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The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific speculation points to between 15,000 and 30,000 years ago. Scientists study the skulls, bones, teeth, and DNA of ancient peoples to learn their origins. DNA and other evidence indicate that the earliest Americans probably came from Asia.
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The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

Jan 02, 2016

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Kerrie Spencer
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Page 1: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

The Asian Migration to America

Click the mouse button to display the information.Click the mouse button to display the information.

• Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific speculation points to between 15,000and 30,000 years ago.

• Scientists study the skulls, bones, teeth, and DNA of ancient peoples to learn their origins.

• DNA and other evidence indicate that the earliest Americans probably came from Asia.

Page 2: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

Click the mouse button to display the information.Click the mouse button to display the information.

• Scientists use radiocarbon dating to determine how old objects are.

• This method measures the radioactivity left in carbon 14.

• Scientists use the rate at which carbon 14 loses its radioactivity to calculate the age of the objects.

The Asian Migration to America (cont.)

Page 3: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

Click the mouse button to display the information.Click the mouse button to display the information.

• About 100,000 years ago, the earth began to cool, gradually causing much of the earth’s water to freeze into huge ice sheets called glaciers. This period is called the Ice Age.

• Ocean levels dropped, exposing an area of dry land.

• Scientists believe that people from Asia crossed this land bridge as they hunted large animals about 15,000 years ago or even earlier.

The Asian Migration to America (cont.)

Page 4: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

• These people were probably nomads, people who continually moved from place to place.

The Asian Migration to America (cont.)

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Page 5: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

How do scientists know who the first Americans were, and when and how they came to America?

Scientists study the skulls, bones, teeth, and DNA of early people to determine their origins. They use radiocarbon dating to determine the age of objects. They study the earth to learn how the first Americans came to America.

Click the mouse button to display the answer.Click the mouse button to display the answer.

The Asian Migration to America (cont.)

Page 6: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

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Early Civilizations in America• During the agricultural revolution

between 9,000 and 10,000 years ago, Native Americans in Mesoamerica learned how to plant and raise crops.

• The most important crop was maize, or corn.

• Agriculture allowed people to stay in permanent villages to raise crops and store the harvest.

Page 7: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

• Civilizations emerged. A civilization is a highly organized society that is characterized by trade, government, the arts, science, and often, a written language.

Early Civilizations in America (cont.)

Page 8: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

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• Anthropologists believe the Olmec culture was the first civilization in America.

• The culture began between 1500 and 1200 B.C. in what is today southern Mexico.

• The Olmec had large villages, temples, and pyramids, and they built large sculpted monuments.

• Olmec culture lasted until about 300 B.C., at which time another people built Teotihuacán, the first large city in America.

Early Civilizations in America (cont.)

Page 9: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

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• The Maya civilization developed in Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula and spread into Central America and southern Mexico.

• The Maya developed complex calendars based on the position of the stars.

• They built elaborate temple pyramids.

• The Mayan people abandoned their cities in the A.D. 900s, possibly fleeing invaders or searching for new farmland.

Early Civilizations in America (cont.)

Page 10: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

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• The Aztec built the city of Tenochtitlánin about 1325 where Mexico City is today.

• They built a great empire by conquering other cities.

• Their military controlled trade in the region and demanded tribute from the cities they conquered.

Early Civilizations in America (cont.)

Page 11: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

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• Anthropologists believe that the agricultural technology of Mesoamerica spread into the American Southwest and beyond, changing many North American nomads into farmers.

• The Hohokam built a civilization in what is now south-central Arizona from about A.D. 300 to the 1300s.

• They created an elaborate system of irrigation canals to bring water to their crops hundreds of miles away.

Early Civilizations in America (cont.)

Page 12: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

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• The Anasazi built a civilization between A.D. 700 and 900 in the area where the present-day states of Utah, Colorado, Arizona, and New Mexico meet.

• They built networks of basins and ditches to catch rainwater for their crops.

• Between A.D. 850 and 1100, the Anasazi living in Chaco Canyon in northwest New Mexico began to build large multi-storied buildings of adobe and cut stone.

• These buildings were called pueblos.

Early Civilizations in America (cont.)

