Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_N - Navajo Indians Native Americans

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 1     1-20 of 100    1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
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  

         Navajo Indians Native Americans:     more books (104)
  1. Navajo Indians (Native Americans) by Caryn Yacowitz, 2003-06
  2. NATIVE PEOPLES MAGAZINE The Arts and Lifeways Summer, 1992 Volume 5 Number 4 (Native American, Indian, Navajo Tradition, Native American Olympians, Great Basin Pinenuts, Yanomamo)
  3. NATIVE PEOPLES MAGAZINE The Arts and Lifeways Summer, 1992 Volume 5 Number 4 (Native American, Indian, Navajo Tradition, Native American Olympians, Great Bsin Pinenuts, Yanomamo)
  4. Eagle Boy: A Traditional Navajo Legend by Gerald Hausman, Barry Moser, et all 1996-09
  5. Told In The Twilight: A Collection of Pueblo and Navajo Stories and Navajo Mother Goose Rhymes by Isis L Harrington, 1938
  6. Navajo Nation: Navajo language, Native Americans in the United States, Indian reservation, Navajo people,Maricopa County, Arizona, Puebloan peoples, Long Walk of the Navajo, Bureau of Indian Affairs
  7. How the Stars Fell into the Sky: A Navajo Legend (Sandpiper Houghton Mifflin Books) by Jerrie Oughton, 1996-03-03
  8. The Navajo (American Indian Art and Culture) by Rennay Craats, 2004-01
  9. Kinaalda: A Navajo Girl Grows Up (We Are Still Here : Native Americans Today) by Monty Roessel, 1993-09
  10. Navaho Symbols of Healing: A Jungian Exploration of Ritual, Image, and Medicine by Donald Sandner M.D., 1991-06-01
  11. Native Roads: The Complete Motoring Guide to the Navajo and Hopi Nations, Newly Revised Edition by Fran Kosik, 2005-04-21
  12. Zinnia: How the Corn Was Saved by Patricia Hruby Powell, 2004-01-01
  13. Songs from the Loom: A Navajo Girl Learns to Weave (We Are Still Here : Native Americans Today) by Monty Roessel, 1995-08
  14. Navajo Courts and Navajo Common Law: A Tradition of Tribal Self-Governance (Indigenous Americas) by Raymond D. Austin, 2009-11-25

1. Native Americans - Internet Resources.
Find links to documents, regional and cultural bibliographies, teaching resources, and periodicals relating to native American history and culture. by and about native americans. A Critical Bibliography on North American indians, for K12 art, religion, wisdom of Cherokee . Apache, navajo, Cheyenne, Pueblo, Sioux, Blackfoot
http://falcon.jmu.edu/~ramseyil/native.htm
Native Americans - Internet Resources
Welcome to the Internet School Library Media Center Native American page. You will find bibliographies, directories to pages of individual tribes, history and historical documents, periodicals and general links. The ISLMC is a preview site for teachers, librarians, students and parents. You can search this site, use an index or sitemap . The following sites have useful information on Native Americans. This page revised 1/22/00. NOTE: The Internet is being overwhelmed by viruses and spam. Please protect your computer with appropriate software. Also, many worthwhile sites have "pop-ups" which may change to include content unknown to me. Use preview sites before using with children.

Bibliographies
Directories Author Pages History ... Periodicals See Also: Virginia's Indians The Cherokees Native American Authors
Bibliographies
Selected Bibliography on Native American Writers and Their Writings
A Wallace library guide
Native Americans. Bibliography. Juvenile Books

Native Americans. Bibliography. Young Adult Books

Fiction; biography; poetry; drama by and about Native Americans.
A Critical Bibliography on North American Indians, for K-12

