Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_I - Innu Indians Native Americans
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 5     81-96 of 96    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5 
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Innu Indians Native Americans:     more detail
  1. A Way of Life That Does Not Exist: Canada and the Extinguishment of the Innu by Colin Samson, 2003-05
  2. It's Like the Legend: Innu Women's Voices

81. Books: Native American Indian Education Resources For School & Library Distribut
The (Lifeways), hardcover Iroquois, The (native Am. Kah Ki Yaw Ni Wahkomakanak NeitherIndian Princesses Nor Inuit It s Like the Legend innu Women s Voices
http://www.goodminds.com/books/menu.htm
Books available
(Ad)dressing Our Words: Aboriginal Perspectives on Aboriginal Literature
500 Nations: An Illustrated History of North American Indians

A to Z of Native American Women: A Biographical Dictionary

A Very Remarkable Sickness: Epidemics in the Petit Nord, 1670-1846
...
Zunis, The (A True Book), paper ed.

82. University Of Oklahoma Law Center - American Indian Tribal/Nation Home Pages
innu Nation/Mamit innuat; United Keetoowah Band the Tribes of the Umatilla IndianReservation; Wichita and Return to native American Legal Resources Home Page
http://www.law.ou.edu/indian/ainations.html
The University of Oklahoma Law Center
American Indian Tribal/Nation Home Pages
Return to:
Native American Legal Resources Home Page

University of Oklahoma Law Center Home Page
This page is maintained by:
Marilyn K. Nicely - nicely@hamilton.law.ou.edu
American Indian Law Subject Specialist
Date Last Modified: 8 January 2003
OU Law Center Web Policy Statement

Equal Opportunity Statement

83. Native American Clothing - Pitt Rivers Museum
innu (Naskapi) women of northern Quebec and Labrador native American people were discouragedfrom wearing traditional to 1951, the Canadian Indian Act forbade
http://www.prm.ox.ac.uk/native.html
Fact Sheets
Art of Benin
Australia

China

Cook
...
Masks

* Native American Clothing
Native American Photo.

Textiles

The Totem Pole
"To Please the Spirits": Native American Clothing
For thousands of years, Native American women have made beautiful and functional clothing for their families. They used their skills to prepare hides and to cut and sew tailored clothing which would protect their families from harsh weather. In making and decorating clothing, women also expressed values central to Native American societies: industry, generosity, and especially kinship. The garments on display in the North American clothing case (near the totem pole) were labours of love and skill. It takes about 40 hours of hard physical work to prepare a hide properly so it can be used for clothing: the hide must be carefully removed from the animal, scraped of flesh, and preparations rubbed into it to prevent it from rotting. It then needs to be stretched and rubbed to soften it, and then evenly smoked to a beautiful tan colour. Native women had very high standards for the preparation of hides, and would notice if someone's hides were poorly prepared. Cutting and sewing a hide shirt, dress, or coat also involved very skilled work. Garments were cut to take advantage of the natural shape of hides. The leather was cut using flint blades, and later, scissors or steel knives traded from Europeans. Seams were sewn with thread made from sinew, the long muscles along the back of a hoofed mammal, which was carefully dried and split into even lengths. Even after European contact, women preferred to use sinew for sewing, which they simply passed through a hole in the hide made with an awl. Steel awls were very efficient, and could be made out of scraps of items traded from Europeans set into bone handles; Plains women wore awl cases as accessories on their belts much as European women wore "chatelaines" with scissors.

