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First Americans

First Americans. Always click on the bow and arrow to get to the next slide. The First Americans. Questions. The First Americans: Who, What, When, Where, How, Why?. Who were the first Americans? When did the first Americans start arriving? Where did they come from?

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First Americans

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  1. First Americans Always click on the bow and arrow to get to the next slide

  2. The First Americans

  3. Questions The First Americans: Who, What,When, Where, How, Why? • Who were the first Americans? • When did the first Americans start arriving? • Where did they come from? • Where did they first enter the Americas? • How did they travel to the Americas? • Why did they come to a new land? • What was daily life like for these First Americans?

  4. The Very First Americans - Who Were They? ► The Americas were the last continents on earth to be occupied by man. ►Before man arrived, large animals roamed and ruled the land. ►Short-faced bears ran as fast as horses and were twice the size of today’s grizzly bears. ►3500 pound ground sloths, 20 feet long and standing over 6 feet tall roamed the land.

  5. More Wild Animals ►Teratorns birds weighed 30 pounds, had 10 foot wing spans, but stalked their prey on the ground ►Three-toed horses, that disappeared before Columbus arrived, galloped across the continent. ►Saber-toothed tigers with 10” canines were dangerous meateaters. ►Mastodons and Mammoths ► Camels, antelope, bighorn sheep, lions, deer, moose, fox, otters, and bison.

  6. The Ancient World: Ice Sheets ►About 125,000 years ago, the earth’s last ice sheets formed and lasted until 12,000 years ago. ►Geologists know that during this age, ice sheets covered more than 30% of the earth, including much of North America and Europe.

  7. Lower Ocean Levels = Land Bridges ► Because so much of the world’s water was frozen in ice sheets, ocean levels were 200-500 feet lower than they are today. ►The lower sea levels exposed land that today is ocean floor. Back then, these exposed lands existed as land bridges.

  8. What Route Did the First Explorers Take to Travel Here? Land Bridge Theory Coastal Route Theory European Maritime Theory

  9. Beringia is the name that scientists call the land bridge that existed between Asia and North America. • Beringia was a land bridge thousands of miles wide. • Paleoclimatologists believe that the weather in Beringia was much milder than the weather in the area is today. • Beringia supported wildlife and plants.

  10. Artifacts • The tools, to the left, were found near Alaska. They are made of bird bone, whale bone, and walrus tusk. • Some of the tools are tiny needles that were used to make waterproof clothing. • They show that humans had adapted to the northern climate. • Archaeologist Rick Knecht says these Aleutian tools show us only a “glimpse of who these people were. All we have are these little piles of stones and bones. It’s like trying to tell something about our culture by looking at steak knives.”

  11. The Enigma of the First Americans • Geoarchaeologist C. Vance Haynes believes the first people who entered the Americas were “explorers . . . Probably young [people] who were really bent on [seeing what was] over the next hill.” • The Beringia Land Bridge theory was long considered the most probable theory, but two problems with the theory arose: • How did the explorers travel thousands of miles over the relatively barren ice sheets. Some scientists argue that there was an area free of ice, a corridor, through which humans could have walked. • Evidence from an archeological site in Monte Verde, Chile indicate that humans were living in South America at an earlier date than the North American artifacts indicate people were living here. • (Michael Parfit and Photographer Kenneth Garrett. National Geographic, [Accessed 10/29/06. http://www.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0012/feature3/index.html

  12. Coastal Route Theory • Recent evidence suggests that the coast of the Americas would have been habitable, livable. In a cave in Alaska, archeologists found the bones of a 10,400 year old man and tools nearby. • The bones prove that the man ate a marine diet, fish and sea plants, proving that by 10,000 years ago, people lived along the coast. • Ancient travelers could have traveled from Asia, along the coast of the Americas down to South America. The evidence would have been destroyed when the ice sheets melted and the ocean levels rose.

  13. European Maritime Theory • Scientists have recently found similarities between the spear points found at certain American sites and the spear points made by the Solutreans, an ancient European culture. • These similar spear points suggest that ancient man might have traveled across the Atlantic. • The Solutreans might have traveled by boat, or the Atlantic might have been frozen, and the Solutreans could have walked.

