Index of Native American Cultural Resources on the Internet

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Index of Native American Cultural Resources on the Internet WWWVL: American Indians - Cultural Resources Page 1 of 12 V -6 t~ WWW Virtual Library - American Indians Index of Native American Cultural Resources on the Internet Thursday, August 15, 2002 5 :11 :47 PM Amazon Honor 13 Frequently Asked Questions for this site System This document must be read before sending any email! Search the indices on this site search I 7/23/02 - New There is now a What's New page for this site. Enoch Kelly Haney for Governor of Oklahoma! Now available : McAfee.com SpamKiller VIRUS ALERT - **W32/Klez.h@MM ** from McAfee or from Symantec Scan your PC for viruses now! Thanks again to the many people who support this website with their book purchases and donations . Please learn how you can support this site. Multi-Cultural Sites NativeWeb A Line In The Sand devoted to issues of Cultural Property and Cultural Sensitivity Indianz.com, Your Internet Resource Center For World Indigenous Studies Fourth World Documentation Project : Indigenous Peoples' Information for the Online Community The Fourth World Journal Other Fourth World Resources Turtle Island Network http://www.hanksville.org/NAresources/indices/NAculture.html 8/15/02 WWWVL : American Indians - Cultural Resources Page 2 of 12 Alaska Native Heritage Center Assembly of First Nations - National Indian Brotherhood, Canada Arctic Circle Congress ofAboriginal Peoples First Nations Confederacy of Cultural Education Centres First Peoples Cultural Foundation Great Lakes Intertribal Council InterTribal Council of Arizona Inter-Tribal Council of Nevada Inter-Tribal of Northeastern Oklahoma Keepers ofthe Sacred Tradition of Pipemakers League of Indigenous Sovereign Nations of the Western Hemisphere National Association of Friendship Centres, Ottawa, Canada National Indian Festival Association National Indian Policy Center Native American Net Nativeculture .com Native Religions of Newfoundland and Labrador SAIIC South and Meso-American Indian Rights Center The Saskatchewan Indian Cultural Centre Southern California Native American Site Bristol Bay Native Corporation, Alaska Village of First Nations Woodland Cultural Center Brantford, Ontario Tribe/Nation Sites United States Iroquois Confederacy [Including Canada] • Mohawk Nation Office - Kahnawake Branch • Mohawks of the Bay of Quinte • St. Regis Mohawk Tribe Environment Division • Haudenosaunee, People Building a Long House • The Seneca Nation of Indians • The Six Nations : Oldest Living Participatory Democracy on Earth • Kahon:wes's Mohawk & Iroquois Index from Chris "Kahon :wes" Deere • The Wampum Chronicles: A Website ofMohawk History • Akwesasne Notes • Oneida Indian Nation of NY • Oneida Nation of Wisconsin • Oneidas for Democracy • Lacrosse: An Iroquois Tradition from the Oneida Indian Nation • SixNations of the Grand River • Southern Band Tuscarora • Tuscaroras.com containing : The Indian Defense League of America and: Me & U [Mother Earth & Us] : A Haudenosaunee Perspective Cherokee http://www.hanksville .org/NAresources/indices/NAculture .html 8/15/02 WWWVL: American Indians - Cultural Resources Page 3 of 12 Cherokee Nation Official tribal website Cherokee Heritage Center in Tahlequah, OK. Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians (Official) • Four Winds Tribe, Louisiana Cherokee Confederacy [Gone ?? 