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First Americans

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EXAMPLE Inuit harpoon NEXT READ THE ARTICLE PUT ON YOUR EARMUFFS TAKE NOTES AS YOU READ QUIZ TOMORROW!!!! NEXT: THE PLAINS . Title: First Americans Author: – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: First Americans


1
First Americans
2
VOCABULARY
VOCABULARY TEACHER DEFINITION STUDENT DEFINITION DRAWING
NOMADIC People who search for food by traveling from one area to another are nomadic.
ADAPT To change or get used to a new way of living in order to survive in a new environment.
BIOME An environment or area with a unique climate, set of plants and animals.

3
VOCABULARY
VOCABULARY TEACHER DEFINITION STUDENT DEFINITION DRAWING
TUNDRA A treeless biome with a variety of moss and grasses. The ground is frozen ten months a year and swampy and wet during the summer. Winter temperatures can drop below -50. Summer temperatures rarely get higher than 60 degrees.
INUIT People who live in the tundra and have learned to adapt to the cold weather.


4
They were here firstThe Land Bridge Theory
  • Around 20,000 years ago, during the Ice Age,
    people began to arrive in North America. They
    followed their food source.

5
Where did they live?
  • These people spread over the continents of North
    America and South America.
  • They lived in all Geographic regions of North
    America.

6
Map
7
Your turn MARK YOUR MAPS!
  • Mark the Biome/Climate
  • Mark the civilizations INUIT

8
3 Questions to answer
  1. What region did each group inhabit?
  2. What was the climate and geography like for each
    group?
  3. How did the geography and climate affect the way
    each group met their basic needs?

9
What are Geography Climate?
  • What the land looks likeflat, mountainous,
    hilly
  • What the weather is like over a long period of
    time

10
List 3 Basic Needs
  1. FOOD
  2. CLOTHING
  3. SHELTER

11
North
  • Hundreds of lakes carved by glaciers
  • Wrapped around the Hudson Bay in a horseshoe
    shape
  • Oldest rock formations in N. America
  • Hills worn by erosion

12
Where Are We?
The Inuit
13
Region Canadian ShieldTUNDRA
  • What is the climate like?
  • Its COLD!
  • Frozen tundra, with temperatures below freezing
    much of the year

14
Tools Of The Trade
Above Trading boat Below Tools
Above Fishing net Below Drying rack
15
The Land
16
THE INUIT PEOPLE
  • The Inuit are the aboriginal inhabitants of the
    North American Arctic, from Bering Strait to East
    Greenland, Arctic Canada, northern Alaska and
    Greenland, and have close relatives in Russia.
  • They are united by a common cultural heritage
    and a common language.
  • Until recently, outsiders called the Inuit
    "Eskimo." Now they prefer their own term,
    "Inuit," meaning simply "people.

17
(No Transcript)
18
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
  • According to archaeological research, the origins
    of the Inuit lie in northwestern Alaska. These
    first Alaskan Inuit lived on the seacoast and
    tundra, where they hunted seals, walrus, whales,
    and caribou. They and their ancestors were the
    first Arctic people to become expert at hunting
    the larger sea mammals, such as the bowhead
    whale.

19
CULTURE
  • The Inuit were a nomadic culture that circulated
    almost exclusively north of the timberline.

20
Basic Needs
  • The Inuit people managed to survive in this cold
    TUNDRA environment.
  • Food
  • Hunt Fish Cultivate
  • Clothing
  • Animal skins or Plants?
  • Shelter
  • What natural resource did they use?

21
Food
  • The Inuit fished and hunted.
  • Their main food was fish.
  • They also ate Whales, seals, walrus, and caribou.

22
Clothing
  • They used animal skins and furs.

23
CLOTHING
  • Warm clothing was important to the Inuit tribes.
    Sealskin was usually wore in the summer. In the
    winter caribou skin was worn. Caribou skin was
    light weight yet very warm.

24
CLOTHING
  • One Inuit garment, the hooded coat called the
    parka, has been adopted by skiers and others who
    spend time in the cold. An atiqik is a Inuit
    parka made with goose down

25
SHELTER
  • They used ice blocks to make their shelters.
  • Their shelters were called Igloos
  • They also used animal skins to make skin tent
    shelters.

26
IGLOOS AS SHELTER
  • An igloo translated sometimes as snow house, is a
    shelter constructed from blocks of snow,
    generally in the form of a dome
  • Other Inuit people tended to use snow to insulate
    their houses which consisted of whalebone and
    hides. The use of snow is due to the fact that
    snow is an insulator (due to its low density). On
    the outside, temperatures may be as low as -49
    F, but on the inside the temperature may range
    from 19 F to 61 F when warmed by body heat
    alone

27
HOUSING
  • They also lived in houses made of driftwood and
    sod, and almost certainly spoke an early version
    of the Inuit language, Inuktitut.
  • That picture shows how they moved. They could
    move with their house on sled.

28
LANGUAGE
  • Inuktittut, the language used by the Inuit in the
    eastern Arctic, had no written form until one was
    developed by a missionary in the 1800's. The
    language is written in syllabic symbols
    corresponding to groups of sounds.
  • EXAMPLE

29
Inuit harpoon
30
NEXT
  • READ THE ARTICLE PUT ON YOUR EARMUFFS
  • TAKE NOTES AS YOU READ
  • QUIZ TOMORROW!!!!

31
NEXT THE PLAINS
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