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         Blackfoot Indians Native Amer:     more detail

1. NATIVE-L (May 1994) By Thread
02.019 (no name). native amer. Film Media Celebration Queens gwelker@mail.lmi.org. blackfoot / Cherokee info? Helen Williams The Mutsun (Costanoan) indians gwelker@mail.lmi.org
http://nativenet.uthscsa.edu/archive/nl/9405
NATIVE-L (May 1994) by thread
Articles:

2. Native American Egemonye
Arapaho. Aztec. blackfoot MOUND BUILDERS. N. amer. Settlements East and Southwest the Plains indians. nativeTech Southwest Region REGIONAL OVERVIEW OF native amerICAN CLOTHING
http://mccants.anderson5.net/library/natam.html
Eighth Grade Native American Report Research Links
Click on the tribe or topic in the table for a list of links.
Abenaki
Anasazi Apaches Arapaho ... Dakota (Sioux) Haida Hopis Huron Inca ... Nakota (Sioux) Navajos Nez Perce Osage Paiute ... Zuni Pueblo ABENAKI POTAWATOMI

3. Oberlin College Conservatory Library
13. Chants native Am. Church of N. america. 770.1 A3 H3. Healing Songs of amer.indians. 770.1 T76 C3. Canadian blackfoot indians Scalp lock Singers. LLST 7373.
http://www.oberlin.edu/~rknight/LPcollection/Lists/6a.Nativeam.html

4. Native Amer
MANDAN / CROW / SIOUX / NEZ PERCE / blackfoot. PLAINS CULTURE EXPENSIVE TO amer. TREASURY. 1887 indians HELD 138 CHEROKEE NATION. indians (native amerICANS) SAFE UNTIL WAR
http://www.garyrutledge.com/AmHistory/NotesFr1865/native_americans.htm
FIVE CIVILIZED TRIBES
CHOCTAW
ORIGINALLY OCCUPIED GEORGIA, ALABAMA, AND SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPI AND LOUISIANA.
LESS WARLIKE THAN CHICKASAW AND CREEK.
MUD-AND-BARK CABINS / THATCHED ROOFS.
AGRICULTURAL PEOPLE / ABLE FARMERS.
CORN, BEANS, SWEET POTATOES, PUMPKINS, AND TOBACCO.
USUALLY A SURPLUS TO SELL / TRADE.
RAISED CATTLE, FISHED, HUNTED WITH BLOWGUNS; BOW / ARROW.
18TH AND 19TH CENTURIES - FORCED TO MOVE WEST.
1842 - CEDED LAND TO US / RELOCATED IN INDIAN TERRITORY. LAND SET ASIDE IN OKLAHOMA. PART OF FIVE CIVILIZED TRIBES, CHOCTAW ON THE SIDE OF CONFEDERACY . 1907 - CHOCTAW NATION INSTRUMENTAL IN STATE OF OKLAHOMA . DESCENDANTS TODAY - OKLAHOMA MISSISSIPPI AND LOUISIANA. CHEROKEE NORTH AMERICAN TRIBE - SOUTHEASTERN INDIANS. PART IROQUOIAN. REMAIN ONE OF LARGEST U.S. TRIBES. 47,000 MEMBERS - EASTERN OKLAHOMA 3000 MORE - "EASTERN BAND" ON QUALLA RESERVATION -NORTH CAROLINA. MIGRATED IN PREHISTORIC TIMES FROM TEXAS / NORTHERN MEXICO TO GREAT LAKES. WARS WITH IROQUOIS AND DELAWARE TRIBES FORCED THEM SOUTHEAST TO ALLEGHENY (APPALACHIAN MOUNTAIN REGIONS IN MODERN NORTH / SOUTH CAROLINA, TENNESSEE, NORTHERN GEORGIA , ALABAMA.

