Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
23 Μαΐ 2012 · The Apache and Navajo in the southwestern United States are from the Athapascan migrants. The third migration around 3,000 B.C. included the Aleuts and Eskimos of Alaska, Canada, and the Aleutian Islands (Taylor).
6 Σεπ 2017 · Each hypothesis uses linguistic, archaeological, and historical data in order to explain the timing of the north-to-south migration to the Southwest and the location of Navajo communities at the time of Coronado’s entrada in 1540 ce (Towner 2003).
22 Οκτ 2024 · At some point in prehistory the Navajo and Apache migrated to the Southwest from Canada, where most other Athabaskan-speaking peoples still live; although the exact timing of the relocation is unknown, it is thought to have been between 1100 and 1500 ce.
25 Μαΐ 2024 · In 1863, the U.S. military, under the command of James H. Carleton and executed by Kit Carson, engaged in a military campaign to subject the Navajo to U.S. jurisdictional control. Carson and his forces killed Navajo, destroyed crops, burnt dwellings, fouled wells, and captured livestock.
16 Νοε 2022 · The out-migration of the Ancestral Pueblo people, mostly south toward the Rio Grande, has long puzzled archaeologists. Single-factor impetuses, such as climate change and conflict, have been proposed over the years.
19 Μαΐ 2020 · The arrival of the ancestors of the Apaches and Navajo to the North American Southwest, the so-called Apachean migra- tion is one of the most widely discussed issues in American archeology.
Jemez Pueblo assimilated Navajo families during the eighteenth century, as well as migrants from Pecos in the early nineteenth century (who may or may not have been native Towa speakers—see discussion below).