Native Peoples of America, To 1500: Chapter Outline
Native Peoples of America, To 1500: Chapter Outline
Native Peoples of America, To 1500: Chapter Outline
CHAPTER OUTLINE
The First Americans,
c. 13,0002500 B.C.
Cultural Diversity,
ca. 2500 B.C.A.D. 1500
North American Peoples on the Eve
of European Contact
known as Athapaskan settled in Alaska and northwestern Canada in about 7000 B.C. Some Athapaskan speakers later migrated to the Southwest to form the Apaches
and Navajos. After 3000 B.C., non-Indian Eskimos, or
Inuits, and Aleuts began crossing the Bering Sea from
Siberia to Alaska.
MAP 1.1
The Peopling of
the Americas
Scientists postulate two probable
routes by which the earliest
peoples reached America. By 9500
B.C., they had settled throughout
the Western Hemisphere.
ARCTIC
OCEAN
ATLANTIC
OCEAN
PACIFIC
OCEAN
0
0
1000 Miles
1000 Kilometers
Monte Verde
Archaic Societies
After about 8000 B.C., peoples throughout the Americas
began modifying their Paleo-Indian ways of life. The
warming of Earths atmosphere continued until about
4000 B.C., with far-reaching global effects. Sea levels
rose, flooding low-lying coastal areas, while glacial
runoff filled interior waterways. As the glaciers receded
northward, so did the arctic and subarctic environments
that had previously extended into what are now the
lower forty-eight states of the United States. Treeless
plains and evergreen forests gave way to deciduous
forests in the East, grassland prairies on the Plains, and
desert in much of the West. Grasslands in South
Americas Amazon River basin were replaced by a tropical rain forest. The immense range of flora and fauna
with which we are familiar today emerged during this
period.
CULTURAL DIVERSITY,
C. 2500 B.C.A.D. 1500
After about 2500 B.C., many Native Americans moved
beyond the ways of their Archaic forebears. The most
far-reaching transformation occurred among peoples
whose cultivated crops were their primary sources of
food. Farming in some of these societies was so intensive that it radically changed the environment. Some
nonfarming as well as farming societies transformed
trade networks into extensive religious and political systems linking severalsometimes dozens oflocal communities. Some of these groupings evolved into formal
confederacies and even hierarchical states. In environments where food sources were few and widely scattered, mobile bands survived by hunting, fishing, and
gathering.
MAP 1.2
Major Mesoamerican Cultures, c. 1000 B.C..A.D.1519
The Aztecs consolidated earlier Mesoamerican cultural traditions. They were still expanding when invaded by Spain in 1519.
100
0
0
100
200 Miles
200 Kilometers
Gulf of Mexico
AD
SIERRA M
uc o
Pn
RE
Tuxpan
OR
IEN
Mayapan
Uxmal
TA
Bay of Campeche
Tula
VALLEY OF MEXICO
Teotihuacan
Tenochtitlan
Texcoco
Tlaxcala
(Mexico City)
L
Lake Texcoco
Quiahuitztlan
Zempoala
Antigua
Vera Cruz
Xicalango
TEOTITLAN
IE
RR
Balsas
A M
AD
RE
DEL
Kimpech
Papa
lo a
pa
TABASCO
Monte Alban
Aztec site
Atoy
ac
Tehuantepec
Olmec site
alv
a
CHIAPAS
Dos Pilas
MAYA
HIGHLANDS
XOCONUSCO
Approximate extent of
Aztec Empire in 1519 A.D.
Approximate extent of
Maya civilization, 150 B.C.900 A.D.
NORTHERN
LOWLANDS
Uaxactn
Piedras
Tikal
Naranjo
Negras SOUTHERN
Caracol
LOWLANDS
Yaxchilan
Bonampak
Seibal
Palenque
SUR
Maya site
Cozumel I.
Tulum
YUCATN
PENINSULA
ta
in
ac
um
Us
Cholula
Tiho (Mrida)
Chichen Itz
CAMPECHE
PACIFIC
OCEAN
Xoconocho
Copn
Caribbean
Sea
PRE-INCA CULTURES
Caribbean Sea
A m a zon
ISTHMUS OF
PANAMA
ATLANTIC
OCEAN
co
Orino
SOUTH
AMERICA
A
Cajamarca
Cahuachi
D E
S
CUZCO VALLEY
600 Miles
600 Kilometers
OCEAN
Tiwanaku
Chavin state
ca. 850250 B.C.
NazcaBRAZILIAN
culture
ca. 100800 A.D.
