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         Native Americans Maps:     more books (117)
  1. Wisconsin Indian Mounds: Native American Mounds in Madison and Dane County [WITH MAP] by Robert A. Birmingham, Katherine H. Rankin, 1994
  2. Maps of Experience: The Anchoring of Land to Story in Secwepemc Discourse (Anthropological Horizons) by Andie Diane Palmer, 2005-11-19
  3. Mediating History: The MAP Guide to Independent Video by and about African Americans, Asian Americans, Latino, and Native American People --1992 publication. by Barbara Abrash, 1992-01-01
  4. Dead Man's Map (Vortex Books) by Peschke, 2007-09-01
  5. Maps and Dreams by Hugh Brody, 1982-03
  6. Native music put on the map.: An article from: Wind Speaker by Jackie Bissley, 1998-12-01
  7. MAPS AND MAPMAKING: An entry from Charles Scribner's Sons' <i>Dictionary of American History</i> by Janet S. Smith, 2003
  8. Map 'N' Facts: Native Peoples of North America by Friendship Press, 1985-06
  9. A Map to the Next World: Poems and Tales by Joy Harjo, 2001-03
  10. The Mapping of New Spain: Indigenous Cartography and the Maps of the Relaciones Geograficas by Barbara E. Mundy, 2000-12-01
  11. Indian Country,;AZ/CO/NM/UT by G.M. Johnson, 2009-01-01
  12. RESULTS OF THE ARCHBOLD EXPEDITIONS. NO. 98. SYSTEMATICS OF NATIVE AUSTRALIAN RATTUS (RODENTIA, MURIDAE). by J. & B. Horner Taylor, 1973
  13. Tony Hillerman's Indian Country Map & Guide, second edition by Tony Hillerman, 2002-11-01
  14. Arizona Game & Fish Department Game Management Unit 10 Outdoor Recreation Map by Arizona Game & Fish Department, 2009

81. Native Americans Of The Pacific Northwest
native americans of the Northwest Guide picks. Information about the Pacific Northwest'snative peoples, including tribes, art, history, and famous figures.
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Native Americans of the Northwest
Guide picks Information about the Pacific Northwest's native peoples, including tribes, art, history, and famous figures.
Art - NW Native American

Resources to learn about Pacific Northwest Native American art, artists, and art galleries. Chief Seattle
Find out more about Noah Sealth - Chief Seattle of the Duwamish and Suquamish people - and his "web of life" speech, which is remembered and recounted in many forms today. Information - NW Native Americans Reference resources that provide a broad range of information concerning the status, culture and history of Native American's in the Pacific Northwest. The Native American tribes of the Pacific Northwest offer visitors a chance to experience their culture and hospitality at museums, casinos, pageants, dinners, and more.

82. Native Americans | T.R. Smith Map Collection, University Of Kansas
native americans Return to Kansas Menu Return to US Serial Set MapsPortrait of a Nation. Click Thumbnail for MrSid(.sid) Image
http://www.ku.edu/~anschutz/web/na.htm
Native Americans
Return to Kansas Menu

Return to U.S. Serial Set Maps: Portrait of a Nation

Click Thumbnail for MrSid(.sid) Image
Click here for file viewing information
Map showing the territory originally assigned to the Cherokee "Nation of" Indians west of the Mississippi, also the boundaries of the territory now occupied or owned by them.
By C.C. Royce; N. Peters, Photo-Lithographer, Washington, D.C.; Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of Ethnology, J.W. Powell, Director.
Serial Set 2497 (49-2) H. misdoc. 167, map 1
Scale: 1:1,150,000
Size: 53 x 76 cm.
Shows original cession in Arkansas as well as later cessions in Kansas and Indian Territory. Colors used to differentiate cessions. Includes rivers, cities, Indian agencies, and political boundaries. Includes table of "Numeric and chronological schedule of Cherokee cessions." Plate IX. Map of the former territorial limits of the Cherokee "Nation of" Indians exhibiting the boundaries of the various cessions of land made by them to the colonies and to the United States by treaty stipulations, from the beginning of their relations with the whites to the date of their removal west of the Mississippi River.
By C.C. Royce; N. Peters, Photo-Lithographer, Washington, D.C.; Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of Ethnology, J.W. Powell, Director.

