Deck 1: A Continent of Villages

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Question
What do the complex earthworks developed by the Woodland people signify?

A) They were a warlike society that practiced human sacrifice.
B) They had adopted a settled existence and more complex social organization.
C) They had learned this practice from the first Europeans who arrived in eastern North America.
D) They depended on extensive trade networks to obtain the materials necessary for mound building.
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Question
Why might native communities have resisted shifting to agriculture?

A) They were ignorant about plants and cultivation.
B) Farming offered few advantages in some areas.
C) Merchant clans prevented their workers from adopting farming.
D) Farming took so little work that it promoted laziness.
Question
The Desert Culture __________.

A) was one of the first settled North American peoples
B) migrated seasonally in search of game
C) disappeared after being unable to adapt to changes in the environment
D) relied on agriculture
Question
Peoples practicing "forest efficiency" __________.

A) relied on intensive agriculture
B) hunted and gathered available resources
C) had a precarious life and often starved
D) mainly lived in deserts
Question
Over time, Indian communities in North America typically __________.

A) remained socially and communally primitive
B) feared the gods and refused to change
C) had little knowledge of even the simplest forms of technology
D) demonstrated increasing levels of complexity
Question
The Clovis culture gets its name from what discovery near Clovis, New Mexico?

A) distinctive stone blades and lance points
B) the skeleton of Kennewick Man
C) huge burial mounds
D) copper imported from the Great Lakes
Question
Eastern Woodland tribes subsisted by __________.

A) gathering, hunting, and limited agriculture
B) raids on neighboring villages
C) fishing and farming
D) dry farming and small game hunting
Question
A major achievement of the Hohokams involved __________.

A) the building of communities of cliff dwellings
B) the development of the first system of irrigation in America
C) the importation of grains such as maize into North America
D) the development of crops that needed no water
Question
Staple crop farming __________.

A) developed in China and spread to the rest of the world
B) developed independently in several areas of the world
C) had little impact on social life
D) remained isolated at its point of origin
Question
Archaeological evidence suggests that plant cultivation in the __________ began about 5,000 years ago.

A) Great Basin
B) Great Plains
C) highlands of Mexico
D) desert of Arizona
Question
How did agricultural production affect relationships between and within farming communities?

A) Settled populations relied less on military forces.
B) Demand for larger food surpluses from a growing population frequently led to conflict and warfare.
C) Farming communities became more stable than the previous foraging communities.
D) Collection and storage of food crops depended on cooperation between farmers rather than on strong chiefs or other individual leaders.
Question
Which of these best explains the sometimes violent competition for resources between Mississippian settlements?

A) religious conflicts
B) political instability
C) population growth
D) ethnic divisions
Question
Desert farmers such as the Pima and Yuma __________.

A) exported high-quality flint hoes
B) were highly communal apartment dwellers
C) were the first to plow using animals
D) lived in dispersed settlements called rancherias
Question
During the first millennium bce, what culture developed in the arid Southwest?

A) Hohokam
B) Anasazi
C) Hopewell
D) Mississippian
Question
With what culture did the Hohokam share many traits?

A) Mesoamerican
B) Hopewell
C) Athapascan
D) Clovis
Question
From studying surviving pre-Columbian works of art, historians __________.

A) have a clear picture of Indian religious beliefs
B) see no evidence of emotions
C) can only speculate about their meaning
D) can translate written Mississippian documents
Question
Adoption of farming might be considered an extension of __________.

A) more egalitarian societies
B) Archaic forest efficiency
C) environmental adaptation
D) falling populations
Question
The largest Indian population centers could be found among __________.

A) the Archaic peoples of the interior
B) the fishing communities of the Pacific Northwest
C) the hunters and gatherers of the Great Plains
D) the farming districts of the South, the Southwest, and the Northeast
Question
The development of Teotihuacan illustrates which of the following?

A) the growing complexity of Mesoamerican cultures
B) Native Americans' inability to adapt to environmental change
C) the impact of mass population migrations on the Great Basin
D) native cultures becoming less sophisticated over time
Question
Which product is correctly paired with its region of origin?

