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01 The Plains Indians

01 Main

02 Diversity and Cultural Modification

03 Germs, Horses, and Guns

04 International Diplomacy and the Arrival of the "Americans"

05 Uncle Sam Adopts His Plains "Stepchildren"

06 Warfare and Destruction

07 The Allotment Revolution

08 The Twentieth Century

The Plains Indians

The immediate predecessors of the tribes whose cultures remain to this day were the short-lived Proto-Historical People: the Dismal River (probably Plains Apache), the Oneota (Kansa or Kaw, Ponca, Omaha, and Osage), the Lower Loup (Pawnee), and the Great Bend (Wichita). Still untouched by the white man's diseases, alcohol, and more complex technology, these people divided their economic endeavors between gathering, small-scale horticulture (maize and vegetables), and the chase. With the penetration of the central plains by Coronado in 1541 the historic period began, as did the Indians mighty struggle for survival.

Sioux village at a distance.
Sioux village: Late 1800's, near Pine Ridge, South Dakota.

 
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