5. Char. Of Amer. Indians By Tribe And Lanuage - Table 1
. 40. Other Alaska native. 30. 9. 152. 20. blackfoot. 37 992 CHARACTERISTICS OF AMERICAN indians BY TRIBE AND LANGUAGE
http://www.census.gov/population/socdemo/race/indian/cp-3-7/tab01.pdf

6. Char. Of Amer. Indians By Tribe And Lanuage - Appendix G
of American indians reported on the census questionnaire. Abenaki. Alaska native. Alaska Indian. Alaska native. Chaneliak. Chugach. Sealaska 1. blackfoot Sioux. Brule Sioux. Cheyenne
http://www.census.gov/population/socdemo/race/indian/cp-3-7/appenG.pdf

7. SYLLABUS
and northwest North america (eg, Kiowa, blackfoot, Spokane, Kwakiutl Group review/currentstatus of american indians in the native N. amer.351362, 367-381, 391
http://nautarch.tamu.edu/anth/Thoms/Sp02/301-02-sprsyl.htm
SYLLABUS: ANTHROPOLOGY 301 (SECTION 500), INDIANS OF NORTH AMERICA
2002, Spring; Mon, Wed, Fri, 10:20-11:30 am; Blocker, Classroom 102 TAMU
Instructor: Dr. Alston V. Thoms Office: Anthro. Bldg, Room 204 Office Hrs: MWF, 2:30 - 4:00 pm Telephone: E-mail: a-thoms@tamu.edu Teaching Assist: Ms. BobbyeJo Coke Office: Anthro. Bldg, Room 235C Office Hrs: MW, 8-9:00 am; F, 9-10:00 am Telephone: E-mail: coke@tamu.edu WHAT THIS COURSE IS REQUIRED TEXTS Boxberger, Daniel L. and Molly R. Mignon (editors) Native North Americans: An Ethnohistorical Approach . Second Edition Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company, Dubuque, Iowa.
Calloway, Colin G (editor) The World Turned Upside Down: Indian Voices from Early America . Bedford Books of St. Martin's Press, Boston Our Hearts Fell to the Ground: Plains Indians Views of How the West Was Lost. Bedford Books of St. Martin's Press, Boston EARNING A GRADE Eighty-five percent (85%) of your grade is the average of the three highest scores you receive on four exams. Each exam will have 68 multiple choice questions. The two questions on each exam with the lowest discriminating score will be dropped and the remaining 66 questions will count 1.52 points each. The first exam covers Part I of the class; the second exam covers Part II; and the third covers Part III.

8. Na-n
apache seminole mohawk mohican blackfoot delaware creek cherokee crow pueblos amerICAN. N-. native amer. ESKIMO/INUITDANCING native amer NATIONAL MUSEUM OF. THE amer. http//www.indians.org. native amerICAN ART. http//www.earthspeakstudio.com. native amer.
http://www.mecodex.com/na-n.html
NATIVE AMERICAN
-N-
NATIVE AMER. ESKIMO/INUITDANCING
BEAR GALLERY
http://www.dancingbeargallery.com

NATIVE AMERICAN FLUTES
http://www.kandlskustomflutes.com

NATIVE AMER. GLENN GREEN GALLERIES
http://www.glenngreen.com

NATIVE AMER NATIONAL MUSEUM OF
http://www.si.edu
http://www.nativeweb.org NATIVE AMERICAN AND THE ENVIRONMENT FOREST LINKS http://www.indians.org NATIVE AMERICAN ART http://www.earthspeakstudio.com NATIVE AMER. ART http://www.hanksville.phast.umass.edu NATIVE AMERICAN ART GALLERY http://www.info1.com NATIVE AMERICAN CLIPART http://www.rtcomputer.com NATIVE AMERICAN CRAFT http://www.annex.com NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURAL RESOURCES ON THE INTERNET http://www.hanksville.phast.umass.edu NATIVE AMERICAN HERITAGE http://www.nativeamericanheritage.com NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN RESOURCES http://www.kstrom.net/isk/mainmenu.html NATIVE AMERICAN LITERATURE http://www.falcon.jmu.edu NATIVE AMERICAN MYTHS AND LEGENDS http://www.ac.wwu.edu NATIVE AMER. NORTHERN PLAINS CROW CANYON ARCHAEOLOGICAL http://www.crowcanyon.org NATIVE AUTHORS http://nativeauthors.com

