: The Four Prehistoric Indian Periods
Page 2: The Four Prehistoric Indian Periods

*Archaeologists dig for artifacts that tell us about people of the past.

*Artifacts are objects that were made, modified, or used by humans of past cultures. They help us

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Paleo

Archaic

Archaic

Woodland

Mississippian

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*Time: up to 10,000 years ago.

*Food Sources: large herds of animals like mammoths and bison, fished, and gathered fruits and nuts

*Weapons, Tools, Utensils: tools of stone, and long spears

*Shelter: no permanent shelter; they were nomads who lived in semi permanent camps.

*Extra: A few Paleo sites in GA Flint River, Savannah River, Ocmulgee River.

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*Time: 8000 B.C. to 1000 B.C.

*Food Sources: smaller game animals (deer, bears, turtles, turkey), berries/nuts, horticulture.

*Weapons, Tools, Utensils: stone axes, drills, pottery, weighted spears, atlatls.

*Shelter: banded together into camps toward the end of the period some resided in small oval pits with coverings and stayed longer

*Extra: pottery was a great contribution to Native American culture.

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*Time: 1000 B.C. to 1000 A.D.

*Food Sources: hunting, fishing, farming (cleared fields and planted crops), gathering nuts/berries.

*Weapons, Tools, Utensils: bow and arrow, stronger pottery.

*Shelter: dome-shaped huts from trees and bark, began forming tribes and living in villages

*Extra: Pottery began having designs on it, burial mounds built for dead can still be found in Georgia.

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Kolomoki Mounds – Blakely, GA

1 Great Temple 2 burial 4 ceremonial

Rock EagleEatonton, GA

believed to be a burial mound

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*Time: 900 A.D. – 1600 A.D.

*Food Sources: grew most food (corn, beans, pumpkins, squash, tobacco)

*Weapons, Tools, Utensils: bone hoes, digging sticks.

*Shelter: larger villages near water sources (Ocmulgee, Oconee, Chatahoochee, and Savannah Rivers).

*Extra: beads, earrings, tattoos, head dresses. Priest-chief was head of village.

*1600s mysteriously disappeared.

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Etowah Mounds in Cartersville, GA

Ocmulgee Indian Mounds

Macon, GA

Ocmulgee Indian Mounds

Macon, GA

Nacoochee Mound Helen, GA

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*Set up in Chiefdoms with a system of levels

*Chief- head of the tribe political and religious figures

*Nobles- large homes and special food

*Commoners- produce food and crafts as well as act a soldiers and laborers

*Some speculate the decline was because of overpopulation while others think it was that the chiefs lost control over the chiefdoms and a final theory is disease

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*A barter economy is one in which items or services are traded instead of money.

*The Cherokee and Creek Indians lived in Georgia during the Mississippian Period.

*The Cherokee lived in the mountains of North Georgia.

*The Creek lived in Southern and Coastal Georgia.