2. NARA | ALIC | Indians/Native Americans
location and use of records pertaining to native americans and americans of minority PlanMemorandum Regarding the Enlistment of navajo indians This NARA
http://www.archives.gov/research_room/alic/reference_desk/native_american_links.
Where Is...? / How Do I...? Where Is...? Hot Topics / What's New The Constitution The Declaration of Independence The Bill of Rights Genealogy Veterans' Service Records Archival Research Catalog (ARC) Access to Archival Databases (AAD) Electronic Records Archives (ERA) Archives Library Info. Center (ALIC) Calendar of Events FAQs FOIA Reading Room Information Security Oversight Office Interagency Working Group (IWG) Locations and Hours (Facilities) Media Desk Organization Chart Preservation Prologue Magazine Publications How Do I...? Use this Site Order Copies Contact NARA Visit NARA Apply for a Job Volunteer at NARA Research Online Find a Public Law Apply for a Grant Find Records Management Training April 9, 2003 Sections ALIC Main Page Research Tools Reference at Your Desk Associations ... About ALIC Resources The Library Catalog Microfilm Catalog NARA Electronic Publications Archives USA ... Contact ALIC Staff Indians/Native Americans This page contains links to American history relating to Native Americans. During November we celebrate Native American/Alaskan Native Heritage Month. Check out these

3. Native Americans
in Tennessee WebQuest; native americans of North Carolina - WebQuest; In the Timeof the Old Ones - Online lesson about the navajo indians' close relationship
http://edtech.kennesaw.edu/web/natam.html
Native Americans Research/Informational Sites

4. Browse The Modern English Collection Electronic Text Center
Largest collection of 19th and 20th-century native American literature available online; also includes Category Arts Literature Cultural native American...... texts Other users search all unrestricted works including native American texts. FenimoreCooper's Libels on America and americans. The navajo indians 1890
http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/subjects/Native-American.html

5. In The Time Of The Old Ones
Douglas party, including Navaho and Paiute indians, celebrate their A navajo fontfor your Windows computer or contact a guest speaker (native americans in your
http://www.itdc.sbcss.k12.ca.us/curriculum/oldones.html
In the Time of the Old Ones
Notes to the Teacher
The Navajo people (who call themselves DinŽ or Dineh) are known for their close relationship with all forms of life, and their desire to live in balance with nature. They are also known for their ability to adapt to their surroundings. The Navajo have a long history with many traditions. They are famous for many arts such as jewelry, pottery, basket making, and sand painting, but they are most famous for their weaving. The Navajo believe that weaving is a gift from a spirit. Their legends say that Spider Woman taught them to weave.
The Task
Explore and experience the Navajo Indians' close relationship with the land they lived on. To do this:
  • Identify why the Navajo wrote legends about the environment, and how they showed it in their rugs and blankets.
    Design a geometric rug pattern to symbolize a natural resource or part of the environment in your area.
    Create a legend about how that environmental object came into being.
The Process
  • Start a project journal to record thoughts, questions and answers, and ideas as you go through the project. Begin by writing what you already know about Navajo Indians.
  • 6. Navajo Nation
    Well, on the navajo Nation, most cowboys ARE indians! Map 4. navajo Nation Lukachukai,Arizona 5. navajo Nation Directory. RETURN TO native americans HOME PAGE.
    http://www.americanwest.com/pages/navajo2.htm
    EXPLORE THE NAVAJO NATION
    Beautiful MONUMENT VALLEY sits quietly in the northwest portion of the Navajo Nation.
    (Note: To enlarge the pictures, just click on the underlined colored text)
    Tenacious...adaptable...enduring...spiritual...
    ...words that characterize the largest and most influential Indian tribe in North America...
    The Navajo Nation.
    Since the Long Walk in the 1860's, the Navajo Nation decimated to a population of only 8,000. It has increased to a stronghold of more than 210,000. About 60 percent of Navajos are 24 years old or younger. In its infancy, the Navajo Nation governed itself by a complex language and clan system. The discovery of oil in the early 1920's clarified the need for a more systematic form of government. So, in 1923, the Navajos established a tribal government; thus providing an entity to deal with American oil companies wishing to lease Navajoland for exploration.
    A Navajo elder, Thelma Nez , in traditional dress is preparing to tend to her daily livestock chores.
    Today, the Navajo Nation Council has grown into the largest and most sophisticated American Indian government in the U.S.

