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is counted among the many achievements and innovations of pre-Columbian American cultures. The region of
Mesoamerica produced a number of Mesoamerican writing systems from the 1st millennium BCE onwards. What may be the earliest-known example in the Americas of an extensive text thought to be writing is illustrated above. These undeciphered glyphs, which appear on a stone tablet discovered in the late 1990s near
San Lorenzo Tenochtitlán in Veracruz, Mexico, have been termed "Olmec hieroglyphs". The tablet has been indirectly dated from ceramic sherds found in the same context to approximately
900s BC, around the time that
Olmec occupation of San Lorenzo began to wane.Skidmore (2006, pp.1-4). The numbers appearing next to each glyph are identifiers used by archaeologists investigating the find.The
indigenous peoples of the Americas are the pre-Columbian inhabitants of the
Americas, their descendants, and many ethnic groups who identify with those peoples. They are often also referred to as
Native American name controversy,
First Nations and by
Christopher Columbus' historical mistake "American Indians" or "AmerIndians".
According to the still debated
Models of migration to the New World, a migration of humans from
Eurasia to the Americas took place via
Beringia, a land bridge which formerly connected the two continents across what is now the
Bering Strait. The minimum time depth by which this migration had taken place is confirmed at c. 12,000 years ago, with the upper bound (or earliest period) remaining a matter of some unresolved contention.See Jacobs 2001 for an extensive review of the evidence for migration timings, and Jacobs 2002 for a survey of migration models. These early Paleoamericans soon spread throughout the Americas, diversifying into many hundreds of culturally distinct nations and tribes.Jacobs (2002). According to the oral histories of many of the indigenous peoples of the Americas, they have been living there since their genesis, described by a wide range of traditional origin story.
Application of the term "Indian" originated with Christopher Columbus, who thought that he had arrived in the
East Indies. This has served to imagine a kind of racial or cultural unity for the
Wikt:autochthonous peoples of the Americas. Once created, the unified "Indian" was codified in law, religion, and politics. The unitary idea of "Indians" was not originally shared by indigenous peoples, but many now embrace the identity.
While some indigenous peoples of the Americas were historically
hunter-gatherers, many practiced aquaculture and
agriculture. The impact of their #Agricultural endowment to the world is a testament to their time and work in reshaping, taming, and cultivating the flora indigenous to the Americas.Mann (2005). Some societies depended heavily on agriculture while others practiced a mix of farming, hunting, and gathering. In some regions the indigenous peoples created monumental architecture, large-scale organized
city,
chiefdoms,
states, and massive empires.
History
Original peopling of the Americas
from the Americas, early 20th century.Scholars who follow the Bering Strait theory agree that most indigenous peoples of the Americas descended from people who probably
Migration (human) from
Siberia across the
Bering Strait, anywhere between 9,000 and 50,000 years ago. The timeframe and exact routes are still matters of debate, and the model faces continuous challenges.
A 2006 study (to be published in
Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology) reports new DNA-based research that links DNA retrieved from a 10,000-year-old fossilized tooth from an Alaskan island, with specific coastal tribes in Tierra del Fuego,
Ecuador, Mexico, and California. "DNA Ties Together Scattered Peoples," Los Angeles Times (accessed September 11
2006); reprint Unique DNA markers found in the fossilized tooth were found only in these specific coastal tribes, and were not comparable to markers found in any other indigenous peoples in the Americas. This finding lends substantial credence to a migration theory that at least one set of early peoples moved south along the west coast of the Americas in boats. However, these results may be ambiguous, as there are other issues with DNA research and biological and cultural affiliation as outlined in Peter N. Jones' book
Respect for the Ancestors: Cultural Affiliation and Cultural Continuity in the American West.One result of these waves of migration is that large groups of peoples with similar languages and perhaps physical characteristics as well, moved into various geographic areas of North, and then Central and South America. While these peoples have traditionally remained primarily loyal to their individual tribes, ethnologists have variously sought to group the myriad of tribes into larger entities which reflect common geographic origins, linguistic similarities, and lifestyles.See also
Classification of indigenous peoples of the Americas.
Remnants of a human settlement in Monte Verde, Chile dated to 12,500 years Before Present (another layer at Monteverde has been tentatively dated to 33,000-35,000 years B.P.) suggests that southern Chile was settled by peoples who entered the Americas before the peoples associated with the Bering Strait migrations. It is suggested that a coastal route via canoes could have allowed rapid migration into the Americas.
The traditional view of a relatively recent migration has also been challenged by older findings of human remains in South America; some dating to perhaps even 30,000 years old or more. Some recent finds (notably the Luzia skeleton in
Lagoa Santa, Brazil) are claimed to be morphologically distinct from Asians and are more similar to
African and Australian Aborigines. These American Aborigines would have been later displaced or absorbed by the Siberian immigrants. The distinctive
Fuegians of
Tierra del Fuego, the southernmost tip of the American continent, are speculated to be partial remnants of those Aboriginal populations. These early immigrants would have either crossed the ocean by boat or traveled north along the Asian coast and entered America through the Northwest, well before the Siberian waves. This theory is presently viewed by many scholars as conjecture, as many areas along the proposed routes now lie underwater, making research difficult. Some scholars believe the earliest cranial anthropoligical origin/forensic evidence for early populations appears to more closely resemble Southeast Asians and Pacific Islanders, and not those of Northeast Asia.Jablonski, Nina (2001). The First Americans: The Pleistocene Colonization of the New World. Journal of Field Archeology (Vol 28, 2001, p. 459. Retrieved on August 10, 2007.
Scholars' estimates of the total population of the Americas before European contact vary enormously, from a low of 10 million to a high of 112 million.See Thornton's (2006) review of
1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus (Mann 2005). Whatever the figure, scholars generally agree that most of the indigenous population resided in
Mesoamerica and South America, while about 10 percent resided in North America.Taylor (2001, p.40).
The
Solutrean hypothesis suggests an early Atlantic migration route into the Americas.Carey, Bjorn (19 February 2006). First Americans may have been European.
Life Science. Retrieved on August 10, 2007.Conner, Steve, Science Editor, (03 December 2002). Does skull prove that the first Americans came from Europe?. Published in the
UK Independent. Retrieved on August 14, 2007. Hecht, Jeff (4 September 2003). Skulls narrow clues to First Americans
New Scientist. Retrieved on August 12, 2007.Gonzalez, Sylvia, C. Jimenez-Lopez, R. Hedges, D. Huddart, J.C. Ohman, A. Turner, J.A. Pompa y Padilla (2003). Earliest humans in the Americas: new evidence from Mexico, Journal of Human Evolution 44, 379-387. Stone tool technology of the
Solutrean culture in prehistoric Europe may have later influenced the development of the Clovis culture tool-making culture in the Americas. Some of its key proponents include Dr.
Dennis Stanford of the Smithsonian Institution and Dr. Bruce Bradley of the University of Exeter. In this hypothesis, peoples associated with the Solutrean culture migrated from
Ice Age Europe to
North America, bringing their methods of making stone tools with them and providing the basis for later Clovis technology found throughout North America. The hypothesis rests upon particular similarities in Solutrean and Clovis technology that have no known counterparts in Eastern Asia, Siberia or Beringia, areas from which or through which early Americans are known to have migrated.