A) maize: Mexico
B) obsidian: Great Lakes
C) copper: Appalachians
D) mica: Rocky Mountains
Question
Which of these was an important early social consequence of farming?

A) development of more elaborate kinship systems
B) elimination of gender-based divisions of labor
C) leveling of social inequalities
D) decentralization of authority
Question
After the collapse of Cahokia, the main area where the Mississippian culture persisted was the __________.

A) forests and waterways of the Northeast
B) forests of the Pacific Northwest
C) deserts of the Southwest
D) forests and floodplains of the Southeast
Question
Cultivation of maize began in __________.

A) Asia
B) Africa
C) Mesoamerica
D) Europe
Question
Someone sent to negotiate with the Five Nations would be meeting with __________.

A) Mohawks, Oneidas, Onodagas, Cayugas, and Senecas
B) Mi'kmaqs, Crees, Montagnais, Ojibwas, and Hurons
C) Hurons, Mohawks, Creeks, Natchez, and Aleuts
D) Choctaws, Chickasaws, Creeks, Cherokees, Natchez
Question
The oldest continuously occupied towns in the United States are home to the __________.

A) Cherokees
B) Pueblos
C) Apaches
D) Navajos
Question
The population of the precolonial Americas __________.

A) is impossible to estimate with any confidence
B) varied greatly by region
C) was uniformly distributed across the continents
D) was greatest in the Arctic and Great Basin
Question
The primary function of a chief in a farming community was to __________.

A) conduct warfare against other tribes
B) divide property among the clans
C) appease the gods
D) supervise the economy
Question
Pueblo Bonito is to the Anasazi as Cahokia is to the __________.

A) Hohokam
B) Hopis
C) Algonquians
D) Mississippians
Question
In what area of North America were the largest populations of nonagricultural Indians concentrated?

A) California and the Pacific Northwest
B) Great Basin
C) New England
D) Mesoamerica and the Caribbean
Question
According to the migration hypothesis, ancestors of Native Americans came from __________.

A) Africa
B) South America
C) Northern Europe
D) Asia
Question
The Monte Verde culture in Chile is evidence of the importance of __________.

A) migration along the "Pacific Coast Waterway"
B) the spread of Mississippian culture
C) Aztec cultural influence
D) farming in pre-Columbian America
Question
The Desert Culture was characterized by reliance on __________.

A) bison hunting
B) small game and plant foraging
C) intensive maize cultivation
D) fish and sea mammals
Question
The members of the Iroquois Confederacy were forbidden to __________.

A) go to war with each other
B) trade with Europeans
C) leave their ancestral homelands
D) farm
Question
The Iroquois differed from most Native American cultures because their society was __________.

A) matrilineal
B) patriarchal
C) pacifist
D) not dependent on agriculture
Question
Which phrase best describes a kiva?

A) burial mound of Hopewell mortuary cult
B) Hohokam ball-playing court with surrounding religious platform mound
C) Pueblo impersonations of ancestral, sacred spirits
D) Anasazi subterranean religious center
Question
Folsom technology was a refinement of what culture?

A) Athapascan
B) Hopewell
C) Clovis
D) Mississippian
Question
Which of these societies had tens of thousands of communities in the Southwest?

A) Inuit
B) Mohawks
C) Senecas
D) Anasazi
Question
On the eve of European colonization, remaining Mississippian cultures in the South included the __________.

A) Pimas
B) Apaches
C) Hohokam
D) Natchez
Question
The bow and arrow was first developed __________.

A) in Mexico
B) on the Great Plains
C) in the Northeast
D) in the desert basins of the Southwest
Question
Teotihuacan had a population of about __________ at its height.

A) 30,000
B) 100,000
C) 200,000
D) 1 million
Question
Using either the Anasazi/Mississippian or the Iroquois/Algonquian, compare and describe their attitudes about community in such areas as settlement patterns, food sources, social organization, cultural and political structures, and conflict.
Question
The standard hypothesis that migrations from Asia to North America began around 13,000 BCE has been challenged by the discovery of what site?