    7. American West - Native Americans
    native American Nations Homepages. The navajo Office of Tourism in Window Rock,AZ., submitted the content. 6. United Keetoowa Band of Cherokee indians WWW.
    http://www.americanwest.com/pages/nathom.htm
    NATIVE AMERICANS
    Native American Nations Homepages
    TABLE OF CONTENTS General Native American Resources Native American Nations Homepages Education Organizations And Government Sources ... Six Nations - Insights from the first tribes to make contact with Europeans. Eastern Delaware Nations NAVAJO NATION'S MAIN HOME PAGE
    We designed this web-page for the Navajo Nation. The Navajo Office of Tourism in Window Rock, AZ., submitted the content. History of the Cherokee Cherokee Messenger United Keetoowa Band of Cherokee Indians WWW 7. Ethnobotany of the Cherokee Indians American Indian Tribal Directory (link was formerly: Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians) North Georgia's Cherokee Indians The Hopi Way - Cloud Dancing ILT History: Native American Tribes A Guide to the Great Sioux Nation - South Dakota Lenapi Delaware Tribe of Indians The Tlingit National Anthem from Alaska's Tongass Miami Nation Homepage Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe ... The Stockbridge Munse Tribe of Mohican Indians
    The Muh-He-Ka-Ne-Ok
    Return to the top...
    Return to the AmericanWest Home Page.

    8. Navajo Indians
    SEARCH RESULTS 1 12 of 17 American indians and the Southwest http //nhusd.k12 http//ausbcomp.com/redman/navajo.htm; native americans http //twingroves
    http://cybersleuth-kids.com/sleuth/History/Native_Americans/Native_Tribes/Navajo

    9. Native Americans Of The Southwest
    of territorial conflicts between southwestern native americans and US New Mexico TheMogollon indians of Arizona navajo indians navajo history, culture, history
    http://gocalifornia.about.com/cs/nativeamericans1/
    zfp=-1 About Travel California / Southwest for Visitors Search in this topic on About on the Web in Products Web Hosting
    California / Southwest for Visitors
    with Betsy Malloy
    Your Guide to one of hundreds of sites Home Articles Forums ... Help zmhp('style="color:#fff"') Subjects ESSENTIALS Tourist Guides Photo Gallery Travel Essentials ... All articles on this topic Stay up-to-date!
    Subscribe to our newsletter.
    Advertising Free Credit Report
    Free Psychics

    Advertisement
    Native Americans of the Southwest
    Guide picks Native Americans of the Southwest - Navajo, Apache, Hopi, Anasazi, primitive tribes, more.
    The Southwest: menu

    More Southwestern United States - native Americans, southwestern cooking, arts, history, the desert, plants and animals, jokes, clip art, travelogues, desert living. Akimel O'Odham - Pima - Akimel O'Othom
    Reservations, history, events and culture of the Akimel O'Odham, Pima, in Arizona. Anasazi Anasazi history, timelines, disappearance theories. Apache Indians Apache history, culture, stories. Camp Verde Yavapai Apache Reservation The Camp Verde Yavapai Apache Reservation is between Phoenix and Flagstaff. Tribes are Yavapai and Apache. Cocopah Indian Reservation The Cocopah Tribe and Indian Reservation south of Yuma, Arizona.

    10. Indians, Native Americans, Press, Part2, By Karen Lincoln Michel - CJR, Nov/Dec
    Tom Arviso, Jr, editor of navajo Times. native American rights advocate Suzan ShownHarjo, president of the Morning Star Institute in Washington, DC, says that
    http://www.cjr.org/year/98/6/res2.asp

    current
    archive resources contact ... subscribe media search:
    newspapers

    magazines

    who owns what
    jobs
    in association with Contents First Amendment
    Repression on the Reservation
    part 2 Tom Arviso, Jr, editor of Navajo Times Native American rights advocate Suzan Shown Harjo, president of the Morning Star Institute in Washington, D.C., says that Indian journalists' problems have their roots in the days when tribes lived in camps and got their news from a "village crier," a designated tribal member who shouted the news throughout the community. "If the village crier reported on something wrong within tribe, he was replaced or punished, or sometimes killed. That's literally killing the messenger." Dan Agent, former editor of the Cherokee Advocate (he was simultaneously public affairs director for the Cherokee Nation in Oklahoma), insists that his principal allegiance was to the Cherokee people when he reported on a political crisis within the tribe last year. For his efforts, Agent believes, he was fired. He found it hard "to give a balanced view to tribal members" when he disagreed morally and ethically with how Principal Chief Joe Byrd was running the Cherokee government. In the six months before his dismissal, the Advocate covered a federal investigation into possible corruption in Byrd's administration, and Byrd's re-interpretation of the tribal constitution that resulted in his supporters having a majority on the Cherokee tribal council.