2/21/02] United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians The Cherokee National Historical Society The Cherokee Messenger from the Cherokee Cultural Society of Houston Tallige Cherokee Nation, West Portsmouth, Ohio The Cherokee Archival Project The Cherokees of California, Inc. Cherokee of Georgia Council Cherokees of South Carolina Wolf Creek Band of the Southern Cherokee Nation Anishinabe/Chippewa/Ojibwe [Including Canada] Anishinabek Nation • Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Batchawana First Nation of Ojibways Bkwejwanong (Walpole Island) First Nation • Dibaudjimoh Nawash, the Chippewas of Nawash Keweenaw Bay Indian Community (L'Anse Reservation) Ojibwe Lac Courte Oreilles Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Lac du Flambeau Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe Mississaugas ofthe New Credit First Nation Pembina and Turtle Mountain Chippewa Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Chippewa St. Croix Band of Lake Superior Chippewa • Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians • Sokaogon (Mole Lake) Band of Chippewa Indians Seasons of the Chippewa, from the The Great Lakes Indian Fish & Wildlife Commission • An Introduction to Ojibway Culture and History by Kevin L . Callahan, Univ . of MN Wikwemikong Unceded Indian Reserve Windigo First Nation Council Sioux/Lakhota/Dakota Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe • Rosebud Sioux Tribe Santee Sioux Tribe The Sisseton Wahpeton Sioux Tribe Official Tribal newspaper Standing Rock Sioux Tribe • Lakota na Dakota Wowapi Oti Kin Sioux Heritage An Introduction to Dakota Culture and History by Kevin L. Callahan, Univ . of MN A Guide to the Great Sioux Nation Hopi http://www.hanksville.org/NAresources/indices/NAculture.html 8/15/02 WWWVL: American Indians - Cultural Resources Page 4 of 12 Hopi • Tribe (Official) Hopi Cultural Preservation Office Village of Hotevilla Hopi Information Network and the Hopi Computer Recycling Project Hopi Cultural Center Dine (Navajo) The Navajo Nation [Official] • Navajo Nation Natural History Program [Can't connect 2/21/02] NavajoLand.com • FAQ About Life on the Navajo Nation & Among the Navajo People Dine Bikeyah map (in Navajo) • Navajo Architecture Dine CARE Unofficial Central Navajo Land Homepage, from Chinle, Arizonas • New Mexico Pueblos All Indian Pueblo Council • • Jemez Pueblo Picuris Pueblo Poeh Center, Pojoaque Pueblo • Pueblo Office of Environmental Protection • San Juan Pueblo [Gone 4/21/02] Sandia Pueblo [Official] • Santa Ana Pueblo Taos Pueblo Pueblo of Zuni Tigua Pueblo (just outside New Mexico in El Paso) The Indian Pueblo Cultural Center • Hawaiian Nation Nation of Hawai'i Hawaiian Sovereignty Elections Council Office of Hawaiian Affairs Information on Kaho'olawe from the Protect Kaho' olawe ' Ohana and the Kaho' olawe Island Reserve Commission Native Hawaiian Advisory Council [Gone ?? 4/21/02] Hawaiian Culture Online Other U.S. Tribes/Nations Traditional Abenaki of Mazipskwik Abenaki homepage Absentee-Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians (Official website) Alabama-Coushatta Tribe of Texas (Official website) Apache Tribe of Oklahoma http ://www.hanksville.org/NAresources/indices/NAculture.html 8/15/02 WWWVL : American Indians - Cultural Resources Page 5 of 12 Barona Band of Mission Indians The Blackfoot Nation Blackfeet Nation, Official Website Cabazon Band of Mission Indians Caddo Indian Tribe of Oklahoma [Can't connect 2/21/02] Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes of Oklahoma The Chickasaw Nation (Official website) Chitimacha Tribe of Louisana Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma (Official website) Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians (Official) The Choctaw Nation Of Oklahoma "Unoffical" The Choctaw Nation Of Oklahoma Another "Unoffical" page The Chumash Indians Coast Miwok (The Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria) Cocopah Tribe Coeur d' Alene Tribe Colorado River Indian Tribes Comanche Tribe of Oklahoma Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation - Colville Tribe Coquille Indian Tribe Coushatta Tribe of Louisana [Gone 3/21/02] Cow Creek Band ofUmpqua Indians Muscogee Creek Nation Delaware Tribe Delaware Tribe of Western Oklahoma Marks in Time: Delaware Treaty History Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation Fort Sill Apache Tribe of Oklahoma Four Winds Tribe, Louisiana Cherokee Confederacy [State recognized] [Can't