HIGHLANDS
Moche state
ca. 200700 A.D.
Cuzco
PACIFIC
Lake
Titicaca
AMA
ATAC
T
DESER
Lima
Wari
zon
HUAYLAS
VALLEY
ma
Tocantins
Tumbes
Chavn de Huantar
Moche
Neg
ro
ad
eir
a
Quito
E
A N D
Maule
0
0
600
600
1200 Miles
1200 Kilometers
MAP 1.3
Major Andean Cultures, 900 B.C.A.D.1432
Despite the challenges posed by the rugged Andes Mountains,
native peoples there developed several complex societies and
cultures, culminating in the Inca Empire.
The Southwest
The Southwest (including the modern American
Southwest and most of northern Mexico) is a uniformly
arid region with a variety of landscapes. Waters from
rugged mountains and forested plateaus follow ancient
channels through vast expanses of desert on their way to
the gulfs of Mexico and California. The amount of water
has fluctuated over time, depending on climatic conditions, but securing water has always been a challenge for
southwestern peoples. Nevertheless, some of them augmented their supplies of water and became farmers.
Maize reached the Southwest via Mesoamerican
trade links by about 2500 B.C. Yet full-time farming
began only after 400 B.C., when the introduction of a
more drought-resistant strain enabled some farmers to
move from the highlands to drier lowlands. In the centuries that followed, southwestern populations rose, and
Indian cultures were transformed. The two most influential new cultural traditions were the Hohokam and the
Anasazi.
The Hohokam emerged during the third century
B.C., when ancestors of the Pima and Tohono Oodham
Indians began farming in the Gila and Salt River valleys
of southern Arizona. Hohokam peoples built irrigation
canals that enabled them to harvest two crops a year, an
unprecedented feat in the arid environment. To construct and maintain their canals, the Hohokam organized large, coordinated work forces. They built perma-
nent towns, usually consisting of several hundred people. Although many towns remained independent, others joined confederations in which several towns were
linked by canals. The central village in each confederation coordinated labor, trade, religion, and political life
for all member communities.
Although a local creation, Hohokam culture drew
extensively on Mesoamerican materials and ideas.
From about the sixth century A.D., the large villages
had ball courts and platform mounds similar to those
in Mesoamerica at the time. Mesoamerican influence
was also apparent in the creations of Hohokam
artists, who worked in clay, stone, turquoise, and
shell. Archaeologists have uncovered rubber balls,
macaw feathers, cottonseeds, and copper bells from
Mesoamerica at Hohokam sites.
The culture of the Anasazi, a Navajo term meaning
ancient ones, originated during the first century B.C.. in
the Four Corners area where Arizona, New Mexico,
Colorado, and Utah meet. By around A.D. 700, the
Anasazi people were harvesting crops, living in permanent villages, and making pottery. Thereafter, they
expanded over a wide area and became the most powerful people in the Southwest.
One of the distinguishing characteristics of Anasazi
culture was its architecture. Anasazi villages consisted of
extensive complexes of attached apartments and storage rooms, along with kivas, partly underground struc-
10
larger mound could watch the sun rise directly over the
village center. As in some Mesoamerican societies at
the time, solar observations were the basis for religious
beliefs and a calendar.
Poverty Point was the center of a much larger political and economic unit. The settlement imported large
quantities of quartz, copper, obsidian, crystal, and other
sacred materials from long distances for redistribution
to nearby communities. These communities almost certainly supplied some of the labor for the earthworks. Poverty Points general design and organization
indicate Olmec influence from Mesoamerica (see
above). Poverty Point flourished for about three centuries and then declined, for reasons unknown.
Nevertheless, it foreshadowed later developments in the
Eastern Woodlands.
A different kind of mound-building culture, called
Adena, emerged in the Ohio valley around 400 B.C.
Adena villages were smaller than Poverty Point, rarely
exceeding four hundred inhabitants. But Adena people
spread over a wide area and built hundreds of mounds,
most of them containing graves. The treatment of Adena
dead varied according to social or political status. Some
corpses were cremated; others were placed in round clay
basins; and still others were given elaborate tombs.
