Top Banner
The Columbian Exchange Who Had It First - Pueblo or Spanish?
17

The Columbian Exchange – Powerpoint Presentation · PDF fileThe Columbian Exchange is the trade of plants, animals, and ideas between Native Americans and European people

Mar 06, 2018

Download

Documents

dinhdien
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: The Columbian Exchange – Powerpoint Presentation · PDF fileThe Columbian Exchange is the trade of plants, animals, and ideas between Native Americans and European people

The Columbian Exchange Who Had It First - Pueblo or Spanish?

Page 2: The Columbian Exchange – Powerpoint Presentation · PDF fileThe Columbian Exchange is the trade of plants, animals, and ideas between Native Americans and European people

The Columbian Exchange is the trade of plants, animals, and ideas between

Native Americans and European people.

Page 3: The Columbian Exchange – Powerpoint Presentation · PDF fileThe Columbian Exchange is the trade of plants, animals, and ideas between Native Americans and European people

Native Americans lived in the Southwestern United States long before

the Europeans arrived here.

Page 4: The Columbian Exchange – Powerpoint Presentation · PDF fileThe Columbian Exchange is the trade of plants, animals, and ideas between Native Americans and European people

Some Native Americans were called Pueblo people by the Spanish, because they lived in villages. Many lived near a

river like the Rio Grande.

Page 5: The Columbian Exchange – Powerpoint Presentation · PDF fileThe Columbian Exchange is the trade of plants, animals, and ideas between Native Americans and European people

Pueblo people were farmers. Corn, beans, and squash were called

“the three sisters” because they grow up together in the garden.

Page 6: The Columbian Exchange – Powerpoint Presentation · PDF fileThe Columbian Exchange is the trade of plants, animals, and ideas between Native Americans and European people

To store their food and seeds, Pueblo people made pottery from clay. They

wove baskets from willow growing by the river.

Page 7: The Columbian Exchange – Powerpoint Presentation · PDF fileThe Columbian Exchange is the trade of plants, animals, and ideas between Native Americans and European people

Pueblo people used stone, shell, wood, and bone to make weapons and tools.

They did not have any metal.

Page 8: The Columbian Exchange – Powerpoint Presentation · PDF fileThe Columbian Exchange is the trade of plants, animals, and ideas between Native Americans and European people

Pueblo people also hunted for food. Some animals, like turkeys, were

domesticated. Pueblos used fur, bones, antlers, and feathers to make warm

blankets, clothes, and many other things.

Page 9: The Columbian Exchange – Powerpoint Presentation · PDF fileThe Columbian Exchange is the trade of plants, animals, and ideas between Native Americans and European people

The Pueblo people traded with other Native Americans for shells, parrot feathers, and many other things.

Everyone wanted the beautiful turquoise that the Pueblos mined from Cerrillos!

Page 10: The Columbian Exchange – Powerpoint Presentation · PDF fileThe Columbian Exchange is the trade of plants, animals, and ideas between Native Americans and European people

The Pueblo people practiced their religion in special underground rooms called kivas. They prayed for rain to

give them a good harvest, and for good hunting.

Page 11: The Columbian Exchange – Powerpoint Presentation · PDF fileThe Columbian Exchange is the trade of plants, animals, and ideas between Native Americans and European people

When the first Spanish soldiers came, they had metal weapons

and steel armor.

Page 12: The Columbian Exchange – Powerpoint Presentation · PDF fileThe Columbian Exchange is the trade of plants, animals, and ideas between Native Americans and European people

The Spanish rode horses. They used wagons with wheels to carry goods. All these were new to the Pueblo people.

http://trailridermag.com/article/kiger-mustang-horse-breed

Page 13: The Columbian Exchange – Powerpoint Presentation · PDF fileThe Columbian Exchange is the trade of plants, animals, and ideas between Native Americans and European people

With the Spanish also came cattle, domestic sheep, pigs, goats, and

chickens. The Pueblos had never seen these animals before.

Page 14: The Columbian Exchange – Powerpoint Presentation · PDF fileThe Columbian Exchange is the trade of plants, animals, and ideas between Native Americans and European people

Later, Spanish settlers brought honeybees, wheat, and many new kinds

of fruit and vegetables.

http://wcmu.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/wheat-field.jpg

Page 15: The Columbian Exchange – Powerpoint Presentation · PDF fileThe Columbian Exchange is the trade of plants, animals, and ideas between Native Americans and European people

Sadly, many new diseases came to the Americas with the Spanish and other

Europeans. Native Americans got very sick from smallpox, measles, and other

diseases. Many Pueblo people died.

https://www.google.com/search?q=smallpox+germs&rlz=1C1CAFB_enUS633US633&espv=2&biw=1920&bih=911&site=webhp&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0CAYQ_AUoAW oVChMI-OaTrOGhxwIVC5qICh1B3Qll#imgrc=yuL07-5WcU-gFM%3A

Page 16: The Columbian Exchange – Powerpoint Presentation · PDF fileThe Columbian Exchange is the trade of plants, animals, and ideas between Native Americans and European people

https://www.google.com/search?q=columbian+exchange&rlz=1C1CAFB_enUS633US633&espv=2&biw=1920&bih=911&site=webhp&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&sqi=2&ved=0CAYQ_AUoAWoVChMI2tjcnd-hxwIVApeICh2XUAMe#imgrc=LvYOmKDNLaysDM%3A

Page 17: The Columbian Exchange – Powerpoint Presentation · PDF fileThe Columbian Exchange is the trade of plants, animals, and ideas between Native Americans and European people

Who do you think gained the most in the Columbian Exchange? Who lost? On

your paper, explain your ideas and tell why by giving details!