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SAPL:
Electronic Services -
Websites by Topic
Native American
Whether you are a student with homework assignments on topics related to Native
Americans or very interested in traditional medicine as practiced for hundreds of years by
the first Americans. There is great information on Native American art forms, such as
basketry and beadwork, and on clothing and dance regalia, cuisine and more.
DIRECTORIES
General | Tribal
GENERAL DIRECTORIES
- Academic Info: Native American
Studies - This annotated directory of Internet resources includes meta-indexes and
general directories; The Reference Desk; local histories; art and culture; religions and
spirituality; law and government; museums; libraries and archives; bibliographies;
academic programs; and centers, institutes and associations.
- Index of Native American Resources on
the Internet - A thorough but slow directory of web resources. Categories covered
include culture, language, history, health, education, art, government, music, electronic
texts, and much more.
- Native American Indian Resources
- A sprawling page that links to over 300 sites concerning Native American culture,
history, and literature.
- NativeWeb Resource Database - This
exhaustive WWW directory allows you to perform keyword searches or browse through
structured sub-categories. The major categories include arts, business, education, events,
languages, law, nations, media, reference materials, science, and society.
- Native American Sites
- This site, created by a Native American librarian, is divided into 10 categories. There
are numerous web resources listed under each category. The subjects covered are individual
Native nations, Native organizations and urban Indian centers, education, the mascot
issue, Native media, powwows and festivals, music, arts, Native business and general
Native-oriented homepages.
TRIBAL & ORGANIZATIONAL DIRECTORIES
- American Indian Heritage Foundation - You can
search this site by tribe name, city, or state name. It provides a contact name and
address for federally recognized tribe locations.
- Native American Organizations -
An alphabetically arranged list of organizations. Addresses, phone numbers, and when
available, links to the various organizations.
- Native American
Organizations and Urban Indian Centers - Wide
range of organizations, listed alphabetically. Each
link shows the date the site was last updated.
- Native American Tribes
Index Page - A large, alphabetically arranged directory by tribal name with listings
of annotated links. The sites listed focus on the history and culture of many of the
larger North American tribes.
- Official and Unofficial
Tribal Sites - Annotated links to both official and unofficial U.S. and Canadian
tribal web pages.
- Specific Tribal Links
- This directory provides multiple access links to sites about individual tribes. It also
has several general directories for locating addresses for specific tribes and
organizations.
- Tribal Names and Their Meanings
- An alphabetically arranged listing of tribal names and name meanings.
ART
General | Basketry & Weaving | Beadwork | Kachinas |
Metalworking | Porcupine Quillwork & Hair | Pottery
General
- Contemporary Hopi Arts and Crafts
- This site links to information on pottery, jewelry, basketry, Katsina dolls, painting,
sculpture, and photography.
- Heard Museum - This non-profit museum in Phoenix,
Arizona houses the collection of Dwight and Maie Barlett Heard. Its mission is to
"promote appreciation and respect for Native people and their cultural heritage, with
emphasis on the traditional cultures of the Greater Southwest and on the evolving Native
American Fine Art Movement." Teachers can sign up to receive the Heard
Museums Teacher Mailing List that includes information about activities,
exhibits, and Internet materials. A resource guide of Native American fine arts is
available as a hypertext document or a single document easy for downloading. Slides are
also free for teachers. "Inventing the Southwest: Fred Harvey and Native American
Art" is "appropriate for intermediate and high school levels (that) can be
integrated into history/social studies programs."
- Index of Native
American Art Related Exhibits on the Internet - An extensive listing of other sites
that cover theater groups, Native American art exhibits available for travel, online
exhibits, and other Native American art related sites.
- Index of Native
American Artists on the Internet - This site not only links to several Native American
artist cooperatives, but it also links to many sites of individual Native American
artists.
- Index of Native
American Commercial Galleries on the Internet - A lengthy listing of sites that link
to non-profit galleries as well as commercial galleries dealing with Native American art.
- Indian Pueblo Cultural Center - This site
provides links to nineteen pueblos from Acoma to Zuni. Each one has its own separate page
with very brief information about their culture, murals and other works of art, dances,
etc.
- Indians of North America
- This collection of copper plate engravings by Theodore de Bry depict scenes of everyday
life of North American Natives. Click on the title of each engraving to get more detailed
information. You can also click on the engraving to get a full-screen image.
Basketry and Weaving
- Internet Links to Native
American Weaving and Cordage - Links to additional sites on weaving, basketry,
cordage, dying and fibers.
- Native American Coil Basketry -
This article discusses coil basketry and includes photographs.
- Native American Coil Basketry:
Pine Needle Baskets of the Mid Atlantic Coast and Appalachia - This page includes
illustrations and a brief discussion of pine needle baskets. It provides a link to
instructions for making coiled pine needle baskets.
