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Published on Nov 18, 2015
Huron Canada's First Nations. By Laura Sherman
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PRESENTATION OUTLINE
1.
Huron
Laura sherman
Photo by
BiblioArchives / LibraryArchives
2.
Food/ clothing
Did a lot of agriculture and farming, hunting and fishing.
Planted foods such as corn, squash, and beans
Women would collect berries in handmade baskets
Clothing was made out of animal hides and sewn by women
Used hides of bears and deer.
Photo by
VinothChandar
3.
Food/ clothing
Did a lot of agriculture and farming, hunting and fishing.
Planted foods such as corn, squash, and beans
Women would collect berries in handmade baskets
Clothing was made out of animal hides and sewn by women
Used hides of bears and deer.
Photo by
VinothChandar
4.
Food/ clothing
Did a lot of agriculture and farming, hunting and fishing.
Planted foods such as corn, squash, and beans
Women would collect berries in handmade baskets
Clothing was made out of animal hides and sewn by women
Used hides of bears and deer.
Photo by
VinothChandar
5.
Transportation/ shelter
Lived in long houses with women's family
Houses were made of trees like birch and elm.
They used birch canoes and dogs as pack animals
Houses were up to 150 feet long.
Houses were furnished with animal hides.
Photo by
BiblioArchives / LibraryArchives
6.
landscape
Lived in now-a-days Ontario
Close to lake Huron and lake Simcoe.
Decidious forests with bears, moose, deer, raccoon ect
Harsh winters and hot summers that are very windy.
Neighboring Iroquois and Algonquin.
Photo by
Яick Harris
7.
Labour division
Men took on the heavier tasks
Men protected villages, hunted, and traded.
Women would take care of everyday life.
Women would make clothing, baskets, cooked.
Women would also collect berries and such.
Photo by
Ontario Wanderer
8.
Matrilineal family
The men would live with wife's family in a long house.
Property was shared between the men and women.
The women would determine the male cheif in their villages.
Clan mothers were the elders that would help with decision making.
Women overall had more of the power.
Photo by
Paul Mannix
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