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         Pueblo Indians Native Americans:     more books (101)
  1. Pueblo Nations: Eight Centuries of Pueblo Indian History by Joe S. Sando, 1992-04-15
  2. Native American Fetish Carvings of the Southwest (Schiffer Book for Collectors) by Kay Whittle, 1998-06
  3. Pueblo Indian Pottery: 750 Artist Biographies, C. 1800-Present, With Value/Price Guide, Featuring over 20 Years of Auction Records (American Indian Art Series, 1) by Gregory Schaaf, 2000-01
  4. Aging & Osteoporosis in Native Americans from Pecos Pueblo, New Mexico: Behavioral & Biomechanical Effects (Evolution of North American Indians Series) by Christopher Ruff, 1991-06-01
  5. Indians of the Southwest: Traditions, History, Legends, and Life (The Native Americans) by Lisa Sita, 1997-03
  6. Pueblos (Native American Life) by June Preszler, 2005-01
  7. Pueblo (Native American Homes) by R. Kent Rasmussen, 2000-06
  8. The Pueblo (Native American People) by Mary D'Apice, 1990-11
  9. The Pueblo Indian Revolt of 1696 and the Franciscan Missions in New Mexico: Letters of the Missionaries and Related Documents by J. Manuel Espinosa, 1991-09
  10. A Zuni Life: A Pueblo Indian in Two Worlds by Virgil Wyaco, 1998-02-01
  11. Indian Time: A Year of Discovery With the Native Americans of the Southwest by Judith Fein, 1993-09
  12. PUEBLO INDIAN COOKBOOK - RECIPES FROM THE PUEBLOS OF THE AMERICAN SOUTHWEST (Cook Book. Recipes. Native Americans. Indians)
  13. The Pueblo And Their History (We the People) by Genevieve St. Lawrence, 2005-08
  14. Coyote Tales from the Indian Pueblos by Evelyn Dahl Reed, 1988-09

21. Indians
North America Wichita indians, pueblo Recommended Websites Indian pueblo CulturalCenter Website pueblo indians Southwest native americans Cherokee Recommended
http://www.thebestkidsbooksite.com/tryindian.cfm

Iroquois
Recommended Websites
Dutch and the Iroquois War
Iroquois History Iroquois Indians Iroquois of the Northeast ... Iroquois Oral Traditions
Hopi
Recommended Websites
Hopi
Hopi Information Hopi of the Southwest
American Indians
(J 970.004)
Recommended Websites
Alabama-Coushatta Indians
American Indian Resources American Indian Symbols American Indians and the Natural World ... Wichita Indians Pueblo Recommended Websites Indian Pueblo Cultural Center Website Pueblo Indians Southwest Native Americans Cherokee Recommended Websites Cherokee Cherokee Indians Cherokee Nation Cherokee: FAQs

22. Teaching Kids The Wonderful Diversity Of Native Americans
San Carlos Apache, Rosebud Sioux, and Zuñi pueblo. are not appreciated by most nonNativeAmericans, because the rich diversity of American indians is not
http://www.nativechild.com/article.html
Teaching Kids the Wonderful Diversity of American Indians
The awareness teachers and parents need to teach Head Start children about American Indians accurately and respectfully.
By Bernhard Michaelis, Founder, Native Child
This article is reprinted from Children and Families, Vol.XVI No.4 , Fall 1997, the journal of the National Head Start Association. Children and Families is published quarterly for NHSA members. For information on joining NHSA, please call (703) 739-0875. "Don't yell like a bunch of wild Indians!" shouts a mother trying to quiet her children in a supermarket in Cortez, Colorado. A long- time American Indian Head Start teacher from the Navajo Reservation is standing close by, feeling hurt and insulted. "We would never say that to our Head Start kids," the teacher explains. "But I hear things like that all the time when I go shopping off the Reservation." The teacher's frustration is understandable. Throughout our lives, we have been bombarded by stereotypical portrayals of American Indians. Books, television programs, movies, and toys tend to depict Native Americans as oversimplified feather-wearing characters. Inaccurate and often offensive representations of American Indians are deeply rooted in the American consciousness. As a result, we have become desensitized to terminology and imagery that is offensive to American Indians. For example, we might not think it's odd to ask our kids to line up Indian file. And we might not see any reason our kids shouldn't dress up and play Indians.