9. Native Amer
(COMANCHE / ARAPAHO / CHEYENNE / MANDAN / CROW / SIOUX / NEZ PERCE / blackfoot. EXPENSIVETO amer. indians (native amerICANS) SAFE UNTIL WAR OF 1812.(ENGLISH
http://garyrutledge.com/AmHistory/NotesFr1865/native_americans.htm
FIVE CIVILIZED TRIBES
CHOCTAW
ORIGINALLY OCCUPIED GEORGIA, ALABAMA, AND SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPI AND LOUISIANA.
LESS WARLIKE THAN CHICKASAW AND CREEK.
MUD-AND-BARK CABINS / THATCHED ROOFS.
AGRICULTURAL PEOPLE / ABLE FARMERS.
CORN, BEANS, SWEET POTATOES, PUMPKINS, AND TOBACCO.
USUALLY A SURPLUS TO SELL / TRADE.
RAISED CATTLE, FISHED, HUNTED WITH BLOWGUNS; BOW / ARROW.
18TH AND 19TH CENTURIES - FORCED TO MOVE WEST.
1842 - CEDED LAND TO US / RELOCATED IN INDIAN TERRITORY. LAND SET ASIDE IN OKLAHOMA. PART OF FIVE CIVILIZED TRIBES, CHOCTAW ON THE SIDE OF CONFEDERACY . 1907 - CHOCTAW NATION INSTRUMENTAL IN STATE OF OKLAHOMA . DESCENDANTS TODAY - OKLAHOMA MISSISSIPPI AND LOUISIANA. CHEROKEE NORTH AMERICAN TRIBE - SOUTHEASTERN INDIANS. PART IROQUOIAN. REMAIN ONE OF LARGEST U.S. TRIBES. 47,000 MEMBERS - EASTERN OKLAHOMA 3000 MORE - "EASTERN BAND" ON QUALLA RESERVATION -NORTH CAROLINA. MIGRATED IN PREHISTORIC TIMES FROM TEXAS / NORTHERN MEXICO TO GREAT LAKES. WARS WITH IROQUOIS AND DELAWARE TRIBES FORCED THEM SOUTHEAST TO ALLEGHENY (APPALACHIAN MOUNTAIN REGIONS IN MODERN NORTH / SOUTH CAROLINA, TENNESSEE, NORTHERN GEORGIA , ALABAMA.

10. Links And References
amer. Hart, J. Montana native Plants and Early Peoples, Montana Historical Society,1976. JC Gadd, M. Ethnobotany of the blackfoot indians, National Museums
http://www.montana.com/manu/links.html
Links and References

References for The Machiguenga, and Other Amazonian Tribes, Plants, and Animals
Albuquerque, E.X. et al. "Batrachotoxin: Chemistry and Pharmacology", Science 172: 995-1002, 1971.
Baer, G., and Snell, W.W., "An Ayahuasca Ceremony among the Matsigenka
(Eastern Peru)", Zeitschrift Fur Ethnologie, 99:63-80, 1974.
Bernard, H.U. Insight Guides: Amazon Wildlife,Houghton Mifflin, Boston, 1993.
Blumenthal, M. (Ed.) Herbalgram, American Botanical Council, P.O. Box 201660, Austin, TX 78720: $25/yr.
Borman, M.B. El Arte Cofan en Tejido de Hamacas, Summer Institute of Linguistics, Dallas, 1992.
Borman, M.B. La Cosmologia y la Percepcion Historica de los Cofanes de
Acuerdo a sus Leyendas, Summer Institute of Linguistics, Dallas, 1990.
Borman, M.B. " Cofan Phonemes", in Elson, B.F. (ed.) Studies in Ecuadorian
Indian Languages, pp. 45-59, Summer Institute of Linguistics, Norman., OK, 1964. Borman, R. El Murcielago y la Mujer, y otras Leyendas Cofanes, Instituto

