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Southern Paiute people

The Southern Paiute people /ˈpjuːt/ are a tribe of Native Americans who have lived in the Colorado River basin of southern Nevada, northern Arizona, and southern Utah. Bands of Southern Paiute live in scattered locations throughout this territory and have been granted federal recognition on several reservations. Southern Paiute's traditionally spoke Colorado River Numic, which is now a critically endangered language of the Numic branch of the Uto-Aztecan language family, and is mutually intelligible with Ute.[1] The term Paiute comes from paa Ute meaning water Ute /ˈjuːt/, and refers to their preference for living near water sources.[2] Before European colonization they practiced springtime, floodplain farming with reservoirs and irrigation ditches for corn, squash, melons, gourds, sunflowers, beans and wheat.[2]

Southern Paiute
Nuwuvi
Moapa Woman and girl in traditional Paiute basket hats near Las Vegas circa 1900. Baby swaddled in rabbit robes in cradleboard.
Regions with significant populations
 United States
( Arizona,  Nevada,  Utah,  California)
Languages
Colorado River Numic (ISO 639-3, ute), English
Religion
Indigenous Religion, Christianity
Related ethnic groups
Utes, Kawaiisu

The first European contact with the Southern Paiute occurred in 1776, when fathers Silvestre Vélez de Escalante and Francisco Atanasio Domínguez encountered them during an attempt to find an overland route to the missions of California. They noted that some of the Southern Paiute men "had thick beards and were thought to look more in appearance like Spanish men than native Americans".[a] Before this date, the Southern Paiute suffered slave raids by the Navajo and the Ute. The arrival of Spanish and later Euro-American explorers into their territory increased slave raiding by other tribes. In 1851, Mormon settlers strategically occupied Paiute water sources, which created a dependency relationship.[citation needed] However, the presence of Mormon settlers soon ended the slave raids, and relations between the Paiutes and the Mormons were basically peaceful.[citation needed] The Mormon missionary Jacob Hamblin worked at diplomatic efforts. The introduction of European settlers and agricultural practices (most especially large herds of cattle) made it difficult for the Southern Paiute to continue their traditional lifestyle, as it drove away the game and reduced their ability to hunt, as well as to gather natural foods.

Ancestral lands of Southern Paiute groups overlaid on a map of the Colorado River and current US state boundaries.[3][4][5]

Today Southern Paiute communities are located at Las Vegas, Pahrump, and Moapa, in Nevada; Cedar City, Kanosh, Koosharem, Shivwits, and Indian Peaks, in Utah; at Kaibab and Willow Springs, in Arizona.

Public relations edit

Early policy edit

Prior to the 1850s the Paiute people lived relatively peacefully with the other Native American groups. These groups included the Navajo, Ute, and Hopi tribes.[6] Though there was the occasional tension and violent outbreaks between groups, Paiutes were mainly able to live in peace with other tribes and settlers due to their loose social structure. Most Paiutes lived in small familial groups, and only gathered together in large settings for matters of trade and commerce.[6] Prior to the 1850s, their biggest antagonists were raiders from competing tribes; such as the Navajos, Utes, and Hopis. The Navajos were particularly known for intruding on Paiute grazing land and engaging in raids to capture Paiute women and children for slave trade.[7]

Prior to the 1860s, there had been no long-term development of the land. Most of the non-native contact they had was with transient militants or traders. Paiutes fought hard to defend their ancestral lands, and at first were successful in driving the settlers out. During the second half of the 1800s, the most prominent groups to migrate to Paiute lands were members and missionaries from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and silver miners in Pioche, Nevada.[8] In 1869, a rich investor named François Louis Alfred Pioche invested in a silver mine in the town of Pioche, which initially depended upon cheap Paiute labor to work in the mines. The conditions in the mines caused a dramatic decline in the Paiute population.[8] Paiute children were mandated to attend American schools, which attempted to assimilate them as much as possible.[9] By the early 1900s, there were approximately 800 Paiute people.[10]

Modern relations edit

In the 1950s, the Indian termination policies of the federal government stripped the Paiutes of their health and educational benefits, federal tax protection, and agricultural assistance. This left them on their own in a weak and unstable state.[11] The first attempt of reconciliation was made in 1980, with the Restoration Act, which recognized the Paiutes as a tribe. It united the five main bands into one tribe: the Cedars, Indian Peaks, Kanosh, Koosharem, and Shivwits.[12] The bill also restored the bands to a system of federal aid and support.