Page 13: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

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• Mound-building cultures arose in North America’s eastern woodlands at about the time the Olmecs arose in Mesoamerica.

• Between 200 and 100 B.C., the Hopewell culture rose.

• These people built huge geometric earthworks.

Early Civilizations in America (cont.)

Page 14: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

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• Between A.D. 700 and 900, the Mississippian culture arose in the Mississippi River valley.

• The Mississippians were great builders.

• One of their largest cities was Cahokia built in Illinois near present-day St. Louis, Missouri.

Early Civilizations in America (cont.)

Page 15: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

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How did the agricultural technology of Mesoamerica spread to the North American cultures?

The agricultural technology spread north into the American Southwest and beyond.

Early Civilizations in America (cont.)

Page 16: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

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Native American Cultural Diversity• The Native American groups of the Far

North included the Inuit whose territory stretched from Alaska to Greenland, and the Aleut of Alaska’s Aleutian Islands.

• The groups of the Far North hunted for food and invented devices, such as the harpoon and the dogsled, to cope with the harsh environment.

• They used whale oil and blubber for fuel.

Page 17: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

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• Native American groups who lived along the Pacific Coast fished.

• Farther inland, Native Americans fished, hunted, and gathered roots and berries.

• Between the Sierra Nevada and the Rocky Mountains, where the weather was much drier, the Native Americans were nomads.

• In what is today California, groups such as the Pomo enjoyed the abundant wildlife and mild climate.

Native American Cultural Diversity (cont.)

Page 18: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

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• The Native American groups of the Southwest farmed like their ancestors.

• They believed in a spirit world.

• When men married, they joined the kachina cult.

• A kachina was a good spirit.

Native American Cultural Diversity (cont.)

Page 19: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

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• Before 1500, Native Americans of the Great Plains were farmers.

• Around 1500 those Native Americansin the western plains became nomads, possibly because of drought or war.

• They followed migrating buffalo herds.

• When the Spanish brought horses to North America, Native Americans of the Great Plains began to use the horses for hunting or for wars.

Native American Cultural Diversity (cont.)

Page 20: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

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• Native Americans of the Northeast practiced slash-and-burn agriculture.

• They cut down forests and burned the cleared land, and then used the rich ashes to make the soil more fertile.

• The peoples of the Northeast lived in large rectangular longhouses, which housed up to 10 families.

Native American Cultural Diversity (cont.)

Page 21: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

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• The Native Americans in the Eastern Woodlands had an environment that supported an abundant range of plant and animal life.

• These Native American groups hunted, fished, and farmed.

• Deer provided food and clothing.

Native American Cultural Diversity (cont.)

Page 22: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

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• The Iroquois lived in large kinship groups, or extended families headed by the elder women of each clan.

• The Iroquois often fought one another.

• Five Iroquois groups formed an alliance called the Iroquois League to maintain peace.

Native American Cultural Diversity (cont.)

Page 23: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

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• Most Native Americans of the Southeast lived in towns built around a central plaza.

• They farmed and hunted.

• The houses were made of poles covered with grass, mud, or thatch.

Native American Cultural Diversity (cont.)

Page 24: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

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How did Native American groups adapt to their differing environments?

Native American Cultural Diversity (cont.)

Page 25: The Asian Migration to America Click the mouse button to display the information. Scientists are unsure when the first people came to America, but scientific.

The Native Americans of the Far North hunted and invented devices, such as the harpoon and the dogsled. They also used whale oil and blubber for food. The Native American groups of the Southwest farmed. Native American groups along the Pacific Coast fished. Farther inland, Native Americans fished, hunted, and gathered roots and berries. Between the Sierra Nevadas and the Rocky Mountains, the Native Americans were nomads. In what is today California, groups enjoyed the abundant wildlife and mild climate. Before 1500, Native Americans of the Great Plains were farmers. Around 1500 those Native Americans in the western plains became nomads, possibly because of drought or war. They followed migrating buffalo herds. The Native Americans of the eastern woodlands hunted, fished, and farmed. They used materials in the environment to make longhouses and other shelter. Deer hide was used for food and clothing.

Native American Cultural Diversity (cont.)