23. Resources
Debbie Reese is a pueblo Indian who studies and center heard a fouryear-old saying, indians. inaccurate view of native americans, even though her classmates
http://www.nativechild.com/resources.html
Native Child has gathered helpful information to give you the tools for evaluating books, curriculum material and videos that are currently published and offered covering the topic.
These resources can be used as guidelines in selecting culturally appropriate material.
Teaching Kids the Wonderful Diversity of Native Americans
Stories about Contemporary Native Americans for Preschool and Kindergarten Classrooms
by Debbie Reese
Debbie is a doctoral student in early childhood education at the University of Illinois. Her research focuses on multicultural literature. She is Pueblo Indian, from Nambe Pueblo in northern New Mexico.
Teaching Young Children about Native Americans
Testing Native American Children
The Current Condition of Native Americans
Native American Languages Act ...
Links
l ast update: 8.07.2000
Teaching Young Children about Native Americans
Debbie Reese,May 1996
Debbie Reese is a Pueblo Indian who studies and works in the field
of early childhood education.

24. Index Of Native American History Resources On The Internet
James Madison University in the native americans section of and the San PascualIndian pueblo in San of San Diego County Chumash indians native People of
http://www.hanksville.org/NAresources/indices/NAhistory.html
WWW Virtual Library - American Indians
Index of Native American History Resources on the Internet
F requently A sked ... uestions for this site
This document must be read before sending any email!
Search this site
3/15/03 - New I am now entering new additions each day. The site is now run from a database. It will be about a week until the last new pages appears online. All new or updated links will be noted on the page where they appear. The What's New page is no longer updated. Trust Fund Filing , A New York Times, 1/07/03 Fed up with Spam?
Try one of these programs! Mac users, my choice is Spamfire, from Matterform Media VIRUS ALERT - Save 50% on McAfee.com VirusScan Online!
Save $25 on McAfee Internet Essentials
Thanks again to the many people who support this website with their book purchases and donations. Please learn how you can support this site.
Oral History
American Indian Oral History Collection on 30 audiocassettes, Norman Ross Publishing American Society for Ethnohistory Comments On Carving Soapstone Dehcho: "Mom, We've Been Discovered!" Interviewing Inuit Elders ... Memories Come To Us in the Rain and the Wind , (Extracts from) Oral Histories and Oral Histories of the Mi'kmaq People Oral Narratives and Aboriginal Pasts:
An Interdisciplinary Review of the Literatures on Oral Traditions and Oral Histories
Our Elders , Interviews with Saskatchewan Elders

25. St. John The Evangelist Catholic Church -- Native Americans And Catholicism
native americans and Catholicism Links to Information. Pre-Columbian Discoveryof America, pueblo indians. Puyallup indians, Quamichan indians.
http://www.globalthinking.com/stjohn/nativeamericans.htm
Native Americans and Catholicism - Links to Information This information has been collected as a reference by Virginia Giglio, Ph.D. Information from these links does not necessarily reflect the views of either the researcher, St. John the Evangelist Church , or the present day Roman Catholic Church. Catholic Encyclopedia Entries What is the Catholic Encyclopedia? The first volume appearing in 1907, ". . . the work was intended to show not only the inner life of the Church in organization, teaching, and practice, but also the manifold and far-reaching influence of Catholicism upon all that most deeply concerns mankind. Hence the introduction of many titles which are not specifically Catholic or even religious in the stricter sense, but under which some interest of the Church or some phase of its activity is recorded." Quoted from the web site. American Indians Alaska Angulo, Pedro Apaches ... Arawaks (Greater Antilles) Badin, Stephen Theodore

