Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Turtle Mountain has kept the craft beer flowing and food menu growing for 25 years in Rio Rancho. It is commemorating the milestone with a 25th anniversary beer and a family-style lunch and dinner ...
The agency is responsible for 12,000 Assiniboine and Sioux enrolled tribal members and the reservation contains about 2,094,000 acres of land within its exterior boundary. . There are about 939,165 acres of tribal and allotted surface trust acreage that includes Turtle Mountain Public Domain lan
It is within the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation. The population was 1,510 at the 2020 census. [4] The community is the seat of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians. Belcourt was originally known as Siipiising, which is Anishinaabe (Chippewa) for "creek that sings with life-giving water." The name refers to what European Americans ...
She was a visiting professor at Turtle Mountain Community College and the Arizona State University from 2011 to 2012, where she taught Native American studies, studio art, art history, literature, and anthropology. [7]
The Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians (Ojibwe language: Mikinaakwajiw-ininiwag) is a federally recognized Native American tribe of Ojibwe based on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation in Belcourt, North Dakota. The tribe has 30,000 enrolled members.
KEYA (88.5 FM), is a National Public Radio member station in Belcourt, North Dakota.Its studios are located at the Turtle Mountain Chippewa Reservation in Belcourt and have been through many renovations and changes.
The traditional tribal leadership of Little Shell of The Pembina Band departed from The Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians and briefly camped in Dunsieth, ND where the Little Shell Campsite is memorialized, before residing at Spirit Lake, North Dakota, and Wolf Point, Montana. The successors apparent of the Pembina Band are:
Turtle Mountains at left across Ward Valley & Danby Lake. (view from southeast Iron Mountains) The Turtle Mountains (Amat 'Achii'ar in the Mojave language), [3] are located in northeastern San Bernardino County, in the southeastern part of California. The colorful Turtle Mountains vary from deep reds, browns, tans and grays, to black.