The Eastern Woodland Indians & Southeast Indians

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The Eastern Woodland Indians & Southeast Indians Lesson 6

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The Eastern Woodland Indians & Southeast Indians. Lesson 6. Life in the Eastern Woodlands. The Eastern Woodlands covers the U.S. east of the Mississippi River. Eastern Woodland people had many uses for trees: Canoes Shelter Food (Maple Syrup) T hey lived in permanent villages. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Eastern Woodland Indians & Southeast Indians

Page 1: The Eastern Woodland  Indians  & Southeast  Indians

The Eastern Woodland Indians &Southeast Indians

Lesson 6

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Life in the Eastern WoodlandsThe Eastern Woodlands covers the

U.S. east of the Mississippi River.Eastern Woodland people had

many uses for trees:CanoesShelterFood (Maple Syrup)

They lived in permanent villages.Some even built walls around their

villages for protection.

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Many Woodland Indians planted crops.

If soil was bad, Woodland Indians had to burn dead trees or used dead fish to fertilize the soil.

When they weren’t farming, Woodland Indians hunted beavers, deer, and birds and gathered berries, nuts, and greens.

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The Algonquians

These Native Americans lived in wigwams.

They communicated with other tribes by using money (shells called “wampum.”)

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WAMPUM

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The IroquoisMany Tribes made up the Iroquois

Nation: MohawksSenecasOnondagasOneidasCayugas

These tribes shared a government.

They lived in longhouses (made of wood/bark).

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The Southeastern IndiansThe Seminole lived in present-day Florida.

Homes were very simple – wooden poles and thatched roofs – called a Chickee

This group hunted and fished since they were near the ocean.

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Chickee

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The Seminole women made baskets, and they added beautiful designs to clothing by using beads.

The Seminole are known for their storytelling around a campfire.

They wore cotton clothing or animal skins.