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Review for Chapter 3Utah Native Tribes
Take out all the work you have for this class. Put it into a packet in this order and staple them.Chapter 3 Study GuidePrehistoric Indians organizer and mapHistoric Indians organizer and map
Anything else you have should have been turned in by now.
Review pages 62-63 and answer questions 36-37 in your study guide. Then work on you maps.
Where should your backpack be?
Bell ActivityThis is a no gum class. Please dispose of it properly!
History Objective – We will prepare fortomorrow’s exam byreviewing the studyguide.
Behavior Objective – Participation & Work Ethic: We will listen to each questions, answer the ones given to us, and write the important details in our notes.
Language Objective – We will listen to, give answers and write the important details from the activity.
Today we will learn…
Use the map on page 194 to fill out your map.
Then work on the geography map on page 8 of the study guide.
There are three basics types of history.
Remembered history is history that was passed down either orally (in spoken words) or recorded in writing.
Recovered history is history that was lost and found again, often through archaeology.
Invented history is history that was made up by someone.◦All three of these give us
valuable information.
38. What is a primary source? Examples:
A primary source is a document/artifact created in the past that we can use to learn about that time. Sometimes a first hand account of an event. Diary, photo…
38. What is a secondary source? Examples:
A secondary source is a document/artifact created by historians/archaeologists/etc who are explaining what they have learned about the past from primary sources. Textbook, documentary…
39. Give two examples of primary sources and two secondary sources from this unit (activity, readings, etc.)
Primary – petroglyphs, tools, oral traditions of Native Americans
Secondary – history books, movies, posters
36.In what ways are oral traditions important to modern Native Americans?
People, like the Native Americans, who did not have writing had to memorize everything that was important to their tribe. Oral traditions were how they passed on their knowledge.
37.What types of information is passed down in oral traditions?
History, language, cultureGenealogyKnowledge of medicine, hunting, making items like clothes, baskets, pottery, etc.Religious stories
35. Which tribe was Utah named after?
Utes
1)2)3)
34.Which tribe held rabbit and cricket drives to get meat?
Goshute
33.This tribe, like the Ute, became very good at using the horse, eventually adopting teepees and a mobile lifestyle to follow large game like buffalo.
Shoshone
32.This tribes territory covered much of eastern Utah and western Colorado, but eventually they were forced to move onto reservations, including the Uintah reservation.
Utes
31.This tribe used over 100 different desert plants for food and medicine.
Goshute
30.Sand painting, silver smithing, and weaving are all crafts this tribe is known for.
Navajo
29.Which tribe was massacred at Bear River?
Shoshone
28.Which tribe was the largest and most powerful in Utah when the Mormon settlers arrived?
Utes
27.What tribe from Southwest Utah were hunters and gatherers, but also farmed on occasion?
Paiutes
26.Which Indian tribe was sometimes called "Root-Diggers"?
Goshute
25.Which tribe got sheep from the Spanish and used the wool to weave beautiful rugs, blankets, & cloth?
Navajo
24.Where did these people get the materials to build their dwellings (homes)?
They found the things they used in nature, such as animal hides, wood, brush and grasses, clay, etc.
22.Name the five modern tribes that live in Utah today.
Navajo, Goshute, Paiute, Ute, Shoshone
23.What type of dwelling (house) did each group live in?
Utes – tepeesShoshone – tepees (at times wickiups)Goshute – wickiupsPaiute – wickiupsNavajo - hogans
20. What is the difference between a petroglyph and a pictogram?
Petroglyphs are carved into rock with a stone; pictograms are painted onto rock.
21. What are some of the reasons they may have created this rock art? (3-5 reasons)
History, good luck in hunting, religious rituals, graffiti- for fun, maps, warnings to other people
17.What type of dwelling (house) did the Fremont live in? Draw one.
pithouse
18. Give five examples of artifacts made by the Fremont people.
Coil grey pottery, jewelry, dolls, rock art, pithouses
19.Where could you go to see Fremont ruins in Utah today?
Fremont State Park; Range Creek
14.What type of dwelling (house) did the Anasazi live in? Draw one.
Pueblos, cliff dwellings, pithouses
15. Give five examples of artifacts made by the Anasazi people.
Black and white pottery, jewelry, rock art, pueblos, mano and metate, kiva
16.Where could you go to see Anasazi ruins in Utah today?
Hovenweep, Anasazi State Park
11. What is hunting and gathering? Describe how it works, who does what work, etc.
A method for getting food used by people mostly in the past. Men typically hunted animals, women typically gathered plants.
12. What is farming/agriculture? Describe how it work, who does the work, etc.
Planting seeds and harvesting plants to provide food for a community. Lots more work to do in farming so families are very large and everyone helps.
13. What are some the benefits of each system, and some of the problems they can create? (at – Hunting/Gathering
Problems: Benefit:Can’t have lots of kids People healthierSmall population More equalityMay not get enough food Less disease
13. What are some the benefits of each system, and some of the problems they can create? (at – Farming
Problems: Benefit:Diseases Bigger populationPoor nutrition/shorter life Complex societyRich/poor – less equality Food surplus
10. How did the atlatl make hunting easier?
It is faster, easier to throw, more accurate at hitting things, can take down smaller targets, and uses less resources.
9.Why did early groups of people move from place to place?
They moved to find food because they were hunters and gatherers.
8.How did most prehistoric Indians spend their time?
Traveling looking for food, hunting and gathering, making tools, telling stories that taught their family about their history, religion, and how to survive.
6.What are the names of the two earliest groups of prehistoric people?
Paleo-Indians; Archaic Indians/Desert Gatherers
7.Which prehistoric Indian group was the earliest to live in Utah?
Paleo-Indians
5.What is one of the greatest challenges archaeologists face today in Utah?
Vandals who destroy archaeological sites and looters who steal artifacts from archaeological sites.
4.What types of items have helped them learn about Paleo-Indians?
Mostly stone tools like Clovis points, but also some preserved bones, animal remains, and trash left at camp sites.
3.How do archaeologists learn about the past?
Mostly by studying artifacts they find from conducting digs.
2.When do archaeologists think humans arrive in Utah?
13,000 – 20,000 years ago at least
1.In what ways did the earliest people adapt to climate change?
They changed what animals they hunted and how they hunted, they adapted their use of plants as the climate became drier, they changed their clothing styles, etc.
Take out your Chapter 3 Study Guide packet (study guide, maps).Only the packet and something to write with can be on your desk!
Start working on the essay brainstorms (You must do all three!)
Where should your backpack be?
Bell ActivityThis is a no gum class. Please dispose of it properly!
Question #1 Choose one of the groups of people you learned about in Chapter 3. Describe how they lived and the contributions they made to the people who came after them and/or to us today. (Paleo-Indians, Archaic, Fremont, Anazazi, Ute, Paiute, Goshute, Shoshone, etc.)
1st detail
2nd detail
3rd detail
Question #2 What contributions (gifts, history, heritage, knowledge) have Native Americans made to Utah?
1st detail
2nd detail
3rd detail
Question #3 What were some of the advantages and disadvantages of hunting and gathering and/or farming?
1st detail
2nd detail
3rd detail
First: Get an ipad and log into Canvas. ◦Log in name: s# + @s.loganschools.org
Second: Choose the chapter 3 test and complete it. Put your ipad back on the charging cord.
Finally: Complete the essay.
Tests