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         Navajo Indians Native Americans:     more books (104)
  1. Navajo (Native American Peoples) by D. L. Birchfield, 2003-08
  2. Navajo Indian Coloring Book by O. T. Branson, 1983-11
  3. Navajo Jewelry by Northland Editors, 1995-10-25
  4. The Navajo (North American Indians) by Stuart Kallen, 2003-09-29
  5. The Navajos (Native American Histories) by Liz Sonneborn, 2007-01
  6. I Choose Life: Contemporary Medical and Religious Practices in the Navajo World (New Directions in Native American Studies) by Maureen Trudelle Schwarz, 2008-11-30
  7. The Navajo (Native Americans) by Richard M. Gaines, 2000-10
  8. Navajos,The (Native Americans) by Nancy Bonvillain, 1995-03-01
  9. Indian-Made: Navajo Culture in the Marketplace, 1868-1940 (Cultureamerica) by Erika Marie Bsumek, 2008-10-03
  10. Native American Life-History Narratives: Colonial and Postcolonial Navajo Ethnography by Susan Berry Brill de Ramírez, 2007-05-16
  11. AMERICA'S FAMOUS HOPI INDIANS - Their Spiritual Way of Life & Incredible Prophecies! by Boye Lafayette De Mente, 2010-06-03
  12. Navaho Indian Myths by Aileen O'Bryan, 1993-06-14
  13. The Long Walk: The Forced Navajo Exile (Landmark Events in Native American History) by Jennifer Denetdale, 2007-11-30
  14. Kinship, Capitalism, Change: The Informal Economy of the Navajo, 1868-1995 (Native Americans: Interdisciplinary Perspectives) by Michael J. Francisconi, 1997-12-01

21. Hopi Indians
Map of the Hopi reservation and some sketchy cultural information from a nonIndian enamored of Hopi Category Society Ethnicity Tribes, Nations and Bands H Hopi...... FOOD. The very first Southwest native americans hunted mammoths until they becameextinct. The Hopi indians grew food similar to the navajo indians.
http://www.crystalinks.com/hopi1.html
HOPI CIVILIZATION
The Hopi Indians, which means good, peaceful, or wise, come from a group of Southwestern people called Pueblo. Hopis call themselves Hopitu The Peacable People. Hopis live in northeast Arizona at the southern end of the Black Mesa. A mesa is the name given to a small isolated flat-topped hill with three steep sides called the 1 st Mesa, 2 nd Mesa, and the 3 rd Mesa. On the mesa tops are the Hopi villages called pueblos. The pueblo of Oraibi on the 3 rd Mesa started in 1050, and is the oldest in North America that was lived in continuously. ANCESTRY Evidence suggest that the Hopi consist of the descendants of various groups that entered the country from the north, the east, and the south, and that a series of movements covered a period of probably three centuries, and perhaps considerably longer. Their ancestors, the Anasazi, appear to have been related to the Aztecs of Mexico, and may have arrived in their current location 5 to 10 thousand years ago. In that time, they have developed an intricate ceremonial calendar that has helped them survive and be strong in a place that would not seem to have enough reliable water to sustain life. Related to people of the various Pueblos to the east, the Hopis never actually had a single group identitythey were independent villages, sharing with the Zuni and other Pueblos a basic culture and view of the sacred, while sharing among themselves their own (Uto-Aztecan) language base.

22. Native Americans INDEX
Natticook Naumkeag - Nauset - navajo - Nayarit - Nazca Religions, native AmericanReligions (chapter) - Religions Francois indians - Stockbridge indians - Sun
http://www.angelfire.com/realm/shades/nativeamericans/titlepage.htm
Index Shades Native Americans Pre Columbian Religions Index Inuit ... Guestbook visitors since
(be sure to scroll down this page!) In the above mentioned chapter you'll find the history of Native Americans, including: Index Native American Territories
Introduction - Early Population - Physical Traits - Earliest Migrations - Major Culture Areas - North America - Mesoamerica - South America - Traditional Way of Life - European Contact and Impact - Initial Reaction to Europeans - Native Americans in Contemporary Society A Abenakis Aboriginal Place Names (Canada) Accominta Acolapissa ... Aztec Empire B Battle of Point Pleasant Battle of the Fallen Timbers Battle of the Little Bighorn Battle of Tippecanoe ... Boats, Skin and Bark Boats