Culture edit

Basket weaving edit

 
Southern Paiute woven hat from 1876 at a Harvard University museum.

One of the most important skills the women of the Paiute tribes had was their basket weaving skills. They would often use red-stemmed willows to weave their baskets. These skills were used in almost every aspect of their lives, and the skill is believed to have been passed down from mother to daughter for at least 9,000 years. When they would go to gather and forage they would carry large conical baskets on their back to collect things.

Specific tools were created including ones to strip fruit off of bushes and trees, ones used for winnowing, and ones used to get to roots better. They would also tightly weave these big baskets with clay and resin to create cooking pots and water jugs. Oftentimes, smaller tools were left behind, whereas bigger products such as cooking pots went with the families as they moved around. Based on the region the families were located determined different uses for the weaving. For instance, those who lived by marshes learned to create duck decoys, nets, and rafts to better hunt the water fowl. Another use for this skill was to create their houses. They would use long thin grasses to tightly weave stalks of Cattails together, and in doing so they created these long board-like sections of grasses that they would set up around long willow limbs stuck in the ground.[13]

Traditional diet edit

A staple food for the Southern Paiutes was the bitterroot. They also depended on wild carrot, wild onion, and chokecherries. Chokecherries were useful in more ways than one - their stems were brewed to make a sweet drink, and their berries would be crushed, then dried to be saved for later. When Aphids came and swarmed the cane plants, they would leave small drops of nectar where they punctured the cane stalk. Knowing this the Southern Paiute women would take the cane rods and beat them until the small dried droplets came loose. These droplets were then tossed in a winnowing dish to be separated from the remnants of the cane. Often these small particles were the main income of sweetness for the people.[13] Another seed they would gather are waada seeds, minuscule black seeds that would be ground up into meal.[14] Those who lived in a region with an adequate water supply would set up farms, complete with ditch irrigation. The biggest crops were maize, squash and wheat.[15] The men were the primary hunters, they would hunt waterfowl, rabbits, bighorn sheep and other mammals in the regions they passed through.[14]

Paiute archery edit

Bows edit

There is a bow collected by the Smithsonian Institution in 1872.[16] Made from a hardwood branch, possibly Mesquite or mountain mahogany, and is 38 5/8 inches from tip to tip. The bow is round in cross section, and the string is two ply sinew. It has a sinew back, and the sinew has been stained with a reddish brown ochre. The bow is utilitarian and still has carving marks, as to be expected of a practical weapon in a hostile and harsh desert environment.[17] Another photograph is taken of a Paiute bow and arrow.[18]

Arrows edit

A set of Paiute arrows was acquired by the Smithsonian Institution in 1874.[19] Only one arrow has a point. The arrowhead is attached by pine pitch glue. There are sinew wrappings behind the point, but they are to prevent the shaft from splitting when the target is hit. The feathers are hawk and buzzard.[17]

Quivers and bowcases edit

A Paiute arrow quiver was acquired by the Smithsonian Institution in 1872.[20] The quiver is made of deerskin with thick hair still on the case, showing the deer was killed in the winter, and is sewn with two ply sinew, much like the bowstring. "The quiver is plain, with no decoration, as would be expected of a desert dwelling culture."[17]

Holy land traditions edit

The Southern Paiute people believe in Puaxant Tuvip, or power land. It is their holy land that links to many significant landmarks in the Southern Paiutes memory and stories. For instance Nuvagantu, or Mt. Charleston in Nevada is a holy landmark that the Southern Paiute people believe was where they were created. These holy lands were places that the separate families or tribes would come to barter, trade, socialize and perform religious ceremonies. Another large landmark that is culturally significant to the Southern Paiutes is the Colorado river and the Grand Canyon. The modern-day importance of these Holy Lands is that the Southern Paiutes claim the supernaturally given right to know what happens and the impacts of any projects that occur in their holy lands.[21]

Organization of the Southern Paiute people edit

 
Koosharem Southern Paiute people in Koosharem, Utah 1905.

One important aspect of gathering food was the social aspect, often families would come together for foraging and games and then depart and go their different ways. The Southern Paiutes were not organized tribally. Groups were instead made up of small family units that would occasionally come together with others to socialize. Each group was about 10-50 related people. Family ties were very important to these groups and determined group movements and interdependence among groups. Marriages were thus very important to the Southern Paiutes.

