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Native American History

Native American History. Arizona Geography GCU 221. Game Plan. Native Americans in Arizona Southwestern tribes before Columbus Anasazi Ancestors: Hopi Hohokam Ancestors: Tohono O'odham and Akimel O'odham Athabaskan Arrivals: Navajo. Native Americans: 21 tribes in AZ 250,000 people.

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Native American History

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  1. Native American History Arizona Geography GCU 221

  2. Game Plan • Native Americans in Arizona • Southwestern tribes before Columbus • Anasazi Ancestors: Hopi • Hohokam Ancestors: Tohono O'odham and Akimel O'odham • Athabaskan Arrivals: Navajo

  3. Native Americans: 21 tribes in AZ250,000 people

  4. Pre-Spanish Native America • The North American native population was likely between 50 and 100 million people. • After their arrival, their population dropped to 237,000. • Deaths from: Disease (small pox, typhus, measles, influenza, bubonic plague, cholera, malaria, tuberculosis, mumps, yellow fever, and whooping cough), War, Massacre, Displacement • Part of Globalization 1.0

  5. North America Population loss from 1500-1700

  6. Hopi • Former Anasazi people and share religion, including kivas. • Very religious, focus on pacifism, corn, and rainfall • Sustainable dryland farmers (700 years) growing corn, beans, and squash: 1. Plant seeds deep 2. Plant in clumps 3. Space plants far apart 4. Leave stalks on the field • Reservation surrounded by the Navajo Nation, their old enemies. • Peabody Coal mine issues

  7. Hopi

  8. Hopi

  9. Hopi

  10. Hopi Nineteen members of the Hopi tribe incarcerated at Alcatraz in 1895 for not “farming” correctly.

  11. Hopi 1931: Einstein visits the Hopi house at the Grand Canyon.

  12. Hopi In 1850, ask for help from Americans to protect them from Navajo raiding.

  13. Hopi 1899: Oraibi founded sometime before 1100 and the oldest continuously inhabited village in North America

  14. Hopi Over 14 varieties of corn. Dryland farming can be done with as little as 9 inches of rain a year.

  15. Hopi Black Mesa Mine closed in 2005 – supplied coal to Mojave Generating Station through a water intensive slurry line. Kayenta Mine supplies coal to Navajo Generating Station – powers CAP, biggest single user of electricity in Arizona

  16. Tohono O'odham and Akimel O'odham • Tohono O'odham, meaning “People of the Desert”, cover a large southern portion of the state and extend into Mexico • Akimel O'odham, meaning “People of the River” live along the Gila and formerly Salt Rivers • Both are considered ancestors of the Hohokam people • Farmers that faced real change with the advent of groundwater pumping

  17. Tohono O'odham and Akimel O'odham

  18. Tohono O'odham and Akimel O'odham 1,500 Tohono O'odham tribal members live in Mexico, but are not US citizens. $3 million spent a year to deal with illegal immigration.

  19. Tohono O'odham and Akimel O'odham The White Dove of the Desert built with the Spanish between 1783 – 1797. Grew tired of the Spanish and had two major rebellions in the 1660s and 1750s.

  20. Tohono O'odham and Akimel O'odham Agricultural intensive culture made them sedentary and an easy target for raiding Apaches and used and improved the same canals built originally built by the Hohokam.

  21. Tohono O'odham and Akimel O'odham Confined to small reservations and anglo ground water pumping practices make agriculture difficult.

  22. Navajo • An Athabasakan people and a recent arrival in the 1000s. • Originally hunters and gatherers, adapted agricultural practices and herding practices. • Famous for wool blankets from goat herding • Raided and traded with Pueblo tribes, Spanish, and Mexicans, kept slaves. • Sent on a 300 mile walk to New Mexico, before being allowed to go back to their old home land. • Uranium mining and hazardous side effects • Code Talkers

  23. Navajo

  24. NorthAmericanAthabaskan Distribution

  25. Navajo Hogans

  26. Navajo Hogans

  27. Navajo Herding

  28. Navajo Weaving

  29. Navajo Blankets

  30. Navajo Farming

  31. Navajo The “Long Walk”, 300 miles to a new reservation in 1864. A failure, the Navajo were allowed to return to their native land.

  32. Navajo The “Long Walk”, 300 miles to a new reservation in 1864. A failure, the Navajo were allowed to return to their native land.

  33. Navajo The “Long Walk”, 300 miles to a new reservation in 1864. A failure, the Navajo were allowed to return to their native land.

  34. Navajo

  35. Navajosilverand turquoise jewelry

  36. Navajo Uranium Mining

  37. Navajo Uranium tailings dam failure: “Hundreds of millions of gallons of radioactive waste escaped. It was the largest accidental release of radioactive material in U.S. history — bigger than Three Mile Island — and nobody cares.”

  38. Navajo WWII Code Talkers

  39. Things to know: • Importance of Native Americans in Arizona • Describe and the know the general geographic distribution of the Hopi • Describe and the know the general geographic distribution of the Tohono O'odham and Akimel O'odham • Describe and the know the general geographic distribution of the Navajo Help: Ask Dr. Douglass

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