83. Watershed Radio: Rocks In The Woods;: Native Americans In The Chesapeake Bay Wat
Lack of good information. Before the European colonists arrived, native Americanswere living in the midAtlantic region including the Chesapeake Bay watershed.
http://www.watershedradio.org/august2001/082801rocks.htm
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Rocks in the Woods
Listen to the program: Program aired on August 28, 2001 and August 27, 2002. To listen to the program, you need Real Player. Click on the Real Player image for a free download. Background info References and further reading back to top
Lack of good information
Before the European colonists arrived, Native Americans were living in the mid-Atlantic region including the Chesapeake Bay watershed. For a number of reasons, however, we know only very little about the cultures of these people. The most important reason is that for a long time, the colonists were simply not interested in the lives and cultures of the Native Americans; by the time anthropologists and other researchers became interested in indigenous people, most of the Indians in this region were either dead or had been forced to move away.

84. Watershed Radio: Native Americans And An Algonquin Oyster Harvest In The Chesape
Trash heaps. When the oysters were harvested, the native Americanswould throw the shells onto a large trash pile called a midden .
http://www.watershedradio.org/october2001/100401algon.htm
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Algonquin Oyster Harvest Archive Home Programs by Topic Programs by Date Home ... Contact us
Algonquin Oyster Harvest
Listen to the program : Program aired on October 4, 2001 and September 10, 2002. To listen to the program, you need Real Player. Click on the Real Player image for a free download. Background info References and further reading back to top
Algonquin oyster harvest
In the United States, there is a vast number of Native American groups, some of which share certain characteristics. One such group is the "Algonquins," which share a similar language and are in the Algonquian language family. Many of the groups that inhabited the land around the Chesapeake Bay belonged to this group, including the Powhatans of Virginia and the Piscataways of Maryland. The Algonquins, however, were found not only in the area surrounding the Chesapeake Bay, but inhabited quite a large area that stretched form the Atlantic Ocean to the foothills of the Rocky Mountains, and from Canada down to North Carolina.

85. Wade: The Native Americans Of The Texas Edwards Plateau, 1582-1799

http://www.utexas.edu/utpress/books/wadnat.html
March 2003 7 x 10 in., 350 pp., 13 maps, line drawings
ISBN 0-292-79156-9
$39.95, hardcover
The Native Americans of the Texas Edwards Plateau, 1582-1799 By Maria F. Wade
Foreword by Thomas R. Hester
Maps by Don E. Wade "This is truly an exceptional work.... It makes a significant contribution to our understanding of the Native people of Texas by introducing new information from previously unused sources and fresh English translations of known documents."
Spanish Expeditions into Texas, 1689-1768 The region that now encompasses Central Texas and northern Coahuila, Mexico, was once inhabited by numerous Native hunter-gather groups whose identities and lifeways we are only now learning through archaeological discoveries and painstaking research into Spanish and French colonial records. From these key sources, Maria F. Wade has compiled this first comprehensive ethnohistory of the Native groups that inhabited the Texas Edwards Plateau and surrounding areas during most of the Spanish colonial era. Much of the book deals with events that took place late in the seventeenth century, when Native groups and Europeans began to have their first sustained contact in the region. Wade identifies twenty-one Native groups, including the Jumano, who inhabited the Edwards Plateau at that time. She offers evidence that the groups had sophisticated social and cultural mechanisms, including extensive information networks, ladino cultural brokers, broad-based coalitions, and individuals with dual-ethnic status. She also tracks the eastern movement of Spanish colonizers into the Edwards Plateau region, explores the relationships among Native groups and between those groups and European colonizers, and develops a timeline that places isolated events and singular individuals within broad historical processes.