After 100 B.C. Adena culture evolved into a more
complex and widespread culture known as Hopewell,
which spread from the Ohio valley to the Illinois River
valley. Some Hopewell centers contained two or three
dozen mounds within enclosures of several square
miles. The variety and quantity of goods buried with
11
A Place in Time
Cahokia in
1200
12
13
14
Nonfarming Societies
Outside the Southwest and the Eastern Woodlands,
farming north of Mesoamerica was either impossible
because of inhospitable environments or impractical
because native peoples could obtain enough food from
wild sources with less work. On the Northwest coast,
from the Alaskan panhandle to northern California, and
in the Columbia Plateau, Indians devoted brief periods
of each year to catching salmon and other spawning
fish. After drying the fish, they stored it in quantities sufficient to last the year. As a result, their seasonal movements gave way to a settled lifestyle in permanent villages. For example, the Makah Indians of Ozette, on
Washingtons Olympic Peninsula, pursued fish and sea
mammals, including whales, while procuring shellfish,
salmon and other river fish, land mammals, and wild
plants.
By A.D. 1, most Northwest Coast villages numbered
several hundred people who lived in multifamily houses
built of cedar planks. Trade and warfare with interior
groups strengthened the wealth and power of chiefs and
other elites. Leading families displayed their power in
elaborate totem poles depicting their descent from spiritual figures, and in potlatchesceremonies in which
they gave away or destroyed their material wealth. From
the time of the earliest contacts, Europeans were
amazed by the artistic and architectural achievements of
the Northwest Coast Indians. What must astonish
most, wrote a French explorer in 1791, is to see painting everywhere, everywhere sculpture, among a nation
of hunters.
At about the same time, Native Americans on the
coast and in the valleys of what is now California were
clustering in villages of about a hundred people to coordinate the processing of acorns. After gathering millions
of acorns from Californias extensive oak groves each fall,
the Indians ground them into meal, leached them of
their bitter tannic acid, and then roasted, boiled, or
baked the nuts prior to eating or storing them. Facing
intense competition for acorns, California Indians combined their villages into chiefdoms and defended their
territories. Chiefs conducted trade, diplomacy, war, and
religious ceremonies. Along with other wild species,
acorns enabled the Indians of California to prosper.
As a Spanish friar arriving in California from Mexico in
1770 wrote, This land exceeds all the preceding territory in fertility and abundance of things necessary for
sustenance.
Between the Eastern Woodlands and the Pacific
coast, the Plains and deserts remained too dry to sup-
15
16
and when centralized Mississippian societies used coercion to dominate trade networks. Yet Native American
warfare generally remained minimal, with rivals seeking
to humiliate one another and seize captives rather than
inflict massive casualties or conquer land. A New
MAP 1.4
Locations of Selected Native American Peoples, A.D. 1500
Todays Indian nations were well established in homelands across the continent when Europeans first arrived.
Many would combine with others or move in later centuries, either voluntarily or because they were forced.
ARCTIC
Eskimo
Eskimo
Aleut
ARCTIC
Dogrib
Tlingit
Inuit
ARCTIC
Kaska
Inuit
Slavey
Chippewyan
Naskapi
Tsmishian
Beaver
SUBARCTIC
Haida
Sarsi
NORTHWEST
COAST Kwakiutl
Blackfeet
Gros
Ventre Assiniboin
Sioux
Sac
Fox
Arikara
PACIFIC
OCEAN
Cheyenne
Paiute
Chumash
CALIFORNIA
Navajo
Walapais
Mohave Hopi
Zuni Pueblo
Yuma
Pima
Ab
Massachusett
Wampanoag
Narragansett
Pequot
Susquehannock
Delaware
Erie
Miami
Shawnee
Illinois
Powhatan
EASTERN
Pawnee
Arapaho
Osage
Wichita
WOODLANDS
Ch
Pomo
Miwok
Potawatomi
GREAT PLAINS
Shoshone
Huron
Seneca
Oneida
Onondaga
Cayuga
Mohawk
Mandan
ero
ke
Crow
Iroquois
en
ak
Ottawa
Menominis
Winneba
go
Nez Perc
Flathead
Ojibwa
PLATEAU
Yakima
Yurok
Beothuk
Innu
Shuswap
Nootka
Okanagan
Salish
Sanpoil
Chinook
Cree
Cree
Kiowa
Chickasaw
Caddo
Choctaw
Natchez
Tuscarora
Catawba
Creek
Guale
(Yamasee)
ATLANTIC
OCEAN
Timucua
SOUTHWEST
GULF OF MEXICO
0
0
500 Miles
500 Kilometers
Taino
17
18
things, rocks and water, sun and moon, even ghosts and
witches. For example, Indian hunters prayed to the spirits of the animals they killed, thanking them for the gift
of food.