11. Introduction To Religion In Native American Cultures (Kirkland)
2. 313330 Christian Feest, Europe's indians . Reserve Grinnell, blackfoot LodgeTales Reader Sullivan 29-32, 201-4, 211-16 ( Ghost Dance ; native amer.
http://www.aarweb.org/syllabus/syllabi/k/kirkland/intro_to_rel_in_nat_am_culture
INTRODUCTION TO RELIGION IN NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURES Religion 2004 University of Georgia V e r A.U.C. ("Spring 2000") R Professor Russell Kirkland http://www.uga.edu/religion/rk F Peabody Hall 221 MW 2:30-3:00 and by appt. 2-2880 (voicemail only "Were one asked to characterize the life of religion in the broadest and most general terms possible, one might say that it consists of the belief that there is an unseen order, and that our supreme good lies in harmoniously adjusting ourselves thereto." C William James, The Varieties of Religious Experience v THE PURPOSE OF THE COURSE The academic study of religion is a systematic exploration of the visions, values, and activities by which people of past and present have understood and shaped their life-experiences. This course is a course in the subdiscipline known as " the history of religions." Such courses are designed to promote a mature sensitivity to the world's religious traditions, within their proper historical contexts. Such a course is not intended to steer you toward, or away from, any particular tradition.

12. Bookmarks For Glenn Welker
ArtNatAm Links to Other Sites blackfoot Home Page NA Arts of Azerbaijan RepublicHuichol indians, their Art native amer Connect pg3 Wes Studi Wes Studi Links
http://www.indigenouspeople.net/bookglen.htm
Bookmarks for Glenn Welker
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ftp://ftp.sterling.com/edi/DoD-edi/

13. Red Eagle Creations - Crafts
Buffalo Warrior, native Effigy, End of the Trail, Scout blackfoot $30 Drum Head- $25 Turtle Shell - $40. amer Indian Veteran , indians Do It The , Custer Was
http://www.flash.net/~redeagle/print/craftscatalog.html
Have fun browsing the various catalogs and choosing the items and colors you want. The symbol indicates traditional and contemporary southwest products. If you are looking for something not shown, please send inquiries to the email address listed below. Custom items or referrals can be made. Prices and inventory are subject to change without notice.
CRAFTS
Picture not yet available Buffalo Bones
Real bones from buffalos. Plain or traditionally decorated in various ways.
Jawbone Plain
Jawbone Decorated
Skull Plain
Skull Decorated
Buffalo Tears

Black, Blue, Green, White - $.12
Picture not yet available Ceramic Coaster
Beautifully painted,furniture protectors on the bottom. 4 1/4" x 4 1/4".
Single - Apache Warrior, Beautiful Maiden, Girl w/ Blanket, Southwest Pottery, Wolf - $3 Set of 4 Kokopelli, Sun, Buffalo, Lizard Ceramic Skulls Ceramic 5.5" x 5.5" cow skulls. Beige kokopelli no longer available. - Kokopelli, Buffalo, Lizard, Sun Design - $10 Wall hanging shown. Decorative Leather Real deerskin wall hanging decorated w/ crow beads, elk teeth, medicine wheel and imitation eagle feather. 3-4 sq ft. Curtains also available in short (7-10 sq ft) or long (13-17 sq ft). Sizes and designs will vary. Allow 3-4 weeks to ship. Artist Red Eagle. Wall Hanging - Black, Brown, Gold, White - $55