86. TOC & Excerpt, Wade: The Native Americans Of The Texas Edwards Plateau, 1582-179

http://www.utexas.edu/utpress/excerpts/exwadnat.html
7 x 10 in., 350 pp., 13 maps, line drawings
ISBN 0-292-79156-9
$39.95, hardcover
The Native Americans of the Texas Edwards Plateau, 1582-1799
By Maria F. Wade
Foreword by Thomas R. Hester
Maps by Don E. Wade
Table of Contents
  • Foreword by Thomas R. Hester Acknowledgments Introduction Note to the Reader Chapter 1. A Move to Settle Chapter 2. The Bosque-Larios Expedition Chapter 3. A Move to Revolt Chapter 4. The Mendoza-Lopez Expedition, 1683-1684 Chapter 5. A New Frontier: Tierra adentro, tierra afuera Chapter 6. Hard Choices: The Apache, the Spaniard, and the Local Native Groups, 1700-1755 Chapter 7. The Price of Peace: Friends, Foes, and Frontiers Chapter 8. Ethnohistory and Archaeology Chapter 9. Conclusions: Weaving the Threads Appendix. Translation of Documents Notes References Cited Index
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Introduction
The Objective
Ethnohistory, as a field of study, has the singular position of being at the intersection of the disciplines of anthropology, history, and archaeology, taken in their broadest sense. Ethnohistory came of age because of a blind spot in the practices of anthropology and history. It emerged to fill the void that existed between anthropological and historical studies because of their failure to document the changes in Native life that occurred during the colonial encounter. The archival text is the material base of ethnohistoric studies, but these texts were produced by the colonizing nations and present a biased view of historical events. Because ethnohistorians have to base their interpretations of history on the colonizer's documents, it is easy to slide into a perspective that subsumes Native history to European history.

87. American Indians Of The Pacific Northwest -- Maps
Ak icon Southeast Alaska native Territories. The following maps werescanned from the 1879 volume of the US Office of Indian Affairs.
http://content.lib.washington.edu/aipnw/maps.html
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American Indians of the Pacific Northwest: Maps
Below are maps which show traditional territories or reservation boundaries. Click on the map icons to view a larger version of the images. "Northwest Coast: Key to Tribal Territories"
Handbook of North American Indians. V.7: Northwest Coast Edited by Wayne Suttles. Washington: Smithsonian Institution, 1990. "Plateau: Key to Tribal Territories" Handbook of North American Indians. V.12: Plateau Edited by Deward W. Walker, Jr. Washington: Smithsonian Institution, 1998. "The Nez Perce Homeland and Their Neighbors" Nez Perce Coyote Tales: The Myth Cycle By Deward W. Walker, Jr. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1998, p.6. Northwest portion of "Map showing Indian Reservations within the limits of the United States compiled under the direction of the Hon. T. J. Morgan, Commissioner of Indian Affairs." U.S. Census Office. 11th Census. 1890, V.10 follows page 34, 1890 Census. Contemporary Indian Reservations of Northwest Coast and Plateau Cultural Groups Southeast Alaska Native Territories The following maps were scanned from the 1879 volume of the U.S. Office of Indian Affairs. Annual report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs to the Secretary of the Interior:

88. Florida Genealogy Project
Family Tree Maker's Genealogy Site native American Research ShadCat's Free GenealogyListings native AMERICAN native americans and Change native American
http://www.rootsweb.com/~flgenweb/links/tribes.html
FL COUNTIES ARCHIVES/LIBRARIES INTERACT SURNAMES ... EVENTS FL COUNTIES
County Selection List

County Selection Map

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ARCHIVES/LIBRARIES
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Florida USGenWeb Archives HTML Site