    11. Indians, Native Americans, Press, By Karen Lincoln Michel - CJR, Nov/Dec 1998
    to cover financial mismanagement involving navajo Nation president for the privatelyowned native American Press of the Mille Lacs Band of Chippewa indians.
    http://www.cjr.org/year/98/6/res.asp

    current
    archive resources contact ... subscribe media search:
    newspapers

    magazines

    who owns what
    jobs
    in association with Contents First Amendment
    Repression on the Reservation
    Native American journalists are in a tough fight for their basic freedoms under the First Amendment by Karen Lincoln Michel
    Michel, 39, is a Ho-Chunk Indian, free-lance writer, and former reporter for The Dallas Morning News . As a general assignment reporter at the La Crosse Tribune in Wisconsin, she won the Wassaja Award – the highest honor given by the Native American Journalists Association – for her two-year coverage of an Indian gaming controversy. Michel is also co-owner of the twice-monthly paper, News From Indian Country. Paul DeMain, editor and co-owner of news From Indian Country, believes that a free press on Indian lands is a remote dream because tribal leaders feel threatened by journalists. In a country where press freedom is a constitutional guarantee, journalists working for American Indian-owned newspapers are denied the basic, fundamental First Amendment rights that are at the very root of news reporting. Some 600 such publications mostly weekly and monthly newspapers are owned and controlled by leaders of Indian tribal governments. Most operate on the conviction that the job of the native press is merely to showcase the tribe's accomplishments not to report the crimes, misdemeanors, and malfeasances that sometimes mark life on the reservation.

    12. Index Of Native American History Resources On The Internet
    Oral Histories and Photographs of navajo Uranium Miners search the index VirginiaCouncil on indians Madison University in the native americans section of
    http://www.hanksville.org/NAresources/indices/NAhistory.html
    WWW Virtual Library - American Indians
    Index of Native American History Resources on the Internet
    F requently A sked ... uestions for this site
    This document must be read before sending any email!
    Search this site
    3/15/03 - New I am now entering new additions each day. The site is now run from a database. It will be about a week until the last new pages appears online. All new or updated links will be noted on the page where they appear. The What's New page is no longer updated. Trust Fund Filing , A New York Times, 1/07/03 Fed up with Spam?
    Try one of these programs! Mac users, my choice is Spamfire, from Matterform Media VIRUS ALERT - Save 50% on McAfee.com VirusScan Online!
    Save $25 on McAfee Internet Essentials
    Thanks again to the many people who support this website with their book purchases and donations. Please learn how you can support this site.
    Oral History
    American Indian Oral History Collection on 30 audiocassettes, Norman Ross Publishing American Society for Ethnohistory Comments On Carving Soapstone Dehcho: "Mom, We've Been Discovered!" Interviewing Inuit Elders ... Memories Come To Us in the Rain and the Wind , (Extracts from) Oral Histories and Oral Histories of the Mi'kmaq People Oral Narratives and Aboriginal Pasts:
    An Interdisciplinary Review of the Literatures on Oral Traditions and Oral Histories
    Our Elders , Interviews with Saskatchewan Elders