84. Native American Links
innu Nation and Mamit innuat Site. Oneida Indian Nation. Other native American websitesyou may want to link to are located The First native American Newspaper
http://www.rialto.k12.ca.us/frisbie/native.htm
Information on Native Americans
General List
Specific List

85. Oregon Indian Council On Post-Secondary Education
innu Nation/Mamit innuat (Canada), http//www.innu.ca/. Other native Sites of Interest,American Indian World s Fair and PowWow, http//www.usaindianinfo.org/.
http://www.osac.state.or.us/oicpse/links.html
Home
Contents

Links

Mission
...
Minutes

Oregon Indian Coalition
on Postsecondary Education
Links
Description Link BIA/Federal Links BIA Genealogical Information http://www.doi.gov/bia/ancestry/genealog.html Bureau of Indian Affairs on line http://www.doi.gov/bureau-indian-affairs.html CodeTalk - Native American Federal Inter-agency Website http://www.codetalk.fed.us/ Indian Health Service Internet Home Page http://www.ihs.gov/ Education Links American Indian Studies at Washington U http://gwbweb.wustl.edu/Users/Buder/bcais.html Association of American Medical Colleges: Minority Medical Ed Programs http://www.aamc.org/meded/minority/mmep/ U of Oklahoma American Indian Health Research http://w3.ouhsc.edu/coph/CophSub/CAIHRtxt.htm Oregon State University Indian Education Office http://www.orst.edu/Dept/indianed/ UCLA NA Studies http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/indian/ Scholarship/Financial Aid Resources Absolutely Scholarships http://www.absolutelyscholarships.com/scholarship American Indian Graduate Center http://www.aigc.com/ Alaska Student Loans http://www.state.ak.us/acpe/

86. NATIVE-L (December 1992) By Thread
Wolves Steve Smith; native Community Research Site Sup simon@web.apc.org; Re URGENTBULLETIN RE innu IN QUEBEC pcwf@web.apc.org; American Indian Studies programs
http://nativenet.uthscsa.edu/archive/nl/9212/
NATIVE-L (December 1992) by thread
Articles:

87. EDU2 : Level 3
About innu History and Culture; innu Nation/Mamit Web Site; The Russian Church andNative Alaskan Cultures; Brazil s Canela indians Home Page; CITIES CIUDADES
http://www.my-edu2.com/EDU/cult4.htm
EDU2 :NATIVE AMERICAN
ABCentral Search Helpers Submit a Link ...
  • The American West - Native Americans *NATIVE TRIBES*
  • Blue Otter's Web Sites:cherokee
  • COLVILLETRIBES.COM
  • Cabazon Band of Mission Indians
  • Cheyenne's Page ...
  • Virginia Indians for Younger Readers *NAVAJO*
  • An Introduction to the Navajo Culture
  • Ms. Safarik's page:on the navajo
  • Navajo Clans
  • Navajo Genealogy and Family History of Harrison Lapahie Jr. ...
  • The Din'e (Navajo) People *POLAR*
  • ARCTIC STUDIES CENTER Home
  • Alaska Native Knowledge Network
  • ArcticCircle Home Page
  • Information About Innu History and Culture ...
  • Welcome to The Ice!!!:antarctica *SOUTH AMERICAN*
  • Brazil's Canela Indians Home Page
  • CITIES - CIUDADES - CIDADES - ORTE :german cities in brazil
  • Central American Cultural - Ecological Information Network
  • Cultures of the Andes, Quechua, Songs, Poems, Stories, Photos ...
  • The Quipu, an Incan Data Structure Return to ABCentral
  • 88. BACK FROM THE BRINK: Native Peoples And The Future - NI 186 - Indian Wars
    According to innu leader Greg Penashue, Indian people who live The innu, he argues,must be able to pursue in solidarity and support of Canadian native people.
    http://www.newint.org/issue186/wars.htm
    new internationalist
    issue 186 - August 1988 Indian wars
    Native people the world over have become increasingly embroiled
    in global militarism - often against their will. Uranium is mined on Indian
    land in Saskatchewan and Nevada, US army bases are built on native land
    in the Philippines, American and French nuclear weapons disrupt the lives of
    Pacific peoples. Here we look at two case studies of these new Indian wars.
    Nicaragua - where the Miskito people were swept up in President Reagan’s
    fanatical campaign against the Sandinista revolution. And Labrador
    - where the lnnu people are fighting NATO war training that
    threatens to destroy their culture. Caught in the crossfire by Ana Carrigan It is 6:00 am on the beach at Puerto Cabezas on Nicaragua’s Atlantic coast. Every morning at this hour 100 or so townspeople gather to watch the fishermen haul their nets to shore with the night’s catch. The scene has a Biblical timelessness about it: this is how they might have fished on the shores of Lake Galilee. For someone fresh off the plane from Managua that over-worked phrase ‘culture-shock’ takes on fresh meaning. This curious part of Central America still retains the feeling of a remote Caribbean island - one that has become involved in a social revolution as if by accident.