14. Glycyrrhiza Lepidota (Nutt.) Pursh
maintains vigorous growth (4). Herbal/ medicinal uses blackfoot indians used wild amer. improvesseed germination and emergence in five native plant species.
http://www.usask.ca/agriculture/plantsci/classes/range/glycyrrhiza.html
Glycyrrhiza lepidota (Nutt.) Pursh
Wild licorice, American licorice
Prepared by: Cheri Sykes
Taxonomy Family: Fabaceae
Similar species: Three species of wild licorice are Glycyrrhiza glabra, G. uralensis, and G. lepidota.
Latin name meaning: Glycyrrhiza is from the Greek glycys meaning sweet and rhiza meaning root. Lepidota means scaly, referring to the glandular dots on the leaves.
Common name: Wild licorice is the most common name but it is also referred to as American licorice. Key Identification Characteristics Growth form: Wild licorice is a perennial.
Roots: Wild licorice has deep, spreading rhizomes. Roots have a distinct, aromatic licorice flavor.
Stems: The stem is simple, with upper branches erect. Wild licorice grows 30 to 90 cm tall.
Leaves: Leaves are alternate, pinnately compound with 11 to 19 deeply veined, lanceolate leaflets. Leaves have glandular dots on the surface when mature. Leaves are hairless, except for minute hairs on the midrib below and on margins.
Inflorescence/flowers: Green to white flowers are in short spikes on long peduncles.

15. Frogtown Books Native American Studies
Chapter on the blackfoot language Frederick Webb (editor) HANDBOOK OF amerICAN indians NORTH OF Topic(s) - native american Studies - Historynative - amer Mails
http://www.frogtownbooks.com/cgi-bin/ftb455/scan/mp=keywords/se=Native American

16. SAIL Ser.1, 5.2B
amer. Tribal Religions, 2. Flagstaff Museum of No. Hellson, John C. The Pigeons,a Society of the blackfoot indians. In native Religious Traditions.
http://oncampus.richmond.edu/faculty/ASAIL/SAILns/52B.html
VI. LITERARY SCHOLARSHIP AND CRITICISM GENERAL Allen, Paula Gunn (Laguna-Sioux). "A Stranger in My Own Life: Alienation in American Indian Prose and Poetry." MELUS , 7:2 (Summer 1980), 3-19. Expanded and revised version of paper which appeared in ASAIL , N.S. 3:1 (Winter 1979), 1-9; 3:2 (Spring 1979), 16-23. Analysis of alienation theme in broad range of contemporary poetry and in the fiction of N. Scott Momaday, Leslie Marmon Silko, and James Welch. Baker, Nora Baker. "The Bear's Son Folk Tale in When the Legends Die and House Made of Dawn." Western American Literature , 12:4 (Winter 1978), 275-87. Interesting analysis of how this motif from European and Asian folk tales provides a structural framework for the novels by Hal Borland and N. Scott Momaday. Beidler, Peter G. "Animals and Human Development in the Contemporary American Indian Novel." Western American Literature , 14:2 (Summer 1979), 133-48. Discusses N. Scott Momaday's House Made of Dawn , Welch's Winter in the Blood, and Silko's Ceremony.

17. Academic Library - History
Slavery In amer Slavery In america Word Count 1010 The blackfoot indians The blackfootindians The wind blows African history wonder why the native people of
http://www.academiclibrary.com/members/History/index12.shtml
Home Register Sign In Search Papers ... Sign Out
History Rock Music
Rock Music Word Count: 1110 In this essay, I’m going to introduce to the reader a topic not touched a lot because of its complexity and its avoidance by conservative adults. This topic is, of course, Rock Music. During one week, I looked for information Rock N' Roll Re
Rock N' Roll Research Word Count: 1370 First there was love and music. Then there was love, music, and a lot of drugs. Lastly there was love, music, a lot more drugs, and death... The ugly turn was taken at the Altamont Speedway during a festival promotin Roe V. Wade
Roe V. Wade Word Count: 984 January 23, 2000 marked the twenty-seventh anniversary of the Roe v. Wade case. It all started out in a small town in Texas where a woman under the alias Jane Roe filed a case in district court for a woman’s right to choose abor Roman Empire
The Fall of the Roman Empire could be linked to many different aspects:army,citizens,barbarianism. Personally I think that all these reasons are linked and headed by the decline of the Roman emperor. The deficient Emperor role led to the lacking military r Roman Empire
Roman Empire Word Count: 609 The Roman Empire was strong for a time. It was founded on geography, family values, military strength, and wise leadership. It flourished because of social, economic, political, military and religious strengths. However, when t

