Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Cahuilla have intermarried with non-Cahuilla for the past century. A high proportion of today's Cahuilla tribal members have mixed ancestry, especially Spanish and African American . People who have grown up in the tribe's ways and identify culturally with the Cahuilla may qualify for official tribal membership by the tribe's internal rules.
The Cahuilla Reservation) is located in Riverside County near the town of The reservation includes Cahuilla, California , [ 6 ] where the Cahuilla Casino is located. [ citation needed ] The reservation is 18,884 acres (76.42 km 2 ), with 16,884 acres (68.33 km 2 ) owned by individual tribe members.
The Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians of the Agua Caliente Indian Reservation is a federally recognized tribe of the Cahuilla, located in Riverside County, California, United States. [3] The Cahuilla inhabited the Coachella Valley desert and surrounding mountains between 5000 BCE and 500 CE. With the establishment of the reservations, the ...
The Cahuilla creation story tells of the origin of the world, the death of god (Mukat), and the consequences of that death for humans (e.g., the need for death, social roles, and so forth). It also describes the basic concepts of supernatural power and its proper use in the contemporary world.
Created Date: 8/30/2012 4:52:52 PM
Bruce Winterhalder [16] incorporates food-sharing among groups into the diet breadth model derived from optimal foraging theory as a means to reduce risk. Risk is measured in this model as a measure of the probability that a forager's net acquisition rate (NAR) falls below a minimum value, such as a threshold for starvation.
Goss-Custard's PhD was based on the study of foraging in the Common Redshank. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Subsequently, he worked at the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology 's Furzebrook Research Station at Wareham, Dorset , leading an extensive project on the foraging of overwintering Eurasian Oystercatchers on the estuary of the River Exe . [ 3 ]
Golden Checkerboard (1965) is a book by Ed Ainsworth [nb 1] about the mid-20th century economic conditions of the Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians of Palm Springs, California and the history of the 99-year lease law, which enabled them to commercially develop tribal-owned lands.