European colonization
The European colonization of the Americas forever changed the lives, bloodlines and cultures of the peoples of the continent. The Population history of American indigenous peoples postulates that infectious diseases exposure, displacement, and
warfare may have diminished populations.As characterized by Mann (2005)Native Americans of North America, http://encarta.msn.com/text_761570777___2/Native_Americans_of_North_America.html, Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia 2006, Trudy Griffin-Pierce, accessed September 14, 2006 The first indigenous group encountered by Columbus were the 250,000 Tainos of
Hispaniola who were the dominant culture in the Greater Antilles and the Bahamas. In thirty years, 80 to 90% of the Tainos died.
Slavery,
Unfree labour in the mines, mistreated, the Tainos began to adopt suicidal behaviors, with women aborting or killing their newly-born children, men jumping from the cliffs or ingesting
manioc, a violent poison
"Espagnols-Indiens: le choc des civilisations" in
L'Histoire, n°322, July-August 2007, pp.14-21 . They were not immune to European diseases, so outbreaks of
measles and smallpox decimated their population. Smallpox Through History
Reasons for the decline of the Native American populations are variously theorized to be from
List of epidemics, conflicts with Europeans, and conflicts among
endemic warfare. More recently, collective mobilization among the indigenous peoples in the Americas has required the incorporation of closely-knit local
communities into a broader national and international framework of political action.
Scholars now believe that, among the various contributing factors,
pandemic disease was the overwhelming cause of the population decline of the American natives.Cook, p. 1. BBC Smallpox: Eradicating the Scourge After first contacts with European ethnic groupss and Africans, some believe that the death of 90 to 95% of the native population of the New World was caused by Old World diseases. The Story Of... Smallpox Half the native population of
Hispaniola in 1518 was killed by
smallpox. American Indian Epidemics Within a few years smallpox killed between 60% and 90% of the Inca population, with other waves of European disease weakening them further. Smallpox: The Disease That Destroyed Two Empires Smallpox was only the first epidemic.
Typhus (probably) in 1546, influenza and smallpox together in 1558, smallpox again in 1589,
diphtheria in 1614,
measles in 1618 - all ravaged the remains of Inca culture. Smallpox had killed millions of native inhabitants of
Mexico. Epidemics Unintentionally introduced at Veracruz with the arrival of
Panfilo de Narvaez on
April 23,
1520, smallpox ravaged Mexico in the 1520s, killing 150,000 in
Tenochtitlán alone, including the emperor, and was credited with the victory of
Hernan Cortez over the Aztec empire at Tenochtitlan (present-day Mexico City) in 1521. Smallpox's history in the world
Even after the two mighty empires of the Americas were defeated by the virus, smallpox continued its march of death. In
1633 in
Plymouth, Massachusetts, the Native Americans in the United Statess were struck by the virus. As it had done elsewhere, the virus wiped out entire population groups of Native Americans. It reached
Lake Ontario in 1636, and the lands of the
Iroquois by 1679, killing millions. Smallpox
Later explorations of the Caribbean led to the discovery of the Aruak peoples of the lesser Antilles. The culture was extinct by 1650. Only 500 had survived by the year 1550, though the bloodlines continued through the modern populace. In
Amazonia, indigenous societies weathered centuries of colonizationSee Varese (2004), as reviewed in Dean (2006).
The
Spanish Empires and other Europeans brought Columbian Exchange. Some of these animals escaped and began to
mustang and increase their numbers in the wild.
Ancient Horse (Equus cf. E. complicatus), The Academy of Natural Sciences, Thomas Jefferson Fossil Collection, Philadelphia, PA, (See: species
Equus scotti and others died out at the end of the last ice age with other megafauna.] The re-introduction of the horse had a profound impact on Native American culture in the
Great Plains of North America and of
Patagonia in South America. This new mode of travel made it possible for some tribes to greatly expand their territories, exchange many goods with neighboring tribes, and more easily capture Game (food).
Agriculture
Over the course of thousands of years, a large array of plant species were domesticated, bred and cultivated by the indigenous peoples of the American continent. These species now constitute 50-60% of all crops in cultivation worldwide "Native Americans: The First Farmers."
AgExporter October 1 1999 . In certain cases, the indigenous peoples developed entirely new species and strains through artificial selection, as was the case in the domestication and breeding of maize from wild teosinte grasses in the valleys of southern
Mexico. A great number of these agricultural products still retain native names (
Nahuatl and others) in the
English language and
Spanish language lexicons.
Innumerable crops first domesticated by indigenous Americans are now produced and/or used globally. Largest among these is maize or "corn", arguably the most important crop in the world Michael Pollan,
The Omnivore's Dilemma.. Other significant crops include cassava, squash (fruit) (pumpkins, zucchini, marrow, acorn squash, butternut squash, others), the pinto bean,
Phaseolus including most
common beans,
tepary beans and
lima beans were also all first domesticated and cultivated by indigenous peoples in the Americas); the tomato, the potatos,
avocados,
peanuts, cacao (used to make
chocolate), vanilla,
strawberries, pineapples,
Capsicum (species and varieties of
Capsicum, including bell peppers, jalapeños,
paprika and chili peppers)
Sunflower,
rubber, brazilwood, chicle, some species of cotton,
tobacco, coca.
Culture
man weaving on traditional loom
Cultural practices in the Americas seem to have been mostly shared within geographical zones where otherwise unrelated peoples might adopt similar technologies and social organisations. An example of such a cultural area could be
Mesoamerica, where millennia of coexistence and shared development between the peoples of the region produced a fairly homogeneous culture with complex agricultural and social patterns. Another well-known example could be the North American plains area, where until the 19th century, several different peoples shared traits of
nomadic hunter-gatherers primarily based on buffalo hunting. Within the Americas, dozens of larger and hundreds of smaller culture areas can be identified.
Music and art
Native American music in North America is almost entirely
Texture (music), but there are notable exceptions. Traditional Native American music often includes
drumming but little other instrumentation, although flutes are played by individuals. The tuning of these flutes is not precise and depends on the length of the wood used and the hand span of the intended player, but the finger holes are most often around a whole step apart and, at least in Northern California, a flute was not used if it turned out to have an interval close to a half step.
Music from indigenous peoples of Central Mexico and Central America often was
pentatonic. Before the arrival of the Spaniards it was inseparable from religious festivities and included a large variety of percussion and wind instruments such as drums, flutes, sea snail shells (used as a kind of trumpet) and "rain" tubes. No remnants of pre-Columbian stringed instruments were found until archaeologists discovered a jar in Guatemala, attributed to the Maya of the Late Classic Era (600-900 AD), which depicts a stringed musical instrument which has since been reproduced. This instrument is astonishing in at least two respects. First, it is the only
stringed instrument known in the Americas prior to the introduction of European musical instruments. Second, when played, it produces a sound virtually identical to a jaguar's growl. A sample of this sound is available at the Princeton Art Museum website.
Art of the indigenous peoples of the Americas comprises a major category in the world art collection. Contributions include pottery, paintings,
jewellery, weavings,
sculptures, basketry,
carvings and
hair pipes.