26. Native Americans OBJECT
native americans Object to Celebration of Spanish Conqueror. between Latinos and Americanindians and become a is reviled by some pueblo indians whose ancestors
http://www.worldfreeinternet.net/news/nws110.htm
Native Americans
Object to Celebration
of Spanish Conqueror
By Rebecca Rolwing
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ALBUQUERQUE, NM-To Latinos, he was a gutsy trailblazer who bravely settled a New World. To American Indians, he was a ruthless colonialist who cut off the feet of their ancestors. Now, the city's plans to celebrate the Spanish conquistador Juan de Onate's arrival in New Mexico 400 years ago have hit a snag: The guest of honor isn't welcome by all.
A proposal to spend $255,000 in taxpayer money to erect a statue to honor Onate has reopened long-festering wounds between Latinos and American Indians and become a focal point in the dueling versions of New Mexico's history. While he is revered by New Mexicans who trace their heritage to Spain, Onate - pronounced o NYAH tay - is reviled by some Pueblo Indians whose ancestors were killed in battles with the Spanish colonizers. (One of the only successful Indian uprisings ever to take place was in New Mexico, in the 1600s. WFI Editor
Indians see no reason to honor a man who ordered his soldiers to cut off the right feet of 24 Acoma Pueblo Indians after the Spaniards defeated the Pueblo in 1599. He eventually was banished from the colony for his cruelty. "The bottom line is, people died," said Conroy Chino, an Acoma who has criticized the Onate statue. "

27. Indians Of The Southwest
Rose lives at the Santa Clara pueblo in New The People; indians of the American SouthwestWords Set in the conflict between native americans Apache, Mexicans
http://falcon.jmu.edu/~ramseyil/indswest.htm
Native Americans of the Southwest
By Wendy Lanehart and Inez Ramsey
Multicultural Bibliography includes Athabascan, Ute, Paiute, Apache, Rancheria, Hopi, Navajo, Pueblo, Taos Pueblo, Pima and other tribes of the Southwest.
WWW Links. Southwest
  • Archaeological Sites of the Southwest
    Folktales
    Baylor, Byrd. And It Is Still That Way, Legends Told by Arizona Indian Children. Trails West Pub.
    Begay, Shonto. Ma'ii and Cousin Horned Toad; A Traditional Navajo Story. Illus. by Begay. Scholastic, 1992.
    A lazy, conniving coyote habitually takes advantage of his animal cousins until his cousin, Horned Toad, teaches him a lesson.
    Duncan, Lois. The Magic of Spider Woman Illus. by Shonto Begay. New York: Scholastic, 1996.
    Tells the Navajo tale of how a stubborn girls learns from the Spider Woman how to keep life in balance by respecting its boundaries.
    Lacapa, Michael. Antelope Woman; An Apache Folktale Northland Pub., 1992. Grades 3 up. Rev. Blkst.
    Carries a feeling of reverence for the earth and its beauty.
    Lacapa, Michael.

28. American Indian Studies
Dedicated to the presentation of artwork, photographs, video, and sound recordings, which reflect Category Science Social Sciences Visual Anthropology...... A presentation of nineteen pueblo communities. Black indians Intertrbial nativeAmerican Associations. Decicated to Intertribal native americans with a
http://www.csulb.edu/projects/ais/
This site received over 1,000,000 hits in 1999 from 50 countries throughout the world.
American Indian History and Related Issues
American Indian Studies programs were created at a number of universities throughout the United States beginning in the late 1960s. The American Indian Studies Program at California State University, Long Beach celebrated its 25th anniversary in 1994 and is the oldest continuous existing program. This world wide site is a developing site supervised by Professor Troy Johnson and is dedicated to the presentation of unique artwork, photographs, video and sound recordings which accurately reflect the history, culture and richness of the Native American experience in North America and has been expanded to include Indian people of Central America and Mexico. Contributions and comments may be made by contacting Professor Johnson See the various books Troy Johnson has written on the American Indian Culture.
Indians of North America
Alcatraz Occupation: The Story The 1969 occupation of Alcatraz Island is seen as a watershed event in contemporary Native American history. This site provides a brief history of the occupation as documented in my book, "The Occupation of Alcatraz Island, Indian Self-determination and The Rise of Indian Activism Alcatraz Occupaion in photographs This collection of photographs and descriptions by Ilka Hartmann tell the story of the American Indian occupation of Alcatraz Island through the eyes of those who made up the occupation force.