The leader of the group was called a Headman, and he would be old enough to know a lot about the land, but young enough to still participate in the tribes activities, and he usually had several different family ties within the group. His job was to wake early in the morning, and using his knowledge he would make specific suggestions of what he thought the tribe should do that day, and if people thought his observations were astute they would follow him, if not then they wouldn't. His suggestions would be based on the weather, season, and abundance of food. If over time they stopped following his ideas and instead turned to another, then the Headman leader title would move onto that person. The Headman also was supposed to settle any disputes that came up.[22] Oftentimes different sub-units of the Southern Paiutes would be classified by the settlers coming in from Europe based on what they ate. So you had those who ate waada seeds, those who ate trout, those who ate cattails, etc.[13] While the Southern Paiute people are categorized as one group, there were subgroups within the whole that were differentiated based on location and dialect.[23]

Traditional Southern Paiute bands edit

 
 
Shivwits Southern Paiutes in 1875.

The Southern Paiute traditionally had 16 to 31 subgroups, bands, or tribes,[24] including the following:

  • Ankakkani'kacimi (Un-ka-ka'-ni-guts, Unka-kanig-its, Oaw'tuhus'eng):
"Yellow Mouth of Canyon People" in present Long Valley
  • Antarianunts (Ute name with ending unts, Paiute name Yantarɨi):
Mixed Southern Paiute-Ute band from Escalante River east to Colorado River and southeast to Henry Mountains, Utah[24]
  • Beaver band (Kʷi?umpacíɨi, Kwiumpus, Quiumputs)):
"Frasera speciosa people", lived in Beaver Valley along Beaver River near today's Beaver, Utah,[24] some intermarried with the Pahvant Ute band to the north living in the deserts near Sevier Lake
  • Cedar band (Ankappanukkicɨcimɨ, Unkapanukuints):
"Red-stream people", or Suh’dutsing, "Cedar people" from near Cedar City, Utah[24]
Branch of Southern Paiute,[25][26][27] southernmost of the groups.[28][29][30]
  • Gunlock band (Matooshats, Matissatï):
Name given them by their southern neighbors, the St. George band/Uainuints, Gunlocks instead bestowed the term to some Southern Paiute bands northeast of them. Lived near Gunlock[31] in southwest Utah
  • Kaibab (Kai'vi'vits, Kaipapicɨcimɨ, Kaivavwits, Kaibabits, Kaipa'pici, Kaivavituvingui):
"Mountain Lying Down People" the Kaibab Plateau and Kaibab National Forest in northern Arizona are named after them[31]
  • Indian Peak Band (Kwee’choovunt):
"Peak People"
  • Kaiparowits:
"Mountain home of the people", lived along the Escalante River and were hunting the Kaiparowits Plateau in Utah,[31] therefore also known as Escalante band
"People of Charleston Peak"[31]
"Muddy Creek Paiute"[31][32]
  • Pahranagat (Pata?nikicɨ):
"Person who sticks his feet in the water", named for the Pahranagat Valley, Nevada[31]
  • Panaca (Tsouwaraits, Matisabits):
Named for Panaca, Nevada[33]
  • Panguitch (Pakiucimi):
"Fish people", named for Panguitch, Utah[33]
"People being over on the opposite side", from the San Juan River in northern Arizona[33]
"People who live in the East"[33] or See’veetseng, "Whitish Earth People"
  • Uinkaret (Yipinkatɨtɨcimɨ):
"People of Mount Trumbull"[33]
  • Uainuints (Uenuwunts, Tonaquints):
Hunted and farmed from Hebron (Shoal Creek Fort), Enterprise and Pinto southward along the Santa Clara River (also called Tonaquint River) to his mouth into the Virgin River south of today's Saint George, Utah, therefore called St. George Band)[33]