- Native Basketry:
Survival, Beauty - This sites provides links to many sites discussing the basketry of
Californian Natives, the Qualla Eastern Cherokee, multi-tribal groups in New England and
Canada, and other sites.
- NativeTech: Basketry - Provides
links to other sites discussing Nipmuc splint basketry, coil basketry, and pine needle
baskets.
- NativeTech: Weaving & Cordage
- Provides links to sites on basketry and weaving in the Eastern Forests.
- Nipmuc Splint Basketry
- This illustrated article discusses Nipmuc basketry traditions, weaving the baskets,
decorations including designs and stains, dyes, and paints, and the Nipmuc splint basket
industry.
- Shapes and Uses of California
Indian Basketry - Discusses baskets made by California Native Americans and their
various uses, such as gathering and transporting plant foods, storing and serving food,
preparing food, and other specialized uses. Each entry includes a photo and brief
description with typical size dimensions.
Beadwork
- Bandolier Bags -
This site provides the answers to questions such as what bandolier bags are, what they
mean, who made them, their uses, and their history.
- Bead and Pendant Types of the
Eastern Forest - Provides links to bone & antler, ceramic, metal, shell, and stone
bead and pendant types. Also includes a bibliography.
- Bead Weaving Techniques and
Analysis - This illustrated document discusses bead weaving.
- Internet Links to Native
American Beads & Beadwork - Links to sites offering information on subjects such
as wampum, woven beadwork, rings, hair pipes, and bracelets.
- Manidoominens Beads
and Beadwork Manidoominensikaanag - This site about
"ManidoominensAnishnaabemowin for seed beads" provides links
to other sites about beadwork including methods, illustrations, history and cultural
values of beads.
- Native American Beads:
Related Web Sites - Links to sources and resources for beads and beadwork.
- Native American Beadwork
- This document discusses the meaning of beads and pendants in the life of Eastern Forest
Native Americans.
- Native American Beadwork:
Introduction and Use of Glass Beads - Provides links to three sites dealing with glass
beads as well as a bibliography.
- Woven Wampum Beadwork -
This article gives the history and background of woven wampum beadwork in southern New
England.
Kachinas
Guide to Hopi Kachinas - This site
discusses various Hopi Kachinas and "how they fit in the Hopi life and
religion."
Metalworking
- Contact & Precontact
Copper & Brass Sheet Metal in the Northeast - A very brief discussion of the
history of using copper and brass sheet metal to make utensils and tools.
- Internet Links to Metalwork
- Provides links to such sites as blacksmith basics, coppers, iron working, and steel
types.
- NativeTech: Metal Working - Links to
other Native American sites on metal working.
- Tinkling Cones~Past &
Present Traditions - This illustrated site discusses this Native American ornament and
links to a page with instructions for making tinkling cones.
Porcupine Quillwork and Hair
- Internet Links to Porcupine
Quillwork and Hair - Links to other quillwork sites.
- Introduction to Techniques and
Methods of Porcupine Quillwork - This site links to others regarding porcupine
quillwork and single-quill diamond or zig-zag stitch, single-quill parallel-fold or simple
band stitch, and the single-quill line embroidery.
- NativeTech: Porcupine Quillwork
- This site links to other sites about quillwork and includes an FAQ about quillwork and
porcupines, and bibliographic references for quillwork.
- Porcupine Quill Embroidery -
This illustrated page discusses porcupine quill embroidery.
- Quill Embroidery Tools and
Techniques - This article discusses quill embroidery. There are no pictures or
illustrations.
Pottery
- Acoma
and Zuni Pottery - Visuals of Acoma and Zuni Pueblos pottery from the late 19th
and early 20th centuries. Click on a piece of pottery to see whether it was
made by Zuni or Acoma. You can enlarge the image to full screen size by clicking on .jpeg.
- Hollister Collection of
Southwestern Native American Pottery - Covering the period of 1875-1966, these
Southwestern pots represent the Acoma, Cochiti, Hopi, Jemez, Laguna, Maricopa,
Picaris,
San Ildefonso, San Feliipe, San Juan, Santo Clara, Santo Domingo, Taos, Tesuque,
Zia, and
Zuni. You can also locate these pots by searching the form: ashtray, wedding vase,
pitcher, mug, jar, canteen, vase, basket, and bowl. Once youve made your selection,
you will get a page with thumbnail images of the pottery. Click on the small picture to
view a larger image and to get additional information such as height, weight,
colorclay,
diameter, colorslip, thickness, form, and ware.
- Making Hand-Built Coiled Pottery
- Shows you how to make hand-built coiled pottery in eight steps.
- Native American Pottery in New
England - This document discusses the history of Native American pottery in New
England and includes drawings and photos.
- NativeTech: Pottery & Clay
- Provides links to the pottery in southern New England, a chronology of southern New
England pottery, how to prepare clay, how to make a clay pot, tools used to decorate
pottery, firing pottery, and many others.