    13. Home Pages For Individual Native Americans
    WWW Virtual Library American indians. Home Pages for Individual native americans. MescaleroApache Louis Annance Abenaki Paul Apodaca navajo Mexican Shannon
    http://www.hanksville.org/NAresources/indices/NAhomes.html
    WWW Virtual Library - American Indians
    Home Pages for Individual Native Americans
    F requently A sked ... uestions for this site
    This document must be read before sending any email!
    Search this site
    3/15/03 - New I am now entering new additions each day. The site is now run from a database. It will be about a week until the last new pages appears online. All new or updated links will be noted on the page where they appear. The What's New page is no longer updated. Trust Fund Filing , A New York Times, 1/07/03 Fed up with Spam?
    Try one of these programs! Mac users, my choice is Spamfire, from Matterform Media VIRUS ALERT - Save 50% on McAfee.com VirusScan Online!
    Save $25 on McAfee Internet Essentials
    Thanks again to the many people who support this website with their book purchases and donations. Please learn how you can support this site.
    K-12
    Student Home Pages at the Gila Crossing Community School, Gila River Reservation, AZ.
    Individuals
    Tim Albert Lac Courte Oreilles Ojibwe Danny Ammom Hupa Ross Anderson Cheyenne-Arapaho Mescalero Apache Louis Annance Abenaki Paul Apodaca Navajo Mexican Shannon Avery Anishinabe Thomas V. Baker

    14. Bigchalk: HomeworkCentral: Navajo (Native Americans)
    State Histories Utah native americans navajo. HISTORY CULTURE World BookOnline Article on CODE TALKERS; World Book Online Article on navajo indians;
    http://www.bigchalk.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/WOPortal.woa/Homework/High_School/His
    Home About Us Newsletters My Products ... Product Info Center
    Email this page
    to a friend!
    K-5
    Navajo

    document.write(''); document.write(''); document.write(''); document.write('');
  • World Book Online Article on CODE TALKERS
  • World Book Online Article on NAVAJO INDIANS
  • Brief History
  • Navajo (Columbia Encyclopedia) ... Contact Us
  • 15. Bigchalk: HomeworkCentral: Navajo (Native Americans)
    Histories New Mexico native americans navajo. HISTORY CULTURE World BookOnline Article on CODE TALKERS; World Book Online Article on navajo indians;
    http://www.bigchalk.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/WOPortal.woa/Homework/High_School/His
    Home About Us Newsletters My Products ... Product Info Center
    Email this page
    to a friend!
    K-5
    Navajo

    document.write(''); document.write(''); document.write(''); document.write('');
  • World Book Online Article on CODE TALKERS
  • World Book Online Article on NAVAJO INDIANS
  • Brief History
  • Navajo (Columbia Encyclopedia) ... Contact Us
  • 16. A Hotlist On Native Americans
    First americans Information on the land, clothes Southwest native American shelters- All about navajo indians - Information on this Southwest tribe's history
    http://www.kn.pacbell.com/wired/fil/pages/listnativeast1.html
    A Hotlist on Native Americans
    An Internet Hotlist on Native Americans created by strifman
    American International School
    Introduction Cherokee and Iroquois Pueblo ... Apache
    Introduction
    Use the sites listed below to find information for your Native American project. Links are listed by tribe.
    Remember to keep the main question of this project in mind while surfing the net: How did your chosen tribe use its natural environment to survive? This includes vegetation, flora/fauna, wildlife and climate!
    The Internet Resources
    Cherokee and Iroquois

    17. A Hotlist On Native Americans
    In addition to using books and magazines to find out about native americans, whynot Hopi Agriculture Hopi indians. How the navajo Met Their Needs - navajo.
    http://www.kn.pacbell.com/wired/fil/pages/listnativeajo.html
    A Hotlist on Native Americans
    An Internet Hotlist on Native Americans
    Rock Springs Introduction Desert/Southwest Pacific Northwest Eastern Woodlands ... Hawaii/Polynesia
    Introduction
    In addition to using books and magazines to find out about Native Americans, why not also use the power of the Internet? The links below will get you started.
    The Internet Resources
    Desert/Southwest
    Pacific Northwest

