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Plateau Environment and Culture

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Plateau Environment and Culture
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You can find this storyboard in the following articles and resources:
California Intermountain Indigenous Peoples

It's All About Geography

Lesson Plans by Liane Hicks

The beginning of all human societies and the development of their communities, traditions, technologies, and cultures were influenced by the environment in which they lived.


Plateau Indigenous Peoples

Indigenous Peoples of the Plateau Region

Lesson Plans by Liane Hicks

The Plateau (or Columbia Plateau) Region is located in the northwestern United States and British Columbia, Canada and stretches between the Cascade Mountains and the Rocky Mountains. Engage and educate students with premade activities and lessons with Storyboard That!




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Indigenous Peoples of the Plateau

Storyboard Description

Create a spider map that details the environment and culture of the Native Americans of the Plateau Region

Storyboard Text

  • LOCATION
  • ENVIRONMENT
  • NATURAL RESOURCES
  • FIRST NATIONS OF THE PLATEAU
  • Between the Cascade and Rocky mountains in Idaho, Montana, eastern Oregon and Washington, and British Columbia.
  • It is semi-arid with very cold winters and hot summers. There are large rivers, flatlands, gorges, hills, forests, and mountains.
  • The streams and rivers are full of fish. The forests and valleys have deer, elk, bears, foxes, rabbits, and badgers. The dry plateau grasslands have sagebrush. Wild berries, nuts and, camas root also provide food.
  • HOMES
  • TIPI
  • Some of the First Nations that live in the Plateau Region are the Klamath, Klickitat, Walla Walla, Nez Perce, Spokane, Yakama, Lillooet, and Shuswap.
  • TRADITIONS
  • NATIVE AMERICANS OF THE PLATEAU
  • CLOTHING
  • Three shelters were useful depending on the season: a pit house or underground home in the winter, a tipi that was portable and used when following game, or a tule-mat lodge in the summer.
  • PIT-HOUSE
  • Digging sticks with animal horn tops were crafted to dig up camas root, the bulbs of which were nutritious food source. Tule reeds were woven into mats used for homes.
  • People wore intricate woven-grass basket hats help protect against the sun. Softened bark was used for clothing. When interaction with the Plains nations brought horses to the region, they began to also use leather.
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