Contemporary Southern Paiute federally recognized tribes edit

Notable Southern Paiutes edit

Gallery of traditional dress, hairstyles, buildings, and basket making edit

Notes edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Peoples of Mesa Verde: The Ute–Southern Paiute Connection". Crow Canyon Archaeological Center. 2014. Retrieved May 3, 2023.
  2. ^ a b "About The Southern Paiute". National Park Service. Retrieved May 3, 2023.
  3. ^ Stoffle, Richard W.; Loendorf, Lawrence; Austin, Diane E.; Halmo, David B.; Bulletts, Angelita (February 2000). "Ghost Dancing the Grand Canyon: Southern Paiute Rock Art, Ceremony, and Cultural Landscapes". Current Anthropology. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 41 (1): 12. doi:10.1086/300101. PMID 10593723. S2CID 142526911. Retrieved May 4, 2023 – via ResearchGate.
  4. ^ Richard, Arnold; Spoon, Jeremy. "Nuwuvi (Southern Paiute) Ancestral Territory". International Union for Conservation of Nature. Retrieved May 4, 2023.
  5. ^ "Nuwuvi (Southern Paiute)". Native Land Digital. August 7, 2022. Retrieved May 4, 2023.
  6. ^ a b Holt, Ronald L. (April 22, 2016). "Paiute Indians". Utah State Department of Community & Cultural Engagement.
  7. ^ Bunte, Pamela; Franklin, Robert (1992). "You Can't Get There from Here: Southern Paiute Testimony as Intercultural Communication". Anthropological Linguistics. 34 (1/4): 19–44. JSTOR 30028366.
  8. ^ a b Reeve, W. Paul (2006). "Mormons, Miners, and Southern Paiutes". Making Space on the Western Frontier. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 9780252031267. JSTOR 10.5406/j.ctt1xcnr6.
  9. ^ Riggs, Christopher K. (2000). "American Indians, Economic Development, and Self-Determination in the 1960s". Pacific Historical Review. 69 (3): 431–463. doi:10.2307/3641716. JSTOR 3641716.
  10. ^ Indian Tribe of Utah: History Utahpaiutes.org. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
  11. ^ Holt, Ronald L. “Paiute Indians.” Utah Department of Heritage and Arts, 17 Aug. 2016, heritage.utah.gov/history/uhg-first-peoples-paiute-indians.
  12. ^ "Our History – the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah".
  13. ^ a b c Patapoff, E. (Director) (1979). The Earth is Our Home. Retrieved October 12, 2018 – via Kanopy.
  14. ^ a b Cultural Resources Management program (2012). "Rock Art of the Malheur Marshlands The Wada'Tika: Ancestors of Today's Burns Paiute Tribe, Oregon". US Fish and Wildlife Service. Retrieved November 12, 2018.
  15. ^ Allison, James R.; Meegan, Cathryn M.; Murray, Shawn Sabrina (2008). "Archaeology and Archaeobotany of Southern Paiute Horticulture in the St. George Basin, Southwestern Utah". KIVA: Journal of Southwestern Anthropology and History. Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society. 73 (4): 417–449. doi:10.1179/kiv.2008.73.4.003. JSTOR 30246559. S2CID 129614910 – via Taylor & Francis.
  16. ^ Smithsonian Institution, Department of Anthropology, Catalogue Number E-12034-0.
  17. ^ a b c Berger, Billy. 2010. "Treasures of the Smithsonian. Part V. Archery of the Southwestern United States: Paiute. " Primitive Archer. Volume 18 (5). October–November 2010. Pages 2025.
  18. ^ Photograph of Willard George Shooting a Bow and Arrow (Neb.), 1899–1900. University of Nevada, Las Vegas University Libraries, n.d. Notes: Taken in Nebraska, Willard George (left) is showing a relative how to shoot a Paiute bow and arrow.
  19. ^ Smithsonian Institution, Department of Anthropology, Catalogue number E-14539.
  20. ^ Smithsonian Institution, Department of Anthropology, Catalogue Number E-12038-0.
  21. ^ Stoffle, Richard W.; Halmo, David B.; Austin, Diane E. (1997). "Cultural Landscapes and Traditional Cultural Properties: A Southern Paiute View of the Grand Canyon and Colorado River". American Indian Quarterly. 21 (2): 229. doi:10.2307/1185646. ISSN 0095-182X. JSTOR 1185646 – via ResearchGate.
  22. ^ Knack, Martha C. (2004). Boundaries between : the Southern Paiutes, 1775-1995. University of Nebraska Press. pp. 20–25. ISBN 9780803278189 – via Google Books.
  23. ^ Steward, Julian (1933). University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. pp. 233–250.
  24. ^ a b c d Kelly & Fowler 1986, p. 394.
  25. ^ Trafzer, Clifford E. (August 1, 2015). A Chemehuevi Song: The Resilience of a Southern Paiute Tribe. Seattle, Washington: University of Washington Press (published June 2015). pp. 17–18. ISBN 978-0-295-80582-5 – via Google Books.
  26. ^ Ocampo, Daisy (June 13, 2023). Where We Belong: Chemehuevi and Caxcan Preservation of Sacred Mountains. Tucson, Arizona: University of Arizona Press. p. 56. ISBN 978-0-8165-4868-2 – via Google Books.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  27. ^ "Chemehuevi Indian Tribe". Southern California Tribal Chairmen's Association. Retrieved May 4, 2023.
  28. ^ Knack, Martha C. (November 1, 2004). Boundaries Between: The Southern Paiutes, 1775-1995. University of Nebraska Press. p. 96. ISBN 978-0-8032-7818-9 – via Google Books.
  29. ^ Nuwuvi: A Southern Paiute History. Inter-Tribal Council of Nevada. 1976. p. 10 – via University of Utah.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  30. ^ Lefler, Brian (January 1, 2000). Nuwuvi (Southern Paiute) Ecological Knowledge of Piñon-Juniper Woodlands: Implications for Conservation and Sustainable Resource Use in Two Southern Nevada Protected Areas (Master of Anthropology thesis). Portland State University. p. 10. doi:10.15760/etd.2006. S2CID 126665057.
  31. ^ a b c d e f Kelly & Fowler 1986, p. 395.
  32. ^ Yanawant Paiute Places and Landscapes in the Arizona Strip: Volume Two Of The Arizona Strip Landscapes and Place Name Study, Part 2, Page 63 Link
  33. ^ a b c d e f Kelly & Fowler 1986, p. 396.

Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • Dutton, Bertha Pauline (1976). The Ranchería, Ute, and Southern Paiute Peoples (2nd ed.). Prentice-Hall. ISBN 978-0-13-752923-0.

External links edit

Tribes edit

  • Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah

Language edit

  • Southern Paiute Collection of Charles Cairns at AILLA – contains audio recordings of words, phrases, and a story in the Southern Paiute language.

Other edit

  • "Removing Classrooms from the Battlefield: Liberty, Paternalism, and the Redemptive Promise of Educational Choice", 2008 BYU Law Review 377
  • "The Piutes and the Legacy of Richard Henry Pratt"[clarification needed]
  • Traditional Southern Paiute Territory: Band Divisions

southern, paiute, people, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, f. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Southern Paiute people news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Southern Paiute people ˈ p aɪ juː t are a tribe of Native Americans who have lived in the Colorado River basin of southern Nevada northern Arizona and southern Utah Bands of Southern Paiute live in scattered locations throughout this territory and have been granted federal recognition on several reservations Southern Paiute s traditionally spoke Colorado River Numic which is now a critically endangered language of the Numic branch of the Uto Aztecan language family and is mutually intelligible with Ute 1 The term Paiute comes from paa Ute meaning water Ute ˈ juː t and refers to their preference for living near water sources 2 Before European colonization they practiced springtime floodplain farming with reservoirs and irrigation ditches for corn squash melons gourds sunflowers beans and wheat 2 Southern PaiuteNuwuviMoapa Woman and girl in traditional Paiute basket hats near Las Vegas circa 1900 Baby swaddled in rabbit robes in cradleboard Regions with significant populations United States Arizona Nevada Utah California LanguagesColorado River Numic ISO 639 3 ute EnglishReligionIndigenous Religion ChristianityRelated ethnic groupsUtes KawaiisuThe first European contact with the Southern Paiute occurred in 1776 when fathers Silvestre Velez de Escalante and Francisco Atanasio Dominguez encountered them during an attempt to find an overland route to the missions of California They noted that some of the Southern Paiute men had thick beards and were thought to look more in appearance like Spanish men than native Americans a Before this date the Southern Paiute suffered slave raids by the Navajo and the Ute The arrival of Spanish and later Euro American explorers into their territory increased slave raiding by other tribes In 1851 Mormon settlers strategically occupied Paiute water sources which created a dependency relationship citation needed However the presence of Mormon settlers soon ended the slave raids and relations between the Paiutes and the Mormons were basically peaceful citation needed The Mormon missionary Jacob Hamblin worked at diplomatic efforts The introduction of European settlers and agricultural practices most especially large herds of cattle made it difficult for the Southern Paiute to continue their traditional lifestyle as it drove away the game and reduced their ability to hunt as well as to gather natural foods Ancestral lands of Southern Paiute groups overlaid on a map of the Colorado River and current US state boundaries 3 4 5 Today Southern Paiute communities are located at Las Vegas Pahrump and Moapa in Nevada Cedar City Kanosh Koosharem Shivwits and Indian Peaks in Utah at Kaibab and Willow Springs in Arizona Contents 1 Public relations 1 1 Early policy 1 2 Modern relations 2 Culture 2 1 Basket weaving 2 2 Traditional diet 2 3 Paiute archery 2 3 1 Bows 2 3 2 Arrows 2 3 3 Quivers and bowcases 2 4 Holy land traditions 3 Organization of the Southern Paiute people 3 1 Traditional Southern Paiute bands 3 2 Contemporary Southern Paiute federally recognized tribes 4 Notable Southern Paiutes 5 Gallery of traditional dress hairstyles buildings and basket making 6 Notes 7 References 8 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External links 10 1 Tribes 10 2 Language 10 3 OtherPublic relations editEarly policy edit Prior to the 1850s the Paiute people lived relatively peacefully with the other Native American groups These groups included the Navajo Ute and Hopi tribes 6 Though there was the occasional tension and violent outbreaks between groups Paiutes were mainly able to live in peace with other tribes and settlers due to their