Dakota and Ojibwe
Women
Fishing in the summer
Men
Fishing in the winter
Dakota
Native Americans that were here in Minnesota first
East coast/Atlantic Ocean
Ojibwe migrated from to Minnesota
Dugout canoes
The Dakota canoes
Birchbark canoes
The Ojibwe canoes
respect
expression of courtesy and consideration towards others
generosity
giving without expecting anything in return
Human Capital
knowledge and skills a person has to earn income
income
money or other benefits for goods or services
migration
moving from one region in a country to another
Corn
planted by Ojibwe women in the summer
sovereign
self-ruling and independent nation
Seven
the number of stops the Ojibwe made in their migration story
Mni Sota Makoce
Dakota word meaning, "where the waters are so clear"
Spring
Dakota/Ojibwe collected maple sap at the sugar camp
Fall
Dakota/Ojibwe harvested wild rice by rivers and marshes where the wild rice grew
Winter
Dakota/Ojibwe mended/sewed clothes, made fish nets spread out in the forest
Summer
Dakota/Ojibwe planted and tended crops by lakes and rivers
Kinship
close connections with ones family
Oral history
A way the Dakota and Ojibwe taught children values and lessons
Buffalo, elk, geese
Animals the Dakota hunted for food
1679
Dakota and Ojibwe created an alliance
Circle
Dakota believe that history is this way
tipi
Dakota home used in the Fall and Winter that is cone shaped
Sugar camp
Where the Dakota/Ojibwe went in the spring
wigwam
a dome-shaped house made out of poles and birchbark used by the Ojibwe
extended family
all of your relatives
Bark house
another kind of house the Dakota lived in during the Spring/Summer
Sioux
another name for the Dakota
Annishinaabe
another name for the Ojibwe