A) Monte Verde
B) Clovis
C) Beringia
D) Folsom
Question
What is forest efficiency and how did it affect community populations?
Question
What do the monumental earthworks and other archeological evidence uncovered at Cahokia and other Mississippian sites suggest about the rise and fall of that society?
Question
What led to the gradual abandonment of the Four Corners area by the Anasazi?
Question
How is Desert Culture best characterized?

A) by the pursuit of small game and the intensified foraging of plant foods
B) by the construction of fluted blades and lance points
C) by high degrees of social stratification and hierarchy
D) by the construction of large earthen mounds
Question
Beringia refers to __________.

A) the land bridge between Asia and North America
B) glaciers along the Alaskan coast
C) the Russian portion of the Bering Strait
D) the combined landmass of Asia and North America
Question
Which of these is true of the inhabitants of the Americas prior to colonization?

A) The inhabitants of the Americas all produced similar cultures.
B) No single physical type characterized all the peoples of the Americas.
C) The inhabitants of the Americas failed to develop farming.
D) All Native Americans belonged to a single race.
Question
Why did some native societies resist adopting agriculture?
Question
Archaeologists' discovery of the remains of 200 bison at one site in Colorado suggests that __________.

A) archaic hunters had developed considerable social organization
B) Indian weapons were superior to those of later Europeans
C) men did all the work in the Folsom culture
D) the local peoples had developed a "Desert Culture"
Question
The heavy log stockade discovered among the ruins of Cahokia have led archaeologists and other scientists to conclude that this Mississippian city experienced __________.

A) regular attacks by wild animals
B) violent conflict with nearby Indian communities
C) frequent raids from European explorers and settlers
D) excessive flooding from the Mississippi River
Question
Which of these helped make the South ideal for farming?

A) its mild climate
B) its low population density
C) the absence of large mammals
D) its short summers
Question
Which major challenge did the Anasazi face in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries?

A) The climate became drier.
B) Iroquois bands raided Anasazi communities.
C) A new and deadly plague struck.
D) Religious conflicts divided the society.
Question
The Adena were __________.

A) mound builders
B) a desert people
C) a largely urban culture
D) strictly hunter-gatherers
Question
How did the development of farming affect family life?

A) People built smaller dwellings.
B) People married at an older age.
C) People became more mobile.
D) People had larger families.
Question
What distinguished the third and final migration from Asia to the Americas from the previous two?

A) It occurred as the result of endemic warfare.
B) It resulted in the settlement of the northeastern portion of North America.
C) It involved hundreds of thousands of people.
D) It occurred long after Beringia had disappeared under rising seas.
Question
Which statement accurately describes the earliest stone tools found in North America?

A) They were like the tools found from the same period in Europe and Asia.
B) They were three- to six-inch fluted blades for spears that were used to hunt large game such as mammoths.
C) They were primarily stone fish hooks utilized by people who migrated to the Americas by boat.
D) They were small arrow points that were used to hunt smaller game such as deer and rabbits.
Question
Which statement was true of most North American Indian farming communities?

A) There was little division of labor based on gender.
B) Women and men belonged to separate social groupings.
C) Women participated in both hunting and farming.
D) Men took sole responsibility for farming.
Question
Which of these was the single overwhelming fact of life in the Southwest?

A) the abundance of resources
B) cultural diversity
C) land scarcity
D) aridity
Question
Which of these helps explain why migration to North America was attractive to Siberian hunter-gatherers?

A) North America was home to many large mammals.
B) It was much warmer in North America than in Asia.
C) Siberian hunter-gatherers were often attacked by more-aggressive Asian peoples.
D) The population of Asia had grown too large to be supported by available resources.
Question
What technological advance made agriculture possible in the Great Basin?

A) modern irrigation systems
B) development of maize cultivation
C) manufacture of pottery to store food over time
D) development of the flint hoe
Question
Which statement explains the failure of Native Americans in the Pacific Northwest to adopt settled agriculture?

A) There was an abundance of salmon in the region.
B) The climate was too harsh to support agriculture.
C) The nomadic lifestyle of the region was not conducive to cultivating plants.
D) The climate was too arid to support a variety of plants.
Question
How did the Yuman people in the Grand Canyon obtain most of the food they required?