    89. Native American Genealogy Resources
    fill out the form at the bottom of this page. native American History Tribal Links. Additional native American Genealogy Resources.
    http://www.angelfire.com/tx/carolynegenealogy/NA_links.html
    var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "angelfire.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded"
    Are you trapped in a Frame? LIBERATE YOURSELF! You'll have access to the entire site!
    Whether you are doing historical or genealogical research, please note that "Iroquois" is a non-Native term. The term is used to represent the six aboriginal nations who united to form a confederacy. The result was what some people call "The Iroquois Confederacy." The correct designation should be Haudenosaunee, or the Haudenosaunee Confederacy. It is an unfortunate fact that most of the names the native tribes are known by today, were actually words given to those tribes by their enemies. It was not the name the tribe, (or group, in the case of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy), gave themselves. The word "Iroquois" is a French variation of an Abenaki word which meant "rattlesnake." It is my hope that by using the word "Iroquois" here and there on my website, someone may stop by and pass the correct information on to others. The people who make up the nations of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy will thank you. The six nations who formed the Haudenosaunee Confederacy are: the Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida, Mohawk, and Tuscarora. Each nation is a separate group with their own government, land base, and membership.

    90. Aboriginal First Nation Organizations First Nation Native American Indian Tribal
    CommunitiesTurtle Island native Network-Aboriginal news and information. A well managed intersection for Aboriginal Peoples on the Information Highway.
    http://www.turtleisland.org/communities/communities-organizations.htm

    FRIENDSHIP CENTRES

    First Nations and Native American Education Organizations First Nations Confederacy of Cultural Education Centres First Nations on SchoolNet Mi'kmaw Kina'matnewey the whole process of learning Kitigan Zibi Education Council First Nations Education Ccouncil Northern Nishnawbe Education Council Windigo Education Authority Keewaytinook Okimakanak Keewatin Career Development Corporation First Nations Education Steering Committee First Nations Schools Association Aboriginal Youth and Family Well Being and Education Society World Indigenous Nations Higher Education Consortium First Nations Adult and Higher Education Consortium American Indian Higher Education Consortium National Indian Education Association Ontario Native Education Counselling Association Ontario Aboriginal Institutes' Consortium American Indian Library Association Federation of Nunavut Teachers Consortium for Alaska Native Higher Education Center for American Indian Research and Education American Indian Science and Engineering Society National Indian Telecommunications Institute Association of American Indian Physicians Native Pyschologists of Canada Native American Pharmacists Aboriginal Nurses Association American Indian Graduate Center Coalition for the Advancement of Aboriginal Studies Indigenous Education Network Aboriginal Literacy Foundation Canadian Aboriginal Science and Technology Society Indigenous and Native Studies Association Center for World Indigenous Studies Indigenous Bar Association Links to Aboriginal Women's Organizations /Resources

    91. Aboriginal First Nations Native American Culture History Spirituality Traditions
    Turtle Island native NetworkCanada's Aboriginal news and information network. A well managed intersection for Aboriginal Peoples on the Information Highway.
    http://www.turtleisland.org/culture/culture.htm
    SPOTLIGHT on Traditional and
    Contemporary CULTURE
    Cultural Protection,Preservation, Restoration/Repatriation The Traditional meets the Contemporary Imagine being able to travel through a traditional Northwest Coast village site that no longer exists The use of interactive multimedia rather than translation is being used to revitalize the Mohawk language Traditional Iroquois way of growing works for today's farmers, providing valuable ecological lessons $6 Million for research projects to strengthen Aboriginal communities and cultures Unveiling of 14-foot tall bronze sculpture by master Haida carver Jim Hart Remove legal obstacles to repatriation of Aboriginal ancestral remains in British museums and galleries November is Native American Heritage Month Repatriation program National Museum of Natural History Smithsonian Institute UBC Museum of Anthropology Guidelines on Repatriation Dance, ceremony, at Field Museum will commemorate repatriation of Haida ancestors to Haida Gwaii Wataybugaw Festival Rediscovering Thanksgiving from a First Nation's Perspective World Premiere of Metis writer, director Gil Cardinal's

