Minnesota History, Ojibwa Indians
Title: Minnesota History, Ojibwa Indians
Category: /Social Sciences/Sociology
Details: Words: 3576 | Pages: 13 (approximately 235 words/page)
Minnesota History, Ojibwa Indians
Category: /Social Sciences/Sociology
Details: Words: 3576 | Pages: 13 (approximately 235 words/page)
How did the Ojibwa end up here?
The Ojibwa are an American Indian ethnolinguistic group centered around the upper great lakes and in Canada and the United States. The Ojibwa are a part of a group of central Algonquian, which includes the Ojibwa, Patauwtomi, Ottawa, Algonquin proper, Illinois and the Miami. They are distributed over nearly the entire region between the lower peninsula of Michigan and adjacent parts of Ontario and to the east. (http://
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University of Oklahoma Press: Norman 1938.
Kohl, Johann G. Kitchi-Gami
<Tab/>St Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press, 1985
(Felicia Hodge, director of the American Indian Cancer Control Project)
(http://www.uwec.edu/academic/curric/greidebe/Indigenous/Student.Web.Pages/Fall.2001/sperduto.ojibway/ojibwa_art.htm)
(http://www.whetung.com/)
(http://www.millelacsojibwa.org/culture2story.html)
(http://www.geocities.com/bigorrin.ojib.html)
(http://www.saulttribe.org/teachings.htm)
(Stuart Yellow Thunder Feather)