connect 4/21/02] Gabrieleno/Tongv a Nation [State recognized] Gila River Indian Community Confederated Tribes of the Grande Ronde Ho-Chunk Nation The Short Encyclopaedia ofHotcak Myth, Legend, and Folklore Gone 9/27/01 ] Hualapai Tribe Indian Creek B and, Chickamauga Creek Inupiat of Arctic Alaska The Iowa Tribe of Oklahoma The loway Nation Jicarilla Apache Tribe [Can't connect 7/21/01] Kaibab-Paiute Tribe The Kaw Nation The Kiowa Tribe of Oklahoma "Unofficial" Klamath Tribes (Klamath, Modoc & Yahooskin) Kuiu Thling-git' Nation, Kuiu Island, Alaska [Gone 6/21/02] Lower Elwha Klallam Triberibe The Lumbee Tribe Makah Nation Houlton Band of Maliseet Indians Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation http://www.hanksville.org/NAresources/indices/NAculture.html 8/15/02 WWWVL: American Indians - Cultural Resources Page 6 of 12 Mattaponi Indian Reservation The Menominee Clans Story Metis Nation of the South Miami Nation Miccosukee Tribe of Florida [Can't connect 12/24/01] Mi'kmaq Resources from Eberhard Wenzel The Mille Lacs Band of Objibwe Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians Modoc Tribe of Oklahoma The Mohegan Tribe Monacan Indian Nation Monacan Indian People Muscogee (Creek) Nation Nanticoke Lenni-Lenape Indians of New Jersey (State recognized) Narragansett Indian Tribe Nez Perce Nipmuc Indian Association of Connecticut Occaneechi Band of the Saponi Nation Costanoan-Ohlone Indian Canyon Resource Muwekma Ohlone Indian Tribe The Osage Nation Ottawa Tribe of Oklahoma Pala Band of Mission Indians Pascua Yaqui Tribe Passamaquoddy Tribe Pleasant Point The Pawnee Nation Penobscot Indian Nation Peoria Tribe of Indians of Oklahoma Pinoleville Band of Pomo Indians Poarch Band of Creek Indians Pocomoke Indian Nation Citizen Band of Potawatomi Nation Prairie Band of Potawatomi (Official website) Prairie Band Potawatomi (Unofficial) Forest County Potawatomi Tribe Hannahville Indian Community (Potawatomi), MI Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribes Puyallup Tribe of Indians Official Quapaw Website Quinault Indian Nation
Recommended publications
  • Nanjemoy and Mattawoman Creek Watersheds
    Defining the Indigenous Cultural Landscape for The Nanjemoy and Mattawoman Creek Watersheds Prepared By: Scott M. Strickland Virginia R. Busby Julia A. King With Contributions From: Francis Gray • Diana Harley • Mervin Savoy • Piscataway Conoy Tribe of Maryland Mark Tayac • Piscataway Indian Nation Joan Watson • Piscataway Conoy Confederacy and Subtribes Rico Newman • Barry Wilson • Choptico Band of Piscataway Indians Hope Butler • Cedarville Band of Piscataway Indians Prepared For: The National Park Service Chesapeake Bay Annapolis, Maryland St. Mary’s College of Maryland St. Mary’s City, Maryland November 2015 ii EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The purpose of this project was to identify and represent the Indigenous Cultural Landscape for the Nanjemoy and Mattawoman creek watersheds on the north shore of the Potomac River in Charles and Prince George’s counties, Maryland. The project was undertaken as an initiative of the National Park Service Chesapeake Bay office, which supports and manages the Captain John Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail. One of the goals of the Captain John Smith Trail is to interpret Native life in the Middle Atlantic in the early years of colonization by Europeans. The Indigenous Cultural Landscape (ICL) concept, developed as an important tool for identifying Native landscapes, has been incorporated into the Smith Trail’s Comprehensive Management Plan in an effort to identify Native communities along the trail as they existed in the early17th century and as they exist today. Identifying ICLs along the Smith Trail serves land and cultural conservation, education, historic preservation, and economic development goals. Identifying ICLs empowers descendant indigenous communities to participate fully in achieving these goals.