- Pottery & Clay Sculpture
- This site links to various sites about pottery including one about potters in a Mexican
village in northern Chihuahua, a link to a discussion of pueblo pottery terms, a site to
Al Qöyawayma, a Hopi artist, and others.
EDUCATION
Materials For
Teachers & Librarians | General Education
Materials for Teachers and
Librarians
- American Indian Library
Association - This site answers questions about the American Indian Library
Association, includes a membership form and its by-laws, provides resources for tracing
Native roots, locates distributors of books by and about Native Americans and Indian
education. The extensive listing of links to other Native and minority library and
literature organizations and resources is excellent.
- Childrens Books With
Native American History, Themes & Characters - This excellent source refers you to
additional web sites covering such topics as Native themes, Native authors and
illustrators, Native American contemporary fiction, Native American historical fiction,
teachers and librarians, higher education, and many tribal nations.
- A Critical
Bibliography on North American Indians, For K-12 - "This bibliography, compiled
by the Anthropology Outreach Office of the Smithsonians National Museum of Natural
History, is a response to teachers concerns about choosing culturally sensitive and
historically accurate books for children about American Indians and Alaska Natives.
Parents and the general public may also find it to be a valuable resource for making
informed choices about books." This lengthy bibliography is separated into regional
sections for easier access. They are Southwest, NW Coast, California, Plateau, Arctic,
Plains, Great Basin, Subarctic, Northwest, Northeast, and General. In the Southwest
section, for example, you can find traditional stories, non-fiction, fiction and
biographies for the Southwest, Acoma Pueblo, Anasazi, Apache, Cochiti Pueblo,
Cocopa, Havasupai, Hohokan, Hopi Pueblo, Isleta Pueblo, Laguna Pueblo, Navajo, Pima, Pueblo, Taos
Pueblo, Tarahumara, Zuni Pueblo and many others. These annotations include grade level.
- Dos and Donts (Appropriate Methods When
Teaching About Native American Peoples) - Ableza, a Native American Arts and Film
Institute, has put together this list of appropriate methods to use when teaching about
Native American peoples. Links to other sites are included that expand on the topic.
- Native American
Childrens Books, Smith-Leitich - A collection of online resources dealing with
Native peoples aimed at teachers, librarians, and anyone working with children.
- Oyate On-Line - This site was put together by
"a Native organization working to see that our lives and histories are portrayed
honestly." Included are evaluations of fiction and non-fiction childrens and
young adult materials by and about Native peoples, a selection of materials to order, and
teacher guides and curricula.
- Teaching Indigenous Languages - Just
a sampling of the topics covered at this site includes affirmative action, bilingual
programs, book reviews, dropout prevention, immersion, language preservation, literacy,
needs assessment, student motivation, and teaching methods.
- Teaching Young Children About
Native Americans - This site by Debbie Reese, a Pueblo Indian, offers tools to help
with evaluating books, curriculum materials, and videos. It deals with stereotypes and
offers practical suggestions for teaching Native American history.
- Techniques for Evaluating
American Indian Web Sites - "The purpose of this Web page is to provide some
guidelines useful for evaluating and identifying Web sites that contain accurate
information and that are not exploitative of American Indians." This document
discusses general web site guidelines, authority, and content.
General Education
- Alaska Native Knowledge Network - You
can search the curriculum resources at this site by typing in your request and then
clicking on the grade level of your chosen theme. Some of the categories included are
family, language/communication, cultural expression, tribe/community, health/wellness,
outdoor survival, subsistence, energy/ecology, and applied technology. Your response lists
the resource title, author, rating, culture/language, and themes.
- American Indian College Fund - The
non-profit American Indian College Fund was created by thirty tribal colleges to
"raise desperately-needed scholarship, endowment and operating monies." From
this page you can locate the various colleges by clicking on Where are the Colleges?
- American Indian Higher Education
Consortium's Tribal College Journal - Alphabetical list of colleges, with contact
information.
- Index of Native
American College Resources on the Internet - This is a guide to Native American
Studies programs being offered as majors, minors, and certifications at the baccalaureate
level or above. The programs are listed by region: Eastern U.S., Western U.S.,
Northcentral U.S., Southcentral U.S., and Canada. Degrees are listed under Ph.D., M.A.,
Baccalaureate majors, Baccalaureate minors, and concentrations. The resulting item lists
title of program, university address, web address (if available), name and title of
director, degrees granted, description of program offerings, areas of faculty interest or
expertise, resources available, financial aid for students, and number of students in the
programs.
- Native Education Directory - This
directory includes international, national and multi-state non-governmental organizations;
federal programs; media, periodicals, publishers, and producers; state and territorial
government and non-government organizations; and colleges and universities offering Native
studies, Native language instruction, supportive services, or scholarships for Native
students. You can search by entering the key word(s) or you can click on any section
listed in the Table of Contents.