29. Southwestern Native Americans
sailed to the New World and named them indians . States, looked like during the timeof native americans. or crafts of the Hopi, Navajo, pueblo,Western Apache
http://projects.edtech.sandi.net/dailard/sw/
Link to Teacher Page http://projects.edtech.sandi.net/dailard/sw by
Janice Kennerly
and Donna Skahill Introduction Task Resources ... Conclusion
WHAT IS THIS ALL ABOUT?
Native Americans have lived throughout North America for thousands of years. This was long before Christopher Columbus sailed to the New World and named them "Indians". He had mistakenly thought he had reached his destination of India. We are going to discover what our world, the Southwestern United States, looked like during the time of Native Americans. Come along on a journey where you will discover different cultures and learn to look at your home in a new way. Each tribe had a distinct culture yet shared many of the same beliefs.
WHAT WILL I DO?
You have the task to learn about the location of the tribes, types of homes, clothing, food, and beliefs and/or crafts of the Hopi, Navajo, Pueblo,Western Apache,and Zuni tribes. At the end of this unit you will have to decide to join a tribe and write about your life there. Which tribe would you like to join? Why? Activity 1 - Look at the map of the Southwestern United States. On this map you will find the locations of the 5 tribes you will be studying in this unit: Hopi, Navajo, Pueblo, Western Apache and Zuni. Click on the name of the tribe, a hand will appear, and read about the tribal ways of each tribe. When you finish reading about that tribe remember to use the BACK arrow to return to this page.

30. 4th & 5th Grade Student Research Resources- Native Americans
native American Archaeology wonderful pueblo views, some 50 stories from varioustribes native American Lore and varied collection from many tribes indians!
http://www.learning.caliberinc.com/indians.html
United States History Resources: Native Americans
Native Americans: United States
Native American Stories and Legends

Native Americans of Mexico and South America

Native American Clipart

Native Americans of the United States
Arctic Studies Center
Here is great information about the very early of people
Anasazi
This is good basic information.
Prehistoric Peoples of the Desert Southwest
an excellent starter site
Anasazi
You can find many links to history and pictures.
Archaeolgy at Crow Canyon
an excellent introduction to the Anasazi at Woods Canyon and Crow Canyon Pueblo sites
Chaco Canyon Tour
Fine photos and information plus a Quicktime virtual tourthat should not be missed. Leave your mouse button down and view the panoramas. Anasazi Excellent pictures and more about the ruins in Southern Utah can be found here Palatki 6000 years of Arizona Rock Art Native American Road Trip excellent photography and information make this virtual trip worthwhile. Why Did the Anasazi Abandon their Cities? - this is a theory Resources for North American Archaeology many links to excellent sites and visuals Virtual Reality Native American Archaeology - wonderful pueblo views, some of which you can manipulate thanks to QuickTime

