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Crow
people
Crow
(people), Native American tribe of the Siouan language
family and of the Plains
culture area.
They
originally lived in permanent agricultural villages
along the upper Missouri River together with the Hidatsa.
In the 18th century the Crow moved westward to the
Yellowstone River area of the Rockies. There they
adopted the buffalo-dependent Great Plains culture,
becoming mounted hunters.
The
Crow, who call themselves Absoraka ("bird people"), lived
in portable tepees, practiced
the sun dance typical of the
plains, and grew a single crop, tobacco, which played
a role in religious ceremonies.
They
became famous as warriors and also as scouts for the
U.S. Army against their enemies, the Sioux.
In
1868 the Crow moved to a reservation in Montana comprising
a portion of their former territory; many still live
there today. In 1990, 8,588 people in the United States
claimed Crow ancestry.
"Crow,"
Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2000 http://encarta.msn.com
© 1997-2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Wyoming,
History, Early Inhabitants
Native
Americans have lived in Wyoming for over 11,000 years. In
1975 archaeologists uncovered a site dating back 11,200
years in which the remains of prehistoric mammoths were
found next to bone tools, projectiles, and knives. Another
site shows evidence of prehistoric people mining quartzite,
presumably to use for tools.
The
principal Native American groups of Wyoming were the
Cheyenne, Arapaho,
Sioux, Blackfoot,
Crow, Shoshone, and Bannock.
Many of these groups had similar lifestyles, based on
the Great Plains culture. They were nomads, living in
small groups of up to 100 people, hunting primarily
Plains bison. In order to trap
the animals, Native Americans built corrals made of
brush and poles near steep bluffs or ravines. Then they
drove bison herds toward the corral. When the bison
entered the corral, men hiding behind the walls chased
the bison over cliffs. In the middle of the 17th century,
Native Americans of the Great Plains began to use horses.
These animals provided the Native Americans greater
mobility because they could carry more goods, and they
could transport the young and the elderly with greater
ease. Horses also became an important tool for bison
hunting. A fast and well-trained group of horses could
drive a herd of buffalo over a cliff so that the Native
Americans did not have to build a corral. Native American
groups with the most horses were often the most prosperous.
Many Native American groups stole horses from one another
to improve their hunting or to weaken their neighbors'
claims on adjacent hunting grounds.
During
the 18th and 19th centuries, some Native Americans from
the Eastern Woodlands began migrating west to the Great
Plains as white settlers took their land. As the plains
became more populated, rivalries intensified among different
Native American groups. The Cheyenne and the Arapaho
probably came into the Great Plains region in the 18th
century from North Dakota or Minnesota. These traditional
allies lived on the eastern plains of Wyoming. The Sioux,
who relocated from Minnesota and Wisconsin, also hunted
in the eastern plains of Wyoming. By the early l9th
century the Crow people were based in the Bighorn Mountains.
The Blackfoot, who were antagonistic toward the Cheyenne,
Arapaho, Crow, and Sioux, occupied the Snake River country
and the Three Forks of the Missouri River in Montana.
In the mountains of western Wyoming roamed the Shoshone
and Bannock.
Other
tribes who at one time hunted in the Wyoming country
included the Ute, the Flathead,
the Nez Perce, and the Kiowa.
Access to the best buffalo lands was determined by warfare.
from:
"Wyoming (state)," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia
2000 http://encarta.msn.com
© 1997-2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
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