The Earliest Americans

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Timeline CardsThe EarliestAmericans

Shari Darley GriffithsScott HammondTyler PackTyler PackLina Chesak-LiberaceApryl StottTyler PackDaniel HughesTrademarks and trade names are shown in this bookstrictly for illustrative and educational purposes and arethe property of their respective owners. References hereinshould not be regarded as affecting the validity of saidtrademarks and trade names.Core Knowledge , Core Knowledge Curriculum Series ,Core Knowledge History and Geography and CKHG are trademarks of the Core Knowledge Foundation.All Rights Reserved.Copyright 2017 Core Knowledge mons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/With the understanding that:For any reuse or distribution, you must make clear toothers the license terms of this work. The best way todo this is with a link to this web page:Share Alike—If you alter, transform, or build upon this work,you may distribute the resulting work only under the same orsimilar license to this one.Noncommercial—You may not use this work forcommercial purposes.This work is based on an original work of the CoreKnowledge Foundation (www.coreknowledge.org) madeavailable through licensing under a Creative CommonsAttribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 InternationalLicense. This does not in any way imply that the CoreKnowledge Foundation endorses this work.Under the following conditions:Attribution—You must attribute the work in thefollowing manner:You are free:to Share—to copy, distribute, and transmit the workto Remix—to adapt the workThis work is licensed under aCreative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike4.0 International License.Creative Commons LicensingTitleChapter 1, Card 1Chapter 1, Card 2Chapter 1, Card 3Chapter 2, Card 1Chapter 2, Card 2Chapter 3, Card 1Chapter 3, Card 2Illustration and Photo CreditsJeffrey L. Hantman, PhD , Department of Anthropology, University of VirginiaSubject Matter ExpertChapter 4, Card 1Chapter 4, Card 2Chapter 5, Card 1Chapter 5, Card 2Chapter 6, Card 1Chapter 6, Card 2Chapter 7Shari Darley GriffithsBecca ScholesShari Darley GriffithsKristin KwanBecca ScholesKristin KwanCarolyn WoudenISBN: 978-1-68380-111-5

CHAPTER 1—IntroductionVikings briefly settledin North America in the1000s CE.Big Question: What was Beringia?THE EARLIEST AMERICANS

CHAPTER 1: Beringia: The Land Bridge15,000 BCE: During the Ice Age, much of the world’swater was frozen into ice, and the weather was verycold.Big Question: What wasBeringia?THE EARLIEST AMERICANS

CHAPTER 1: Beringia: The Land Bridge15,000 BCE:People lived ashunter-gatherersin North America.Big Question: What was Beringia?THE EARLIEST AMERICANS

CHAPTER 2: America’s First Settlers9000 BCE: Over a period ofthousands of years, as theice sheets melted, peoplespread out over the landand settled on it.Big Question: How did the ability to grow food changethe way people lived?THE EARLIEST AMERICANS

CHAPTER 2: America’s First Settlers5000 BCE: People who settledin Mexico planted corn.Big Question: How did the ability to grow food changethe way people lived?THE EARLIEST AMERICANS

CHAPTER 3: People of the Far North2500 BCE: When the Inuit first came toNorth America, they got almost everythingthey needed by hunting and fishing.Big Question:What were the bigdifferences betweenlife in the summerand life in the winterfor the Inuit?THE EARLIEST AMERICANS

CHAPTER 3: People of the Far North1500 CE or 500 yearsago: The daily life ofthe Inuit changed fromseason to season.Big Question: What were the big differences betweenlife in the summer and life in the winter for the Inuit?THE EARLIEST AMERICANS

CHAPTER 4: Ancestral Pueblo and Mound Builders2,000 years ago or 100 BCE:Ancestral Pueblo movedfrom Canada to the AmericanSouthwest and lived in cliffdwellings that were like smalltowns.Big Question: How would you compare thesettlements built by the Ancestral Pueblo tothose built by the Mound Builders?THE EARLIEST AMERICANS

CHAPTER 4: Ancestral Pueblo and Mound Builders2,800 years ago or 700s BCE:The Mound Builders’ villagesstretched along the MississippiRiver Valley. Their villagesspanned from the present-daystates of Ohio, Wisconsin,and Minnesota to Louisianaand the southeasternUnited States.Big Question: How would you compare thesettlements built by the Ancestral Pueblo tothose built by the Mound Builders?THE EARLIEST AMERICANS

CHAPTER 5: After the Ancestral Pueblo1500s CE: The Hopibuilt homes on mesaswith different levelsconnected by ladders.The Zuni, Navajo, andApache had differenttypes of homes.Big Question: What are some of the reasons why someNative American groups moved from place to place?THE EARLIEST AMERICANS

CHAPTER 5: After the Ancestral PuebloSpaniards arrived in the American Southwest inthe 1500s and 1600s. They introduced sheep tothe Navajo.Big Question: What are some of the reasons why someNative American groups moved from place to place?THE EARLIEST AMERICANS

CHAPTER 6: After the Mound BuildersLate 1500s CE: Creekvillages were similar tothe communities builtby the Mound Builders.Big Question: What were the key characteristics of theCreek, Seminole, and Cherokee Nations?THE EARLIEST AMERICANS

CHAPTER 6: After the Mound Builders1800s CE: Sequoyahcreated a system forwriting the Cherokeelanguage.Big Question: What were the key characteristics of theCreek, Seminole, and Cherokee Nations?THE EARLIEST AMERICANS

CHAPTER 7: The Eastern Woodlands1500s CE: HaudenosauneeConfederacy leadersdiscussed commonproblems in councilmeetings.Big Question: What was the purpose ofthe Haudenosaunee Confederacy?THE EARLIEST AMERICANS

Chapter 1, Card 3 to Share Tyler Pack Chapter 2, Card 1 Lina Chesak-Liberace Chapter 2, Card 2 Apryl Stott Chapter 3, Card 1 Tyler Pack Chapter 3, Card 2 Daniel Hughes Chapter 4, Card 1 Shari Darley Griffiths Chapter 4, Card 2 Becca Scholes Chapter 5, Card 1 Shari Darley Griffiths Chapter 5, Card 2 Kristin

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