    [Show full text]
  • Land Description for Logan's Indian Reserve No. 6 Lower Nicola First
    Land Description For Logan’s Indian Reserve No. 6 Lower Nicola First Nation British Columbia Prepared under First Nations Land Management Act (S.C. 1999, c.24) Prepared on: January 21, 2016 January 21, 2016 Table of Contents Section 1 – Introduction Section 2 – Land Description Section 3 – Administrative Sketch and Orthophoto Map Section 4 – Additional Items Page 2 of 6 January 21, 2016 2 – Land Description Logan’s Indian Reserve No. 6 Land Description of the Extent of Reserve Lands that will be subject to the Land Code of the Lower Nicola First Nation under the First Nations Land Management Act. Reserve Lands within the Kamloops Division of Yale District, Province of British Columbia, Canada, more particularly described as: All of Logan’s Indian Reserve No. 6 as shown on Plan No. 103818 in the Canada Lands Surveys Records (CLSR), containing 18.3 hectares (45.2 acres), more or less. The above described Reserve Lands are subject to: The rights and reservations contained in provincial Order in Council 1938‐1036, registered in the Indian Lands Registry as No. 8042, transferring the land from the Province of British Columbia to Canada, as amended by provincial Order in Council 1969‐1555, registered in the Indian Lands Registry as No. 4111‐118. Notes 1. The Administrative Sketch in Section 3 illustrates this Land Description. 2. Refer to the pertinent survey plans and instruments for the authoritative boundary definition and the nature of the interests in the land. 3. The extent of Oil and Gas Rights are not dealt with in the Land Description.
    [Show full text]
  • Supreme Court of Tfje ®Mteb States;
    UBRARY SUPREME court, u. s. In the Supreme Court of tfje ®mteb States; Colorado River Water Conservation ) District, Et Al., ) ) Petitioners, ) ) vP ) ) No. 74-940 United States Of America ) ) Respondent 0 ) 5 Mary Akin, Et Ale, ) ) No. 74-949 Petitioners, ) ) \ va i ) United States Of America, ) ) Respondent . ) ) Washington, D„ C0 January 14, 1976 C- C ' thru 49 ..t: rv_ ty <L_0 ~T~‘ ■ • •. Duplication or copying of this transcript Cx by photographic, electrostatic or other CO \ d 'ry X) facsimile means is prohibited under the 3=» r,HO 3C order form agreement. ocr rnc/> O ) HOOVER REPORTING COMPANY, INC. Official "Reporters Washington, D. C. 546-6666 1 ER IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES ■x COLORADO RIVER WATER CONSERVATION DISTRICT, ET AL., Petitioners, v. No. 74-940 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Respondent. MARY AKIN, ET AL., Petitioners, v. No. 74-949 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, : Respondent. s ™ ~ „ --------- -x Washington, D. C. Wednesday, January 14, 1976 The above-entitled matter came on for argument at. 1:48 p.m. BEFOi E % WARREN E. BURGER, Chief Justice of the United States WILLIAM J. BRENNAN, JR., Associate Justice POTTER STEWART, Associate. Justice BYRON R. WHITE, Associate. Justice THURGOOD MARSHALL, Associate Justice HARRY A. BLACKMUN, Associate Justice LEWIS F. POWELL, JR., Associate Justice WILLIAM H. REENQUIST, Associate Justice JOHN P. STEVENS, Associate Justice 2 APPEARANCESs KENNETH BALCOMB, ESQ., Delaney & Balcomb, P.G. Drawer 790, Glenwood Springs, Colorado 81601, for the petitioners» HOWARD E. SHAPIRO, ESQ., Assistant to th© Solicitor General, Department of Justice, Washington, D, C. 20530, for fch® respondent» I N D E X ORAL ARGUMENT OF: Page KENNER BALCOMB, ESQ., on behalf of the Petitioners 3 HOWARD E.
    [Show full text]
  • What Does Food Sovereignty Mean to the Homalco Community?
