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Geo Soctomah Neptune is a Passamaquoddy Two-Spirit, master basket maker, activist, storyteller, model, and educator from Indian Township, Maine. Neptune uses they/them pronouns. Neptune uses they/them pronouns.
Geo Soctomah Neptune, Passamaquoddy; Julia Parker, Coast Miwok/Kashaya Pomo (born 1929) Essie Parrish, Kashaya Pomo (1902–1979) Christine Navarro Paul, Chitimacha, (1874-1946) Sheila Kanieson Ransom (b. 1954) Akwesasne; April Stone, Lake Superior Chippewa; Boeda Strand, Snohomish; Lucy Telles, Mono Lake Paiute/Miwok
The Passamaquoddy (Passamaquoddy: Peskotomuhkati, Plural: Peskotomuhkatiyik) are a Native American/First Nations people who live in northeastern North America. Their traditional homeland, Peskotomuhkatikuk, straddles the Canadian province of New Brunswick and the U.S. state of Maine in a region called Dawnland.
Donald Soctomah (born 1955) is a Native American author, filmmaker, historian, and politician. He serves as the tribal historic preservation officer for the Passamaquoddy tribe, where he works with both the U.S. and Canadian governments on the protection of culturally significant sites, artifacts and knowledge. [ 1 ]
National Geographic Channel MARS: Inside SpaceX 12 November 2018 Curiosity: Life of a Mars Rover 4 November 2018 Egypt's Sun King: Secrets and Treasures 21 October 2018 Free Solo: 28 September 2018 Martin Luther King Jr.: Marked Man 4 September 2018 Mafia Confidential 29 July 2018 Big Sharks Rule 16 July 2018 Nat Geo Wild Shark vs. Tuna 16 July ...
Madonna M. Soctomah is a Passamaquoddy politician from Maine. Soctomah represented the Passamaquoddy people as a non-voting tribal representative in the Maine House of Representatives . She has been elected by her people to four two-year terms (2000, 2002, 2010, 2012).
Geo Rutherford (born 1984 or 1985) is an American artist, educator, and TikToker based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. [1] She considers herself to be a hobbyist limnologist ...
Geopoetics gained recognition and popularity primarily in academic and literary circles during the late 20th and early 21st centuries. [3] It has been embraced by poets, writers, artists, and scholars worldwide as a way to rethink and reimagine their relationship with the environment. [3]