Demography of contemporary populations
The following table provides estimates of the per-country populations of indigenous people, and also those with part-indigenous ancestry, expressed as a percentage of the overall country population. of each country that is comprised by indigenous peoples, and of people with partly indigenous descent. The total percentage obtained by adding both of these categories is also given (One should note however that these categories, especially the second one, are inconsistently defined and measured differently from country to country).{| class="prettytable"|+
Indigenous populations of the Americas1
as estimated percentage of total country's population|-!style="background:aqua" |Country!style="background:aqua" |Indigenous!style="background:aqua" |Part-indigenous!style="background:aqua" |Combined total|- align="right"|
Argentina11] || 55 percent || 30 percent || 85 percent|- align="right"|
Brazil² ]³ || 1.9 percent4 || 2.7 percent || 4.6 percent|- align="right"| Chile ] || 3.4 percent5 || 82.1 percent || 85.5 percent6|- align="right"|
Costa Rica7 ]7 || 1 percent || 20 percent || 21 percent|- align="right"|
Dominican Republic ] || 40 percent || 45 percent || 85 percent|- align="right"|
Ecuador ] || 1 percent || 90 percent || 91 percent|- align="right"|
French Guiana,
Guyana and Suriname ] || 7 percent || 90 percent || 97 percent|- align="right"| Mexico ] || 5 percent || 69 percent || 74 percent|- align="right"| Panama ] || 5 percent || 93.3 percent || 98.3 percent|- align="right"| Peru ] || 0.4 percent || 61.2 percent || 61.6 percent9]|- align="right"|
Venezuela ]10 || .74 - .9 percent || .57 - .74 percent || 1.31 - 1.64 percent|- align="right"|
Uruguay ] unless otherwise indicated.
²
2000 Brazil Census³
Canada 2001 Census4
1.9 percent is for single origins only, Aboriginal identity population is 3.3 percent5 DANE 2005 National Census
6Yunis, Emilio y Juan José Yunis (2006) quoted by Bejarano, Bernardo
El 85,5 por ciento de las madres colombianas tiene origen indígena7
indigenous peoples mixed into the general population; NA = "not available".8 Of Amerindian
and "predominantly" Amerindian as reported in the CIA Factbook. National statistics report a 12% of
pure Amerindian. Los pueblos indígenas de México
9
Kearns DNA10
2000 U.S. Census11
Primeros Resultados de la Encuesta Complementaria de Pueblos Indígenas (ECPI)
|}
History and status by country
Argentina
Argentina's indigenous population is about 403.000 (0.9 percent of total population). INDEC: Encuesta Complementaria de Pueblos Indígenas (ECPI) 2004 - 2005 Indigenous nations include the Toba (tribe), Wichí,
Mocoví,
Pilagá, Nivaclé,
Diaguita-Calchaquí, South Bolivian Quechua, Guaraní (Tupí Guaraní and Avá Guaraní in the provinces of Jujuy and Salta, and Mbyá Guaraní in the province of Misiones), Chorote (Iyo'wujwa Chorote and Iyojwa'ja Chorote), Chané language,
Tapieté,
Mapuche, Tehuelche and
Selknam (Ona).
Belize
Mestizos (European with indigenous peoples) number about 45 percent of the population; unmixed
Maya people make up another 6.5 percent. The Garifuna, who came to Belize in the 1800s, originating from St. Vincent and the Grenadines, with a mixed African, Carib, and
Arawak ancestry make up another 5% of the population.
Bolivia
In Bolivia about 2.5 million people speak
Quechua, 2.1 million speak
Aymara, while
Guaraní is only spoken by a few hundred thousand people. The languages are recognized; nevertheless, there are no official documents written in those languages. However, the constitutional reform in 1997 for the first time recognized Bolivia as a multilingual, pluri-ethnic society and introduced education reform. In 2005, for the first time in the country's history, an indigenous Aymara president, Evo Morales, was elected.
Brazil
tribe: Raony, Kaye, Kadjor, Panara..The Amerindians make up 0.4% of Brazil's population, or about 700,000 people. Brazil urged to protect Indians Indigenous peoples are found in the entire territory of Brazil, although the majority of them live in Indian reservations in the North and Centre-Western part of the country. On 18 January 2007, Fundação Nacional do Índio reported that it had confirmed the presence of 67 different
uncontacted peoples in Brazil, up from 40 in 2005. With this addition Brazil has now overtaken the island of
New Guinea as the country having the largest number of uncontacted tribes. Brazil sees traces of more isolated Amazon tribes
Canada
The most commonly preferred term for the indigenous peoples of what is now Canada is
Aboriginal peoples in Canada. Of these Aboriginal peoples who are not
Inuit or Métis people (Canada), "
First Nations" is the most commonly preferred term of self-identification. First Nations peoples make up approximately 3.3 percent of the Canadian population, and includes Inuit, and Metis peoples.
Chile
Less than 5 percent of
Chileans belong to indigenous peoples, such as the
Mapuche in the country's central valley and lake district, and the Mapuche successfully fought off defeat in the first 300-350 years of Spanish during the War of Arauco. Relation with the new Chilean Republic were good until the Chilean state decided to occupy their lands. During the
Occupation of Araucanía the Mapuche surrendered to the country's army in the 1880s. The former land was opened to settlement for mestizo and white Chileans. Conflict over Mapuche land rights continued until present days.
, Colombia
Colombia
A small minority today within
Colombia's overwhelmingly
Mestizo and
Afro-Colombian population, Colombia's indigenous peoples nonetheless encompass at least 85 distinct cultures and more than 1,378,884 peopleDANE 2005 national census. A variety of collective rights for indigenous peoples are recognized in the 1991 Constitution.
One of these is the
Muisca culture, a subset of the larger
Chibcha ethnic group, famous for their use of
gold, which led to the legend of
El Dorado. At the time of the Spanish conquest, the Chibchas were the largest native civilization between the
Incas and the Aztecs.
Ecuador
Ecuador was the site of many indigenous cultures, and civilizations of different proportions. An early sedentary culture, known as the
Valdivia culture, developed in the coastal region, while the
Caras and the Quitus unified to form an elaborate civilization that ended at the birth of the Capital Quito. The
Cañaris near Cuenca were the most advanced, and most feared by the Inca, due to their fierce resistance to the Incan expansion. Their architecture remains were later destroyed by Spaniards and the Incas. Many Ameridian natives still exist today living in isolation with little contact to the outerworld. Most natives remained unmixed in the fusion that occurred after colonization because they inhabited such remote areas like the jungle, and the Andes.Many of the Cañaris, and other natives still occupy their ancestors' original locations.
Guatemala
Many of the indigenous peoples of Guatemala are of Maya peoples heritage. Other groups are Xinca people and
Garífuna.
Pure Maya account for some 40 percent of the population; although around 40 percent of the population speaks an indigenous language, those tongues (of which there are more than 20) enjoy no official status.
