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         Navajo Indians Native Americans:     more books (104)
  1. The Navajo Nation: A Visitor's Guide by Patrick Lavin, Joan Lavin, 2008-08
  2. Houses Beneath the Rocks: The Anasazi of Canyon de Chelly and Navajo Natl Monument
  3. Native American Art of the Southwest by Linda B. Eaton, J. J. Brody, 1993-06
  4. The Last Warrior: Peter MacDonald and the Navajo Nation (The Library of the American Indian) by Peter MacDonald, 1993-10-26
  5. Through Navajo Eyes: An Exploration in Film Communication and Anthropology by Sol Worth, John Adair, 1997-06
  6. Children of Sacred Ground: America's Last Indian War by Catherine Feher-Elston, 1988-10
  7. Navajo Coyote Tales: The Curly To Aheedliinii Version (American Tribal Religions) by Father Berard HaileO. F. M., 1984-11-01
  8. To Walk in Beauty: A Navajo Family's Journey Home by Stacie Spragg- Bradue, 2009-03-15
  9. A Summer's Trade by Deborah W. Trotter, 2007-03-25
  10. Enduring Traditions: Art of the Navajo by Lois Essary Jacka, Jerry D. Jacka, 1994-08
  11. Waterway: The Navajo Ceremonial Myth told by Black Mustache Circle (American Tribal Religions, Volume V) by O.F.M. Father Berard Haile, 1979-11-01
  12. The Navajo-Hopi Land Dispute: An American Tragedy by David M. Brugge, 1999-08-01
  13. Native American Indian Religions - 53 Books On CD: Covering Inuit, Apache, Sioux, Iroquois, Chinook, Cherokee, Navaho/Navajo, Hopi and many others
  14. Wide Ruins: Memories from a Navajo Trading Post by Sallie Wagner, 1997-09-01

81. WWWVL: American Indians - Cultural Resources
Database of materials about indigenous peoples of the world. Offers forums and articles indexed by subject, nation and geographic region.
http://www.hanksville.org/NAresources/indices/NAculture.html
WWW Virtual Library - American Indians
Index of Native American Cultural 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 The What's New page is no longer updated.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.
Multi-Cultural Sites
A Line In The Sand , issues of cultural property and cultural sensitivity Assembly of First Nations Center For World Indigenous Studies
Fourth World Documentation Project:
Indigenous Peoples' Information for the Online Community
... American Indian Art and Ethnographica Magazine
Tribe/Nation Sites
United States
Iroquois Confederacy [Including Canada]
Haudenosaunee Lacrosse: An Iroquois Tradition Mohawk Council of Kahnawake ... St. Regis Mohawk Tribe Environment Division

82. Arizona Native American Indians
The navajo Tab works, but is being worked on. Almost without exception, the historyof the native American indians in North America is one of broken
http://www.libraryofarizona.com/indian.html
Grand Canyon North Rim
Navajo Nation Windtalkers Navajo Nation Navajo Times Navajo-Hopi Observer ... Navajo Language Salt River-Pima-Maricopa Community Salt River-Pima-Maricopa Community
Native Americans

W elcome to the Library of Arizona. This section is under construction. The Navajo Tab works, but is being worked on. Other Indian tabs are not operable yet, and there are many more tabs to be added. The text below is only a beginning very rough draft. Almost without exception, the history of the Native American Indians in North America is one of broken treaties, broken promises, racism, horrible treatment, forced exodus from their lands, relocation to reservations, and slaughter. Today, they are staging a remarkable comeback. They are a proud people, who are fighting for sovereignty and their right to control their destiny.
This site is a creation of Dastcom Graphics
Don Tibbits,Webmaster/Photographer

All images © Don Tibbits.

83. Native American Culture
What is the native American Grave Protection and Indian tribe; The Sauk and Fox indians;Who were the navajo sandpaintings; native American Indian powwows for the
http://www.essortment.com/in/Culture.Native.American/
Culture: Native American
about this site Back to main site Find A Site General Tribes © 2002 Pagewise, Inc.

