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Texas Native Americans - PART 1

Texas Native Americans - PART 1

Assessment

Presentation

History

7th Grade

Medium

Created by

Jana Ross

Used 218+ times

FREE Resource

9 Slides • 9 Questions

1

Texas Native Americans

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2

Read the following passage and then answer the question on the next slide.



Thousands of years ago, Earth’s climate turned very, very cold. Large amounts of water became ice and formed vast sheets, called glaciers, that covered much of the Northern Hemisphere. With so much water trapped in ice, sea levels fell—perhaps by as much as a few hundred feet. Falling sea levels turned the ocean floor in some areas into dry land. One such area was between Alaska and Asia, where a land bridge formed and connected those two masses of land.

3

Multiple Choice

Thousands of years ago, a land bridge was formed between what two masses of land?

1

Alaska and America

2

Asia and Antartica

3

America and Asia

4

Asia and Alaska

4

Read the following passage and then answer the questions on the next slides.

Migrating animals moved across that land bridge in their search for food. Nomads who hunted these animals for food followed them. In this way, the first humans came to the Americas. They eventually spread east across North America and south all the way to South America.

The land bridge opened about 36,000 B.C. Over the years, many humans could have made the journey. After about 20,000 years, however, the climate warmed again. Glaciers melted, and sea levels rose once more. A body of water that is now called the Bering Strait covered the land bridge, and it could no longer be used to cross from Asia to the Americas.

5

Multiple Choice

What did nomads follow across the land bridge to become the first humans to come to the Americas?

1

Thier enemies

2

God, Gold and Glory

3

Migrating animals

4

Their leaders

6

Multiple Choice

As the climate warmed, the ice melted and a body of water covered that land bridge. What is that body of water called?

1

The Bering Strait

2

The Panama Canal

3

The Bering Peninsula

4

The Great Lakes

7

Read the following passage and then answer the questions on the next slides.

Scientists called archaeologists study the past. They have methods for learning about early humans who lived in the time before written records. They collect artifacts, or objects made or used by humans, such as tools, pottery, bones, and shells. Archaeologists study these artifacts for clues about how and why people used them.

Archaeologists also use artifacts to figure out where people came from and moved to. They have seen similarities between stone tools used in Asia and in the Americas in ancient times. They have also found physical similarities between some Asian peoples and Native Americans. This evidence points to Asia as the original home of the first Americans.

8

Multiple Choice

Archaeologists study the ______. They use _______ or objects to help them find clues.

1

artifacts; past

2

past; artifacts

3

future; things

4

humans; tools

9

Multiple Choice

Evidence from archaeologists' studies points to what continent being the orignal home of the first Americans?

1

America

2

Alaska

3

Asia

4

Africa

10

Read the following passage and then answer the question on the next slide.

. The earliest Texans were hunter-gatherers who moved from place to place to hunt and gather food. They hunted large animals, such as mammoth and giant bison. They used a stick called an atlatl (AHT•lah•tuhl) to throw their spears farther and give them more force. After a few thousand years, the mammoth and giant bison died out. Then people hunted the small bison that survived, as well as deer and smaller animals such as rabbits, squirrels, and birds.

11

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12

Multiple Choice

The earliest Texans could best be described as ______.

1

settlers

2

vegetarians

3

fighters

4

hunters and gatherers

13

Read the following passage and then answer the question on the next slide.

The earliest Texans lived in rock shelters, areas naturally cut open in the side of a canyon. This was especially common in what is today southwest Texas. People cooked and worked toward the front open area of the shelter. They placed beds made of plants toward the back. These rock shelters were found along streams or rivers, so the people had fresh water available.

14

Multiple Choice

Which of the following looks most like what the earliest Texans might have used as shelter?

1
2
3
4

15

Read the following passage and then answer the question on the next slide.

Around A.D. 600 to 700, Native Americans in Texas began using new kinds of technology. One of these new technologies was the bow and arrow. It let hunters deliver smaller, sharper points with greater force than a hand-thrown spear. Another new technology was pottery. Pots were created by shaping mud into containers and then heating the containers at very high temperatures. The heating makes the shape keep its form. Pottery vessels could be used to cook or store food.

16

Multiple Choice

What were two technological advances that Texans began using in 600 to 700 A.D.?

1

Bow and Arrows and Pottery

2

Phone and Electricity

3

Fire and the Wheel

4

Forks and Spoons

17

Read the following passage and then answer the question on the next slide.

Around A.D. 1200, the practice of agriculture, or the growing of crops, became well established among the early peoples of Texas. Native Americans here began to produce their own supply of plants for food instead of only gathering what they could find in nature. Agriculture had a huge effect on these peoples’ way of life. They could now settle in one place to tend their crops instead of moving around, always in search of food.

18

Multiple Choice

How did the introduction of agriculture change the way Texans lived?

1

They had more food choices.

2

It didn't change the way they lived.

3

They could settle in one place.

4

They began selling their crops.

Texas Native Americans

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