Mexico
, an indigenous Zapotec and President of Mexico from 1858 to 1872. He was the first Mexican president with indigenous roots.The territory of modern-day Mexico was home to numerous indigenous civilizations prior to the arrival of the European
conquistadores: The
Olmecs, who flourished from between 1200 BCE to about 400 BCE in the coastal regions of the
Gulf of Mexico; the Zapotecs and the Mixtecs, who held sway in the mountains of
Oaxaca (state) and the Isthmus of Tehuantepec; the
Maya civilization in the Yucatán (and into neighbouring areas of contemporary Central America); the Purepecha or Tarascan in present day Michoacán and surrounding areas, and the Aztecs, who, from their central capital at
Tenochtitlan, dominated much of the centre and south of the country (and the non-Aztec inhabitants of those areas) when
Hernán Cortés first landed at
Veracruz, Veracruz.
In contrast to what was the general rule in the rest of
North America, the history of the colony of
New Spain was one of racial intermingling (
Mestizo).
Mestizos quickly came to account for a majority of the colony's population; however, significant pockets of pure-blood
indígenas (as the native peoples are now known) have survived to the present day.
With
mestizos numbering some 60 percent of the modern population, estimates for the numbers of unmixed indigenous peoples vary from a very modest 10 percent to a more liberal 30 percent of the population. The reason for this discrepancy may be the Mexican government's policy of using linguistic, rather than racial, criteria as the basis of classification.
In the states of
Chiapas and
Oaxaca and in the interior of the Yucatán peninsula the majority of the population is indigenous. Large indigenous minorities, including
Aztecs, Tarascan, and
Mixtecs are also present in the central regions of Mexico. In Northern Mexico indigenous people are a small minority: they are practically absent from the northeast but, in the northwest and central borderlands, include the
Tarahumara of Chihuahua (state) and the Yaquis and Seri of Sonora. Many of the tribes from this region are also recognized Native American tribes from the U.S. Southwest such as the Yaqui and Kickapoo.
In particular, in areas such as Chiapas — most famously, but also in
Oaxaca (state), Puebla (state),
Guerrero, and other remote mountainous parts — indigenous communities have been left on the margins of national development for the past 500 years. Indigenous customs and uses enjoy no official status. The
Huichols of the states of Jalisco, Nayarit, Zacatecas, and Durango are impeded by police forces in their ritual pilgrimages, and their religious observances are interfered with.
Nicaragua
The
Miskito are
Indigenous peoples of the Americas people in
Central America. Their territory expands from Cape Cameron, Honduras, to
Rio Grande, Nicaragua,
Nicaragua along the
Miskito Coast. There is a native Miskito language, but large groups speak
Miskito Coastal Creole, Spanish, Rama and others. The creole English came about through frequent contact with the British. Many are Christians.
Over the centuries the Miskito have intermarried with Maroon (people) who have sought refuge in Miskito communities. Traditional Miskito
society was highly structured, with a defined politics structure. There was a
monarch but he did not have total power. Instead, the power was split between him, a
governor, a
general, and by the 1750s, an
admiral. Historical information on kings is often obscured by the fact that many of the kings were semi-
mythologyical.
===Peru===
Most
Peruvians are either indigenous or mestizos (of mixed Indigenous and European ancestry). Peru has the largest indigenous population of South America, and its traditions and customs have shaped the way Peruvians live and see themselves today. Cultural citizenship--or what Renato Rosaldo has called, "the right to be different and to belong, in a democratic, participatory sense" (1996:243)--is not yet very well developed in Peru. This is perhaps no more apparent than in the country's Amazonian regions where indigenous societies continue to struggle against state-sponsored economic abuses, cultural discrimination, and pervasive violence.
Throughout the Peruvian Amazon, indigenous peoples have long faced centuries of missionization, unregulated streams of colonists, land-grabbing, decades of formal schooling in an alien tongue, pressures to conform to a foreign national culture, and more recently, explosive expressions of violent social conflict fueled by a booming underground coca economy. The disruptions accompanying the establishment of extractive economies, coupled with the Peruvian state-sanctioned civilizing project, have led to a devastating impoverishment of Amazonia's richly variegated social and ecological communities.See for example Dean and Levi (2003)
The most visited tourist destinations of Peru were built by
indigenous peoples (the
Quechua,
Aymara, Moche, etc.), while Amazonian peoples, such as the
Urarina, Bora people, Matsés,
Tikuna,
Yagua, Shipibo and the
Aguaruna, developed elaborate
shamanic systems of belief prior to the European Conquest of the
New World. Macchu Picchu is considered one of the marvels of humanity, and it was constructed by the Inca civilization. Even though Peru officially declares its multi-ethnic character and recognizes at least six–dozen languages —including Quechua,
Aymara and
hegemonic Spanish—
discrimination and language endangerment continue to challenge the indigenous peoples in Peru.A view expressed by Dean (2003)
United States
womanIndigenous peoples in what is now the contiguous United States are commonly called "American Indians" but are also often referred to as "
Native Americans in the United States". In Alaska, indigenous peoples, which include Native Americans, Yupik and
Inupiat Eskimos, and Aleut people, are referred to collectively as
Alaska Natives. Native Americans and Alaska Natives make up 2 percent of the population, with more than 6 million people identifying themselves as such, although only 1.8 million are registered tribal members. A minority of U.S. Native Americans live in zones mistakenly called Indian reservations. There are also many Southwestern U.S. tribes, such as the Yaqui and Apache, that have registered tribal communities in Northern Mexico and several bands of Blackfoot reside in southern Alberta. There is further Native American ancestry by various extraction existing across all social races that is mostly unaccounted for.
Native cultures in Hawaii still thrive following annexation to the US.
Other parts of the Americas
Indigenous peoples make up the majority of the population in
Bolivia and Peru, and are a significant element in most other former
Spain colonies. Exceptions to this include
Costa Rica, Cuba, Puerto Rico,
Argentina, Dominican Republic, and Uruguay. At least three of the native American languages (Quechua in
Peru and
Bolivia,
Aymara language also in
Bolivia, and
Guarani in Paraguay) are recognized along with
Spanish language as national languages. And the controversial issue on the significance of indigenous peoples and their culture has on
Chile, the South American country was treated more like an European-derived one by the fact European immigration was dense, but smaller than immigration to Uruguay and neighboring Argentina, but a majority of Chileans are
mestizos of varied degrees of mixed European and native American ancestry. (see demographics of Chile)
Native American name controversy
The
Native American name controversy is an ongoing dispute over the acceptable ways to refer to the indigenous peoples of the Americas and to broad subsets thereof, such as those living in a specific country or sharing certain cultural attributes. Once-common terms like "Indian" remain in use, despite the introduction of terms such as "Native American" during the latter half of the 20th century.
See also
in the early 19th Century
Notes
References
External links
- http://www.garviespointmuseum.com/indian-archaeology-long-island.php Native American Archaeology of Long Island, NY
- The Canadian Museum of Civilization - History of Native People of Canada
- Indigenous Women of the Americas
- Uncontacted Indian tribe found in Brazil's Amazon
- The Peopling of the American Continents
- Pre-European Exploration, Prehistory through 1540
- America's Stone Age Explorers
- Speaking4Earth: action site about indigenous issues
- Photos and videos of Bolivian, Mexican, Peruvian and Guatemaltec indigenous people
- Tlingit National Anthem, Alaska Natives and Native American resources
- A History of Aboriginal Treaties and Relations in Canada This site includes contextual materials, links to digitized primary sources and summaries of primary source documents.