A) They grew corn, beans, and squash on small irrigated fields.
B) They raided small agricultural communities and took what they required.
C) They were fishermen who also harvested mussels.
D) They hunted for large game, especially buffalo.
Question
Anthropologists have demonstrated that __________.

A) farmers work considerably longer and harder than do foragers
B) foragers are more vulnerable to famine than are farmers
C) almost all communities rushed to adopt settled agriculture
D) the agricultural revolution took place over tens of thousands of years
Question
Who first referred to Native Americans as "Indios"?

A) Christopher Columbus
B) Joseph de Acosta
C) Jacques LeMoyne
D) John White
Question
How were the Algonquian and Iroquois people similar to each other?

A) They both organized confederacies within their own culture groups.
B) They both developed large urban centers.
C) They both lived in extensive longhouses.
D) They both saw trade as contrary to their warrior values.
Question
Which of these best describes the purpose of a clan?

A) to bind people from different communities into larger social units
B) to divide responsibility for labor
C) to supervise the economy
D) to allow a group of people to own land
Question
Increased violence in Mississippian cultures was most likely a result of __________.

A) competition for resources
B) religious conflicts
C) new migrations from Asia
D) rapid environmental change
Question
What was a common trait of the Creeks, Chickasaws, and Choctaws?

A) a cultural pattern of confederacies
B) a matriarchal patronage system
C) a patrilineal system of descent
D) an elaborate system of class, priests, and monarchs
Question
Which of the following technological innovations initially produced the powerful new Mississippian culture in North America?

A) a quickly maturing variety of maize suitable for temperate northern latitudes
B) digging sticks used for planting seeds
C) a complex system of irrigation canals
D) the creation of pottery to store seeds and crops
Question
Farming first developed in what part of North America?

A) Mexico
B) Great Plains
C) Great Basin
D) Pacific Northwest
Question
The decline of the Anasazi culture was initially triggered by __________.

A) climate change
B) internal warfare
C) population pressures
D) attacks by neighboring peoples
Question
Which statement best describes the Pueblos?

A) They lived by a strict communal code of behavior.
B) They gradually abandoned their Athapascan raiding tradition and adopted the agricultural lifestyle of their neighbors.
C) They spoke a common language.
D) They lived in rancherias.
Question
The Iroquois Confederacy was founded to __________.

A) control the violence among the five Iroquois nations
B) accelerate economic development
C) fight the European invasion of Iroquois lands
D) protect Iroquois communities from attacks by Algonquians
Question
How did most of the large number of Native Americans residing in what is now California subsist?

A) through hunting and gathering
B) by fishing for salmon
C) as agriculturalists who irrigated their small fields
D) as agriculturalists who used the lower classes to cultivate large expanses of land
Question
Which of these best describes the Mogollon culture?

A) the first farming culture of the Southwest
B) a culture derived from the Inca
C) a society centered on the construction of massive earth mounds
D) a nomadic lifestyle based on the movement of animal herds
Question
A consequence of Native Americans' increasing reliance on agriculture was __________.

A) a new division of labor and, ultimately, the emergence of classes
B) a more diverse, healthier diet
C) a decrease in the need for military forces
D) in foraging societies most individuals are engaged in similar tasks, and there are few opportunities for individuals to accumulate personal wealth. See 1.2.1: Origins in Mexico.
Question
Which statement describes the type of violence that was common to the Athapascans?

A) They carried out systematic raids of settled farming communities.
B) The chiefdoms competed against one another for additional lands to cultivate.
C) They used ritual sacrifice of humans to appease the gods.
D) Acts of violence were often at the family and clan level, as they were often acts of revenge.
Question
How were the civilizations in Mesoamerica like those that arose in the Mediterranean?

A) Wealth and power were concentrated in the hands of an elite class of priests and rulers.
B) Ritual human sacrifice was used to appease the gods.
C) Maize agriculture provided the bulk of the food that was consumed by the populace.
D) Stone tools were commonly utilized for agriculture and defense.
Question
Archaeologists believe that a central feature of the Hopewell culture was __________.

A) an elaborate trade network throughout North America
B) matriarchal rule
C) simple religious rituals and burial practices
D) apartment-like living structures
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Deck 1: A Continent of Villages
1
What do the complex earthworks developed by the Woodland people signify?