31. Native Americans
Wright, Bill Tiguas pueblo indians of Texas Texas Western Press, 1993 These areNOT the only books on Texas indians. See also native americans In The News
http://www.cam-info.net/cyberindians.html
Native Americans - All Tribes Overview Texas Tribes Great Plains ... Civil Rights
Native Americans - All Tribes
Native American Tribes NativeWeb Native Americans Native American Indian Resources ... Cherokee Genealogy Page Overview sites for Texas Native Americans NOTE: This guide is meant to help people get started who want to do research on the Native American tribes who lived in Texas, before the Europeans came. This is by NO means an exhaustive list of places where one can look. But, I hope it will help as a jumping off point.
  • Handbook of Texas Online (Has an excellent article on each Texas tribe. Search by tribe name.)
  • Indians of Texas (with map)
  • Texas Indians
  • Texas Indians
  • Native Americans (Institute of Texan Cultures)
  • Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca
  • Letters on Spanish Texas Specific Texas Tribes
  • Apache (Lipan)
  • Caddo More Caddo Still More Caddo ... More Wichita Great Plains
  • Great Plains
  • Horses and Great Plains Indians
  • Buffalo and Great Plains Indians Foods
  • Native American Recipes
  • What Great Plains Indians ate
  • Foods from the New World (From Colonial Times/Discovery of the New World) Tribes now living within Texas
  • Alabama-Coushatta Alabama-Coushatta Tribal History Reservation
  • Kickapoo ...
  • Tiguas (El Paso, TX-area)
  • 32. Terrie's Native Americans
    Art of pueblo Pottery pueblo Cultural Center Oxford City History (Chickasaw indians)native American Only The American West - native americans ARIZONA LINKS
    http://www.geocities.com/EnchantedForest/Pond/5526/NativeAmericans.html
    But it's a dry heat Thank you SO much for this award! June, 1998 This White Buffalo site is owned by Terrie Want to join the White Buffalo Skip Prev Prev Next ... List Sites If you need resources for other subjects, please use this drop-down menu:

    33. Mustangs And Man
    the early relationship between native americans and horses indians, especially theApaches, acquired a taste After 1680, the pueblo indians forced the Spanish
    http://www.pbs.org/wildhorses/wh_man/wh_indians.html
    Native Americans and the Horse Western Indians Begin to Acquire the "Big Dog"
    In 1541, Viceroy Mendoza put allied Aztec chieftains on horses to better lead their tribesmen in the Mixton War of Central Mexico. This appears to have been the first time that horses were officially given to the Indians. Indians were seen to rub themselves with horse sweat, so that they might acquire the magic of the "big dog." But the early relationship between Native Americans and horses was not always mutually beneficial. Indians, especially the Apaches, acquired a taste for roasted horse meat. After 1680, the Pueblo Indians forced the Spanish out of New Mexico. Many horses were left behind. The Pueblo learned to ride well but didn't live by the horse. They mainly valued the horse as food and as an item to trade with the Plains Indians for jerked buffalo meat and robes. Horses and horsemanship gradually spread from tribe to tribe until the Plains Indians became the great mounted buffalo hunters of the American West. Plains Indian Horsemen
    The alliance of the American Indians and the Spanish horse gave the Indians great mobility and changed their way of life. Tribes of horses were dominant over other tribes who relied on moving camp on foot. The plains Indians were great mounted buffalo hunters. They traded meat and buffalo hides for glass beads, metal tools, cloth and guns.

    34. Indians/Native Americans, Indigenous Peoples, Indonesia, Industrial & Insects Po
    Taos Indian pueblo . Unused Curteich linen. PLEASE TELL A FRIEND! INDIGENOUS PEOPLESPOSTCARDS POST CARDS For North America, see indians/native americans.
    http://www.judnick.com/IndiansToInsects.htm
    LOTSOFCARDS.COM
    (POSTCARD DEPARTMENT OF JUDNICK.COM) Home General Information How to Order Contact Us ... Unique Gift Ideas INDIANS/NATIVE AMERICANS,
    INDIGENOUS PEOPLES, INDONESIA,
    INDUSTRIAL
    What's new? Items marked NEW/NOVÝ/NUOVO Reminders: All items offered subject to prior sale.
    Quantities available: one each unless stated otherwise.
    We reserve the right to correct typographical errors
    Unless noted, prices do not include postage or insurance. CAPTION READING TIP
    Exact captions are within " " marks.
    Capitalization is as found.
    / denotes a line change. (sic) signals a caption error. INDIANS POSTCARDS For other than North American Indians, please see Indigenous peoples postcards ALASKAN ESKIMO. "Alaska Eskimos" showing a seated group of nine, well done home-made (and, hence, unique) postcard mailed 1966 at Abilene Texas McMurry Station, faint SCC. $1.75 ai NEW/NOVÝ/NUOVO ALASKAN ESKIMO. "Fairbanks, Alaska./Eskimo mother and child/have forsaken native costume" well done home-made (and, hence, unique) postcard mailed APR 17 1962 from Ruby Alaska (clear hand cancel on 4-c anti-malaria stamp). $2.00 ai-a NEW/NOVÝ/NUOVO ALASKAN ESKIMO.