84. Books On Navajo Indians
navajo indians. Books on native American History and Culture.
http://www.dropbears.com/b/broughsbooks/history/navajo_nation.htm
Navajo Indians Books on Native American History and Culture
Related Books History Index Native Americans
Arizona History

Navajo Code Talkers
...
Click Here
Departments Posters
Calendars

History Magazines

Documentaries

Posters
Native Americans

Best Sellers Browse Powells History Books The Archaeology of Navajo Origins by Ronald H. Towner (Editor) (Hardcover - July 1996) Crossing Between Worlds: The Navajos of Canyon De Chelly by Jeanne M. Simonelli Paperback: 128 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.33 x 8.04 x 10.04 Publisher: School of American Research Press; ; (December 1997) ISBN: 0933452497 Dine Bizaad: Speak, Read, Write Navajo by Irvy W. Goossen (Paperback) Dine: A History of the Navajos by Peter Iverson, Monty Roessel (Photographer) (Hardcover - October 2002) Dine: Origin Myths Of The Navaho Indians (Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletins) by Aileen O'bryan (Library Binding - January 1956) Special Order Dine Bahane: The Navajo Creation Story by Paul Zolbrod (Translator) (Paperback - March 1988) H. L. James' Rugs and Posts: The Story of Navajo Weaving and Indian Trading by H. L. James Book Description Schiffer Publishing is pleased to bring out this entirely new edition of H.L. James' classic study of the Navajo rug and the trading posts associated with each unique style. New information and an entirely different design help explain and display the beauty and craft of the Navajo Indians. Illustrated with 49 color plates, many black-and-white photographs and drawings, and up-to-date price information, Post and Rugs traces the history of the Navajo rug and the impact the trading posts have had on its regionalization. There is also much background material on the Navajo people and their art. Here are design drawings showing elements characteristic of different weaving centers, superb color photographs of rugs typical of these centers, and detailed maps to the areas. Exquisite line drawings accompany the text showing all the steps in rug weaving, from the sheep to the finished rug. Also there is helpful advice on buying Navajo rugs and caring for them.

85. CyberSpace Search!
Research the navajo indians at Questia Questia online library offers more than 70,000 http//www.questia.com;native East Spirit, native American Arts Crafts
http://www.cyberspace.com/cgi-bin/cs_search.cgi?Terms=navajo indians

86. Encyclopedia Smithsonian: Native American Resources
Cherokee and Southeastern indians. Crafts, Clothing, Dance, and Sign Language. NavajoWeaving Reading List. native americans General Topics.
http://www.si.edu/resource/faq/nmai/start.htm

Native American Resources
Native American Resources at the Smithsonian Native American Resources for Parents and Teachers Genealogical Research for Native Americans Arctic Studies Center ... The Horse in Blackfoot Indian Culture
Selected Exhibitions
New Exhibitions at the National Museum of the American Indian National Museum of the American Indian Web Gallery Native American Portraits from the National Portrait Gallery Benedicte Wrensted: An Idaho Photographer in Focus ... Tracking the Buffalo: Stories From a Buffalo Hide Painting
Recommended Reading
Anthropology Outreach Office Resources Cherokee and Southeastern Indians Crafts, Clothing, Dance, and Sign Language Cultural and Biological Impact Reading List ... Spirituality, Religion, and Medicine
For more resources, visit the Smithsonian's
National Museum of the American Indian
Encyclopedia Smithsonian A B ...
Public Inquiry Mail Service

Smithsonian Institution

87. Native American Home Pages - Nations
28/98; updated 6/13/00; Mohegan History Added 7/3/00; native American Mohegans 9/14/98;The Stockbridge Munsee Tribe of Mohican indians (a compilation navajo/DINE.
http://www.nativeculture.com/lisamitten/nations.html
NATIVE AMERICAN NATIONS
Last update - March 27, 2003
Maintained by Lisa Mitten
INFORMATION ON INDIVIDUAL NATIVE NATIONS
This section contains links to pages that have either been set up by the nations themselves, or are pages devoted to a particular nation, and are ALPHABETICAL BY TRIBAL NAME. Pages maintained by Indian Nations or individuals are indicated with this symbol: . Pages without this symbol are primarily ABOUT specific nations, but not by them. Included are both recognized and unrecognized tribes. First Nations Histories - a good source for student papers! Dick also has a listing of tribes , both federally and state recognized, as well as those with no formal governmental recognition at all. Added 8/3/99; updated 5/15/00. A-C D-H I-L M-N ... T-Z