loose social structure Most Paiutes lived in small familial groups and only gathered together in large settings for matters of trade and commerce 6 Prior to the 1850s their biggest antagonists were raiders from competing tribes such as the Navajos Utes and Hopis The Navajos were particularly known for intruding on Paiute grazing land and engaging in raids to capture Paiute women and children for slave trade 7 Prior to the 1860s there had been no long term development of the land Most of the non native contact they had was with transient militants or traders Paiutes fought hard to defend their ancestral lands and at first were successful in driving the settlers out During the second half of the 1800s the most prominent groups to migrate to Paiute lands were members and missionaries from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and silver miners in Pioche Nevada 8 In 1869 a rich investor named Francois Louis Alfred Pioche invested in a silver mine in the town of Pioche which initially depended upon cheap Paiute labor to work in the mines The conditions in the mines caused a dramatic decline in the Paiute population 8 Paiute children were mandated to attend American schools which attempted to assimilate them as much as possible 9 By the early 1900s there were approximately 800 Paiute people 10 Modern relations edit In the 1950s the Indian termination policies of the federal government stripped the Paiutes of their health and educational benefits federal tax protection and agricultural assistance This left them on their own in a weak and unstable state 11 The first attempt of reconciliation was made in 1980 with the Restoration Act which recognized the Paiutes as a tribe It united the five main bands into one tribe the Cedars Indian Peaks Kanosh Koosharem and Shivwits 12 The bill also restored the bands to a system of federal aid and support Culture editBasket weaving edit nbsp Southern Paiute woven hat from 1876 at a Harvard University museum One of the most important skills the women of the Paiute tribes had was their basket weaving skills They would often use red stemmed willows to weave their baskets These skills were used in almost every aspect of their lives and the skill is believed to have been passed down from mother to daughter for at least 9 000 years When they would go to gather and forage they would carry large conical baskets on their back to collect things Specific tools were created including ones to strip fruit off of bushes and trees ones used for winnowing and ones used to get to roots better They would also tightly weave these big baskets with clay and resin to create cooking pots and water jugs Oftentimes smaller tools were left behind whereas bigger products such as cooking pots went with the families as they moved around Based on the region the families were located determined different uses for the weaving For instance those who lived by marshes learned to create duck decoys nets and rafts to better hunt the water fowl Another use for this skill was to create their houses They would use long thin grasses to tightly weave stalks of Cattails together and in doing so they created these long board like sections of grasses that they would set up around long willow limbs stuck in the ground 13 Traditional diet edit A staple food for the Southern Paiutes was the bitterroot They also depended on wild carrot wild onion and chokecherries Chokecherries were useful in more ways than one their stems were brewed to make a sweet drink and their berries would be crushed then dried to be saved for later When Aphids came and swarmed the cane plants they would leave small drops of nectar where they punctured the cane stalk Knowing this the Southern Paiute women would take the cane rods and beat them until the small dried droplets came loose These droplets were then tossed in a winnowing dish to be separated from the remnants of the cane Often these small particles were the main income of sweetness for the people 13 Another seed they would gather are waada seeds minuscule black seeds that would be ground up into meal 14 Those who lived in a region with an adequate water supply would set up farms complete with ditch irrigation The biggest crops were maize squash and wheat 15 The men were the primary hunters they would hunt waterfowl rabbits bighorn sheep and other mammals in the regions they passed through 14 Paiute archery edit Bows edit There is a bow collected by the Smithsonian Institution in 1872 16 Made from a hardwood branch possibly Mesquite or mountain mahogany and is 38 