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| Students > Community Dramas > Unit 3 |
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| Unit 3. Early Indian Communities: and the Stories They Might Have Told Introduction The first people to live in the United States were the Native Americans. They had communities of families that worked together to survive. Some were hunters. Others were farmers. They all were storytellers. This unit will explore what we know about the Hohokam Indians who lived in the Sonoran Desert a very long time ago. Then we will learn to tell stories rather like the Native Americans told their children. Perhaps you would like to find out about Native Americans in your part of the United States. We have some recommendations for web sites that have interesting information. Then we hope you’ll join us for the storytelling. But we certainly welcome you to join us as we study
the Hohokam – superb canal builders and farmers from the Southwest. Lesson 1. The History of
the Hohokam The Pima and their ancestors, the Hohokam Life was very different in the Valley of the Sun a 150 years ago. There were no electric lights, air conditioning, running water, grocery or furniture stores. There were no schools, cars, airplanes, telephones, computers or TVs. But people had lived here for a very long time. In 1850, the Pima Indians lived in Arizona by the Salt and Gila Rivers. (In their language they are called the Akimel O'odham, the River People.) The mountains were not far away and the Salt River and the Gila River were always full of water. The desert valley, the mountains and the rivers, were their landforms. The climate, the weather, was hot and dry.
Cottonwood, mesquite and palo verde trees grew on the desert. Saguaro, yucca and prickly pear cactus grew there, too.
Small animals such as rabbits, snakes, coyotes and bobcats lived there. There were many birds such as quail, owls and vultures. The Pimas were very good at using these natural resources, the plants and animals. They ate many of the plants and hunted the animals. These natural resouces made life possible in the desert. They remembered how their ancestors,
the Hohokam, lived. The Pimas inherited
much of their culture, their way of life,
from the Hohokam.
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