LANGUAGES
General Sources | Specific Languages
General Sources
- Numbers in North Amerindian Languages -
Major language categories covered include Eskimo-Aleut, Na-Dené, Almosan, Siouan,
Caddoan, Iroquoian, and Hokan.
- Index of Native
American Language Resources on the Internet - Besides links to Native Americans of the
United States, Canada, and Latin America, this site provides links to Living Languages of
the Americas, The Endangered Language Fund, Less Commonly Taught Languages Project,
Teaching Indigenous Languages, Wayne Lemans Language Links, and Tribal Names:
Meanings & Alternative Names.
- Inwewinan - Native
American Languages - Links to the Native Language Act of 1992, the U.S. Federal
Register - Native Language Development Grants, Places that Teach Indian Languages, and
specific languages such as Ojibwe-Anishinaabemowin, Six Nations (Iroquois), Mayan
Languages, and Cherokee. Includes statistics on many Native languages as well as
dictionaries.
- Native Languages Page
- This site, maintained by Lisa Mitten, provides links to an assortment of Native American
language resources on the Web.
- Survey
for California and Other Indian Languages - The Survey is a "research center and
archive which provides workspace for scholars and students specializing in the field and
it manages a large collection of tapes on American Indian languages which are located at
the Berkeley Language Center." Online resources include a catalog of the Survey
Archives, tribal maps, linguistic group maps, and a search tool to search the Survey
Archives.
- A Web of On-line Dictionaries - This site,
which is linked to over 800 dictionaries in 160 languages, allows the user to type in a
word or phrase from any European language to get the translation in such languages as
Eskimo, Hawaiian, Cherokee, Cheyenne, Lakhota, Lenape, Mohawk, and Potawatomi among many
others.
Specific Languages
Abenaki
The Abenaki Language -
Translation of a brief listing of words.
Athabascan
California Athapascan Home Page - Links to
Eel River languages (Cahto, Lassik, Nongatl, Sinkyone, and Wailaki), Hupa-Chilula
languages (Chilula-Whilkut and Hupa & Tsnungxwe), and Mattole-Bear River languages
(Bear River and Mattole).
Cayuga
Cayuga Language - Part of the
booklet developed by Six Nations Polytechnic staff member Marge Henry entitled Most
Commonly Used Phrases. To hear the phrase in Cayuga, click on the desired phrase.
Cherokee
- Freeware Cherokee Font
Information - This site offers you the option of downloading the Cherokee font and
also includes a Cherokee table and pronunciation guide.
- The Cherokees of California - This
non-profit tribal organization, which isnt affiliated with the Cherokee Nation of
Oklahoma, seeks to "preserve and pass on to the next generation our traditions,
history and language." This site includes the history of the Cherokee language, a
Cherokee syllabary, and six Cherokee lessons.
- Ravens
Tsa-La-Gi Page - Provides links to the Cherokee alphabet, a chart of vowels with sound
bytes, symbols, and a Cherokee Lexicon with animal names, adjectives, simple verbs, and
phrases.
Chippewa
Chippewa (Ojibwe) Language
- Anishinabemowin - This site, "dedicated to the preservation of
Anishinabebimadissiwin," provides pages on impersonal verbs, writing Chippewa,
personal pronouns, plurals, and sample sentences, as well as information on how to order
the Chippewa Language Book.
Comanche
Numu Tekwapuha Nomneekatu - Information
about work that The Comanche Language and Cultural Preservation Committee has instituted
to preserve the language and the history of the Comanche People.
Dakota
- The Dakota Language Homepage
- Included are lessons, methodology, and a questions/feedback section.
Hawaiian
Kualono - You can download special, required
Hawaiian HI fonts or click on the H button for Hawaiian text or the P button for English
text.
Hupa
Danny
Ammons Hupa Language Web Page - This personal web page offers a Hupa Alphabet
Chart, Hupa numbers, verb forms, and words with graphics.
Ioway-Otoe-Missouria
Ioway-Otoe-Missouria
Language - "Ioway-Otoe-Missouria Language is a Siouan Language designated as the
Chiwere subgroup of Mississippi Valley Siouan." This site provides a bibliography of
essential materials for studying this language, including glossaries and word lists;
texts, songs and song books, primers, reading books; grammars and grammatical/language
papers; kinship; manuscripts; missionary materials; stories, myths, legends in English;
and ethnography.
Iroquois
Language Index - This language site
from the Six Nations at the Grand River Reserve in Ontario, Canada contains language files
with sound samples and written words of the Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, Seneca, and
Tuscarora. Also includes fonts and statistics.
Kanienkehaka
Kanienkehaka Language
Homepage - This site, "dedicated to preserving, enriching and promoting
Haudenosaunee/Kanienkehaka language and culture," includes dictionary sources, words,
and language references.