A) They were a warlike society that practiced human sacrifice.
B) They had adopted a settled existence and more complex social organization.
C) They had learned this practice from the first Europeans who arrived in eastern North America.
D) They depended on extensive trade networks to obtain the materials necessary for mound building.
They had adopted a settled existence and more complex social organization.
2
Why might native communities have resisted shifting to agriculture?

A) They were ignorant about plants and cultivation.
B) Farming offered few advantages in some areas.
C) Merchant clans prevented their workers from adopting farming.
D) Farming took so little work that it promoted laziness.
Farming offered few advantages in some areas.
3
The Desert Culture __________.

A) was one of the first settled North American peoples
B) migrated seasonally in search of game
C) disappeared after being unable to adapt to changes in the environment
D) relied on agriculture
migrated seasonally in search of game
4
Peoples practicing "forest efficiency" __________.

A) relied on intensive agriculture
B) hunted and gathered available resources
C) had a precarious life and often starved
D) mainly lived in deserts
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5
Over time, Indian communities in North America typically __________.

A) remained socially and communally primitive
B) feared the gods and refused to change
C) had little knowledge of even the simplest forms of technology
D) demonstrated increasing levels of complexity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
The Clovis culture gets its name from what discovery near Clovis, New Mexico?

A) distinctive stone blades and lance points
B) the skeleton of Kennewick Man
C) huge burial mounds
D) copper imported from the Great Lakes
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Eastern Woodland tribes subsisted by __________.

A) gathering, hunting, and limited agriculture
B) raids on neighboring villages
C) fishing and farming
D) dry farming and small game hunting
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
A major achievement of the Hohokams involved __________.

A) the building of communities of cliff dwellings
B) the development of the first system of irrigation in America
C) the importation of grains such as maize into North America
D) the development of crops that needed no water
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Staple crop farming __________.

A) developed in China and spread to the rest of the world
B) developed independently in several areas of the world
C) had little impact on social life
D) remained isolated at its point of origin
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Archaeological evidence suggests that plant cultivation in the __________ began about 5,000 years ago.

A) Great Basin
B) Great Plains
C) highlands of Mexico
D) desert of Arizona
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Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
How did agricultural production affect relationships between and within farming communities?

A) Settled populations relied less on military forces.
B) Demand for larger food surpluses from a growing population frequently led to conflict and warfare.
C) Farming communities became more stable than the previous foraging communities.
D) Collection and storage of food crops depended on cooperation between farmers rather than on strong chiefs or other individual leaders.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Which of these best explains the sometimes violent competition for resources between Mississippian settlements?

A) religious conflicts
B) political instability
C) population growth
D) ethnic divisions
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Desert farmers such as the Pima and Yuma __________.

A) exported high-quality flint hoes
B) were highly communal apartment dwellers
C) were the first to plow using animals
D) lived in dispersed settlements called rancherias
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Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
During the first millennium bce, what culture developed in the arid Southwest?

A) Hohokam
B) Anasazi
C) Hopewell
D) Mississippian
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15
With what culture did the Hohokam share many traits?

A) Mesoamerican
B) Hopewell
C) Athapascan
D) Clovis
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16
From studying surviving pre-Columbian works of art, historians __________.

A) have a clear picture of Indian religious beliefs
B) see no evidence of emotions
C) can only speculate about their meaning
D) can translate written Mississippian documents
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Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Adoption of farming might be considered an extension of __________.

A) more egalitarian societies
B) Archaic forest efficiency
C) environmental adaptation
D) falling populations
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
The largest Indian population centers could be found among __________.

A) the Archaic peoples of the interior
B) the fishing communities of the Pacific Northwest
C) the hunters and gatherers of the Great Plains
D) the farming districts of the South, the Southwest, and the Northeast
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
The development of Teotihuacan illustrates which of the following?

A) the growing complexity of Mesoamerican cultures
B) Native Americans' inability to adapt to environmental change
C) the impact of mass population migrations on the Great Basin
D) native cultures becoming less sophisticated over time
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Which product is correctly paired with its region of origin?

