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The Americas in 1491 . Prior to European arrival in the Americas, there were approximately 50-100 million native Americans Many were complex civilizations with written language, religions, cities. All adapted and shaped their environment. South and Central America
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The Americas in 1491 • Prior to European arrival in the Americas, there were approximately 50-100 million native Americans • Many were complex civilizations with written language, religions, cities. • All adapted and shaped their environment.
South and Central America • Contained unified empires: Aztec (Mexico) and Inca (Peru) • Population of millions • North America • Primarily small populations, widely dispersed • No large scale “civilizations” at time of Euro arrival
Aztec • A vast empire Located in present-day Mexico • Large capital city, Tenochtitlan • 200,000 people…larger than any European city • Built in a large lake. • Large temples, courts, canals and causeways. • Complicated religion which required human sacrifice • Huitzilopochtli • Led to frequent wars in order to gain captives. • 20,000 sacrificed to inaugurate a new temple.
A Spanish map of Tenochtitlan showing the elaborate system of causeways leading into the city.
Inca • Large empire that stretched along the coast of South America • Bigger than any European nation, the Ming Dynasty, or the Ottoman Empire. • 32 degrees of latitude
Built huge public works: • Giant state-run farms • 25,000 miles of paved roads • Some are steep stairs that go straight up mountainsides (perfect for llama, not horses) • Suspension bridges (scared the bejezzus out of the Spaniards) over huge gorges • Communication maintained by a system of runners who used knotted ropes to transmit messages.
To adapt to the steep moutains, the Inca constructed terraces for farming.
Mound Builders • Adena & Hopewell Cultures • Ohio River Valley • Constructed huge burial mounds, filled with goods. • Extensive trading along riverways.
Mound Builders • Mississipian Culture • Largest of mound-builders • Built Cahokia, a city / religious complex near St. Louis
Monk’s Mound dominates the city known as Cahokia. The structure is 100 ft high, 16 acres at base
Woodland Indians • Along the NE coast of the US • Language groups: • Algonquian • Massachusett • Wampanoag • Pequot • Narraganset • Iroquoian • Six Nations (Iroquois Confederacy): Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, Seneca, Tuscarawas • Lived in long-houses
Woodland Indians • Diet • “Three Sisters” Farming • Maize (corn), beans, and squash were grown together, conserving space and replenishing nutrients in the soil
Iroquoian farms were perceived as a jumbled mess to Europeans, but the three sisters technique made wise use of space and replenished needed nutrients in the soil.
Woodland Indians • Diet • Diet was supplemented by food that was collected (berries, nuts, fruits, oysters, clams, etc) & hunted (fish, deer, bear) • Women tended to farms and to collection of food, while men hunted…women provided 90% of the families food-sources.
Woodland Indians • Cleared land for farming and travel by setting fires to the forest • Controlled burns • Cleared out underbrush for ease of travel • Killed insects • Allowed sunlight to get to the forest floor, allowing berries to grow and attracting deer and bear
Woodland Indians • Used rivers as highways • Perfected the canoe as a mode of transport. • War canoes could carry up to 20 people. Penobscot Indian birch-bark canoe
Woodland Indians • Wampum • Belts made of shells, used as a currency for trade.