    92. NATIVE AMERICAN WEB
    Memory Project. Research Guides. Government Agencies affecting nativeAmericans; Indian Law Materials; native American Law Guide; native
    http://www.washlaw.edu/doclaw/nativ5m.html

    93. Native American Law - MegaLaw.com
    et al. v. DuBois. nativeWeb; Oklahoma Indian Times Comprehensive andinformative native American news information. The Tribal Court
    http://www.megalaw.com/top/native.php
    MegaLaw.com MegaLawBooks.com MegaDepos.com MegaLaw ... Contact Us Official Case Law:
    MegaLaw partners:
    NATIVE AMERICAN LAW Home Legal Research Topic Index > Native American Law Supreme Court Decisions Other Native American Web Sites

    94. Native American News
    America Calling , the AIROS flagship program, is a live onehour call-in show, nowdistributed to over 40 native and non-native radio stations across Indian
    http://www.owlstar.com/
    Lawsuit for Indians' benefits ( 6/7) Call for U.S. apology to Indians (6/7) More news and links to stories about tribal people in the Western Hemisphere
    Questions or comments are welcome. Mail Janet at owlstar@speakeasy.org
    Aboriginal/AmerIndian Perspective about the First Nations of Turtle Island
    Wotanging Ikche Lakota Common News
    Kanoheda Aniyvwiya Cherokee Journal of the People
    Otapi'sin Atsinikiisinaakssin Blackfoot News for All the People
    Es'te Opunvk'vmucvse Creek People's New News
    Aunchemokauhettittea Naragansett Let Us Share News
    Ni-mah-mi-kwa-zoo-min Ojibwe We Are Talking About Ourselves
    Ha-Sah-Sliltha Ditidaht Nation News of the People
    Un Chota Susquehannic Seneca The People Speak
    Ximopanolti tehuatzin, inin Mexika tlahtolli Nahuatl For you we offer these words It-hah-pe-hah Ah-num pah-le Chicasaw Together We Are Talking Sho-da-ku-ye Teehahnahmah Talking Birchbark Acimowin Plains Cree Story or Account or Report Dineh jii' adah' ho'nil'e'gii ba' ha' neh Navajo Nation What's Happening among The People News Okla Humma Holisso Nowat Anya Choctaw People(s) Red Newspaper Hi'a chu ah gaa Pima The stories or the talk of the People Agnutmaqan Listuguj Mi'kmaq News Native American News Language of the Occupation Forces If you speak a Native American language not listed above, please send us your words for "news." We'd rather take up this whole page saving these few words of our hundreds of nations than present a nice clean banner in the language of those people who came here determined to replace our words with their own.

    95. Page Not Found
    THE MOST native AMERICAN LINKS ON THE WEB.
    http://www.eandgcomputers.com/peacepipe/nativeamerican.htm
    Page not found
    The page you are looking for might have been removed, had its name changed, or is temporarily unavailable.
    Please try the following: If you typed the page address in the Address bar, make sure that it is spelled correctly. - Click the Back button in your browser to try another link. - Use a search engine like Google to look for information on the Internet. HTTP 404 - File not found

    96. PHILTAR - North America/Traditional Religions/Tribes
    This page provides links to native American origin/creation stories of four Indiannations, to a discussion of the Mide , described as the native religion of
    http://philtar.ucsm.ac.uk/regional/north-america/traditionalreligions/tribes/

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 5     81-96 of 96    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5 

    free hit counter