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INTERACT
Mailing list info

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Sign the Guestbook
Read the Guestbook SURNAMES Surname Registry Florida Surname Links ORGANIZATIONS Genealogical Rootsweb USGenWeb Historical PROJECTS World GenWeb Project USGenWeb Project Florida Tombstone Transcription Project Florida Migrations Project VOLUNTEERS State Coordinators Info Florida Lookup Page Lookup Volunteers Orphan Counties Adopting a County info OTHER LINKS Vital Records Information Maps and Atlas Links Florida Newspapers Online Native Americans in Florida ... Other Florida Links EVENTS School and Family Reunions Native American Events Upcoming Events
FLGenWeb Project Native American Information and Links
Hopefully the links on this page will provide some background information on the Native American Tribes of Florida. If you know of a link we should have here, please feel free to let us know via email.
Native American Links on the Internet
The Seminole Tribe of Florida The Seminole Zone Seminole Nation of Oklahoma: Historic Preservation Office Seminole and Miccosukee Documents ... Muscogee Nation of Florida Here is a listing of Native American Web Sites, they each have interesting sub-links of Historical and Genealogical information for those who are attempting to establish their Native Roots.

89. Native Americans In The Santa Clara Valley
native americans Santa Clara Valley. The Basics. General; native americansof California; native americans of the Pacific Northwest and Alaska;
http://www.scu.edu/SCU/Programs/Diversity/scvnat.html
Native Americans
Santa Clara Valley
The Basics
History [General, Familial, and Immigration Histories]
  • General
  • Native Americans of California
  • Native Americans of the Pacific Northwest and Alaska
  • Native Americans of the Plains
  • Native Americans of the Southwestern U.S.
  • Native Americans of the Northeast
Organizations and Local Resources
Demographics
Culture [Literature, Food, Dances, Special Events, etc.]
  • General
  • Native Americans of California

90. BCPL Homework Center -- Native Americans
native americans Compact History A Geographic Overview History, location,culture and more on tribes throughout the United States.
http://homework.bensenville.lib.il.us/NativeAmericans.htm
Animals Art Astronomy Biographies ... Writing Native Americans
Compact History: A Geographic Overview
History, location, culture and more on tribes throughout the United States.
Flags of the Native Peoples of the United States
Flags representing Native nations and associations.
Index of The North American Indian
Summaries of the western native tribes visited and photographed by Edward Sherrif Curtis from 1890 to 1930.
Indigenous People's Literature
General stories, including creation and migration stories and sacred stories.
Legends, Stories and Poems
More legends for viewing.
National Museum of the American Indian
Information on the Native peoples of the Western Hemisphere from the National Museum of the American Indian.
Native American Indian: Art, Culture, Education, History, Science
Native books, schools and nations.
Native American Lore Index Page
Native American stories online.

91. Educational Resources
Useful maps. Here are some useful maps of California that demonstratevarious aspects of native cultures and lifeways. Landform
http://www4.hmc.edu:8001/humanities/indian/welcome.htm
A Selection of General Resources Informative Books Useful Maps A Discussion of Report Topics An Historical Sketch ... Other California Web Resources
Select a Region Below Most Applicable to Your Needs
Northwest Coast Shasta Southern Coast Southern California Deserts ... Eastern Sierra
My Book on California Indians - Draft Version
The View from Native California
Student Projects
Native American Basketry by Allison Burce and Sarah Jane Stetina Home Page Generally Informative Books Here are some books that are good sources of general information about California's indigenous people. Incidentally, there is a fine bibliography for Northern and Central California available through the California Indian Library Collection at Berkeley.
  • Sturtevant, William C. (gen.ed.) and Robert F. Heizer (vol.ed.). Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 8, California (Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution, 1978)
    A collection of essays by leading authorities, comprehensively reviewing all aspects of indigenous life in Califoria. (Note the Handbook's division into study-regions includes portions of Eastern California in the Great Basin region covered by Vol. 11.)
  • Kroeber, A. L.

