Agriculture and corn
Pueblos architecture
Tribes and culture
Clothing and textiles
Pottery
100

The Three Sisters

Corn, beans, and squash.

100

Traditional materials used to construct Pueblo homes

Limestone and Adobe bricks

100
The Jumano's religion

Christianity

100
Amount of time that cotton played a role for the Pueblos

2,000 years

100
How they fired pottery?

Used cow or sheep manure.

200

The Pueblos most important crop

Corn

200
What is a Kiva?

A subterranean ceremonial chamber

200

What is the Jumanos language?

It is unknown, yet is believed to be Tanoan.

200
Who mainly did Pueblo loom?

Men

200

What was pottery used for in the South West.

Cooking, storage, and ceremonial purposes.

300

What were the stones used for grinding corn?

Mano- The smaller stone used for grinding

Metate- The stone acting as a base and held the corn

300
How were rooms arranged inside a Pueblo and where would new rooms be built?

Rooms were arranged in a line starting from the central plaza, and a family's extensions would be built above or behind the original rooms.

300

The Tigua's language was based off?

A nature based and animal belief system centering on Kachina spirits.

300

What happened to the balls of the cotton?

They were harvested, broken open, sorted clean and then hand spun.

300

The first to create pottery in the Southwest

Ancestral Pueblos(Anasazi).

400

The cultural significance of corn

There is a sacred corn maiden depicted in paintings, pottery and jewelry.

400

Whom most pueblo residential groups comprised of:

Nuclear and extended family

400

What were some things the Anasazi known for?

Pottery making, astronomical studies, and their cliff dwellings.

400

Cotton served as a metaphor for what?

Clouds and rain.

400

What pottery embodies for the pueblos.

The 4 elements; Earth, Water, Air and Fire.

500

Why did these combining these crops work out?

Beans have nutrients and nitrogen needed for growing, corn stalks are tall working best for beans, and squash leaves provide shade and cover.

500

How was each floor of a Pueblo arranged, and what did this enable?

Each floor was usually a step back from the one below, meaning it resembled a stepped pyramid. This enabled the roof to be used as a terrace for the floor right above

500

What did the Anasazi believe in?

They believed in a pantheon of spirits including Kachinas, as well as ancestors and natural elements(animals and water) that controlled life, crops, and rain.

500

After harvesting cotton, Pueblo peoples used this type of stationary, upright framework and a vertical weaver to work the weft back and forth.

They used a true loom and a tight and vertical weaver to work the weft back and forth to create the fabric

500

Way of making pottery

Was handmade using a coil method from locally dug clay, and painted with more local clay and mineral paint.
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