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  2. Karankawa people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karankawa_people

    The Karankawa also possessed a gesture language for conversing with people from other Native American tribes. [6] [page needed] The Karankawa were noted for their skill of communicating with each other over long distances using smoke signals. The Karankawa could make the smoke of a small fire ascend toward the sky in many different ways, and it ...

  3. Plains Indians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plains_Indians

    Stumickosúcks of the Kainai. George Catlin, 1832 Comanches capturing wild horses with lassos, approximately July 16, 1834 Spotted Tail of the Lakota Sioux. Plains Indians or Indigenous peoples of the Great Plains and Canadian Prairies are the Native American tribes and First Nations peoples who have historically lived on the Interior Plains (the Great Plains and Canadian Prairies) of North ...

  4. Indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest Coast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigenous_peoples_of_the...

    The term Pacific Northwest is largely used in the American context. At one point, the region had the highest population density of a region inhabited by Indigenous peoples in Canada. [1] [2] [3] Chief Anotklosh of the Taku Tribe of the Tlingit people, ca. 1913 Painting representing "Three Young Chinook Men" by George Catlin

  5. Classification of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classification_of_the...

    The Na-Dené, Inuit and Alaska Native populations exhibit haplogroup Q (Y-DNA) mutations, however are distinct from other Indigenous Americans with various mtDNA mutations. [ 82 ] [ 83 ] [ 84 ] This suggests that the earliest migrants into the northern extremes of North America and Greenland derived from later populations.

  6. Coast Salish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coast_Salish

    The first smallpox epidemic to hit the region was in the 1680s, with the disease travelling overland from Mexico by intertribal transmission. [12] Among losses due to diseases, and a series of earlier epidemics that had wiped out many peoples entirely, e.g. the Snokomish in 1850, a smallpox epidemic broke out among the Northwest tribes in 1862, killing roughly half the affected native ...

  7. Salish peoples - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salish_peoples

    Matika Wilbur is a Swinomish and Tulalip photographer, and the creator of Project 562, which documents contemporary Native Americans from the 562 federally-recognized tribes in the United States. [20] Debra Sparrow is a Musqueam artist and weaver. Her weaving was featured in The Fabric of Our Land: Salish Weaving exhibit at the Museum of ...

  8. Coast Miwok - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coast_Miwok

    The Coastal Post. Archived from the original on December 9, 2012. Silliman, Stephen (2004). Lost Laborers in Colonial California, Native Americans and the Archaeology of Rancho Petaluma. Tucson, AZ: University of Arizona Press. ISBN 0-8165-2381-9. Shumway, Burgess M. (1988). California Ranchos: Patented Private Land Grants Listed by County. San ...

  9. Indigenous peoples of the Eastern Woodlands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigenous_peoples_of_the...

    The Plains Indians culture area is to the west; the Subarctic area to the north. The Indigenous people of the Eastern Woodlands spoke languages belonging to several language groups, including Algonquian , [ 2 ] Iroquoian , [ 2 ] Muskogean , and Siouan , as well as apparently isolated languages such as Calusa , Chitimacha , Natchez , Timucua ...