This is the "Home" page of the "The Navajo" guide.
Alternate Page for Screenreader Users
Skip to Page Navigation
Skip to Page Content

The Navajo   Tags: navaho, navajo  

Last Updated: Mar 20, 2013 URL: http://txcc.commnet.libguides.com/navajo Print Guide RSS UpdatesShareThis

Home Print Page
  Search: 
 

Where Do I Start?

Is it Navajo or Navaho?  Try both!

*Start Broadly

*Learn the Language

*Uncover the Controversy or Find Something Interesting

*Become the Expert

 

Why Books?

Books provide:

  • Detailed analysis of a topic
  • Background information
  • Overview of big issue
  • Use their bibliographies to find other sources

AND you don't necessarily need to read the entire book!  Check the Table of Contents and the Index for chapters and pages that are pertinent.

 Click HERE to search Books, Ebooks, DVDs, and other items in the Tunxis Library

or click on the links below:

 

Dine' (The Navajo People)

Navajo Indians- Shiprock, New Mexico

North American Indian people living mostly in northwestern New Mexico, Arizona, and southeastern Utah, U.S. The Navajo speak an Athabaskan language related to that of the Apache. The Navajo and Apache migrated from Canada to the Southwest c. AD 900-1200, after which the Navajo came under the influence of the Pueblo Indians. Painted pottery and the famous Navajo rugs, as well as sandpainting, are products of this influence. The craft of silversmithing probably came from Mexico in the mid-19th century. The traditional economy was based on farming and later herding of sheep, goats, and cattle. The basic social unit was the band. Religion focused on the emergence of the first people from worlds beneath the Earth's surface. In 1863 the U.S. government ordered Col. Kit Carson to put an end to Navajo and Apache raiding; his offensives resulted in the incarceration of about 8,000 Navajo and the destruction of crops and herds. Today many Navajo live on or near the Navajo Reservation (24,000 sq mi [64,000 sq km] in New Mexico, Arizona, and Utah); thousands earn their living as transient workers. Their language has been tenaciously preserved; they used it to great effect during World War II by transmitting coded messages in Navajo. The Navajo are the most populous Native American group in the U.S., with some 300,000 individuals of Navajo descent in the early 21st century.

Encyclopaedia Britannica Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Copyright © 1994-2009 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc

Ask a TXCC Librarian!

Use these links to contact me or to get your library related questions answered online.

Susan Simonds

ssimonds@txcc.commnet.edu

Recommended Databases

Articles are good sources for:

  • Most recent research or information on a topic
  • coverage of a very narrow topic
  • coverage of current events
  • contemporary accounts of past events and research

OH CRAAP!!

Evaluating Websites

Currency, Relevance, Authority, Accuracy, Purpose

Description

Loading  Loading...

Tip