    What Does Food Sovereignty Mean to the Homalco Community? by Caitlyn Harrison B.A. (English Literature & Psychology), University of British Columbia, 2014 Project Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Urban Studies in the Urban Studies Program Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences © Caitlyn Harrison 2019 SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY Spring 2019 Copyright in this work rests with the author. Please ensure that any reproduction or re-use is done in accordance with the relevant national copyright legislation. Approval Name: Caitlyn Harrison Degree: Master of Urban Studies Title: What Does Food Sovereignty Mean to the Homalco Community? Examining Committee: Chair: Patrick J. Smith Professor, Urban Studies and Political Science Karen Ferguson Senior Supervisor Professor, Urban Studies and History Meg Holden Supervisor Professor, Urban Studies and Geography Kamala Todd External Examiner Indigenous Cultural Planner and Filmmaker Date Defended/Approved: January 23, 2019 ii Ethics Statement iii Abstract Colonization and urbanization have had devastating impacts on Indigenous food systems, the repercussions of which are still salient today. However, research shows that food sovereignty has the potential to strengthen Indigenous communities and improve health outcomes. This thesis explores how the idea of food sovereignty is conceptualized by the Homalco Nation in the city of Campbell River and what opportunities and barriers exist in realizing this model of food sovereignty. For this research, I engaged in open-ended conversations with Homalco community members in order to hear their food stories. Participants’ stories demonstrated the significance of land, specific foods, customs and values for Homalco food sovereignty and served to highlight key barriers and opportunities relating to this conceptualization of food sovereignty.
    [Show full text]
  • Association for Bahá'í Studies and Mention of American Indians
    Updated: December 2020 CHAPTER 9 - NORTH AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR BAHÁ'Í STUDIES A. ABS Conferences The North American Association for Bahá’í Studies began holding conferences in January of 1976. While it is evident from the previous notations that Indians have been involved in the Association for Bahá'í Studies far earlier, here is a list of presentations made (by Indians and others) through the regular sessions or at the Indigenous Studies session since 2000, some of which pertain to Indians in the Western Hemisphere. (Editor Note: most of the items below were lifted directly from the Programs which are online.) 24th ABS (Aug. 31-Sept 3, 2000) Delta Meadowvale Resort and Conference Centre Mississauga, ON “A Century of Light: Who Is Writing the Future?” Aboriginal Economic Development: A Bahá’í Perspective Presented by Parviz Yazdani Sacred Circle: Child of the Seventh Generation Presented by Jacqueline Left Hand Bull (Sicangu Lakota from Rosebud) The Native American Intertribal Movement: Connections to a Global Perspective Presented by Dr. Don Addison Keedu T’ei Kaa: The Man Behind the Dam, A Story on the Covenant Presented by Mark Wedge (Tsimshean?) What is Bahá’í Scholarship from the Perspective of Native Culture? Presented by Jacqueline Left Hand Bull 25th ABS (Aug. 31-Sept 3, 2001) Sheraton Seattle Hotel & Towers, WA “Towards a Spiritual Civilization” Linking Sacred Site and Sacred Song: The Arc as a Metaphorical Framework for Documenting the Performative Process—A Case Study of a Lakota Song keeper Presented by Pauline Tuttle [Mi'kmaq from Abegweit (Prince Edward Island)] Beyond Forgiveness Presented by Valerie J.