88. American Indian Studies
Dedicated to the presentation of artwork, photographs, video, and sound recordings, which reflect Category Science Social Sciences Visual Anthropology...... indians of North America. Photographs, drawings, maps and short descriptions chroniclizingthe experiences of the native American population The navajo (Din'e).
http://www.csulb.edu/projects/ais/
This site received over 1,000,000 hits in 1999 from 50 countries throughout the world.
American Indian History and Related Issues
American Indian Studies programs were created at a number of universities throughout the United States beginning in the late 1960s. The American Indian Studies Program at California State University, Long Beach celebrated its 25th anniversary in 1994 and is the oldest continuous existing program. This world wide site is a developing site supervised by Professor Troy Johnson and is dedicated to the presentation of unique artwork, photographs, video and sound recordings which accurately reflect the history, culture and richness of the Native American experience in North America and has been expanded to include Indian people of Central America and Mexico. Contributions and comments may be made by contacting Professor Johnson See the various books Troy Johnson has written on the American Indian Culture.
Indians of North America
Alcatraz Occupation: The Story The 1969 occupation of Alcatraz Island is seen as a watershed event in contemporary Native American history. This site provides a brief history of the occupation as documented in my book, "The Occupation of Alcatraz Island, Indian Self-determination and The Rise of Indian Activism Alcatraz Occupaion in photographs This collection of photographs and descriptions by Ilka Hartmann tell the story of the American Indian occupation of Alcatraz Island through the eyes of those who made up the occupation force.

89. Fort Burgwin Library
Historical Studies of American indians, Environment, and Business (1966) Indian DrinkingNavajo Practices and Us Uranium and the native americans (1994) In a
http://www.smu.edu/cul/FBL/nativeamer.htm
Guides to
FBL Resources
Native Americans
Many books in the Fort Library relate to Native American history. For students and faculty in the SMU-in-Taos program, this guide lists some general sources but focuses on selected titles that cover late-19th century and 20th century periods and events. For pre-history, see the guide in this series on Archaeology Categories within this guide : Pueblos Reference Contemporary Issues Government Relations ... Selected Journal Articles See also other Library Guides in this series on
Anthropology, Archaeology, and Ethnology
Art: Architecture Art: Painting and Sculpture
Art: Photography
... Sciences: Botany Pueblos For information about a specific Pueblo group, search PONI under the specific name (e.g., Acoma Pueblo, Cochiti Indians, etc.) as Subject. For more general information, search Pueblo Indians as Subject. Also, review the lists below for relevant titles. Reference Books A to Z of Native American Women
Dictionary of Native American Mythology
Documents of United States Indian Policy
Encyclopedia of Native American Biography
Encyclopedia of North American Indians
Encyclopedia of Native American Religions
Encyclopedia of American Indian Costume
Great Documents in American Indian History Handbook of American Indian Religious Freedom Illustrated Atlas of Native American History Native American Almanac Native American History: A Chronology of a Culture’s Vast Achievements and Their Links to World Events Native Americans in the Twentieth Century: An Encyclopedia

90. Photographs From The Chicago Daily News: American Indians / Native Americans
Another way that American indians were quite visible during the players and are dressedin native costume (SDN Kee Kensol is described as a navajo and appears
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/ndlpcoop/ichihtml/cdnsp5h.html
Photographs from the Chicago Daily News, 1902-1933 Topics to Explore Operation
of the Newspaper
...
a Major Sport
American Indians
/ Native Americans Christmas
Activities

American Indians / Native Americans (Page 9 of 10)
SDN-0005500
SDN-0005499
SDN-0067301
DN-0084984 Another way that American Indians were quite visible during the early twentieth century was as athletes. In 1907, basketball team members from Haskell Indian School (now Haskell Indian Nations University in Lawrence, Kansas) posed for the photographers ( SDN-005500 SDN-005499 ). In 1928, another group of Native Americans (some appearing to be older men) are labeled as basketball players and are dressed in native costume ( SDN-067301 ). Kee Kensol is described as a Navajo and appears to be part of this group ( DN-0084984 ). A professional wrestler identified himself as an American Indian with the name War Eagle and sometimes appeared in native dress ( SDN-006143 SDN-006142 ). Native American Fred Simpson was a marathoner in 1909 ( SDN-055410 SDN-055286
SDN-0006143 SDN-0006142 SDN-0055410 SDN-0055286 Return to Photographs from the Chicago Daily News