- Shamanism.com offers information on the ancient shamanic traditions of the Huichol indigenous people.
is counted among the many achievements and innovations of pre-Columbian American cultures. The region of
Mesoamerica produced a number of Mesoamerican writing systems from the
1st millennium BCE onwards. What may be the earliest-known example in the Americas of an extensive text thought to be writing is illustrated above. These undeciphered glyphs, which appear on a stone tablet discovered in the late 1990s near San Lorenzo Tenochtitlán in Veracruz, Mexico, have been termed "Olmec hieroglyphs". The tablet has been indirectly dated from ceramic sherds found in the same context to approximately 900s BC, around the time that Olmec occupation of San Lorenzo began to wane.Skidmore (2006, pp.1-4). The numbers appearing next to each glyph are identifiers used by archaeologists investigating the find.The
indigenous peoples of the Americas are the
pre-Columbian inhabitants of the Americas, their descendants, and many
ethnic groups who identify with those peoples. They are often also referred to as
Native American name controversy,
First Nations and by
Christopher Columbus' historical mistake "American Indians" or "AmerIndians".
According to the still debated Models of migration to the New World, a migration of humans from
Eurasia to the Americas took place via Beringia, a land bridge which formerly connected the two continents across what is now the
Bering Strait. The minimum time depth by which this migration had taken place is confirmed at c. 12,000 years ago, with the upper bound (or earliest period) remaining a matter of some unresolved contention.See Jacobs 2001 for an extensive review of the evidence for migration timings, and Jacobs 2002 for a survey of migration models. These early Paleoamericans soon spread throughout the Americas, diversifying into many hundreds of culturally distinct nations and tribes.Jacobs (2002). According to the oral histories of many of the indigenous peoples of the Americas, they have been living there since their genesis, described by a wide range of traditional
origin story.
Application of the term "Indian" originated with Christopher Columbus, who thought that he had arrived in the
East Indies. This has served to imagine a kind of racial or cultural unity for the Wikt:autochthonous peoples of the Americas. Once created, the unified "Indian" was codified in law, religion, and politics. The unitary idea of "Indians" was not originally shared by indigenous peoples, but many now embrace the identity.
While some indigenous peoples of the Americas were historically
hunter-gatherers, many practiced aquaculture and
agriculture. The impact of their
#Agricultural endowment to the world is a testament to their time and work in reshaping, taming, and cultivating the flora indigenous to the Americas.Mann (2005). Some societies depended heavily on agriculture while others practiced a mix of farming, hunting, and gathering. In some regions the indigenous peoples created monumental
architecture, large-scale organized city, chiefdoms,
states, and massive
empires.
History
Original peopling of the Americas
from the Americas, early
20th century.Scholars who follow the Bering Strait theory agree that most indigenous peoples of the Americas descended from people who probably Migration (human) from Siberia across the
Bering Strait, anywhere between 9,000 and 50,000 years ago. The timeframe and exact routes are still matters of debate, and the model faces continuous challenges.
A 2006 study (to be published in
Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology) reports new DNA-based research that links DNA retrieved from a 10,000-year-old fossilized tooth from an Alaskan island, with specific coastal tribes in Tierra del Fuego,
Ecuador,
Mexico, and California. "DNA Ties Together Scattered Peoples," Los Angeles Times (accessed September 11
2006); reprint Unique DNA markers found in the fossilized tooth were found only in these specific coastal tribes, and were not comparable to markers found in any other indigenous peoples in the Americas. This finding lends substantial credence to a migration theory that at least one set of early peoples moved south along the west coast of the Americas in boats. However, these results may be ambiguous, as there are other issues with DNA research and biological and cultural affiliation as outlined in Peter N. Jones' book
Respect for the Ancestors: Cultural Affiliation and Cultural Continuity in the American West.One result of these waves of migration is that large groups of peoples with similar languages and perhaps physical characteristics as well, moved into various geographic areas of North, and then Central and South America. While these peoples have traditionally remained primarily loyal to their individual tribes, ethnologists have variously sought to group the myriad of tribes into larger entities which reflect common geographic origins, linguistic similarities, and lifestyles.See also Classification of indigenous peoples of the Americas.
Remnants of a human settlement in
Monte Verde, Chile dated to 12,500 years Before Present (another layer at Monteverde has been tentatively dated to 33,000-35,000 years B.P.) suggests that southern Chile was settled by peoples who entered the Americas before the peoples associated with the Bering Strait migrations. It is suggested that a coastal route via canoes could have allowed rapid migration into the Americas.
The traditional view of a relatively recent migration has also been challenged by older findings of human remains in South America; some dating to perhaps even 30,000 years old or more. Some recent finds (notably the
Luzia skeleton in Lagoa Santa, Brazil) are claimed to be morphologically distinct from Asians and are more similar to
African and Australian Aborigines. These
American Aborigines would have been later displaced or absorbed by the Siberian immigrants. The distinctive Fuegians of
Tierra del Fuego, the southernmost tip of the American continent, are speculated to be partial remnants of those Aboriginal populations. These early immigrants would have either crossed the ocean by boat or traveled north along the Asian coast and entered America through the Northwest, well before the Siberian waves. This theory is presently viewed by many scholars as conjecture, as many areas along the proposed routes now lie underwater, making research difficult. Some scholars believe the earliest cranial anthropoligical origin/forensic evidence for early populations appears to more closely resemble Southeast Asians and Pacific Islanders, and not those of Northeast Asia.Jablonski, Nina (2001). The First Americans: The Pleistocene Colonization of the New World. Journal of Field Archeology (Vol 28, 2001, p. 459. Retrieved on August 10, 2007.
Scholars' estimates of the total population of the Americas before European contact vary enormously, from a low of 10 million to a high of 112 million.See Thornton's (2006) review of
1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus (Mann 2005). Whatever the figure, scholars generally agree that most of the indigenous population resided in
Mesoamerica and South America, while about 10 percent resided in North America.Taylor (2001, p.40).
The Solutrean hypothesis suggests an early Atlantic migration route into the Americas.Carey, Bjorn (19 February 2006). First Americans may have been European.
Life Science. Retrieved on August 10, 2007.Conner, Steve, Science Editor, (03 December 2002). Does skull prove that the first Americans came from Europe?. Published in the
UK Independent. Retrieved on August 14, 2007. Hecht, Jeff (4 September 2003). Skulls narrow clues to First Americans
New Scientist. Retrieved on August 12, 2007.Gonzalez, Sylvia, C. Jimenez-Lopez, R. Hedges, D. Huddart, J.C. Ohman, A. Turner, J.A. Pompa y Padilla (2003). Earliest humans in the Americas: new evidence from Mexico, Journal of Human Evolution 44, 379-387. Stone tool technology of the
Solutrean culture in prehistoric Europe may have later influenced the development of the
Clovis culture tool-making culture in the Americas. Some of its key proponents include Dr.
Dennis Stanford of the
Smithsonian Institution and Dr. Bruce Bradley of the
University of Exeter. In this hypothesis, peoples associated with the Solutrean culture migrated from
Ice Age Europe to
North America, bringing their methods of making stone tools with them and providing the basis for later Clovis technology found throughout North America. The hypothesis rests upon particular similarities in Solutrean and Clovis technology that have no known counterparts in Eastern Asia, Siberia or Beringia, areas from which or through which early Americans are known to have migrated.