Kiowa
An Unofficial Practical
Orthography for the Kiowa Language - This brief page shows Kiowa vowels and
consonants.
Lakota
- Customized Computer Software/Programming - You
can download "Lakohta Word v2.0 (which) is a translation dictionary that converts
English words to Lakota with over 3000 words included. It also has a pronunciation guide
for every word along with a general guide to speaking the Lakhota language." With
Learn Lakota Now!, you can click on the Lakota word to hear the common phrase or words in
such categories as numbers, body parts, animals, shapes, colors, and foods. You can also
download the Rinehart Collection of old (late 1800s to 1901) pictures screen saver.
Lenape
Common Words and Phrases in Lenape
- To hear the Lenape pronunciation, simply click on the Lenape word.
Miami
The Miami Language
- Besides explaining this Algonquian language, this site provides links to short lists of
Miami words under Greetings and Animal Names and Common Phrases. Crossword puzzles and
word search puzzles are also included.
Ojibwe
Ojibwe Language and Culture -
Besides a section on language, this site has links to crosscultural materials, a
bibliography of further references, and an index of Ojibwe (Anishinaabe/Chippewa) authors
online.
Omaha-Ponca
Omaha-Ponca - This
Siouan language is discussed under the following headings: phonology with comments and
pronunciation examples, morphology, syntax, texts, and bibliography.
Potawatomi
Potawatomi Web - This web
site is divided into five sections. You can learn to speak Potawatomi in the
"bodewadmimo" section which includes an orthography and dictionary with
sound files and documents written in the Potawatomi language. In the
"nIshnabek" section, you can learn about the Potawatomi people, their
history, culture, genealogy, and life. "Mzenegenek" is their "collection of
hypertexts and "nizhokmakewen" provides a list of additional resources.
Siouan
Siouan Languages and Related Subjects -
Links to Omaha-Ponca, projects, pictures, publications, and an FAQ on Siouan and other
Native American languages.
MEDIA
Electronic Texts | Music, Video, & Film | Newspapers & Magazines
ELECTRONIC TEXTS
- Native American
Electronic Texts - A large collection of e-texts. These range from articles to
historical texts.
- Native American
History - Historical Texts Archive - A large collection of historical online texts.
They are arranged alphabetically by author name. Most were written around 1900.
MUSIC, VIDEO, AND FILM
- Index of Native
American Music Resources on the Internet - This extensive listing of sites is part of
a larger site on Native American resources put together by Karen Strom. Included are
sections on general resources, individual artists and bands, music sources, music
organizations, music reviews and articles, and musical instruments with some annotations.
- Index of Native
American Video Resources on the Internet - Again, an extensive listing of sites that
is part of the larger site on Native American resources by Karen Strom. Commercial and
non-commercial sites are included and some sites have brief annotations.
- Indigenous Peoples of
North and Central America/Native Americans - A large, annotated alphabetical listing
of videos available at the Media Resources Center at University of California-Berkeley.
Some contain reviews.
- National Museum of the American Indian
Film and Video Center - This site highlights the Film and Video Center, located at the
National Museum of the American Indian in New York. Included is information about the
Center, information about the Native American Film and Video Festival held biennially,
films screened at NMAI, and a feature presentation.
- NativeCelebs - Native Americans in the
entertainment industry are the focus of this site. Features include a newsletter, a
profile of a featured Native actor, and listings of movies with Native content, movies
featuring Native actors, TV films and series, as well as links to reviews.
- Sources for Indian Music -
Native American Singers and Recording Artists - This is a section on Lisa
Mittens Native American Home Pages. Included are lists of links to record labels,
distributors, and reviews as well as a listing of links about performers, recording
artists, and drums.
NEWSPAPERS AND MAGAZINES
- Cherokee Observer -
"The only independent Cherokee newspaper," The Cherokee Observer site links to
current articles, political information, the Cherokee National Party, the Cherokee
language, and archives. Subscription information is included.
- Indian Country Today - The online version of
this weekly newspaper "that covers national news and events (and) is currently
distributed in all fifty states and in seventeen foreign countries." The full-text of
selected articles is available, but you must subscribe to the paper edition to get the
entire newspaper.
- Native Americas Journal - This
journal is published quarterly by the American Indian Program at Cornell University and
features various articles on important Native American issues. "Many of the articles
in Native Americas feature breaking news from in-depth investigative
reporting." Subscription information is included.
- Native Peoples Magazine - This site
provides selected articles from the print edition. Teacher guides and lesson plans are
available as well.
- Navajo Hopi Observer Online - This
weekly newspaper covers quick reads, news, opinions, community, weather, sports, and arts.
A link to subscribe is included.
- Navajo Times on the Web -
Daily
newspaper of the Navajo people.
