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| a tract of land that connects continents, permitting the passage of people and animals |
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| a diverse group of Native American inhabitants of New Mexico, Texas, and Arizona; lived in buildings built into the cliffs |
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| North Eastern America; were hunters and gatherers; population was mobile; had a trade network amoung themselves |
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| built mounds used for religious ceremonies and burials; hunting, fishing, and agiculture; different people had different crafts/trades; involved in trade |
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| Native Americans in the Mississippi River Valley |
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| refers to a belief in numerous personalized, supernatural beings endowed with reason, intelligence and/or volition, that inhabit both objects and living beings and govern their existences |
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| added ash to the soil for temporary benefit, but every few years it was necessary to move to new locations |
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| refers to the exchange of cultural material through vocal utterance |
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| were developed by the Puritans of New England from 1646 to 1675 in an effort to convert the local Native American tribes to Christianity |
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| refer to the Spanish colonial frontier in what later became the United States |
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