European colonization
The European colonization of the Americas forever changed the lives, bloodlines and cultures of the peoples of the continent. The
Population history of American indigenous peoples postulates that
infectious diseases exposure, displacement, and
warfare may have diminished populations.As characterized by Mann (2005)Native Americans of North America, http://encarta.msn.com/text_761570777___2/Native_Americans_of_North_America.html, Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia 2006, Trudy Griffin-Pierce, accessed September 14, 2006 The first indigenous group encountered by Columbus were the 250,000 Tainos of Hispaniola who were the dominant culture in the Greater Antilles and the Bahamas. In thirty years, 80 to 90% of the Tainos died.
Slavery, Unfree labour in the mines, mistreated, the Tainos began to adopt suicidal behaviors, with women aborting or killing their newly-born children, men jumping from the cliffs or ingesting manioc, a violent poison
"Espagnols-Indiens: le choc des civilisations" in
L'Histoire, n°322, July-August 2007, pp.14-21 . They were not immune to European diseases, so outbreaks of measles and smallpox decimated their population. Smallpox Through History
Reasons for the decline of the Native American populations are variously theorized to be from
List of epidemics, conflicts with Europeans, and conflicts among
endemic warfare. More recently, collective mobilization among the indigenous peoples in the Americas has required the incorporation of closely-knit local communities into a broader national and international framework of political action.
Scholars now believe that, among the various contributing factors,
pandemic disease was the overwhelming cause of the population decline of the American natives.Cook, p. 1. BBC Smallpox: Eradicating the Scourge After first contacts with European ethnic groupss and
Africans, some believe that the death of 90 to 95% of the native population of the New World was caused by Old World diseases. The Story Of... Smallpox Half the native population of
Hispaniola in 1518 was killed by
smallpox. American Indian Epidemics Within a few years smallpox killed between 60% and 90% of the
Inca population, with other waves of European disease weakening them further. Smallpox: The Disease That Destroyed Two Empires Smallpox was only the first epidemic. Typhus (probably) in 1546,
influenza and smallpox together in 1558, smallpox again in 1589,
diphtheria in 1614, measles in 1618 - all ravaged the remains of Inca culture. Smallpox had killed millions of native inhabitants of Mexico. Epidemics Unintentionally introduced at Veracruz with the arrival of
Panfilo de Narvaez on April 23, 1520, smallpox ravaged Mexico in the 1520s, killing 150,000 in Tenochtitlán alone, including the emperor, and was credited with the victory of
Hernan Cortez over the
Aztec empire at Tenochtitlan (present-day Mexico City) in 1521. Smallpox's history in the world
Even after the two mighty empires of the Americas were defeated by the virus, smallpox continued its march of death. In
1633 in Plymouth, Massachusetts, the Native Americans in the United Statess were struck by the virus. As it had done elsewhere, the virus wiped out entire population groups of Native Americans. It reached Lake Ontario in
1636, and the lands of the
Iroquois by 1679, killing millions. Smallpox
Later explorations of the Caribbean led to the discovery of the
Aruak peoples of the lesser Antilles. The culture was extinct by 1650. Only 500 had survived by the year 1550, though the bloodlines continued through the modern populace. In Amazonia, indigenous societies weathered centuries of colonizationSee Varese (2004), as reviewed in Dean (2006).
The Spanish Empires and other Europeans brought Columbian Exchange. Some of these animals escaped and began to
mustang and increase their numbers in the wild.
Ancient Horse (Equus cf. E. complicatus), The Academy of Natural Sciences, Thomas Jefferson Fossil Collection, Philadelphia, PA, (See: species
Equus scotti and others died out at the end of the last ice age with other
megafauna.] The re-introduction of the horse had a profound impact on Native American culture in the
Great Plains of North America and of
Patagonia in South America. This new mode of travel made it possible for some tribes to greatly expand their territories, exchange many goods with neighboring tribes, and more easily capture
Game (food).
Agriculture
Over the course of thousands of years, a large array of plant species were domesticated, bred and cultivated by the indigenous peoples of the American continent. These species now constitute 50-60% of all crops in cultivation worldwide "Native Americans: The First Farmers."
AgExporter October 1 1999 . In certain cases, the indigenous peoples developed entirely new species and strains through artificial selection, as was the case in the domestication and breeding of maize from wild teosinte grasses in the valleys of southern Mexico. A great number of these agricultural products still retain native names (Nahuatl and others) in the
English language and Spanish language lexicons.
Innumerable crops first domesticated by indigenous Americans are now produced and/or used globally. Largest among these is
maize or "corn", arguably the most important crop in the world Michael Pollan,The Omnivore's Dilemma.. Other significant crops include
cassava,
squash (fruit) (pumpkins, zucchini, marrow, acorn squash, butternut squash, others), the pinto bean,
Phaseolus including most common beans, tepary beans and
lima beans were also all first domesticated and cultivated by indigenous peoples in the Americas); the tomato, the potatos, avocados,
peanuts,
cacao (used to make
chocolate),
vanilla, strawberries,
pineapples, Capsicum (species and varieties of
Capsicum, including
bell peppers,
jalapeños, paprika and chili peppers) Sunflower,
rubber,
brazilwood, chicle, some species of cotton,
tobacco,
coca.
Culture
man weaving on traditional loom
Cultural practices in the Americas seem to have been mostly shared within geographical zones where otherwise unrelated peoples might adopt similar technologies and social organisations. An example of such a cultural area could be
Mesoamerica, where millennia of coexistence and shared development between the peoples of the region produced a fairly homogeneous culture with complex agricultural and social patterns. Another well-known example could be the North American plains area, where until the 19th century, several different peoples shared traits of
nomadic hunter-gatherers primarily based on buffalo hunting. Within the Americas, dozens of larger and hundreds of smaller culture areas can be identified.
Music and art
Native American music in North America is almost entirely Texture (music), but there are notable exceptions. Traditional Native American music often includes drumming but little other instrumentation, although flutes are played by individuals. The tuning of these flutes is not precise and depends on the length of the wood used and the hand span of the intended player, but the finger holes are most often around a whole step apart and, at least in Northern California, a flute was not used if it turned out to have an interval close to a half step.
Music from indigenous peoples of Central Mexico and Central America often was
pentatonic. Before the arrival of the Spaniards it was inseparable from religious festivities and included a large variety of percussion and wind instruments such as drums, flutes, sea snail shells (used as a kind of trumpet) and "rain" tubes. No remnants of pre-Columbian stringed instruments were found until archaeologists discovered a jar in Guatemala, attributed to the Maya of the Late Classic Era (600-900 AD), which depicts a stringed musical instrument which has since been reproduced. This instrument is astonishing in at least two respects. First, it is the only
stringed instrument known in the Americas prior to the introduction of European musical instruments. Second, when played, it produces a sound virtually identical to a jaguar's growl. A sample of this sound is available at the Princeton Art Museum website.
Art of the indigenous peoples of the Americas comprises a major category in the world art collection. Contributions include
pottery, paintings,
jewellery, weavings,
sculptures,
basketry,carvings and
hair pipes.