A) maize: Mexico
B) obsidian: Great Lakes
C) copper: Appalachians
D) mica: Rocky Mountains
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Which of these was an important early social consequence of farming?

A) development of more elaborate kinship systems
B) elimination of gender-based divisions of labor
C) leveling of social inequalities
D) decentralization of authority
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
After the collapse of Cahokia, the main area where the Mississippian culture persisted was the __________.

A) forests and waterways of the Northeast
B) forests of the Pacific Northwest
C) deserts of the Southwest
D) forests and floodplains of the Southeast
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Cultivation of maize began in __________.

A) Asia
B) Africa
C) Mesoamerica
D) Europe
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Someone sent to negotiate with the Five Nations would be meeting with __________.

A) Mohawks, Oneidas, Onodagas, Cayugas, and Senecas
B) Mi'kmaqs, Crees, Montagnais, Ojibwas, and Hurons
C) Hurons, Mohawks, Creeks, Natchez, and Aleuts
D) Choctaws, Chickasaws, Creeks, Cherokees, Natchez
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
The oldest continuously occupied towns in the United States are home to the __________.

A) Cherokees
B) Pueblos
C) Apaches
D) Navajos
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
The population of the precolonial Americas __________.

A) is impossible to estimate with any confidence
B) varied greatly by region
C) was uniformly distributed across the continents
D) was greatest in the Arctic and Great Basin
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
The primary function of a chief in a farming community was to __________.

A) conduct warfare against other tribes
B) divide property among the clans
C) appease the gods
D) supervise the economy
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Pueblo Bonito is to the Anasazi as Cahokia is to the __________.

A) Hohokam
B) Hopis
C) Algonquians
D) Mississippians
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
In what area of North America were the largest populations of nonagricultural Indians concentrated?

A) California and the Pacific Northwest
B) Great Basin
C) New England
D) Mesoamerica and the Caribbean
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
According to the migration hypothesis, ancestors of Native Americans came from __________.

A) Africa
B) South America
C) Northern Europe
D) Asia
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
The Monte Verde culture in Chile is evidence of the importance of __________.

A) migration along the "Pacific Coast Waterway"
B) the spread of Mississippian culture
C) Aztec cultural influence
D) farming in pre-Columbian America
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
The Desert Culture was characterized by reliance on __________.

A) bison hunting
B) small game and plant foraging
C) intensive maize cultivation
D) fish and sea mammals
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
The members of the Iroquois Confederacy were forbidden to __________.

A) go to war with each other
B) trade with Europeans
C) leave their ancestral homelands
D) farm
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
The Iroquois differed from most Native American cultures because their society was __________.

A) matrilineal
B) patriarchal
C) pacifist
D) not dependent on agriculture
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Which phrase best describes a kiva?

A) burial mound of Hopewell mortuary cult
B) Hohokam ball-playing court with surrounding religious platform mound
C) Pueblo impersonations of ancestral, sacred spirits
D) Anasazi subterranean religious center
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Folsom technology was a refinement of what culture?

A) Athapascan
B) Hopewell
C) Clovis
D) Mississippian
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Which of these societies had tens of thousands of communities in the Southwest?

A) Inuit
B) Mohawks
C) Senecas
D) Anasazi
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38
On the eve of European colonization, remaining Mississippian cultures in the South included the __________.

A) Pimas
B) Apaches
C) Hohokam
D) Natchez
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39
The bow and arrow was first developed __________.

A) in Mexico
B) on the Great Plains
C) in the Northeast
D) in the desert basins of the Southwest
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40
Teotihuacan had a population of about __________ at its height.

A) 30,000
B) 100,000
C) 200,000
D) 1 million
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41
Using either the Anasazi/Mississippian or the Iroquois/Algonquian, compare and describe their attitudes about community in such areas as settlement patterns, food sources, social organization, cultural and political structures, and conflict.
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42
The standard hypothesis that migrations from Asia to North America began around 13,000 BCE has been challenged by the discovery of what site?