91. Navajo News Letter
Between 19801989 1,585 native americans, a large number of them NavajoIndians ,were killed by unintentional injuries. The three
http://www.navajoworld.com/newsletter/earth2.htm
The Navajo People: A Brief History "The Navajos do not refer to their mode of living as a way of life; it is the way of life." According to The Book Of The Navajo by Raymond Friday Locke. It is estimated that the Navajo Indians entered and settled in the Four Corner region of New Mexico, Arizona, Utah and Colorado around 1000 A.D. The ruins of a Navajo home site near Gallup, NM (25 miles south of us) has been dated to 1380. The land the Navajo live on is sacredlled Dinetah -the land of the People. First contact with the Spanish was in 1598. The Spanish had come north from Mexico bringing sheep and horses. When they met the Navajos, the Spanish tried to convert the Navajo people to European customs and religion. According to Locke’s The Book of The Navajo , "they (the Navajo) were more interested in the Spaniard's sheep and horses." The Navajo’s resisted the Spanish and in fact allowed the United States to capture the Southwest. This is a debt however we would not repay or acknowledge.

92. Resources
The Natchez indians; History Now; Natchez indians; Earthfoot; native Living in theNavajo Past. Nez PerceVolume 8; PBS Online - Lewis and Clark native americans;
http://www.dist126.k12.il.us/powwow/resources.htm
A Gathering of Cultures
Native American Flags
Native American Culture
Native American Tribes
Algonquin
Apache
Arapaho
top
Blackfoot
Cherokee
Cheyenne
top
Chippewa
Comanche

93. LaReina Persians  -  In Honor Of The Native Americans
In Honor of the native americans. native American Greeting Cards. Code Talkers TheNavajo indians were America's secret weapon in defeating the Japanese in World
http://www.lareina-persians.net/native.html
In Honor of the Native Americans
"Lose your temper and you lose a friend;
lie and you lose yourself." ~Hopi ~ The referral of Native people as Indians is not from the theory that Christopher Columbus thought he was in India. When Columbus set sail in 1492, the country that is known today as India was called Hindustan. He wrote that the people he had met in the "New World" were "una gentre en dio"; meaning "a people in with God". The term "en dio" somehow got changed to Indian, thus the common belief held that Columbus called the Native people "Indians" because he thought he was in India.
We who are clay blended by the Master Potter, come from the kiln of Creation in many hues. How can people say one skin is colored, when each has its own coloration? What should it matter that one bowl is dark and the other pale, if each is of good design and serves its purpose well." ~ Polingaysi Qoyawayma, Hopi ~

94. New Dimension Media
4. navajo indians OF THE SOUTHWEST navajo ancestry has 5. SEMINOLES indians OF THESOUTHEAST The Seminoles were a multicultural group of native American and
http://www.ndmquestar.com/nr_native_am_nations.asp
Hear a Young Person's View of Famous Native American Tribes Great Native American Nations Series Find out how some of the best-known peoples representing key Native American regions experienced the Westward Expansion by Europeans and American settlers.
Six of America's representative Indian nations, from five major geographic areas of Native American cultures, are portrayed here by historic photographs & graphics, dramatic reenactments, maps, haunting music, and the people's own words. This revision of Questar's "America's Great Indian Nations" re-focuses the series at the primary-middle school level, where Native Americans are most widely studied, through more age-appropriate scripting and narration. An effective tool for meeting standards, these programs:
Are told from Native Americans' point of view

95. Index,indianer, Native Americans,nyhetsbrev, Utvandrare,västern,andra Kulturer,
Information om indianer och andra naturfolk med länkar och nyhetsbrev.Category World Svenska Regionalt Nordamerika...... native americans Indianer First americans *native People*. I´m writing in my ownlanguage Swedish to inform and make other interested of native americans.
http://www.dreamwater.com/jannen/
Sorry, your browser doesn't support Java(tm).
JANNENS HEMSIDA
OM MITT STORA INTRESSE - Native Americans - Indianer
First Americans *Native People* Urbefolkningar - Primitive People *
Andra kulturer
Som liten grabb växte man upp med lekar som indianer och
blekansikte, jag ville alltid vara indian. Då fick man speja och klättra
mer i träd och berg. Vid 12 års ålder fick man gå på matiné
och se filmer om Zorro liksom pang-pangfilmer - om västernhjältarna.
Gary Cooper, John Wayne och Roy Rogers vann alltid och kunde
vara med i mer filmer, medan indianerna var tjutande vildar ... Serietidningarna kunde vara lite mer varierade. Ju äldre man blev och ju mer böcker man läste i ämnet ju tydligare framstod det hur fel Hollywood haft : ( På senare år startade intresset med att söka efter hur verkligheten var både då- och nu. Det började med att man träffade likasinnade, föreningsverksamhet och annat. Numer är jag engagerad på många olika vis. Jag följer genom nyhetsbrev bl.a. information om Leonard Peltier och andra aktualiteter. Har dagligkontakt med mina Cherokeevänner genom email och mailinglistor.