Demography of contemporary populations
The following table provides estimates of the per-country populations of indigenous people, and also those with part-indigenous ancestry, expressed as a percentage of the overall country population. of each country that is comprised by indigenous peoples, and of people with partly indigenous descent. The total percentage obtained by adding both of these categories is also given (One should note however that these categories, especially the second one, are inconsistently defined and measured differently from country to country).{| class="prettytable"|+
Indigenous populations of the Americas1
as estimated percentage of total country's population|-!style="background:aqua" |Country!style="background:aqua" |Indigenous!style="background:aqua" |Part-indigenous!style="background:aqua" |Combined total|- align="right"|
Argentina11] || 55 percent || 30 percent || 85 percent|- align="right"|
Brazil² ]³ || 1.9 percent4 || 2.7 percent || 4.6 percent|- align="right"|
Chile ] || 3.4 percent5 || 82.1 percent || 85.5 percent6|- align="right"|
Costa Rica7 ]7 || 1 percent || 20 percent || 21 percent|- align="right"|
Dominican Republic ] || 40 percent || 45 percent || 85 percent|- align="right"|
Ecuador ] || 1 percent || 90 percent || 91 percent|- align="right"|
French Guiana,
Guyana and
Suriname ] || 7 percent || 90 percent || 97 percent|- align="right"|
Mexico ] || 5 percent || 69 percent || 74 percent|- align="right"| Panama ] || 5 percent || 93.3 percent || 98.3 percent|- align="right"|
Peru ] || 0.4 percent || 61.2 percent || 61.6 percent9]|- align="right"|
Venezuela ]10 || .74 - .9 percent || .57 - .74 percent || 1.31 - 1.64 percent|- align="right"|
Uruguay ] unless otherwise indicated.
²
2000 Brazil Census³
Canada 2001 Census4
1.9 percent is for single origins only, Aboriginal identity population is 3.3 percent5 DANE 2005 National Census
6Yunis, Emilio y Juan José Yunis (2006) quoted by Bejarano, Bernardo
El 85,5 por ciento de las madres colombianas tiene origen indígena7
indigenous peoples mixed into the general population; NA = "not available".8 Of Amerindian
and "predominantly" Amerindian as reported in the CIA Factbook. National statistics report a 12% of
pure Amerindian. Los pueblos indígenas de México
9
Kearns DNA10
2000 U.S. Census11
Primeros Resultados de la Encuesta Complementaria de Pueblos Indígenas (ECPI)
|}
History and status by country
Argentina
Argentina's indigenous population is about 403.000 (0.9 percent of total population). INDEC: Encuesta Complementaria de Pueblos Indígenas (ECPI) 2004 - 2005 Indigenous nations include the
Toba (tribe),
Wichí, Mocoví, Pilagá,
Nivaclé, Diaguita-
Calchaquí,
South Bolivian Quechua,
Guaraní (Tupí Guaraní and Avá Guaraní in the provinces of Jujuy and Salta, and Mbyá Guaraní in the province of Misiones), Chorote (
Iyo'wujwa Chorote and
Iyojwa'ja Chorote),
Chané language,
Tapieté, Mapuche, Tehuelche and
Selknam (Ona).
Belize
Mestizos (European with indigenous peoples) number about 45 percent of the population; unmixed Maya people make up another 6.5 percent. The Garifuna, who came to Belize in the 1800s, originating from St. Vincent and the Grenadines, with a mixed African,
Carib, and
Arawak ancestry make up another 5% of the population.
Bolivia
In Bolivia about 2.5 million people speak
Quechua, 2.1 million speak
Aymara, while Guaraní is only spoken by a few hundred thousand people. The languages are recognized; nevertheless, there are no official documents written in those languages. However, the constitutional reform in 1997 for the first time recognized Bolivia as a multilingual, pluri-ethnic society and introduced education reform. In 2005, for the first time in the country's history, an indigenous Aymara president, Evo Morales, was elected.
Brazil
tribe: Raony, Kaye, Kadjor, Panara..The Amerindians make up 0.4% of Brazil's population, or about 700,000 people. Brazil urged to protect Indians Indigenous peoples are found in the entire territory of Brazil, although the majority of them live in Indian reservations in the North and Centre-Western part of the country. On 18 January 2007, Fundação Nacional do Índio reported that it had confirmed the presence of 67 different
uncontacted peoples in Brazil, up from 40 in 2005. With this addition Brazil has now overtaken the island of New Guinea as the country having the largest number of uncontacted tribes. Brazil sees traces of more isolated Amazon tribes
Canada
The most commonly preferred term for the indigenous peoples of what is now
Canada is
Aboriginal peoples in Canada. Of these Aboriginal peoples who are not
Inuit or
Métis people (Canada), "First Nations" is the most commonly preferred term of self-identification. First Nations peoples make up approximately 3.3 percent of the Canadian population, and includes
Inuit, and Metis peoples.
Chile
Less than 5 percent of Chileans belong to indigenous peoples, such as the
Mapuche in the country's central valley and lake district, and the Mapuche successfully fought off defeat in the first 300-350 years of Spanish during the
War of Arauco. Relation with the new Chilean Republic were good until the Chilean state decided to occupy their lands. During the Occupation of Araucanía the Mapuche surrendered to the country's army in the 1880s. The former land was opened to settlement for mestizo and white Chileans. Conflict over Mapuche land rights continued until present days.
, Colombia
Colombia
A small minority today within
Colombia's overwhelmingly
Mestizo and Afro-Colombian population, Colombia's indigenous peoples nonetheless encompass at least 85 distinct cultures and more than 1,378,884 peopleDANE 2005 national census. A variety of collective rights for indigenous peoples are recognized in the 1991 Constitution.
One of these is the
Muisca culture, a subset of the larger Chibcha ethnic group, famous for their use of
gold, which led to the legend of
El Dorado. At the time of the Spanish conquest, the Chibchas were the largest native civilization between the Incas and the Aztecs.
Ecuador
Ecuador was the site of many indigenous cultures, and civilizations of different proportions. An early sedentary culture, known as the Valdivia culture, developed in the coastal region, while the Caras and the Quitus unified to form an elaborate civilization that ended at the birth of the Capital Quito. The Cañaris near Cuenca were the most advanced, and most feared by the Inca, due to their fierce resistance to the Incan expansion. Their architecture remains were later destroyed by Spaniards and the Incas. Many Ameridian natives still exist today living in isolation with little contact to the outerworld. Most natives remained unmixed in the fusion that occurred after colonization because they inhabited such remote areas like the jungle, and the Andes.Many of the Cañaris, and other natives still occupy their ancestors' original locations.
Guatemala
Many of the indigenous peoples of Guatemala are of Maya peoples heritage. Other groups are
Xinca people and
Garífuna.
Pure Maya account for some 40 percent of the population; although around 40 percent of the population speaks an indigenous language, those tongues (of which there are more than 20) enjoy no official status.
