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Studies Weekly 9/14/20 Monday_W.5
By Laura McCarty
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Last updated over 5 years ago
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Question 1
1.
Where are Jackson and Alana in this story?
in a prehistoric forest
somewhere in the Ohio or Mississippi River Valley
Kansas
somewhere in the Hudson or Delaware River Valley
Question 2
2.
Who could be found in forests east of the MIssissippi River at the time Jackson and Alana are expolring?
Canadians
Pacific Northwest Indians
Eastern Woodland Indians
Plains Indians
Question 3
3.
In this story real or pretend?
Real, because Jackson and Alana are exploring in our time.
Pretend, because JAckson and Alana are imagining they are exploring over 1,600 years ago.
Real, beacuse Jackson and Alana are exploring the Mississippi River
Pretend, because Jackson and Alana do not have a tent.
Question 4
4.
The woodhenge is a ________________.
village leader
tribal chief
sun calendar
large building
Question 5
5.
What was the large building that once exsited on top of Monks Mound used for?
Farming
calendar making
religious ceremonies
schooling
Question 6
6.
"The mounds were built on fertilie lands near where the Illinois, Missouri and Mississippi rivers come together."
What can we
infer
about why they built the mounds in this location?
It is easiler for visitors to reach these lands.
The village members argues about where to build.
The people knew that lands near the river would be fertilie and could support their villages.
Large cedar posts were located in the area.
Question 7
7.
Which ancient Eastern Indians of North America had women that rules the longhouses?
Iroquois
Mississippian
Algonquian
Woodland
Question 8
8.
What is one statement from the text that shows the Woodlnad Indians have rich history of myths and legends?
The men in Algonquian culture hunted game for food and clothing.
Many Woodland tribes features animals, but most include a gandmother character or child-sized spririts who poossess magiacal powers.
Upon marriage, it was a custom for the couple to move to the house of the wife's family, where the women planted and harvested.
Well-organized villages with councils and elected leaders gave the Iroquois a stable life.
Question 9
9.
Whisch statement from the text shows that the Woodland tribes traded with other tribes?
Archaeologists have found late Woodland and Mississippian artifacts hundreds of miles away from the villages in which they start.
The Hopewell lived in small villages.
Mississippian people may have lived in huts built of tall, thick stems of plants called cane and covered with mud.
People of Iroquois and Algonquian villages built shelters depending on the location and the season.