MISC A-Z
Beliefs, Mythology &
Religion | Biography | Clothing | Culture | Food & Cooking | Government & Law | History
Issues |
Literature | Maps
| Statistics | Texas
| Traditional Medicine &
Ethnobotany
BELIEFS, MYTHOLOGY, AND RELIGION
- Aadizookaanac - Traditional
Stories, Legends & Myths - A nice collection that allows you to search for
stories, legends and myths by region of origin.
- American Indians
and the Natural World - This site, produced by the Carnegie Museum, examines the
belief systems and practical knowledge that guides four Native American tribes'
interaction with the natural world.
- Powerful
Symbols: Honoring the Animal Spirits - The symbolism of several animals is discussed,
with tribal legends and stories.
- Regional Folklore and
Mythology - This is a large directory of folklore and mythology sites from around the
world. There is a section on Native Americans which contains a wide variety of sources,
such as online texts of public domain books and individual home pages.
- Religion, Rituals, Myths and Legends
-
- An annotated list of some twenty different sites which concern various tribes'
religious beliefs and practices.
BIOGRAPHY
- American Indian Medal of Honor
Winners - Brief biographical sketches of five Native American Medal of Honor winners.
- Great Chiefs and Leaders - Nice
biographical portraits and reflections on the lives of numerous great Native American
leaders of the past. People covered include well-known leaders such as Crazy Horse and
Sitting Bull and less well-known leaders such as Roman Nose and Little Turtle.
- Powerful
People - Biographical sketches of individuals such as Cochise, Geronimo, Chief Joseph,
and Sitting Bull.
Individual Biography
CLOTHING AND ADORNMENT
- The Costume Gallerys Online
Library - To locate links to Native American costume sites, first click on the
Cultural button on the second shelf.
- The Costume Page
- There are more than thirty links to various sites on Native American clothing. Some
examples are Alaska Native Costume Information, Fancy Powwow Outfits, Items Related to
Native American Issues and Concerns, Native American Textiles & Clothing, and
Athapaskan Hunter.
- Hair Pipes
in Plains Indian Adornment - This site is from the Anthropological Papers, No. 50
from the Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin. It contains a discussion of the
history of hair pipes, maps, tables, and many illustrations.
- Internet Links to Native
American Art Resources - This page provides links to other sites with information
about Native American clothing and hide, fur and leather tanning.
- Moccasins - A
detailed discussion of moccasins and how to make a center-seam moccasin.
- NativeTech: Leather and Clothes
- This site focuses on the Eastern Woodlands and provides information and pictures of
their clothing. Useful sections include an overview of Native American footwear, mittens
and gloves, leather bags and pouches, tanning and the preservation of other animal parts.
In the Regional Overview of Native American Clothing and Regalia section, you will find an
annotated sketch as well as a link to a map of culture areas with illustrated clothing and
a bibliography for Native American clothing and regalia. It also provides links to other
resources on the World Wide Web.
- NativeTech: Regional
Overview of Native American Technology and Art - This page provides a map of culture
areas and locations of tribes with illustrations of clothing. The site is divided into
Northeast, the Great Lakes, Southeast, Southwest, Prairie, Plains, Plateau, Basin,
California, Northwest Coast, and Subarctic.
- Pow Wow Dance Styles -
"There are certain guidelines that all dancers follow when making their regalia.
These styles have evolved from the old days and each has its own unique story and
traditions." This site lists both mens and womens dance styles such as
southern straight dance, grass dance, fancy shawl dance, and jingle dress dance. All of
the styles then link to another page that discusses the dance and its appropriate regalia
or clothing.
- Pow Wow Terminology - This is a
"list and description of several items, words, and terms that are unique to pow wows.
Many contain pictures and sound files, so feel free to explore any listing further by
clicking on the provided link." Examples include bandoliers, beadwork, bustle, and
clackers.
CULTURE
- American Indian Studies - The American
Indian Studies Program at California State University - Long Beach has been in existence
since 1969. This site is supervised by Professor Troy Johnson and "is dedicated to
the presentation of unique artwork, photographs, video and sound recordings which
accurately reflect the history, culture and richness of the Native American experience in
North America
" There are links to sites discussing the Indian occupation of
Alcatraz in the section on Indians of North America, a developing section on Indians of
Central America and Mexico, a section of Tribes and Nations Homepages, and a section of
related web sites.
- Index of Native
American Cultural Resources on the Internet - This very extensive list of sites is
part of the larger site on Native American resources put together by Karen Strom. Included
is a listing of multicultural sites and a large listing of tribe/nation sites in the
United States, Canada, and Latin America.
- Indian Pueblo Cultural Center - This site
provides links to nineteen pueblos from Acoma to Zuni. Each one has its own separate page
with very brief information about their culture, murals and other works of art, dances,
etc.
- Luxton Museum of the Plains
Indian - This sites collection "has been organized into 20 modules under
four main sections" that include history/background, hunter/warrior, spiritual life,
and daily life. Daily Life includes food, birth/child rearing, clothing, the tipi, and
quillwork and beadwork. Each of those sections includes a description of the topic
accompanied by a series of pictures.