    35. Research Starters: Anasazi And Pueblo Indians
    on the Internet — WWWVL American indians http//www representing the highest pointof pueblo preColumbian native americans and the Environment http//cnie.org
    http://teacher.scholastic.com/researchtools/researchstarters/native_am/
    adobe
    A building material made of straw and sun-dried earth or clay, adobe was also formed into bricks. Anasazi
    Meaning "the ancient ones," this name derives from a Navajo Indian word. hunter-gatherers
    People that lived by hunting for animals and gathering naturally existing edible plants, rather than by growing crops. mesa
    A flat-topped elevation rising from the Southwestern desert, with nearly vertical sides. nomadic
    Refers to people with no fixed settlement, who wander a region usually following food supplies or weather patterns. Pueblo
    (Spanish for "town") The name refers to the village-dwellings of these Indian people. sedentary
    Living a settled existence, with permanent community institutions such as buildings of some type.
    Here are some topics to explore that relate to the Anasazi and Pueblo Indians. Looking at the articles, images, and other materials in this Research Starter may give you more ideas. Each topic has one or more articles to start you on your research, but remember that it takes more than one article to make a research paper. Continue your research with our list of articles below.
    Anasazi history as conveyed by national monuments, parks, and historic sites.

    36. Native Americans Web Sites
    tribute to the contributions of native americans in 20th native American Religionin Early America Essay New Mexico's pueblo indians - History of the pueblo
    http://www.teach-nology.com/teachers/subject_matter/social_studies/native/
    Best Sites
    Downloads

    eReports

    Free Sites
    ... Professional Development Enter your email address for
    FREE weekly teaching tips! Home Teacher Resources Subject Matter Social Studies ...
  • American Indian History and Art - Biographies and portraits of several historic Native Americans including Sitting Bull, Quanah Parker, Chief Joseph.
  • The American Indian in Tennessee - Traces the last 15,000 years of Native American occupation of Tennessee, using artifacts from the McClung Museum's extensive collections. Includes the Duck River Cache, considered the greatest find in Tennessee archaeology, dating from the Late Mississippian period (ca. AD 1450).
  • American Indian Kids - Historical look at Native Americans for kids, ages 6-10. Emphasizes Indian family and community life.
  • American Indian Policy Center - Provides government leaders, policy makers, and the public with accurate information about the legal and political history of American Indian nations, and the contemporary situation for American Indians.
  • Anadarko Festival - Historical photographs taken by John C. Chapman during the 1947 Anadarko, Oklahoma, Indian Festival.
  • 37. American West - Native Americans
    1857 1900) A pioneer Ethnologist and friend of the Zuni pueblo indians, one of Ethnologistand a leader in the movement to bring native americans into the
    http://www.americanwest.com/pages/pastldrs.htm
    NATIVE AMERICANS
    LEADERS OF THE PAST...
    TABLE OF CONTENTS General Native American Resources Native American Nations Homepages Education Organizations And Government Sources ... Movies New links:
    Susan LaFlesche Picotte
    , daughter of an Omaha chief, she was the bridge between her people and the new culture.
    Indians.org
    SITTING BULL (TATANKA YOTANKA) 1834 - 1890.
    Leader of the Sioux tribe (Hunkpapa), born in the region of Grand River in present-day South Dakota. Under his leadership, the Sioux resisted efforts of the U.S. government to annex their lands and force them to settle on reservations...
    1. Chief Sitting Bull
    Biography of Sitting Bull by THE WEST TV-series
    GERONIMO (GOYATHLAY) 1829 - 1909.
    Leader of the Chiricahua tribe of North American Apache Indians, born in present-day Clifton, Arizona. After his wife, children, and mother were killed by Mexicans in 1858, he participated in a number of raids against Mexican and American settlers, but eventually settled on a reservation. Later in life he adopted Christianity and took part in the inaugural procession of President Theodore Roosevelt in 1905.

