Food
Tools
Homes
Mix
Vocabulary
100

This animal was commonly eaten by California Indians. 

Elk, deer, rabbit, fish, salmon, shellfish, etc

100

Stones were often used for grinding this plant part by the Central Area and Great Basin Area Indians. 

Acorns

100

California Indians used these materials to build their homes. 

Natural materials such as bark, wood, reeds, willow sticks, mud, etc

100
A story that helps to explain the beliefs and history of a people.

Myth

100

The way of life shared by a group of people.

Culture

200

Indians in the Central Area would gather and grind this food from Oak Trees. 

Acorn

200

This item could be woven out of grasses and reeds. 

A basket

200

California Indians of the Northwest area used this to build their homes. 

Trees. Large planks of wood. 

200

The study of people and their cultures.

Anthropology

200

To change one's way of life to fit the land and its resources.

Adapt

300

Salmon was an important food source for Indians from this region. 

The Northwest Area

300

Canoes from this region were made of Redwood Trees. 

The Northwest Area

300

In the winter, Indians from this region lived in cone-shaped in-ground houses. 

Northeast Area

300

The Chumash villages could support a large number of people because they were located near this resource.  

The coast, ocean 

300

A high, flat landform that rises steeply from the land around it. 

Plateau

400

Fish, seals, and sea lions were an important food source for Indians in coastal area of this region. 

The Southern Area

400

Arrowheads made from this stone would have been valuable and used for trading. 

Obsidian

400

Indians in the Central Region used these materials to build their homes. 

Round poles covered in reeds or bark, bark slabs leaned on center posts, 

400

Someone believed to be in contact with the spirit world. 

Shaman

400

A hard, glassy rock that is formed when lava cools. 

Obsidian

500

In this area California Indians practiced agriculture. 

The Colorado River Area

500

Indians living in the Great Basin Area would have used this resource to make warm clothing for winter.

Animal fur, skins/ hides

500

In this region, Indians would live in homes with open sides during the winter. 

The Colorado River Area

500

This food would have to be ground and soaked in water before it could be eaten. 

Acorns

500
A person who moves from place to place in search of food. 

Nomad.