VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

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VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide

Transcript of VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Page 1: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

VA Studies: Native Americans

Powerpoint created by Carrie ReedFacts from the VA Pacing Guide

Page 2: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Why did Christopher Columbus call the people

he found “Indians”?

Page 3: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Christopher Columbus called the people he found in the

lands he discovered “Indians” because he thought he was in the

Indies (near China).

Page 4: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

What are artifacts?

Page 5: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Artifacts such as arrowheads, pottery, and

other tools that have been found tell us a lot about the people who lived in

Virginia.

Page 6: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

What were the three major language groups found in

Virginia?

Page 7: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

There were three major language groups found in

Virginia. Algonquian, Siouan, and Iroquoian.

Page 8: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Where was Algonquian spoken and which tribe was part of this group?

Page 9: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Algonquian was spoken primarily in the Tidewater

region; the Powhatans were a part of this group.

Page 10: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Where was Siouan spoken and which tribe was part of

this group?

Page 11: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Siouan was spoken primarily in the Piedmont region;

the Monocan were part of this group.

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Where was Iroquoian spoken and which tribe was part of this group?

Page 13: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Iroquoian was spoken in Southwestern Virginia and in Southern Virginia near

what is today North Carolina; the Cherokee were part of this group.

Page 14: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

What language group was spoken here?

Page 15: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Algonquian was spoken here.

Page 16: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

What language group was spoken here?

Page 17: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Iroquoian was spoken here.

Page 18: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

What language group was spoken here?

Page 19: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Siouan was spoken here.

Page 20: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

What is the climate like in Virginia?

Page 21: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

The climate in Virginia is relatively mild with distinct seasons – spring, summer, fall, and winter – resulting in a variety of vegetation.

Page 22: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

What are Virginia’s Indians called and why?

Page 23: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Virginia’s Indians are referred to as Eastern

Woodland Indians because forests, which have a variety of trees, cover

most of the land.

Page 24: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

What did the food, clothing and shelter depend on for

the Native people?

Page 25: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

The kinds of foods the native peoples ate, the

clothing they wore, and the shelters they had

depended on the seasons.

Page 26: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

What did the Eastern Woodland Indians eat in

the winter?

Page 27: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Winter – they hunted birds and animals and lived on

stored goods from the previous fall.

Page 28: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

What did they eat in the Spring?

Page 29: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Spring – they hunted, fished, and picked berries.

Page 30: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

What did they eat in the summer?

Page 31: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Summer – they grew crops (beans, corn, squash).

Page 32: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

What did they eat in the fall?

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Fall – they harvested crops and hunted for foods to

preserve and keep for the winter.

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What did the native peoples use for clothing?

Page 35: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Animal skins (deerskin) were used for clothing.

Page 36: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

What did the native peoples use for shelter?

Page 37: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Shelter was made from the material around them (Natural Resources).

Page 38: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

What was life like for the native peoples?

Page 39: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Native peoples of the past farmed, hunted, and

fished. They made homes using natural resources.

They used animal skins for clothing in the winter.

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What is life like today for Native Americans?

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Today, most native peoples live like other Americans.

Their cultures have changed over time.

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What are archeaologists?

Page 43: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Archaeologists study all kinds of material evidence left from the people of the

past.

Page 44: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

What was Werowocomoco?

Page 45: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Werowocomoco was a large Indian town used by Indian leaders for several hundred

years before the English settlers came. It was the

headquarters of the leader, Powhatan, in 1607.

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What did archaeologists discover at the original

Jamestown fort?

Page 47: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Archaeologists discovered the original Jamestown fort.

They recovered artifacts that gave them clues about the interactions of the English,

Africans, and Indians in early Virginia.

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Do American Indians still live in Virginia today?

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American Indians, who trace their family history back to before 1607, continue to live in all parts of Virginia

today.

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Which state tribes live in the Coastal Plain region? (7

tribes)

Page 51: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Coastal Plain – Chickahominy

Eastern ChickahominyMattaponi

NansemondPamunkey

RappahannockUpper Mattaponi

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Which one current state tribe lives in the Piedmont

region?

Page 53: VA Studies: Native Americans Powerpoint created by Carrie Reed Facts from the VA Pacing Guide.

Piedmont – Monacan tribe