    38. Books On Pueblo Indians
    Browse Powells History Books. Posters. native American Posters native americans.Best Sellers. Dropbears.com Web Developers. Search Books on pueblo indians.
    http://www.dropbears.com/b/broughsbooks/history/pueblo_indians.htm
    Pueblo Indians Books on Native American History and Culture
    Related Books History Index
    Native American Art

    Rock Art

    Native American Languages
    ...
    Click Here
    Departments Posters
    Calendars

    History Magazines

    Documentaries

    Browse Powells
    History Books
    Posters Native Americans Best Sellers Recollections from My Time in the Indian Service, 1935-1943: Maria Martinez Makes Pottery by Alfreda Ward Maloof (Paperback - May 1997) The Chaco Meridian: Centers of Political Power in the Ancient Southwest by Stephen H. Lekson (Paperback) Talking With the Clay: The Art of Pueblo Pottery by Stephen Trimble, Tom Ireland (Photographer) (Paperback - June 1988) Fourteen Families in Pueblo Pottery by Rick Dillingham, J. J. Brody (Paperback - August 1994) Pueblo Stories and Storytellers by Mark Bahti (Paperback - December 1996) Anasazi Ruins of the Southwest in Color by William M. Ferguson, et al (Paperback - March 1987) Mesa Verde Ancient Architecture: Selections from the Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletins 41 and 51 from the Years 1909 a by Jesse Walter Fewkes, Larry V. Nordby (Introduction) (Paperback) The Pueblo Story Teller : Development of a Figurative Ceramic Tradition Barbara A. Babcock, et al / Published 1991

    39. Native Americans
    personal home pages of native americans, and bibliographies. links related to native,aboriginal, and pueblo pueblo indians pueblo Indian Watercolors Learning
    http://www.auburn.wednet.edu/mtbaker/Library/links/ss/nat_amer.htm
    Native American Web Links
    General Sources
    Cherokee Cheyenne Hopi ... Wampanoag
    See Also: Washington State page Washington (State) - Conflicts General Sources American Indians of the Pacific Northwest Digital Collection (UW site)
    University of Washington Library and Library of Congress have combined to put together a site with hundreds of photographs and documents. Arrangement is by topic and you may browse through the photograph collection. American Indians of the Pacific Northwest Digital Collection http://content.lib.washington.edu/aipnw/ American Indians of the Pacific Northwest (Lib. of Cong. American Memories)
    This digital collection integrates over 2,300 photographs and 7,700 pages of text relating to the American Indians in two cultural areas of the Pacific Northwest, the Northwest Coast and Plateau. These resources illustrate many aspects of life and work, including housing, clothing, crafts, transportation, education, and employment. The materials are drawn from the extensive collections of the University of Washington Libraries, the Cheney Cowles Museum/Eastern Washington State Historical Society in Spokane, and the Museum of History and Industry in Seattle. Canada's Digital Collection: Aboriginal Peoples.

    40. Native Americans, Indians, Tribes
    native americans. Paiute; Pawnee The Pawnees; Pawnee Indian Village State Historicalsite; Pawnee Nation.org. Pomo Brief history; California indians. pueblo Indiana
    http://www.cybrary.org/indian.htm
    home
    about us contact HOME ... SOCIAL STUDIES War and relocation Eyewitness accounts of the battle with the Apache, 1872 Eyewitness account of the Battle of Little Bighorn, 1876 Eyewitness accounts of the ... Trail of Tears.....2 Famous Native Americans General information . . . . . . . Tribes . . . . . . . . . . . .

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