    [Show full text]
  • Friends of the Capitol 2009-June 2010 Report
    Friends of the Capitol 2009-June 2010 Report Our Mission Statement: Friends of the Capitol is a tax-exempt 501(c)(3) corporation that is devoted to maintaining and improving the beauty and grandeur of the Oklahoma State Capitol building and showcasing the magnificent gifts of art housed inside. This mission is accomplished through a partnership with private citizens wishing to leave their footprint in our state's rich history. Education and Development In 2009 and 2010 Friends of the Capitol (FOC) participated in several educational and developmental projects informing fellow Oklahomans of the beauty of the capitol and how they can participate in the continuing renovations of Oklahoma State Capitol building. In March of 2010, FOC representatives made a trip to Elk City and met with several organizations within the community and illustrated all the new renovations funded by Friends of the Capitol supporters. Additionally in 2009 FOC participated in the State Superintendent’s encyclo-media conference and in February 2010 FOC participated in the Oklahoma City Public Schools’ Professional Development Day. We had the opportunity to meet with teachers from several different communities in Oklahoma, and we were pleased to inform them about all the new restorations and how their school’s name can be engraved on a 15”x30”paver, and placed below the Capitol’s south steps in the Centennial Memorial Plaza to be admired by many generations of Oklahomans. Gratefully Acknowledging the Friends of the Capitol Board of Directors Board Members Ex-Officio Paul B. Meyer, Col. John Richard Chairman USA (Ret.) MA+ Architecture Oklahoma Department Oklahoma City of Central Services Pat Foster, Vice Chairman Suzanne Tate Jim Thorpe Association Inc.
    [Show full text]
  • Newark Earthworks Center - Ohio State University and World Heritage - Ohio Executive Committee INDIANS and EARTHWORKS THROUGH the AGES “We Are All Related”
    Welcoming the Tribes Back to Their Ancestral Lands Marti L. Chaatsmith, Comanche/Choctaw Newark Earthworks Center - Ohio State University and World Heritage - Ohio Executive Committee INDIANS AND EARTHWORKS THROUGH THE AGES “We are all related” Mann 2009 “We are all related” Earthen architecture and mound building was evident throughout the eastern third of North America for millennia. Everyone who lived in the woodlands prior to Removal knew about earthworks, if they weren’t building them. The beautiful, enormous, geometric precision of the Hopewell earthworks were the culmination of the combined brilliance of cultures in the Eastern Woodlands across time and distance. Has this traditional indigenous knowledge persisted in the cultural traditions of contemporary American Indian cultures today? Mann 2009 Each dot represents Indigenous architecture and cultural sites, most built before 1491 Miamisburg Mound is the largest conical burial mound in the USA, built on top of a 100’ bluff, it had a circumference of 830’ People of the Adena Culture built it between 2,800 and 1,800 years ago. 6 Miamisburg, Ohio (Montgomery County) Picture: Copyright: Tom Law, Pangea-Productions. http://pangea-productions.net/ Items found in mounds and trade networks active 2,000 years ago. years 2,000 active networks trade and indicate vast travel Courtesy of CERHAS, Ancient Ohio Trail Inside the 50-acre Octagon at Sunrise 8 11/1/2018 Octagon Earthworks, Newark, OH Indigenous people planned, designed and built the Newark Earthworks (ca. 2000 BCE) to cover an area of 4 square miles (survey map created by Whittlesey, Squier, and Davis, 1837-47) Photo Courtesy of Dan Campbell 10 11/1/2018 Two professors recover tribal knowledge 2,000 years ago, Indigenous people developed specialized knowledge to construct the Octagon Earthworks to observe the complete moon cycle: 8 alignments over a period of 18 years and 219 days (18.6 years) “Geometry and Astronomy in Prehistoric Ohio” Ray Hively and Robert Horn, 1982 Archaeoastronomy (Supplement to Vol.
    [Show full text]
  • The People's Art a Tour of the Permanent Capitol Art Collection
    The People’s Art A tour of the Permanent Capitol Art Collection [Read each question carefully and choose the best answer using your notes taken from the DVD presentation and class discussion.] 1. Who was the first woman in American history elected to state office as well as Oklahoma’s first commissioner of charities and corrections? a. Molly Boren b. Kate Barnard c. Linda Cannon 2. What year was the first woman in American history elected to state office in Oklahoma? a. 1907 b. 1780 c. 1997 3. This artist painted The Earth and I are One and has also held public office in Oklahoma. What is his name? a. Will Rogers b. Judge Robert Henry c. Enoch Kelly Haney 4. In the painting The Earth and I are One what is the Indian doing? a. Meditating b. Singing c. Swimming 5. What lesson is taught to Oklahomans in the painting The Earth and I are One? a. Drink more water. b. Meditation is good for your health. c. Take care of the earth. 6. Many symbols of Oklahoma are illustrated in The Earth and I are One. What symbol of the United States is seen in the painting? a. Moon b. Bald Eagle c. Scissor-tale Flycatcher Oklahoma Arts Council • Teaching with Capitol Art 7. The four paintings by Wilson Hurley, including Spring Morning Along the Muddy Boggy, Autumn Woods North of Tahlequah, Sunset at Roman Nose State Park, and A Storm Passing Northwest of Anadarko, illustrate what feature of Oklahoma? a. Tornados b. Mountains c. The four geographic regions 8.