92. Southwestern Arts & Crafts Of Native Americans (DesertUSA)
is Silverwork. Ironically, Silverwork is among one of the newer craftsadopted by native americans of the Southwest. In fact, some
http://www.desertusa.com/mag98/dec/stories/craft.html
By Lynn M. Bremner Native American cultures of the Southwest portray a colorful and varied heritage through their fine arts and crafts. Many of the designs and symbols prominent in Native American craftwork represent ideas that are important to their cultures. Images of crops, rain, feathers, lightning, animals and other nature symbols are prominent in Native American art. The purpose of this article is to introduce you to a variety of Native American arts and crafts, as well as the religious, cultural and economic influences that have shaped their development. All craftwork has an economic purpose to use, to buy or to trade. For centuries, Native American crafts have been used in religious ceremonies, to barter for trade or for their utility, as a functional part of every day life. Through the centuries, new ideas, changing markets, and the introduction of new tools and materials have greatly influenced the development of their craftwork. Basketry and pottery are some of the oldest and most functional of Native American crafts. Silverwork, painting on paper and commercial sandpaintings are newer art forms, that have been driven by European influences and developing markets. Other items such as Kachina carvings and fetishes have been used for centuries to represent and Kachina Dolls The Hopi believe that all things in the world have both a spiritual form and a material form. They do not worship the Kachinas, but consider them allies of the pueblo and are respected by the villagers. There are more than 200 different Kachina spirits ranging from butterflies, eagles and bugs, to the sun, corn and clouds.

93. NativeTech: Native American Technology And Art
Offers educational articles regarding native American crafts such as quillwork, stonework and beadwork. Explore readersubmitted recipes.
http://www.nativetech.org/
...revising use of the term "primitive" with respect to Native American Technology and Art A RTICLES
Metalwork

Porcupine Quills

S PECIAL FEATURES
Virtual Woodland Tour

O THER RESOURCES
Contemporary Issues in Art

Seminole Clothing

Discussion Forums

Instructional Pamphlets
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Internet Links
Can't find it?
Try looking in the Site Index ALL GRAPHICS AND TEXT ON THE NATIVETECH WEBSITE Tara Prindle (unless specifically cited otherwise) This site is hosted by NativeWeb. Your donations to Nativeweb help them to promote Indigenous resources, inform the public about Indigenous cultures and issues, and to facilitate communications between Indigenous peoples and organizations supporting their goals and efforts. Please see their donation page to find out ways you can help. NATIVETECH NEWS Click >>>> More Native News Sources Tribal News Click >>>> MoreTribal News In the Arts Click >>>> More Native Arts News Click >>>> More Powwow News Powered by Moreover.com NativeTech BOOKPAGES Article Bibliographies Please visit my personal page

94. Garrison Diversion: Maps
Home Public Info District Org. Hot News Proj. Programs NativeAmericans DWRA maps gdcd@daktel.com (800) 5320074 Contact Us.
http://www.garrisondiv.org/maps.shtml
Javascript Rollovers
We have a variety of state and regional maps available as Web graphics (HTML) or Adobe Acrobat (PDF) files. The HTML versions are low resolution for faster loading time. The PDF versions may be viewed or printed at high resolution, but they may take a few minutes to download over a slow connection. The PDF maps require Adobe's free Acrobat Reader, which may already be installed on your computer. If you cannot view them, click on the icon to the right to download and install the software on your computer. HTML PDF Recreation Map Pipeline Map Environment Map Wildlife Management Areas Completed Facilities
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95. Gieseking's SPNHF Maps
Environmental Racism/ Environmental Justice An Annotated Bibliographyof Internet Resources. The following are bibliography was
http://www.mtholyoke.edu/~jegiesek/ergrass.html
Environmental Racism/ Environmental Justice:
An Annotated Bibliography of Internet Resources
The following are bibliography was created by Jennifer Gieseking during the spring of 1996 in collaboration with Professor Mary Jacob, now Dean of International Studies at Univeristy of California, Santa Barbara. This guide is not a complete list of sites but is as comprehensible as possible. When I began my study, there were no web sites on environmental racism/ environmental justice. Click on which of the following site type you desire to follow:
Africans/ African Americans
Anti-Racism Environment/ Toxics Environmental Law ... COMPREHENSIVE INDEX OF ALL LISTED SITES
This site was last updated March 30, 1998.

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