Indians had several ways of gaining access to spiritual power. One was through dreams. Most Native
Americans took very seriously the visions that came to
them in sleep. Some also sought power through difficult
physical ordeals. Young men in many societies gained
recognition as adults through a vision questa solitary
venture that entailed fasting and awaiting the appearance of a spirit who would endow them with special
powers and sometimes, as in Hiawathas case, entrust
them with a message of import for their people. Girls
underwent rituals at the onset of menstruation to initiate them into the spiritual world from which female
reproductive power flowed. Entire communities often
practiced collective power-seeking rituals such as the
Sun Dance, performed by Indians of the Plains and
Great Basin.
Native Americans who had gained special religious
powers assisted others in communicating with unseen
Conclusion
CONCLUSION
When Europeans discovered America in 1492, they did
not, as they thought, enter a static world of simple savages. For thousands of years, Native Americans had
tapped the secrets of the land, sustaining themselves
and flourishing in almost every environment. Native
Americans transformed the landscape, as evidenced by
their hunting camps, communities, and cornfields. But
Indians never viewed these accomplishments as evidence of their ability to conquer nature. Rather, they saw
themselves as participants in a natural and spiritual
order that pervaded the universe, and their attitudes, as
expressed in their religious practices, were gratitude and
concern lest they violate that order.
These beliefs did not necessarily make all Native
Americans careful conservationists. Plains hunters
often killed more animals than they could eat; and
eastern Indians sometimes burned more land than
intended. But the effect of such acts were limited;
Indians did not repeat them often enough to eliminate
entire species. However, some Indians actions were
more consequential. The decline of the great Anasazi
and Mississippian centers resulted from excessive
demands placed on their environments by large concentrations of people.
After 1500, a new attitude toward the land made
itself felt in North America. A people come from under
the world, to take their world from themthus a
Mannahoac Indian characterized the English who
invaded his homeland to found Virginia. Certain that
God had given Christians dominion over nature,
European newcomers claimed vast expanses of territory for their crowned heads. They divided much of the
land into plots, each to be owned by an individual or
family and to be valued according to the wealth it produced. Over the ensuing centuries, they ignored and
even belittled Native American strategies that allowed
natural resources to renew themselves. The modern
society that has arisen on the Indians ancient continent bears little resemblance to the world that Native
Americans once knew.
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20
C H R O N O L O G Y 13,000 B . C . A . D . 1500
c. 13,000 B.C. People present in America.
c. 10,5009000 B.C. Paleo-Indians established
throughout Western Hemisphere.
c. 9000 B.C.
Extinction of big-game mammals.
c. 8000 B.C.
Earliest Archaic societies.
c. 7000 B.C.
Athapaskan-speaking peoples enter
North America.
c. 5000 B.C.
First domesticated plants grown.
c. 3000 B.C.
First maize grown in Mesoamerica.
c. 30002000 B.C. Eskimo and Aleut peoples enter
North America from Siberia.
c. 2500 B.C.
Archaic societies begin giving way to a
more diverse range of cultures. First
maize grown in North America.
c. 1200 B.C.
First chiefdoms emerge.
c. 1200900 B.C. Poverty Point flourishes in
Louisiana.
c. 400100 B.C. Adena culture flourishes in Ohio valley.
c. 250 B.C.
Hohokam culture begins in Southwest.
c. 100 B.C.
Anasazi culture begins in Southwest.
c. 100 B.C.A.D. 600 Hopewell culture thrives in
Midwest.
c. A.D. 1
Rise of chiefdoms on Northwest Coast
and in California.
c. 100700
Teotihuacn flourishes in Mesoamerica.
c. 6001400
Mayan kingdoms flourish.
c. 700
Mississippian culture begins. Anasazi
expansion begins.
c. 900
Urban center arises at Cahokia.
c. 980
Norse arrive in Greenland.
c. 10001100 Norse attempt to colonize Vinland
(Newfoundland).
c. 1200
Anasazi and Hohokam peoples disperse
in Southwest.
c. 12001400 Cahokia declines and inhabitants disperse.
c. 1400
League of the Iroquois formed.
1428
Rise of Aztec Empire.
1438
Rise of Inca Empire.
1492
Christopher Columbus reaches Western
Hemisphere.
WEBSITES
American Indian History and Related Issues
http://www.csulb.edu/projects/ais/index.html#north
(American Indian Studies Program, California State
University, Long Beach) Provides links to hundreds of
sites relating to Native Americans before and after 1492.
Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site
http://medinfo.wustl.edu/mckinney/cahokia/cahokia.html
(Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site, Collinsville, IL)
An introduction to archaeology at Cahokia, with visitor
information about the site of North Americas earliest
metropolis.
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