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Before there were “gringos”

Before there were “gringos”. The Pre-encounter Western Hemisphere, 20,000 B. C. E.-1492. What we think we know. Beringian Hypothesis By 12,000 B. C. E., “human beings” inhabited the whole span of the Western Hemisphere Archaeological Studies cast doubt on single wave of migration.

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Before there were “gringos”

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  1. Before there were “gringos” The Pre-encounter Western Hemisphere, 20,000 B. C. E.-1492

  2. What we think we know • Beringian Hypothesis • By 12,000 B. C. E., “human beings” inhabited the whole span of the Western Hemisphere • Archaeological Studies cast doubt on single wave of migration

  3. Olmecs andTehotihuacan • Olmecs—writing, calendar, ballgames, large basalt heads (1400-500 B. C. E. in southern Mexico) • Tehotihuacan--elaborate urban architecture (100 b. c. e-500 c. e. Central Valley of Mexico)

  4. Tehotihuacan: The "Camino de los Muertos" from thePyramid of the Sun

  5. Mayas • Yucutan and Belize 500 –950 • great science and math, urban centers

  6. What happened to the Maya? • Theories: • ecological devastations • internal social and political unrest • external invasion

  7. Maya Solar Calendar

  8. Agricultural Foundations for Human Civilization in the Americas Olmecs and Mayas were farmers. Between 5000 B. C. E. and 2500 B. C. E., cultivation of corn was developed.

  9. Aztec • Empire flourished from about 1325-1520 • Vast political, trade, and tribute network • capital city was Tenochtitlan • conquered by Cortes.

  10. Aztec Empire

  11. Artist’s rendering of Tenochtitlan

  12. Quechua Empire (Inca) • extended through Ecuador, Peru, and Chile • flourished from about 1200 to 1533 • conquered by Juan Pizarro. • The ruler, the Inca, had great power and kept his empire together through a network of roads over which messengers ran carrying instructions/accounting “written” in the form of knotted ropes.

  13. Quechua Empire

  14. Machu Picchu, major temple and administration center

  15. Human Beings al Norté • Pueblo-Hohokam • Adena-Hopewell • Mississippian

  16. Southwest Peoples • Book to read: Stephen Plog, Ancient Peoples of the Southwest • Slow to develop agriculture • Major cultural flowerings: • HOHOKAM—Southern Arizona 1000 B. C. E.- 1100—Ball Courts, feathers • MOGOLLAN—Southern New Mexico 1000 B. C. E.-1000 —Pit Houses and Pottery • ANASAZI (now properly called Ancestral Puebloans)—1000 B. C. E. –1300—Northern New Mexico and Arizona—large villages and cliff dwellings, good roads.

  17. Pueblo Bonito—Chaco Canyon, New Mexico

  18. Cliff Palace, Mesa Verde, Colorado

  19. ADENA-HOPEWELL • Mississippi and Ohio River Valleys 1000 B. C. E.-800 A. D. • Burial Mounds • Trade Goods

  20. Adena Hopewell Village—computer enhanced image by scholars at the University of Cincinnati

  21. MISSISSIPPIAN • Flourished 900-1550 • Lower Mississippi Valley • great moundbuilders

  22. Emerald Mound in Mississippi 3.5 football fields long

  23. Other Peoples • GREAT PLAINS—1500 B. C. E. – Present—hunters, gatherers, transhumance, bows and arrows—got horse in 1600. • GREAT BASIN—1500 B. C. E.-Present—hunters, gatherers, horticulturalists—UTES (NYUUTSIYU) • ARTIC/SUBARTIC—5000 B. C. E.-Present—good boats, whale hunters. • PACIFIC NORTHWEST—5000 B. C. E.-Present—good fishers, hunters of whales, netters of fish. (Tlingits) • MUSKOGEAN—1500 present—Southeast—moundbuilders and farmers (Natchez, Chickasaw, Choctaw) • IROQUOIS—1400 present—New York—longhouses—Senecas, Cayugas, Onondogas, Oneidas, Mohawks. • ALGONQUIAN—1200 present—agriculture, hunting, gathering, fishing. • CARIBBEAN—1000-1500—fishers, canoe borne commerce (ARAWAKS—Columbus encountered these)

  24. Misc. • In 1492, TOTAL INDIAN POPULATION—57 million to 112 million • How do we know about these “lost peoples/” Archaeology—clovis/folsom hypothesis. Kennewick Man—was he a Caucasoid ecotumor? Oral History.

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