  14. Everyday Life for the First American Hunter Gatherers • Humans developed farming about 8,000 years ago. • Before man learned how to grow plants and take care of crops that would grow well in the same place year after year, people would hunt small and large animals, birds, and fish, and they would gather plants, berries, and roots that were edible, fit to be eaten. • We call these people “hunter gatherers.” • Hunter gatherers didn’t live in permanent homes or villages. Instead they would move from place to place hunting and gathering food.(“Hunter-Gatherers,” Microsoft Encarta, 2001).

  15. Bibliography National Geographic. http://www.centerfirstamericans.com/ La Brea Tar Pits. “Return to the Ice Age: La Brea Exploration Guide. [Accessed 10/30/06. http://www.tarpits.org/education/guide/flora/birds.html] Beringia. [Accessed: October 29, 2006. http:///www.beringia.com/02/02maina6.htm.] Moyle, Peter and Mary A. Orland. “A History of Wildlife in North America.” [Accessed 11/2/06. http://marinebio.org/Oceans/Conservation/Moyle/ch2.asp]

  16. The people who were the first to live in America are called First Americans. They are also called Native Americans or American Indians.

  17. To meet their basic life needs, First Americans were very wise. They used the natural resources of their region. These are examples of natural resources: Trees and plants Animals Land and water Can you be as wise as a First American?

  18. Good! Test your thinking skills. To become a wise chief, you must earn 3 feathers. Answer each question carefully and correctly. Are you ready?

  19. The Native Americans of the Eastern Woodlands

  20. 1. The Eastern Woodland Indians lived in forests, near rivers and streams. What would they use to build their houses? Seashells Trees

  21. Sorry! Please try again!

  22. Right! Their houses were made of wood and tree bark.

  23. 2. Sometimes, many people lived in a house, so it had to be big. What is the name of this kind of house? long house large house

  24. Right! As many as six families lived in a long house. It could be 200 feet long!

  25. Sorry! Please try again!

  26. 3. To get their food from the rivers and streams, the Eastern Woodland Indians fished swam

  27. Right! The Eastern Woodland Indians were very good fishermen.

  28. Sorry! Please try again!

  29. 4. The forests had many animals that were food for the Eastern Woodland Indians. Someone who captures animals for food is called a horseman hunter

  30. Right! They hunted many animals, including bear, deer and rabbits.

  31. 5. The Eastern Woodland Indians ate vegetables with their meat and fish. Someone who grows vegetables is called a farmer forester

  32. Right! The Eastern Woodland Indians grew many vegetables, especially the “3 Sisters”— corn, beans, and squash

  33. Sorry! Please try again!

  34. 6. You’ve learned that the Eastern Woodland Indians lived near rivers and streams. To get from place to place, they probably paddled canoes and drove cars paddled canoes and walked

  35. Sorry! Please try again!

  36. Sorry! Please try again!

  37. Right! They made canoes from tree trunks.

  38. You have answered all the questions about the Eastern Woodland Indians correctly! Congratulations! You have earned your first feather! Click to continue

  39. 2. The Indians lived in homes that could be moved quickly. These homes were called tents teepees

  40. Right! Women usually put up the teepee. It was made with buffalo hides and decorated with paint.

  41. 3. The Plains Indians hunted the buffalo for food and clothing. To capture the buffalo, the Plains Indians had to know how to ride a horse paddle a canoe

  42. Right! The Plains Indians were very good horsemen. They killed only enough buffalo that they needed for food. They did not waste any part of the animal.

  43. 4. There were many tribes that lived on the Plains. To protect themselves from other tribes, the men learned how to fight with bows and arrows. These men were called Warriors Wrestlers

  44. Right! The more feathers a warriors wore, the greater a warrior he was. Sometimes, a great warrior was given a buffalo helmet to wear, also.

  45. You have answered all the questions about the Plains Indians correctly! You have earned your second feather! You are on your way to becoming a wise chief. Click to continue

  46. 5. The Plains Indians did not settle in one place for a long time. Tribes that move are called nomadic settled

  47. Right! The Plains Indians carried their belongings on a travois (say “trah-voy”). It was made of 2 teepee poles attached to the harness of a horse or dog. It looked like this.

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