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Quiz Show. Question and Answer Native Peoples of Canada Social Studies 9. Game rules:. No yelling out. You will be warned, then asked to leave. Use your whiteboard to answer each question. Erase your answer after each question.
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Quiz Show Question and Answer Native Peoples of Canada Social Studies 9
Game rules: • No yelling out. You will be warned, then asked to leave. • Use your whiteboard to answer each question. Erase your answer after each question. • Each correct answer earns you one (1) point. No points are deducted for incorrect answers; therefore, answer every question (guess if you are unsure). • Good luck!
Match the People to their location. 1. Peoples of the Plateau 2. Peoples of the Northwest Coast 3. Eastern Woodlands((roquois) 4. Inuit 5. Peoples of the Plains A. Southern provinces of Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba B. They inhabited the shores of the Great Lakes to the St. Lawrence River C. southern interior of British Columbia and Alberta. D. West Coast of British Columbia E. Northern Canada (Arctic)
Peoples of the Plains nomadic
Peoples of the Northwest Coast sedentary
Peoples of the Plateau Semi-nomadic
Inuit nomadic
The Iroquois (Eastern Woodlands) Peoples lived in pit houses. They lived in long houses or wig wams.
What is the name of the shelter of the Peoples of the Plains? The tipi (also spelled teepee)
Name, and describe, at least four features of the winter shelter of the Inuit. The iglu (igloo) Large blocks cut from snow Piled in a spiral shape blocks leaned in to form a dome Soft snow filled cracks (insulation) Fire inside for warmth Entrance …
What is a plank house? None of the above A shelter built by the Peoples of the Plateau out of planks A long, low-ceilinged shelter made from cedar by the Peoples of the NW Coast A small, round-domed shelter made from wood by the Peoples of the Eastern Wooldands A tent-like shelter built with animal skins stretched over long poles, designed to be easily set up and taken down, by the Poepls of the Plains and the Inuit
Define & draw a pit house (“the shelter made by the ___ Peoples out of ____”…) Plateau Dirt, grass, wooden beams, dug out of the earth, hole in roof for entering/extiting and smoke to escape/air to enter, siting/sleeping quarters around edges, rounded shape, dug out of ground, fire in middle…
Match the belief to the group of People: 1. Inuit 2. Plains 3. Plateau 4. Iroquois 5. Northwest Coast they were surrounded, at all times, by supernatural beings interfering with the natural world. Coyote was responsible for bringing salmon up the river every spring and fall, and for transforming people into their present day form. People get sick because they have been behaving inapproproateily People have a spirit guide in the form of an animal. |It is found on a VisonQuiest. Rate ofa young woman Aientsik represented the fertile earth; her husband was Tharonhiawakon or ‘He who Holds Up the Sky.’ A turtle’s back became the ocean floor on which the earth is settled, and Aientsik’s daughter represents the wind.Travel
The Sun Dance ceremony The Peoples of the Eastern Woodlands (Iroquois) The Peoples of the Plateau The Inuit The Peoples of the Northwest Coast The Peoples of the Plains
They had six annual ceremonies: the New Year Festival, the Maple Festival, the Corn Planting Festival, the Strawberry Festival, the Green Corn Festival and the Harvest Festival of Thanksgiving. The Inuit The Peoples of the Northwest Coast The Peoples of the Plateau The Peoples of the Plains The Peoples of the Eastern Woodlands (Iroquois)
A potlatch was a big celebration that often took more than a year to plan. The ceremony usually corresponded with a person's change in social status, for example, marriage, birth, death, and coming of age. Each person invited to a Potlatch received gifts related to their social rank. Some examples of gifts: canoes, slaves, carved dishes, and eulachon oil. The more wealth that a family gave away (as gifts), the more prestige was bestowed on them. The Peoples of the Plateau The Peoples of the Eastern Woodlands (Iroquois) The Peoples of the Plains The Inuit The Peoples of the Northwest Coast
'The Winter Guardian Spirit Dance', hosted by a Shaman., involved several days of dancing, and healing the sick. Who held this ceremony? The Peoples of the Plains The Inuit The Peoples of the Northwest Coast The Peoples of the Eastern Woodlands (Iroquois) The Peoples of the Plateau
A ceremony called a 'Bladder Dance' was often held after a large hunt, as they believed that the soul of the animal was found inside the bladder, so if the bladder was honoured and returned to the sea, then the animal's spirit would find a new body. The Peoples of the Plateau The Peoples of the Eastern Woodlands (Iroquois) The Peoples of the Plains The Inuit The Peoples of the Northwest Coast
1. Inuit 2. Plains 3. Iroquois (Eastern Wooldands) 4. PLateau 5. Northwest Coast Clams, oysters, mussels Corn, ;white-tailed deer Seal, walrus, caribou Buffalo Salmon, deer, coyote
The Peoples of the Northwest Coast: Fished using harpoons, nets, and traps
The Peoples of the Plateau: Used dip nets and baskets to fish Used spears to fish Used weirs to fish All the above
The Peoples of the Plains hunted using 2 methods. Describe both! Pound - Buffalo was driven into a corral or compound and speared or shot with an arrow A "Buffalo Jump" - Bands united in the summer to stampede an entire herd of Buffalo off a high cliff
The Iroquois grew a lot of their food, and obtained meat by hunting & fishing.
The Inuit: Hunted game, like caribou Fished for whale, fish Speared seals through breathing holes
1. Inuit 2. Plains 3. Iroquois 4. Plateau 5. Northwest Coast Cedar canoes birch bark canoe Kayak, umiak Dog Travois Sturgeon dugout canoes
Describe Plains clothing : Robe/poncho, leggings, moccassins
Describe Northwest Coast clothing: They wore little clothing. Most made from softened cedar wood/bakr, animal leather, and wool. Used to keep rain off rather than for warmth due to mild weather.
Describe Inuit clothing: Clothing of the Inuit people was mostly made out of animal skins and furs. They usually wore many layers of clothing as protection from the cold weather Usually the Inuit wore clothing with two layers of caribou skin: an inner layer with the fur facing the skin, and an outer layer with the fur facing out
Describe Iroquois clothing: Clothing was made from fur and hides, along with cornhusks and plant and tree fiber. Sewing needles were made from a small bone near the ankle joint of a deer. Thread was either animal sinew or twisted elm-bar fibers.
Describe Plateau clothing: They used tanned hides, grasses, and softened bark. The most common animal hides used for clothing were muskrat, beaver, and deerskin
The tools/weapons shown were made and used by… Northwest Coast