- Pow Wow Dance Styles -
"There are certain guidelines that all dancers follow when making their regalia.
These styles have evolved from the old days and each has its own unique story and
traditions." This site lists both mens and womens dance styles such as
southern straight dance, grass dance, fancy shawl dance, and jingle dress dance. All of
the styles then link to another page that discusses the dance and its appropriate regalia
or clothing.
- Pow Wow Terminology - This is a
"list and description of several items, words, and terms that are unique to pow wows.
Many contain pictures and sound files, so feel free to explore any listing further by
clicking on the provided link." Examples include bandoliers, beadwork, bustle, and
clackers.
FOOD AND COOKING
- The Best in Native American Cuisine - This
site is "produced by the Santa Ana Pueblo to promote economic development throughout
Indian Country by helping to expand the market for Indian food products." It provides
links to sources to commercial enterprises that sell food products necessary for Native
American recipes.
- Indian Foods and Herbs - Besides
recipes for frybread and Indian tacos, this site discusses jerked meat, pemmican, acorn
meal or flour, and acorn bread.
- Kwakuitl Recipes - This site
has "genuine Kwakuitl Indian recipes from NW Coast circa 1914." Included are
recipes for boiled halibut heads & backbone, whale and salmon.
- Native Recipes - This
excellent site is divided into sections: frybread; Native cookbooks; wild rice recipes;
corn, hominy, cornmeal; squash, pumpkin; fish, birds; herbal teas, culinary herbs;
nutrition information, cookbooks for kids; maple sugar/syrup recipes; beans and greens;
deermeat, meat; fruit and berries; and xocoatl (chocolate), Aztecs (and south) YUM!
- Native Tech: Food and Recipes - This site
is also divided into useful sections: beverages & teas; from the four legged (recipes
for raccoon, beaver, buffalo, possum, moose, venison, etc.); from the bird (includes
doves, pheasant, chicken); from the fish; plants, fruit & vegetables; breads, nuts,
seeds & grains. It also includes "recipes that defy categorization" such as
baked grindle, beans & bacon, and others.
- Traditional Food, Health
and Nutrition - This site provides many links to additional information about food and
diet, cooking and recipes, and health of Native Americans.
GOVERNMENT AND LAW
- Code Talk - This site is a virtual
clearinghouse of resources relating to Native Americans sponsored by the federal agencies
with Native American programs.
- Flags of Native Peoples of
the United States - This site provides beautiful illustrations of the flags of
numerous tribes and has a description of the history of each flag.
- Internet Law Library; Indian
Nations and Tribes - Links
to web resources including the Native American Constitution and Law Digitization Project,
and treaties with the Continental Congress.
- Repatriation and Reburial
Issues - This site provides annotated links to laws, articles, case studies and
organizations.
HISTORY
- American Indian Movement - A
large index of sites and articles concerning the history and activities of AIM.
- American Indian
Occupation of Alcatraz Island - An interesting collection of photographs taken during
the 1969-1971 occupation of Alcatraz Island.
- Battle of Little
Bighorn - An eyewitness account of the battle by Lakota Chief Red Horse.
- First Nation Histories - Lengthy
articles concerning numerous tribal histories. To access the longer entries, click on the
name of the tribe of interest at the top of the page. This will take you to a brief entry.
At this point, click on the name of the tribe at the top of the brief entry and it will
take you to a much lengthier article which discusses the culture, location, language and
history of the tribe from the time of contact up to 1900.
- Native American Chronology
1830-1890 - A fairly detailed chronology of events that took place during this time
period.
- Native American Experience - A
large collection of historical photographs of the Native American Experience made
available by Facts on File. The collection is arranged chronologically from
prehistoric times to 1990.
- Navajo Code Talkers: World War
II Fact Sheet - A short description of the history of the Navajo Code Talkers of World
II and how they baffled the very efficient Japanese code breakers.
- On This Date In North American Indian
History - Scroll halfway down the page and you come to an area that allows you to
search for historical events that occurred during a given week.
- Original Native People of the Americas
- Among other things, this page offers essays on the Battle of Little Bighorn, Wounded
Knee and the Trail of Tears. You have to scroll half way down before you see links to
these and other essays.
- Trail of Tears - This site
describes the removal of the Cherokee Nation from Georgia and the devastating nature of
their forced journey of relocation.
- Wounded Knee Home Page - This
site documents the tragedy which occurred at Wounded Knee.
ISSUES
Information concerning stereotypes can also be found in the Materials for Teachers and
Librarians section.
- American Indian Gaming and Casino Information
Center - This site provides information about the benefits that the gaming industry
has provided to Native tribes. It has sections on the myths and facts as well as the
statistics surrounding this issue.