23. American Indians, Native Americans, History Of A Proud People
the largest and area reserved for native americans 17 million The navajo wereless sedentary than the Hopi and with the Zuni and with eht Pueblo indians.
http://www.americanindians.com/
Indian Nations are sovereign governments, recognized in the U.S. Constitution and hundreds of treaties with the U.S. President. The history of this continent's original inhabitants encompasses a broad range of cultures and experiences. American Indians varied greatly from region to region, as did their reactions to European settlement. This website will delve into the vast and storied background of most tribes and seek to supply the visitors with as much knowledge as possible about the proud history of Native Americans . Please join us on this journey into the past, experience the present and dream about the future of the American Indian. When Columbus landed on the island of San Salvador in 1492 he was welcomed by a brown-skinned people whose physical appearance confirmed him in his opinion that he had at last reached India, and whom, therefore, he called Indios , Indians, a name which, however mistaken in its first application continued to hold its own, and has long since won general acceptance, except in strictly scientific writing, where the more exact term American is commonly used. As exploration was extended north and south it was found that the same race was spread over the whole continent, from the Arctic shores to Cape Horn, everywhere alike in the main physical characteristics, with the exception of the Eskimo in the extreme North, whose features suggest the Mongolian...

24. Southwestern Native Americans
sailed to the New World and named them indians . United States, looked like duringthe time of native americans. or crafts of the Hopi, navajo, Pueblo,Western
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.

25. Native American Links
Pueblos; Pueblo Links; History of the Pueblo of Santa Ana; Pueblo native americans; ApacheVolume1; APACHE, PUBLEO, ZUNI indians; Apache indians; Cochise navajo.
http://www.phillipsbrooks.org/students/3rd/tribes.html
Native American Web Resources
3rd Grade, Phillips Brooks School
Eskimo-Inuit Nez-Perce Shawnee Chippewa ... Email Us!
Arctic Peoples
Eskimo/Inuit

26. Desert Southwest Reading List
The navajo by Raymond Bial; Night Sky, Morning Star by Evelina Zuni Southwest indians(native americans) by Mir Tamim Ansary; The Apache (Life ways) by Raymond
http://nativeamericanrhymes.com/books/desertswbooks.htm
Desert Southwest
Reading List
In Association with Amazon.com

27. Bookmarks For Mrs. Byrd
Kachinas of the Hopi indians Hopi indians native americans of the HOPI indians Hopiindians Hopi indians A-to of New Mexico and Arizona, navajo Pottery Hopi
http://www.amphi.com/~nbyrd/NatAmSites.htm
Mrs. Byrd's Native American Research Site Return to Mrs. Byrd's Home Page
Native Americans
In the Time of the Old Ones Native American Geometry SOUTHWEST ART swest
Arts and Crafts
Basketry (Main Menu) Native American Art
General Southwestern tribes
Natives, North American: The Southwest Area Tribal Websites culture intro ... N o r t h - S o u t h - E a s t - W e s t
Apache
[Mexican Boy Captured by Apache Indians] Basketry of the San Carlos Apache Indians BUFFALO SOLDIERS/MESCALERO APACHES APACHE ... Apache Creation Story
Hopi
Hopi Welcome to Hopi Native americans legends - How the Hopi Indians Reached Their World Hopi Indians Hopi Indians: Kachina puppet ... Hopi
Navajo
navajo navajo.html The Navajo Homepage U.S. Treaty with the Navajo's in 1868 ... Navajo Rugs, Navajo Weavings

28. Alcoholism And Native Americans
1974 Indian Drinking navajo Practices and AngloAmerican Alcohol Use and Abuse AmongNative americans of North to Alcoholism Among American indians and Alaska
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Forum/9235/Alcohol.html
Alcoholism and Native Americans by John M. Stevenson Native Americans have a higher rate of alcohol consumption than all other ethnic groups or subgroups in the United States. Arrest statistics, random-sample surveys, professional and social-service-agency studies, and ethnographic studies of Native Americans have identified that alcohol consumption is a leading health problem. Although alcohol consumption is a serious problem in Native American society, it is often overlooked that substantial numbers of them do not drink at all or drink in moderation (Weisner, 1984 : 237). This paper will show the statistics and will conclude with some suggestions on how this problem may be corrected. Crime Native Americans have consistently been arrested at approximately three times the Black rate and ten times the White rate, according to age-adjusted figures for 1950-1968. Despite a number of reports showing that in particular Native American groups, most arrests are for minor offenses, this does not appear to be the case of Native Americans as a whole. For drinking-related offenses, the disparity between Native American and the general population rate are even greater about eight times the Black rate and over twenty times the White rate in the United States. Canadian native peoples also have been reported to be over-represented in alcohol associated arrests and a high proportion of arrested Canadian native people have been reported as drinking at the time an offense was committed. These disproportionate rates of drinking-related arrests are one of the principal statistics cited to show that Native Americans have a greater drinking problem than the rest of the population.