Mexico
, an indigenous Zapotec and President of Mexico from 1858 to 1872. He was the first Mexican president with indigenous roots.The territory of modern-day Mexico was home to numerous indigenous civilizations prior to the arrival of the European
conquistadores: The
Olmecs, who flourished from between 1200 BCE to about 400 BCE in the coastal regions of the
Gulf of Mexico; the
Zapotecs and the Mixtecs, who held sway in the mountains of Oaxaca (state) and the
Isthmus of Tehuantepec; the Maya civilization in the Yucatán (and into neighbouring areas of contemporary
Central America); the Purepecha or
Tarascan in present day Michoacán and surrounding areas, and the Aztecs, who, from their central capital at
Tenochtitlan, dominated much of the centre and south of the country (and the non-Aztec inhabitants of those areas) when
Hernán Cortés first landed at
Veracruz, Veracruz.
In contrast to what was the general rule in the rest of North America, the history of the colony of
New Spain was one of racial intermingling (
Mestizo).
Mestizos quickly came to account for a majority of the colony's population; however, significant pockets of pure-blood
indígenas (as the native peoples are now known) have survived to the present day.
With
mestizos numbering some 60 percent of the modern population, estimates for the numbers of unmixed indigenous peoples vary from a very modest 10 percent to a more liberal 30 percent of the population. The reason for this discrepancy may be the Mexican government's policy of using linguistic, rather than racial, criteria as the basis of classification.
In the states of
Chiapas and
Oaxaca and in the interior of the
Yucatán peninsula the majority of the population is indigenous. Large indigenous minorities, including Aztecs, Tarascan, and Mixtecs are also present in the central regions of Mexico. In Northern Mexico indigenous people are a small minority: they are practically absent from the northeast but, in the northwest and central borderlands, include the Tarahumara of Chihuahua (state) and the
Yaquis and Seri of
Sonora. Many of the tribes from this region are also recognized Native American tribes from the U.S. Southwest such as the Yaqui and Kickapoo.
In particular, in areas such as
Chiapas — most famously, but also in Oaxaca (state),
Puebla (state),
Guerrero, and other remote mountainous parts — indigenous communities have been left on the margins of national development for the past 500 years. Indigenous customs and uses enjoy no official status. The Huichols of the states of Jalisco, Nayarit, Zacatecas, and Durango are impeded by police forces in their ritual pilgrimages, and their religious observances are interfered with.
Nicaragua
The
Miskito are
Indigenous peoples of the Americas people in Central America. Their territory expands from
Cape Cameron,
Honduras, to Rio Grande, Nicaragua, Nicaragua along the
Miskito Coast. There is a native Miskito language, but large groups speak Miskito Coastal Creole, Spanish, Rama and others. The creole English came about through frequent contact with the British. Many are Christians.
Over the centuries the Miskito have intermarried with
Maroon (people) who have sought refuge in Miskito communities. Traditional Miskito
society was highly structured, with a defined
politics structure. There was a monarch but he did not have total power. Instead, the power was split between him, a
governor, a
general, and by the 1750s, an admiral. Historical information on kings is often obscured by the fact that many of the kings were semi-
mythologyical.
===Peru===
Most Peruvians are either indigenous or mestizos (of mixed Indigenous and European ancestry). Peru has the largest indigenous population of South America, and its traditions and customs have shaped the way Peruvians live and see themselves today. Cultural citizenship--or what Renato Rosaldo has called, "the right to be different and to belong, in a democratic, participatory sense" (1996:243)--is not yet very well developed in Peru. This is perhaps no more apparent than in the country's Amazonian regions where indigenous societies continue to struggle against state-sponsored economic abuses, cultural discrimination, and pervasive violence.
Throughout the Peruvian Amazon, indigenous peoples have long faced centuries of missionization, unregulated streams of colonists, land-grabbing, decades of formal schooling in an alien tongue, pressures to conform to a foreign national culture, and more recently, explosive expressions of violent social conflict fueled by a booming underground coca economy. The disruptions accompanying the establishment of extractive economies, coupled with the Peruvian state-sanctioned civilizing project, have led to a devastating impoverishment of Amazonia's richly variegated social and ecological communities.See for example Dean and Levi (2003)
The most visited tourist destinations of Peru were built by
indigenous peoples (the
Quechua, Aymara, Moche, etc.), while Amazonian peoples, such as the
Urarina,
Bora people, Matsés,
Tikuna, Yagua,
Shipibo and the Aguaruna, developed elaborate
shamanic systems of belief prior to the European Conquest of the New World.
Macchu Picchu is considered one of the marvels of humanity, and it was constructed by the
Inca civilization. Even though Peru officially declares its multi-ethnic character and recognizes at least six–dozen languages —including Quechua, Aymara and
hegemonic Spanish— discrimination and language endangerment continue to challenge the indigenous peoples in Peru.A view expressed by Dean (2003)
United States
womanIndigenous peoples in what is now the contiguous United States are commonly called "American Indians" but are also often referred to as "Native Americans in the United States". In Alaska, indigenous peoples, which include Native Americans, Yupik and
Inupiat Eskimos, and Aleut people, are referred to collectively as Alaska Natives. Native Americans and Alaska Natives make up 2 percent of the population, with more than 6 million people identifying themselves as such, although only 1.8 million are registered tribal members. A minority of U.S. Native Americans live in zones mistakenly called
Indian reservations. There are also many Southwestern U.S. tribes, such as the Yaqui and Apache, that have registered tribal communities in Northern Mexico and several bands of Blackfoot reside in southern Alberta. There is further Native American ancestry by various extraction existing across all social races that is mostly unaccounted for.
Native cultures in Hawaii still thrive following annexation to the US.
Other parts of the Americas
Indigenous peoples make up the majority of the population in
Bolivia and
Peru, and are a significant element in most other former
Spain colonies. Exceptions to this include
Costa Rica, Cuba, Puerto Rico,
Argentina,
Dominican Republic, and
Uruguay. At least three of the native American languages (Quechua in
Peru and
Bolivia,
Aymara language also in
Bolivia, and
Guarani in Paraguay) are recognized along with
Spanish language as national languages. And the controversial issue on the significance of indigenous peoples and their culture has on Chile, the South American country was treated more like an European-derived one by the fact European immigration was dense, but smaller than immigration to Uruguay and neighboring Argentina, but a majority of Chileans are
mestizos of varied degrees of mixed European and native American ancestry. (see demographics of Chile)
Native American name controversy
The
Native American name controversy is an ongoing dispute over the acceptable ways to refer to the indigenous peoples of the Americas and to broad subsets thereof, such as those living in a specific country or sharing certain cultural attributes. Once-common terms like "Indian" remain in use, despite the introduction of terms such as "Native American" during the latter half of the 20th century.
See also
in the early 19th Century
Notes
References
External links
- http://www.garviespointmuseum.com/indian-archaeology-long-island.php Native American Archaeology of Long Island, NY
- The Canadian Museum of Civilization - History of Native People of Canada
- Indigenous Women of the Americas
- Uncontacted Indian tribe found in Brazil's Amazon
- The Peopling of the American Continents
- Pre-European Exploration, Prehistory through 1540
- America's Stone Age Explorers
- Speaking4Earth: action site about indigenous issues
- Photos and videos of Bolivian, Mexican, Peruvian and Guatemaltec indigenous people
- Tlingit National Anthem, Alaska Natives and Native American resources
- A History of Aboriginal Treaties and Relations in Canada This site includes contextual materials, links to digitized primary sources and summaries of primary source documents.
- Shamanism.com offers information on the ancient shamanic traditions of the Huichol indigenous people.