96. David Rivers Native American Links Page
Ethnobotany of the American indians. The Educational native American Indian Art,Culture, Education, History, Science . navajo Community College.
http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~drivers/natamlinx.html
to
David Rivers Home Page:
Native American Links
Education Art D.Rivers Plants ... Other Links
Sorry! No, there is nothing here about vehicles or Taxi shortcuts for drivers.
There is not even anything here about computer application/hardware drivers This is simply a plain homepage devoted to providing a few links to selected education sites and other resources on the web. The choices I make for these selections are entirely my own and in no way reflect the views or choices of those selected or for whom I work A number of other links to other sites of interest to me and possibly to you will soon be placed here.
My Heritage
Native Americans
Biographies Commercial ... Rings Biographies Commercial Education/Schools

97. Southwest
This meant that the indians could not depend on hunting to find food. Some importantSouthwest Culture tribes are the Anasazi, Hopi, Pueblo, and navajo.
http://www.germantown.k12.il.us/html/southwest.html
Grade 3 Indian Project
Southwest culture
The Southwest Culture was very different from the Plains Culture. The climate of the Southwest is very dry. Much of the land is a desert . A desert is a very dry place where few plants will grow. Water was a precious natural resource in this culture. The Indians in this culture had strict rules about the use of water. Even the very young children were taught to be careful with the water they used. There were very few animals in the desert. This meant that the Indians could not depend on hunting to find food. They had to find other ways to get food. They became farmers. Some important Southwest Culture tribes are the Anasazi, Hopi, Pueblo , and Navajo.
Anasazi indians
The Anasazi Indians lived over 1,000 years ago. The Anasazi built their homes in a special place. The land in the Southwest was very different from the Great Plains. Instead of wide open land, the Southwest is made of uneven land with canyons and mesas (ma' suz). A mesa is a landform that is made of rock, and that is shaped like a high flat table. In fact, the word mesa is the Spanish word for table.

98. Navajos In New Mexico
Scenic Photos of the navajo Nation, List of navajo Clans, Indian Wars. NativeAmerican Baskets, Massacre Cave, Plains indians Around navajo.
http://www.cia-g.com/~rockets/nmnavajo.htm
Navajo in New Mexico Introduction First Navajos Antonio Sandoval Spaniards ...
New Mexico History Links

99. Csrlbib
Library Services to navajo indians Off the Reservations History and Status of NativeAmericans in Librarianship. Library Trends 49.1 (Summer 2000) 182193.
http://eagle.clarion.edu/~grads/csrl/bib15.htm
Native Americans and Library Services Bibliography #15
Center for the Study of Rural Librarianship

Department of Library Science
Clarion University of Pennsylvania

Updated January 2003 Ambler, Mariane. "Tribal Colleges Gaining Digital Access to Worldwide Library Resources." Tribal College 12.1 (Fall 2000): 22-24. Beaudin, Janice M. "American Indians." ALA Yearbook of Library and Information Services, Volume 11. Chicago: American Library Association, 1986: 47. Biggs, Bonnie. "Bright Child of Oklahoma: Lotsee Patterson and the Development of America's Tribal Libraries." American Indian Culture and Research Journal 24 (Fall 2000): 55. Biggs, Bonnie. "The Tribal Library Project: Interns, American Indians, and Library Services: A Look at the Challenges." College and Research Libraries News 59.4 (Apr 1998): 259-262. Biggs, Bonnie and Whitehorse, David. "Sovereignty, Collaboration and Continuing Challenge: A History of Tribal Libraries in San Diego County." Special Libraries 86 (Fall 1995): 279-291. Blumer, Thomas J. "American Indian Library Association."

100. El Centro's American Indian Links Page
The Overland Trail Links Plains indians The Dawes Online Exercises for TeachersNative American Lesson Units Mimbres Pottery Aboriginal navajo Places Art
http://pw1.netcom.com/~wandaron/indians.html
Forward to the Olmec The Magical History Tour Back to the Early Peoples of the Americas
From El Centro College's
...
History Department
American
Indian
Links
Index: General American Indian Resources on the Internet

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