18. Indians By Remington Pictures And Posters - PicturesPostersandPrints.net
Return of a blackfoot War Party Frederic Remington Buy Photos of indians by Remington indians by Remington Posters, Art Prints and Pictures of native amer.
http://www.picturespostersandprints.net/POSTER_STORES/topic_Horses/Indians_by_Re
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Indians by Remington Pictures and Posters
posters for sale, poster, pictures, picture, prints, art, artwork , Animals Fine Art MORE POSTERS LIKE THIS FROM ART.COM Frederic Remington To purchase any of the products below click on the image. All transactions are safe and secure with satisfaction guaranteed. This store is brought to you in association with AllPosters.com - The World's Largest Poster and Print Store. The Fall of the Cowboy
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Victory Dance
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Frederic Remington
Buy this Art Print Return of a Blackfoot War Party Frederic Remington Buy this Art Print Running Bucker Frederic Remington Buy this Art Print Crow Scout Frederic Remington Buy this Art Print Turn Him Loose Bill Frederic Remington Buy this Art Print Halt-Dismount Frederic Remington Buy this Art Print Apache Frederic Remington Buy this Art Print Aiding a Comrade Frederic Remington Buy this Art Print Turn Him Loose Bill Frederic Remington Buy this Art Print Old Stage Coach of the Plains Frederic Remington Buy this Art Print Cavalryman's Breakfast on the Plains Frederic Remington Buy this Art Print Scout Frederic Remington Buy this Art Print If Skulls Could Speak Frederic Remington Buy this Art Print Outlier the Frederic Remington Buy this Art Print Indian Trapper Frederic Remington Buy this Art Print Advance Guard Frederic Remington Buy this Art Print Football Incidents Frederic Remington Buy this Art Print Smoke Signal

19. The Popul Vuh, By Lewis Spence
chief to the interrogation of a Moravian Brother, regarding the native belief in Thusthe blackfoot indians emerged from Ninastahu, a peak in the Rockies amer.
http://www.sacred-texts.com/nam/pvuheng.htm
Sacred-texts Native American Excerpt from:
The Popol Vuh
By
Lewis Spence
Published by David Nutt, at the Sign of the Phoenix, Long Acre, London
PREFACE
THE "Popol Vuh" is the New World's richest mythological mine. No translation of it has as yet appeared in English, and no adequate translation in any European language. It has been neglected to a certain extent because of the unthinking strictures passed upon its authenticity. That other manuscripts exist in Guatemala than the one discovered by Ximenes and transcribed by Scherzer and Brasseur de Bourbourg is probable. So thought Brinton, and the present writer shares his belief. And ere it is too late it would be well that thesethe only records of the faith of the builders of the mystic ruined and deserted cities of Central Americashould be recovered. This is not a matter that should be left to the enterprise of individuals, but one which should engage the consideration of interested governments; for what is myth to-day is often history to-morrow. LEWIS SPENCE.

20. Untitled
Dark Mavis Jukes 3.6 1.0 13344EN The blackfoot (native american P 3.9 0.5 10063ENThe Crow indians Leigh Wood 6.1 6.0 13353EN Daily Customs (native Latin amer
http://www.d91.k12.id.us/linden/Media Center/ARListByTitle.htm
Accelerated Reader Test List Report

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