29. Navajo, Hopi And Other Native Americans
code that was never deciphered, especially by fellow navajo indians. Click navajoCODE TALKERS to learn more about an ARIZONA map of the native American tribes
http://www.geocities.com/wbegody1/page3.html
WELCOME. The Navajo Nation comprises over 200,000 people. We are larger than the state of New York and several smaller states in the United States. Our land comprises of forest to desert vegetation. When driving through the Rez (reservation) you will see homes and such built along the major highways.
WARNING!!! IF YOU ARE NOT CAREFUL, YOU MAY RUN OVER A SHEEP, A GOAT, A COW OR A HORSE!!!
We have a beautful country. As Navajos, we walk in beauty. We are a proud people. The Navajo Nation is a nation within a nation. Click the link NAVAJO NATION to learn more about my people.
In World War II, many Navajo men served in the military and served as Top Secret Code Talkers. The U.S. military gathered many Navajos to speak a special code that was never deciphered, especially by fellow Navajo Indians. The Navajo Code was finally declassified in 1968. It was then that the Navajo Code Talker's could freely discuss their activities during the War. Click NAVAJO CODE TALKERS to learn more about our courageous heros.
Click this map to see the State of Arizona.

30. Indians/Native Americans, Indigenous Peoples, Indonesia, Industrial & Insects Po
The Silversmith's Daughter 174/SEE OTHER SIDE showing a navajo Indian girl 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.

31. Native Americans: Navajo
,These sites focus on navajo indians and their hogan homes. The...... students. Resource Information. Title, native americans navajo.
http://emints.more.net/ethemes/resources/S00000456.html
Questions or comments about this resource?
Contact eThemes@more.net
Printer-friendly version
Please preview all links before sharing in class with students.
Resource Information Title Native Americans: Navajo Description These sites focus on Navajo Indians and their hogan homes. The sites discuss the Navajo people, their culture, and their history. Grade Level Performance Standards Knowledge Standards Resource Links Link ID:
Title:
Dine(Navajo) Homepage
Description: This Navajo page contains links to Navajo literature.
URL: http://www.indians.org/welker/navajo.htm
Link ID:
Title:
Living in the Navajo Past
Description: This page has lots of information on the history and culture of the Navajo people. You can also find information on the Navajo government and pictures of their flag and seal.
URL: http://waltonfeed.net/peoples/navajo/
Link ID: Title: Navajo Central Web Site Description: This page contains information on Navajo weaving as well as current Navajo weather information. The information can be found on the menu to the left. If you scroll to the bottom of the page and click on "Navajo Circle Dance" you can listen to a sound clip of traditional Navajo dance ceremonies. URL: http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/larry_dilucchio/

32. Indians Of The Southwest
tribes, as Sioux, Dakota, Zuni, navajo and others The People; indians of the americansouthwest 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.

33. Native C.I.R.C.L.E.
Gilbert J Absence of Coronary Thrombosis in navajo indians. Calif Med 83(Feb)114115,1955. Gillum R The Epidemiology of Stroke in native americans.
http://www.mayo.edu/nativecircle/cardio.html
Native C.I.R.C.L.E. Home Native C.I.R.C.L.E. Resources Bibliography ... AI/AN Initiatve NativeWeb Cardiovascular
Acton KJ: Clinical Hypertension in Native Americans: A Comparison of 1987 and 1992 Rates from Ambulatory Care Data. Pub Health Rep 111 (2/suppl):33-36, 1996. Casper M: Blood Pressure, Diabetes, and Body mass Index Among Chippewa and Menominee Indians: The Inter-Tribal Heart Project Preliminary Data. Pub Health Rep 111 (2):37-39, 1996. Clifford N: Coronary Heart Disease and Hypertension in the White Mountain Apache Tribe. Circulation 28:926-931, 1963. Cohen B: Arterial Hypertension Among Indians of the Southwestern U.S. Amer J Med Sci 225(May):503-513, 1958. Ellis JL: Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors in Native Americans: A Literature Review. Am J Prev Med 10:295-307, 1994. Fulmer H: Coronary Heart Disease Among the Navajo Indians. Ann Inter Med 59(Nov):740-764, 1963. Gilbert J: Absence of Coronary Thrombosis in Navajo Indians. Calif Med 83(Feb):114-115, 1955. Gillum R: The Epidemiology of Stroke in Native Americans. Stroke 20 (3):514-521, 1995. Howard BV: Rising Tide of Cardiovascular Disease in American Indians. The Strong Heart Study. Circulation 99(18):2389-2395, May 11, 1999.