A) Monte Verde
B) Clovis
C) Beringia
D) Folsom
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43
What is forest efficiency and how did it affect community populations?
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44
What do the monumental earthworks and other archeological evidence uncovered at Cahokia and other Mississippian sites suggest about the rise and fall of that society?
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45
What led to the gradual abandonment of the Four Corners area by the Anasazi?
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46
How is Desert Culture best characterized?

A) by the pursuit of small game and the intensified foraging of plant foods
B) by the construction of fluted blades and lance points
C) by high degrees of social stratification and hierarchy
D) by the construction of large earthen mounds
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47
Beringia refers to __________.

A) the land bridge between Asia and North America
B) glaciers along the Alaskan coast
C) the Russian portion of the Bering Strait
D) the combined landmass of Asia and North America
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48
Which of these is true of the inhabitants of the Americas prior to colonization?

A) The inhabitants of the Americas all produced similar cultures.
B) No single physical type characterized all the peoples of the Americas.
C) The inhabitants of the Americas failed to develop farming.
D) All Native Americans belonged to a single race.
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49
Why did some native societies resist adopting agriculture?
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50
Archaeologists' discovery of the remains of 200 bison at one site in Colorado suggests that __________.

A) archaic hunters had developed considerable social organization
B) Indian weapons were superior to those of later Europeans
C) men did all the work in the Folsom culture
D) the local peoples had developed a "Desert Culture"
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51
The heavy log stockade discovered among the ruins of Cahokia have led archaeologists and other scientists to conclude that this Mississippian city experienced __________.

A) regular attacks by wild animals
B) violent conflict with nearby Indian communities
C) frequent raids from European explorers and settlers
D) excessive flooding from the Mississippi River
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52
Which of these helped make the South ideal for farming?

A) its mild climate
B) its low population density
C) the absence of large mammals
D) its short summers
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53
Which major challenge did the Anasazi face in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries?

A) The climate became drier.
B) Iroquois bands raided Anasazi communities.
C) A new and deadly plague struck.
D) Religious conflicts divided the society.
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54
The Adena were __________.

A) mound builders
B) a desert people
C) a largely urban culture
D) strictly hunter-gatherers
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55
How did the development of farming affect family life?

A) People built smaller dwellings.
B) People married at an older age.
C) People became more mobile.
D) People had larger families.
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56
What distinguished the third and final migration from Asia to the Americas from the previous two?

A) It occurred as the result of endemic warfare.
B) It resulted in the settlement of the northeastern portion of North America.
C) It involved hundreds of thousands of people.
D) It occurred long after Beringia had disappeared under rising seas.
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57
Which statement accurately describes the earliest stone tools found in North America?

A) They were like the tools found from the same period in Europe and Asia.
B) They were three- to six-inch fluted blades for spears that were used to hunt large game such as mammoths.
C) They were primarily stone fish hooks utilized by people who migrated to the Americas by boat.
D) They were small arrow points that were used to hunt smaller game such as deer and rabbits.
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58
Which statement was true of most North American Indian farming communities?

A) There was little division of labor based on gender.
B) Women and men belonged to separate social groupings.
C) Women participated in both hunting and farming.
D) Men took sole responsibility for farming.
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59
Which of these was the single overwhelming fact of life in the Southwest?

A) the abundance of resources
B) cultural diversity
C) land scarcity
D) aridity
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60
Which of these helps explain why migration to North America was attractive to Siberian hunter-gatherers?

A) North America was home to many large mammals.
B) It was much warmer in North America than in Asia.
C) Siberian hunter-gatherers were often attacked by more-aggressive Asian peoples.
D) The population of Asia had grown too large to be supported by available resources.
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61
What technological advance made agriculture possible in the Great Basin?

A) modern irrigation systems
B) development of maize cultivation
C) manufacture of pottery to store food over time
D) development of the flint hoe
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62
Which statement explains the failure of Native Americans in the Pacific Northwest to adopt settled agriculture?

A) There was an abundance of salmon in the region.
B) The climate was too harsh to support agriculture.
C) The nomadic lifestyle of the region was not conducive to cultivating plants.
D) The climate was too arid to support a variety of plants.
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63
How did the Yuman people in the Grand Canyon obtain most of the food they required?