    18. Ms. Common's Class's Bookmarks
    navajo. native americans navajo National Monument Homepage navajo indiansDel Mar Pines 3rd Grade indians-Houghton Mifflin Southwest.
    http://www.smcoe.k12.ca.us/msd/gh/common/common5.html
    The Land and the First Americans
    Some Sites to Visit on the Web Green Hills 3rd Grade-Native Americans-Houghton Mifflin, KidPix Art
    Del Mar Pines 3rd Grade - Indians-Houghton Mifflin
    Native Americans
    First Americans, Native American Indian Studies for Grade Schoolers.
    CHEYENNE
    Del Mar Pines 3rd Grade - Indians-Houghton Mifflin
    Native Americans
    Eagle Wing Main
    Cheyenne stories
    KWAKIUTL
    Raven Spirit by Robert Hewson
    Grade 3 - Indians
    Introductions
    Occassions
    Scrolling Gallery ...
    Totem Poles and Native Sites
    NAVAJO
    Native Americans
    Navajo National Monument Homepage
    NAVAJO INDIANS
    Del Mar Pines 3rd Grade - Indians-Houghton Mifflin ...
    Return to Green Hill's Home Page 401 Ludeman Lane
    Millbrae, California
    Feel Free to e-mail Ms. Common with any communication needs.
    Last updated April 13, 1999
    GH Home
    Principal Staff PTA ... Web/MAX

    19. Marilee's Native Americans Resource
    Kiliwa, Laguna, Maricopa, Mayo, Mescalero Apache, Mohave, Nakipa, navajo, Opata,Paipai by Mir Tamim Ansary, 2001 California indians (native americans), by Mir
    http://www.ameritech.net/users/macler/nativeamericans.html
    This webpage is moving to http://marilee.us/nativeamericans.html
    Please change your bookmarks and links as this site will no longer be updated.
    Home
    Word Puzzles Picturebooks KidPix/KidWorks Projects ... Link-Backs
    Marilee's Native Americans Resource
    Cherokee
    Comanche
    Cree
    Haida
    Hopi
    Inuit
    Iroquois Navajo NezPerce Pomo Sioux Ute Wampanoag Misc. Tribes Clothing Craft Projects FamousPeople Legends Recipes Songs, Dances, Games
    Creation stories teach that Native Americans have been where they are since the world was created. It is also thought that First Americans migrated from Siberia over the Bering Strait about 14,000 years ago, or perhaps even earlier. The land bridge was dry ground for several thousand years before the sea level rose again and stopped migration. The hunters would have followed the migrating herds of large mammals as they moved south. As the glaciers melted, the First Americans spread to the North American coasts and across the entire continent. Native Americans adapted to the climates and terrains in which they lived and used whatever natural resources were available. The arrival of the Europeans in the 1500's began a change in the lives of the Indian people that continued through the next centuries. Sometimes the changes were good. The horses brought by the Spanish made bison hunting much easier and safer. But Vikings, Spanish, English and French explorers, colonists and missionaries spread diseases, made slaves of the people, forced relocations, claimed ownership of natural resources and land, and tried to stamp out the native cultures. Some of the Indian people survived, but not without making drastic changes in their life styles.

    20. Native Americans
    of the Choctaw and the navajo peoples were used and music used in traditional NativeAmerican Pow Acjachemem Juaneno Band of Mission indians Acjachemem Nation;
    http://killeenroos.com/link/amind.html
    Native Americans back to social studies link index Tribal Websites
  • Animal Legends and Symbols Animals played an important part in Native American tradition. This site shows you some of those animals and offers examples of their symbolic meanings. American Indian Law This page is designed for Indian law practitioners, Tribes or tribal members, law students, and anyone interested in Indian law. Features of this site include a list of the best law schools for Indian law, links to researching Indian law issues, and links of organizations related to Indian law. American Indian Resources American Indian Web page American Indians and the Natural World Through exploration of four different visions of living in and with the natural worldthose of the Tlingit of the Northwest Coast, the Hopi of the southwest, the Iroquois of the Northeast, and the Lakota of the PlainsNorth, South, East, West: American Indians and the Natural World examines the belief systems, philosophies, and practical knowledge that guide Indian peoples' interactions with the natural world. Though all of these peoples have chosen different pathways and strategies for making a life in their various environments, one similar concept is voiced by allthat a reciprocal connection exists between people and the rest of the world. Authors - Native American First Nations Histories excellent data about many different tribes. Author proposes to add more tribes - as many as 200.
  • 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 1     1-20 of 100    1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

    free hit counter