34. Research Project: Native Americans In Utah History
navajo indians Limited information but has dates and language with some religious ofthe life, languages, literature, history, and arts of native americans.
http://www.uen.org/Lessonplan/preview.cgi?LPid=1465

35. Glen Canyon Dam: Socio-cultural
Glen Canyon Dam and the navajo indians The navajo Nation primarily inhabits the areaof our is important to remember that the native americans have inhabited
http://www2.kenyon.edu/projects/dams/gsc04det.html
Glen Canyon Dam and the Navajo Indians

36. Native American
of the navajo, Kwakiutl, Cheyenne, and Piscataway indians. This site has beendivided into two categories; general information about native americans and
http://www.pgcps.pg.k12.md.us/~carmody/natamer.htm
A Journey with Native Americans General Information Native American Tribes This site was developed to assist students and teachers in obtaining information on Native Americans. The following is a listing of Native American web pages that support the Third Grade Social Studies curriculum of Prince George's County. The site was design to supplement the culture and customs of the Navajo, Kwakiutl, Cheyenne, and Piscataway Indians. This site has been divided into two categories; general information about Native Americans and specific information regarding the Native American tribes . while the information contained within this site focuses on the above mentioned tribes there are extensive links to a variety of sites dealing with Native American culture, customs, and history. General Native American Information
There are numerous sites that are devoted to the Native American Indians. I have selected only a few sites to help give students an understanding of the Native American Culture. The links found in this section deal with a general background on the origins, history and locations of the Native Americans. More detailed information regarding specific tribes can be found from within these sites as well as the links on this site Where do the Native American Tribes live?

37. Go To The Following URL:
(navajo life today, maps, photos and much more). www.navajoland.com. (all aboutnavajoland, tourist guides etc.). Some facts about native americans. The indians
http://www.uni-giessen.de/fb10/tefl/seminarP/cele99/projectResults/augustinersch
Go to the following URL: www.u.arizona.edu/ic/kmartin/School/ and try to find the answers to the following questions. Please write the answers down. 1. What are the names of the 5 tribes that are presented on this web-site? 2. Where do they (the different tribes) come from? 3. Go back to the starting page and click on Activities, choose Tlingit. Now click on Puzzles. There you will find 2 puzzles that show you how the Tlingit-Indians did fishing a long time ago and how modern fishing is done today. Do the puzzles and describe the pictures in 2 or 3 sentences. 4. What is the favourite food of many Navajo-Indians today? 5. Where do women sit in a hogan (the traditional Navajo house)? 6. What were the hats of the Tlingit made of? 7a. Can you explain what a Totem Pole is? 7b. Give 2 of the reasons the Tlingit made them for. 8. What does the word Lakota mean? 9. What does the word Tipi mean? 10. What kind of clothes did Lakota men wear in cold weather? 11. How do the Iroquois call themselves? 12. How did the houses of the Iroquois Indians look like? 13. What kind of clothes do the Iroquois people wear today?

38. Indian Tribes
indians Sioux indians Hopi indians, Comanche indians Cheyenne indians Iroquis indians,navajo indians Seminole indians. Return to native americans Project Page.
http://www.fatherryan.org/frhsonline/history/tribes.htm
Native American links Cherokee Indians
Aztec Indians

Chitimache Indians
...
Return to Native Americans Project Page
Fr. Ryan Media Center has videos on the following Native American tribes:
Aztec Apache Cherokee Cheyenne Comanche Iroquis Navajo Seminole Yankton Sioux
Native American Links
top
Cherokee Indians
top Aztec Indians top
Apache Indians
top
Chitimache Indians
top
Sioux Indians
top
Hopi Indians
top
Comanche Indians
top
Cheyenne Indians
top
Iroquis Indians
top
Navajo Indians
top
Seminole Indians
top Return to Native Americans Project Page

39. Indian Tribes
navajo, Seminole, Yankton Sioux. native Link Sources; native American Studies; Tribesby-StatesMap Index; native americans links. Return to Top. Cherokee indians.
http://www.fatherryan.org/library/tribes.htm

40. American Indian/Native Americans: Code Talkers
navajo Code Talkers World War II Fact Sheet (Naval Historical Related InformationHistory Other Related Information indians/native americans Other Related
http://www.louisville.edu/library/ekstrom/govpubs/subjects/indians/code.html
American Indian/Native Americans: Code Talkers Other Related Information: Historical Documents ...
Back to Subject Areas

Comments to Barbara Whitener, GovPubs Webmaster
URL:http://library.louisville.edu/ekstrom/govpubs/subjects/indians/code.html

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