A1: 1 --
Shawnee; 2 --
Cherokee; 3 -- Chickasaw; 4 -- Yuchi; 5 --
Mosopelea; 6 -- Wyandot; 7 --
Mingo (Seneca-Iroquois); 8 --
Chippewa; 9 --
Delaware (
Lenape); 10 --
Miami; 11 -- Yamacraw; 12 -- Touguenhas; 13 --
Eel River; 14 --
Haudenosaunee; 15 --
Kaskaskia; 16 --
Kickapoo; 17 --
Ottawa; 18 -- Piankeshaw; 19 --
Potawatomi; 20 -- Wea; 21 --
Tutelo; 22 --
Illinois; 23 -- Lanapota; 24 --
Creek (Muskogee); 25 --
Ojibwa; 26 -- Honniasontkeronons (
La Salle, 1668); 27 - Outagame (Fox); 28 - Iskoussogos (the general
Iroquoian name for western
Algonquians);
A2: The Delaware (Lenape)
A3: 1-Cornstalk, 2-Blue Jacket, 3-Black
Hoof, 4-Blackfish, 5-Tecumseh-Panther-in-the-Sky, 6-Tenskwatawa ("
The Prophet), 7-Puckshinwah (
Tecumseh's father), 8-Black Bob, 9-Nererahhe, 10-Paxinos, 11-Big Jim, 12-Nererahhe
A4: 1763 (signing of 1st
Treaty of Paris)
A5: 1-Cultural Anthropology; 2-Glottochronology; 3-Physical anthropology; 4-Human genetics; 5-Epidemiology; 6-Botany; 7-Zoology; 8-Archeology; 9-History
A6: Cherokee: ? (pronounced "oh-see-yo"); Chickasaw: Chokma! (pronounced "choke-mah"); Shawnee: Bezon! (pronounced "bay-zone"); Yuchi: Sahn gah ley! (pronounced "san gah lay")
A7:
Gabriel Arthur
A8: 1-Wampanoag, 2-Taino, 3-Narragansett, 4-Pocanet
Choctaw, 5-Arawaks, 6-Aztecs, 7-Incas, 8-Powhatans, 9-Pequots, etc. etc. etc.
A9: The Miami, Shawnee, and Cherokee
A10:
The Green River.
A11: The
Shawnee language is a
Central Algonquian Language (related to other
Algonquian languages, such as Mesquakie-Sauk (
Sac and Fox) and Kickapoo); The
Chickasaw language is a
Muskogean language; the Chickasaw language is "agglutinative" and follows the pattern of subject-object-verb; the Chickasaw language, which is spoken by Chickasaw peoples in
Oklahoma, is closely related to
Choctaw language; the
Cherokee language is an
Iroquoian language that is still spoken today; the Cherokee language is a polysynthetic language and uses a unique syllabary writing system; the
Yuchi language is a language isolate.
A12: Agglutinative is Chickasaw and
Turkish languages; Agglutinative is a process in linguistic morphology in which complex words are formed by stringing morphemes, each with a single grammatical or semantic meaning. Ex.
Turkish word: evlerinizden, or "from your houses", consists of the morphemes, ev-ler-iniz-den with the meanings house-plural-your-from.
Hungarian languages do the same thing.
German is a fusional aka inflecting synthetic type of language, which is different than Agglutinative.
A13: In linguistic typology, polysynthetic languages are highly synthetic languages, which are languages which have words that are made-up of many morphemes.
Algonquin and
Iroquoian languages are polysynthetic.
Polysynthetic languages typically have long "sentence-words" such as the Yupik word tuntussuqatarniksaitengqiggtuq which means "He had not yet said again that he was going to hunt reindeer." The word consists of the morphemes tuntu-ssur-qatar-ni-ksaite-ngqiggte-uq with the meanings, reindeer-hunt-future-say-negation-again-third.person.singular.indicative, and except for the morpheme tuntu "reindeer", none of the other morphemes can appear in isolation.
A14: It means there's only one of it's kind; it doesn't belong to any family; it is it's own language.
A15: 1 - Paleo-Indian Era (
13,000 BC -- 8,000BC); 2 -
Archaic Period: (8,000BC -- 2,000BC); 3 -
Woodland Period: (1,000BC -- 1,000AD). [
Crab Orchard and
Adena Culture are here]; 4 -
Mississippian Period: (1,000AD to 1,650AD); 5 - Historic
Period: (1,600s to 1,700s)
A16: 1 -
Modern Era; 1800s to
2000s; 2 - Postmodern Era; 2000s;
A17: The adoption of sedentary farming.
Agricultural Revolution.
Domesticated plants.
A18:
Chief Red Bird (
Cardinal)
A19: Woodland Period. 1000BC to 1000AD.
Adena and
Crab Orchard culture is during this period.
A20:
Iroquois
A21: No Mammoths or Mastodons in Archaic Period.
Archaic period natives had to hunt deer and rabbits—smaller game—since there weren't any Columbian Mammoths (not wholly Mammoths) or
Mastodon's left.
A22:
The Mississippian culture were known as the the Mound-Builders; more intensive agriculture than
Woodland; better shelters, and tools;
A23:
Iroquois Confederacy
A24: 3 established Shawnee villages in
Kentucky
A25: A
Meteor Crater
A26:
Pontiac's War (1763-1766), 3 years after the
French and Indian War, was fought by the
Ottawas, their
Chief Pontiac, as well as
Ojibwas,
Potawatomis,
Hurons,
Miamis, Weas,
Kickapoos, Mascoutens, Piankashaws, Delaware, Shawnees,
Wyandots, Mingos, and
Seneca... natives primarily from the
Ohio Country,
Illinois, and
Great Lakes region.
A27: Because of Chief
Johnny Logan's revengeful warpath for his family being slaughtered at the
Yellow River Massacre
A28:
Father Jacques Marquette and
Louis Joliet
A29: Shawnee
A30:
Spanish explorer
Hernando De Soto
A31: 1540.
A32:
Mississippi River
A33: The Chickasaw.
A34: Of a
Fever. In the Mississippi River.
A35:
True
- published: 19 May 2014
- views: 188