A) They grew corn, beans, and squash on small irrigated fields.
B) They raided small agricultural communities and took what they required.
C) They were fishermen who also harvested mussels.
D) They hunted for large game, especially buffalo.
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64
Anthropologists have demonstrated that __________.

A) farmers work considerably longer and harder than do foragers
B) foragers are more vulnerable to famine than are farmers
C) almost all communities rushed to adopt settled agriculture
D) the agricultural revolution took place over tens of thousands of years
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65
Who first referred to Native Americans as "Indios"?

A) Christopher Columbus
B) Joseph de Acosta
C) Jacques LeMoyne
D) John White
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66
How were the Algonquian and Iroquois people similar to each other?

A) They both organized confederacies within their own culture groups.
B) They both developed large urban centers.
C) They both lived in extensive longhouses.
D) They both saw trade as contrary to their warrior values.
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67
Which of these best describes the purpose of a clan?

A) to bind people from different communities into larger social units
B) to divide responsibility for labor
C) to supervise the economy
D) to allow a group of people to own land
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68
Increased violence in Mississippian cultures was most likely a result of __________.

A) competition for resources
B) religious conflicts
C) new migrations from Asia
D) rapid environmental change
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69
What was a common trait of the Creeks, Chickasaws, and Choctaws?

A) a cultural pattern of confederacies
B) a matriarchal patronage system
C) a patrilineal system of descent
D) an elaborate system of class, priests, and monarchs
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70
Which of the following technological innovations initially produced the powerful new Mississippian culture in North America?

A) a quickly maturing variety of maize suitable for temperate northern latitudes
B) digging sticks used for planting seeds
C) a complex system of irrigation canals
D) the creation of pottery to store seeds and crops
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71
Farming first developed in what part of North America?

A) Mexico
B) Great Plains
C) Great Basin
D) Pacific Northwest
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72
The decline of the Anasazi culture was initially triggered by __________.

A) climate change
B) internal warfare
C) population pressures
D) attacks by neighboring peoples
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73
Which statement best describes the Pueblos?

A) They lived by a strict communal code of behavior.
B) They gradually abandoned their Athapascan raiding tradition and adopted the agricultural lifestyle of their neighbors.
C) They spoke a common language.
D) They lived in rancherias.
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74
The Iroquois Confederacy was founded to __________.

A) control the violence among the five Iroquois nations
B) accelerate economic development
C) fight the European invasion of Iroquois lands
D) protect Iroquois communities from attacks by Algonquians
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75
How did most of the large number of Native Americans residing in what is now California subsist?

A) through hunting and gathering
B) by fishing for salmon
C) as agriculturalists who irrigated their small fields
D) as agriculturalists who used the lower classes to cultivate large expanses of land
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76
Which of these best describes the Mogollon culture?

A) the first farming culture of the Southwest
B) a culture derived from the Inca
C) a society centered on the construction of massive earth mounds
D) a nomadic lifestyle based on the movement of animal herds
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77
A consequence of Native Americans' increasing reliance on agriculture was __________.

A) a new division of labor and, ultimately, the emergence of classes
B) a more diverse, healthier diet
C) a decrease in the need for military forces
D) in foraging societies most individuals are engaged in similar tasks, and there are few opportunities for individuals to accumulate personal wealth. See 1.2.1: Origins in Mexico.
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78
Which statement describes the type of violence that was common to the Athapascans?

A) They carried out systematic raids of settled farming communities.
B) The chiefdoms competed against one another for additional lands to cultivate.
C) They used ritual sacrifice of humans to appease the gods.
D) Acts of violence were often at the family and clan level, as they were often acts of revenge.
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79
How were the civilizations in Mesoamerica like those that arose in the Mediterranean?

A) Wealth and power were concentrated in the hands of an elite class of priests and rulers.
B) Ritual human sacrifice was used to appease the gods.
C) Maize agriculture provided the bulk of the food that was consumed by the populace.
D) Stone tools were commonly utilized for agriculture and defense.
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80
Archaeologists believe that a central feature of the Hopewell culture was __________.

A) an elaborate trade network throughout North America
B) matriarchal rule
C) simple religious rituals and burial practices
D) apartment-like living structures
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Unlock Deck
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