N.C.A.I. SUMMER SESSION INFO, BISMARCK ND, JUNE 16th-19th 2002 Indian Law Course Announcement and application for 2002 Fort Berthold Community College Fort Berthold Libraries New Town News Click Picture to Navigate www.Lewis-Clark.org Click Picture to Navigate Four Bears Casino & Lodge Home Telephone Assistance Can't afford telephone service Link Up and Lifeline Programs for tribal areas ...
Winner of the year 2000 National Award for Museum Service .. Newest Information: Learn More About Community Archaeology 2002 Visit the Gallery Webcam Visit Looking Both Ways Web Page Helen Simeonoff's artwork featured in Native Art Gallery Museum Hours: Summer (June - August) Mon - Fri 9 am - 5 PM, Sat 10 am - 5 PM, Sunday by appointment. Winter (September - May) Tue - Fri 9 am - 5 PM, Sat 10:30 ...
The Aleut Corporation An Alaska Native Regional Corporation With a mission to serve it's Shareholders and their Descendants Introduction Corporate Team Corporate Calendar The Aleut Foundation Shareholder Responsibilities Corporate Profile Shareholder Affairs Shareholder Publications Last updated: 03/28/02 ...
Vikings Looking Both Ways Arctic Wildlife Crossroads/Continents Yup'ik Masks Alutiiq Dance Arctic Social Sciences Repatriation Yamal Ainu Get Plug-ins Help Printing Credits Copyright Smithsonian Institution, 2002. All rights reserved. ach fall, after the end of salmon fishing and the berry harvest, the Alutiiq people of southern coastal Alaska held a series of festivals and spiritual ...
www.mnh.si.edu/arctic/features/fisher
Created for the Cowasuck Band of the Pennacook and Abenaki People, Cowass North America Inc. We are American Indians. We celebrate Native American ceremonies.
MONTAGNAIS HISTORY ...
www.dickshovel.com/mon.html
Who Were and Who Are the Algonquin
The Wyoming Companion -- Native Americans Navigational Links (Contents) -- ...
www.wyomingcompanion.com/wcwrr.html
ABENAKI HISTORY (revised 7.21.97) ...
www.tolatsga.org/aben.html
A Century of Servitude: Pribilof Aleuts Under U.S. Rule by Dorothy M. Jones Preface Chapter 1: From Russian to American Administration Chapter 2: The Reign of the Treasury Agent, 1870-1889 Chapter 3: From Wage Earners to Wards, 1890-1909 Chapter 4: Sole Federal Jurisdiction, 1910-1918 Chapter 5: A Colonial Regime, 1918-1942 Chapter 6: Refugees Chapter 7: Turning Point, 1945-1960 Chapter 8: The ...
arcticcircle.uconn.edu/HistoryCulture/Aleut/Jones/jonesindex.html
Kodiak, Alaska has a rich cultural heritage, going back thousands of years.
www.kodiak.org/alutiiq.html
Arapaho Immersion Program ...
jan.ucc.nau.edu/~jar/TIL_3.html
Your name here as sponsor for this page. The Alabama-Coushatta Indians By R. E. Moore Back to the Texas Indians home page at WWW.TexasIndians.com These are two tribes that combined to live together, the Alabama tribe and the Coushatta tribe. Neither tribe is originally from Texas. Both are from the Southeast -- Alabama, Mississippi and Georgia. The Alabama are one tribe from Alabama and the ...
www.texasindians.com/albam.htm
Ne-Do-Ba is a nonprofit, established to explore the history and culture of the Abenaki Indian in Western Maine ...
Aleut: People of the Aleutian Chain Aleutian/Pribilof Islands Association Museum of the Aleutians Introduction to the Aleut - National Museum of Natural History Aleut Corporation SOCIAL EQUITY AND ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE A Century of Servitude: Pribilof Aleuts under U.S. Rule - Dorothy Jones One Alaska Native's Perspective on Marine Contamination - Larry Merculieff Who Will Help the Aleuts of the ...
arcticcircle.uconn.edu/HistoryCulture/Aleut/aleutindex.html
The Arapaho Tribe The Arapaho, who call themselves 'Inuna-ina', are close allies with the Cheyenne. This name is roughly translated into 'our people'. The Arapho tribe was represented by a large delegation of 24 from Oklahoma. The Araphoe are considered to be buffalo hunters of the plains but also have traditions of a time when they lived in the east and planted corn. The Arapaho, numbering in ...
www.omaha.lib.ne.us/transmiss/congress/arapaho.html
Native American Technology & Art: a topically organized educational web site emphasizing the Eastern Woodlands region, organized into categories of Beadwork, Birds & Feathers, Clay & Pottery, Leather & Clothes, Metalwork, Plants & Trees, Porcupine Quills, Stonework & Tools, Weaving & Cordage, Games & Toys and Food & Recipes. Find simple instructional information about how these materials are ...
www.nativetech.org/clothing/regions/region3.html
ARAPAHO The Arapahos, like the Cheyennes and Sioux with whom they are closely associated in the Indian wars, were thought to have migrated onto the Great Plains sometime in the 17th or 18th century from the east, but probably from a region further north, perhaps the vicinity of the Red River of the North. Also, like the Cheyennes, they eventually separated into two groups. Those that came to be ...
www.emayzine.com/lectures/ARAPAHO.html
Kodiak Island, Alaska. Information on travel to our island. Visitor information on fishing, sightseeing, Kodiak bears, lodging, charters, outdoor activities and much more.
kodiakisland.net/alutiiq.html
Arikara (Sahnish) Literature An Address to Mother Corn How Antelope Carrier Saved the Thunderbirds and Became the Chief of the Winged Creatures How Corn Came to the Earth The Arikaras (Sahnish) came from the south, many years ago, to the Missouri River in what is now North Dakota and the Fort Berthold Reservation in South Dakota, where they live today. With them, they brought not only reliance ...
www.indians.org/welker/arikara.htm
STUDY GUIDE FOR JOURNEYS TO THE PAST The Acjachemen Nation The Acjachemen Nation occupied the San Juan Capistrano valley for hundreds of years before the arrival of the Spanish missionaries in 1769. The origin of this Nation and how its culture developed is unclear. However, existing documentation on the missions and the Acjachemens history which has been passed on orally from generation to ...
www.fieldtrips4kids.com/journeypaststudyguide.htm
Texas A&M University The Alabama-Coushatta Indians by Jonathan Hook Not only does Hook provide a basic history of the people, he also delves into one of the most important consequences of Indian contact with Euroamericans the loss and recreation of culture. David LaVere, University of North Carolina, Wilmington What does it mean to be an Alabama-Coushatta Indian on the reservation today, ...
www.tamu.edu/upress/books/1997/hook.htm