- Casinos: Is Gaming the New
Buffalo? - This site discusses both the positive and negative sides of the casino
issue. Throughout the discussion, you are offered links to other relevant pages.
- Legislative
Health Policy -
Information resource for current issues in Indian health policy, with links,
from the Association of American Indian Physicians.
- Mascot Issue - Here
you will find a compilation of web sites and writings concerning the use of Indian mascots
by sports teams.
- Native American Political
Issues - Articles concerning a wide range of issues including the slaughter of
buffaloes and the sterilization of Native American women.
- Native Opinions on
Pocahontas - This site provides a discussion and links to other information about the
Disney film, Pocahontas.
- Repatriation and Reburial
Issues - This site provides annotated links to laws, articles, case studies and
organizations.
LITERATURE
- Aadizookaanag,
Dibaajimowin (Native Stories Many Truths) - A collection of book reviews,
Native narratives, traditional stories, picture-stories, Native author biographies, Mayan
stories, comparison of the myths of Oochigeaskw and Cinderella, and a Native languages
section set up and maintained by Paula Giese (Anishinabe).
- Native American Authors - This site,
provided by the Internet Public Library, consists of biographical and bibliographic
information for primarily contemporary and historical Native North Americans. Authors are
indexed by name, title of work, and tribe. Various web links are included.
- Oyate On-Line - This site was put together by
"a Native organization working to see that our lives and histories are portrayed
honestly." Included are evaluations of fiction and non-fiction childrens and
young adult materials by and about Native peoples, a selection of materials to order, and
teacher guides and curricula.
- Storytellers: Native American Authors
Online - This page was conceived to "make the writing of modern Native American
authors
both more visible and more widely available." Pages were developed in
collaboration with the respective authors. Included is an alphabetical as well as a tribal
listing of the authors, reviews of books by Native American authors, a page on traditional
storytelling, and a listing of related sites.
MAPS
- Maps: GIS Windows On Native
Lands, Current Places and Histories - Numerous maps concerning Native American history
and culture are available through this site. Many of the maps use a lot of memory and may
take quite awhile to load.
- North American Tribes,
Culture Areas & Linguistic Stocks - An interactive map which allows you to zoom in
on any area and then click on that area to find links to pages of information on tribes
from that region.
STATISTICS
- American Indians and Crime
- Reports on the rate and nature of crimes committed against Native Americans and
summarizes data on American Indians in the criminal justice system.
TEXAS
- Handbook of Texas - The
online version of the Handbook of Texas provides lengthy articles on Texas tribes. Simply
type in the name of the particular tribe that you are looking for and a list of articles
will be provided.
- Texas Indians - This site provides a nice
selection of essays concerning numerous Native American tribes of Texas. There are also
descriptions of activities for children as well as links to other Texas Indian sites.
TRADITIONAL MEDICINE &
ETHNOBOTANY
- AAIP Resources: Traditional Medicine
- This site by the Association of American Indian Physicians (AAIP) stresses that there
are many approaches to traditional medicine and that "AAIP does not endorse any
single method but recognizes the diversity that exists and supports the rights of the
tribes to continue the traditions that have been passed down through many
generations." Therefore, this site provides links to many Native American sites
dealing with medicine, healing, food, and health.
- Cherokee Messenger: Native
American Herbal Remedies - Discusses various Native American remedies for such
diseases as asthma, backache, burns, diarrhea, fevers, insect bites and stings, and the
common cold.
- Native American Ethnobotany Database
- This database provides information about the foods, drugs, dyes, and fibers of Native
North American people. "This represents uses by 291 Native American groups of 4,029
species from 243 different plant families" for a total of over 44,000 items. You can
do a Boolean search, limit the number of items to be found, match whole words only, or do
case sensitive searches. Results of the searches can include bibliographies of articles,
various reports and books.
- Native
American Health History - Developed by the Indian Health Service and
the University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center, this searchable
database contains bibliographic information and abstracts on historical
American Indian and Alaskan Native medical and health research from 1652 to
1970. Links from this site include a category titled “Pre-defined
Expert Searches,” which holds information about Native Americans and
diabetes, cancer, tuberculosis and other diseases.
- The Roots of North
American Medicine - This brief article, from a 1994 issue of Indian Life Magazine,
explores the history of medicine in North American Native cultures.
- Southwest School of Botanical
Medicine Bisbee, Arizona Home Page - This site provides photos, engravings, and
drawings of medicinal plants from various sources. There is an index of more than 1,600
plant pictures and maps listed by genus and species, color illustrations by 20th
century artist, Mary Vaux Walcott, and others by the National Geographic Society from
1915-1924. Pen and ink drawings by botanical artist Mimi Kamp and over 1,350 images listed
by genus are also included.
- Traditional Herbal &
Plant Knowledge, Identification - An excellent site with annotated links to other
research tools and sites dealing with plants and ethnobotany.
Posted/Updated:
06/11/2008
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