    [Show full text]
  • Senate Members and Their Districts
    PART II Senate Members and Their Districts Senate Members and Their Districts 79 Senate Members listed by District Number District Senate Page Number Member Party Number Littlefield, Rick (D) 128 2 Taylor, Stratton (D) 164 3 Rozell, Herb (D) 154 4 Dickerson, Larry (D) 'X) 5 Rabon, Jeff (D) 148 6 Mickel, Billy A. (D) 136 7 Stipe, Gene (D) 162 8 Shurden, Frank (D) 156 9 Robinson, Ben H. (D) 152 10 Harrison, J. Berry (D) 108 11 Homer, Maxine (D) 120 12 Fisher, Ted V. (D) 100 13 Wilkerson, Dick (D) 170 14 Roberts, Darryl F. (D) 150 15 Weedn, Trish (D) 166 16 Hobson, Cal (D) 118 17 Hemy ,Brad (D) 114 18 Easley, Kevin Alan (D) % 19 Milacek, Robert V. (R) 138 Xl Muegge, Paul (D) 144 21 Morgan , Mike (D) 142 22 Gustafson, Bill (R) 104 23 Price, Bruce (D) 146 24 Martin , Carol (R) 134 26 Capps, Gilmer N. (D) 88 29 Dunlap, Jim (R) 94 31 Helton, Sam (D) 110 32 Maddox,Jim (D) 132 33 Williams, Penny (D) 172 34 Campbell, Grover (R) 86 35 Williamson, James (R) 174 37 Long, Lewis (D) 130 38 Kerr, Robert M. (D) 122 ?f) Smith, Jerry L. (R) 158 80 The Almanac of Oklahoma Politics District Senate Page Number Member Party Number 40 Douglass, Brooks (R) 92 41 Snyder, Mark (R) lffi 42 Herbert, Dave (D) 116 43 Brown, Ben (D) 82 44 Leftwich, Keith C. (D) 126 45 Wilcoxson , Kathleen (R) 168 46 Cain, Bernest (D) 84 tfl Fair, Mike (R) 98 48 Monson, Angela (D) 140 49 Laughlin, Owen (R) 124 X) Haney, Enoch Kelly (D) 106 51 Ford, Charles R.
    [Show full text]
  • Annex 4.C.4 Terms of Reference for the IAMC for Trans Mountain Project TRANS MOUNTAIN INDIGENOUS ADVISORY and MONITORING COMMITTEE TERMS of REFERENCE
    Annex 4.C.4 Terms of Reference for the IAMC for Trans Mountain Project TRANS MOUNTAIN INDIGENOUS ADVISORY AND MONITORING COMMITTEE TERMS OF REFERENCE DEFINITIONS 1. Defined terms in these Terms of Reference have the following meanings, which also include their singular and plural forms: “Committee” means the Trans Mountain Indigenous Advisory and Monitoring Committee established by these Terms of Reference as detailed in section 24, as may be amended from time to time; “Committee Members” means the Indigenous Caucus and the Government Committee Members; “CPCN” means the new Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity, Instrument No. OC-064 issued to Kinder Morgan in relation to the Project on 1 December 2016; “DFO” means Fisheries and Oceans Canada; “Government” means the Government of Canada, including its departments and agencies; “Government Committee Members” are the representatives of federal government departments and agencies as contemplated by section 24(b); “Indigenous Caucus” means the members of the Committee appointed by the Indigenous Communities; “Indigenous Communities” are those Indigenous communities and groups to which the federal Crown determined it owes a duty to consult in relation to the Project, as set out in Appendix A; “Kinder Morgan” means Trans Mountain Pipeline ULC or the company that currently holds the CPCN, NEB Certificates of Public Convenience and Necessity OC-49 and OC-2 for the existing NEB-regulated Trans Mountain pipeline, together with all related Amending Orders, authorizations and exemptions
    [Show full text]
  • Tribal and House District Boundaries
    ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! Tribal Boundaries and Oklahoma House Boundaries ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! 22 ! 18 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! 13 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! 20 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! 7 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! Cimarron ! ! ! ! 14 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! 11 ! ! Texas ! ! Harper ! ! 4 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! n ! ! Beaver ! ! ! ! Ottawa ! ! ! ! Kay 9 o ! Woods ! ! ! ! Grant t ! 61 ! ! ! ! ! Nowata ! ! ! ! ! 37 ! ! ! g ! ! ! ! 7 ! 2 ! ! ! ! Alfalfa ! n ! ! ! ! ! 10 ! ! 27 i ! ! ! ! ! Craig ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! h ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! 26 s ! ! Osage 25 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! a ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! 6 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! Tribes ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! 16 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! W ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! 21 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! 58 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! 38 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! Tribes by House District ! 11 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! 1 Absentee Shawnee* ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! Woodward ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! 2 ! 36 ! Apache* ! ! ! 40 ! 17 ! ! ! 5 8 ! ! ! Rogers ! ! ! ! ! Garfield ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! 1 40 ! ! ! ! ! 3 Noble ! ! ! Caddo* ! ! Major ! ! Delaware ! ! ! ! ! 4 ! ! ! ! ! Mayes ! ! Pawnee ! ! ! 19 ! ! 2 41 ! ! ! ! ! 9 ! 4 ! 74 ! ! ! Cherokee ! ! ! ! ! ! ! Ellis ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! 41 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! 72 ! ! ! ! ! 35 4 8 6 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! 5 3 42 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! 77
    [Show full text]
  • Bloetscher Collection
    BLOETSCHER COLLECTION SPECIAL COLLECTIONS – AKRON-SUMMIT COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY SPECIAL COLLECTIONS #: 2004-5 ACQUISTION: The collection was donated by Virginia Chase Bloetscher in 2004. ACCESS: Restricted access: materials fragile; access by request at Main Library archives only; material does not circulate. VOLUME: 8 storage boxes and books, 10 LF. BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE: Virginia Chase Bloetscher was a local author, storyteller, and historian who lived in Cuyahoga Falls and specialized in local Native American history. Her book, Indians of the Cuyahoga Valley and Vicinity was published in 1980 by the North American Indian Culture Center, Inc. The second revised edition was published by Cuyahoga Valley Archaeological Society in 1997. SCOPE AND CONTENT: The collection consists of a wide variety of documents from Ms. Bloetscher’s manuscripts, presentation notes, slides and photographs, research notes, clippings, posters, artifacts, copies of treaties and maps, and fiction and non-fiction books pertaining to Native Americans. The collection also includes correspondence, manuscripts, articles and clippings from various people she networked with from the 1970s through the 1990s. ARRANGEMENT: Arranged by format and types of materials. NOTE: All measurements are approximate. Box measurements include lid. ABBREVIATIONS: (bw) = black and white (col) = color INVENTORY: SERIES I: SLIDES Slides used for presentations by Ms. Bloetscher. BOX 1 (4 ½ x 6 x 5 ¼”) includes: SLIDE CONTAINERS 1-3: Scenes of miscellaneous Native American locations showing mounds, ceremonial and treaty sites, trails, etc. SLIDE CONTAINERS 4 & 5: Miscellaneous slides of charts, drawings, and Native American artifacts. SERIES II: PHOTOGRAPHS ENVELOPES 1-6: (bw; 2 ½ x 3 ¼”) scenes of Native American locations. Each photo is marked 1 through 6 on the back with a blue marker.
    [Show full text]