5 8 inches from tip to tip The bow is round in cross section and the string is two ply sinew It has a sinew back and the sinew has been stained with a reddish brown ochre The bow is utilitarian and still has carving marks as to be expected of a practical weapon in a hostile and harsh desert environment 17 Another photograph is taken of a Paiute bow and arrow 18 Arrows edit A set of Paiute arrows was acquired by the Smithsonian Institution in 1874 19 Only one arrow has a point The arrowhead is attached by pine pitch glue There are sinew wrappings behind the point but they are to prevent the shaft from splitting when the target is hit The feathers are hawk and buzzard 17 Quivers and bowcases edit A Paiute arrow quiver was acquired by the Smithsonian Institution in 1872 20 The quiver is made of deerskin with thick hair still on the case showing the deer was killed in the winter and is sewn with two ply sinew much like the bowstring The quiver is plain with no decoration as would be expected of a desert dwelling culture 17 Holy land traditions edit The Southern Paiute people believe in Puaxant Tuvip or power land It is their holy land that links to many significant landmarks in the Southern Paiutes memory and stories For instance Nuvagantu or Mt Charleston in Nevada is a holy landmark that the Southern Paiute people believe was where they were created These holy lands were places that the separate families or tribes would come to barter trade socialize and perform religious ceremonies Another large landmark that is culturally significant to the Southern Paiutes is the Colorado river and the Grand Canyon The modern day importance of these Holy Lands is that the Southern Paiutes claim the supernaturally given right to know what happens and the impacts of any projects that occur in their holy lands 21 Organization of the Southern Paiute people edit nbsp Koosharem Southern Paiute people in Koosharem Utah 1905 One important aspect of gathering food was the social aspect often families would come together for foraging and games and then depart and go their different ways The Southern Paiutes were not organized tribally Groups were instead made up of small family units that would occasionally come together with others to socialize Each group was about 10 50 related people Family ties were very important to these groups and determined group movements and interdependence among groups Marriages were thus very important to the Southern Paiutes The leader of the group was called a Headman and he would be old enough to know a lot about the land but young enough to still participate in the tribes activities and he usually had several different family ties within the group His job was to wake early in the morning and using his knowledge he would make specific suggestions of what he thought the tribe should do that day and if people thought his observations were astute they would follow him if not then they wouldn t His suggestions would be based on the weather season and abundance of food If over time they stopped following his ideas and instead turned to another then the Headman leader title would move onto that person The Headman also was supposed to settle any disputes that came up 22 Oftentimes different sub units of the Southern Paiutes would be classified by the settlers coming in from Europe based on what they ate So you had those who ate waada seeds those who ate trout those who ate cattails etc 13 While the Southern Paiute people are categorized as one group there were subgroups within the whole that were differentiated based on location and dialect 23 Traditional Southern Paiute bands edit nbsp nbsp Shivwits Southern Paiutes in 1875 The Southern Paiute traditionally had 16 to 31 subgroups bands or tribes 24 including the following Ankakkani kacimi Un ka ka ni guts Unka kanig its Oaw tuhus eng Yellow Mouth of Canyon People in present Long ValleyAntarianunts Ute name with ending unts Paiute name Yantarɨi Mixed Southern Paiute Ute band from Escalante River east to Colorado River and southeast to Henry Mountains Utah 24 Beaver band Kʷi umpaciɨi Kwiumpus Quiumputs Frasera speciosa people lived in Beaver Valley along Beaver River near today s Beaver Utah 24 some intermarried with the Pahvant Ute band to the north living in the deserts near Sevier LakeCedar band Ankappanukkicɨcimɨ Unkapanukuints Red stream people or Suh dutsing Cedar people from near Cedar City Utah 24 Chemehuevi tʃ ɛ m ɪ ˈ w eɪ v i Nuwuwu Tantawats Branch of Southern Paiute 25 26 27 southernmost of the groups 28 29 30 Gunlock band Matooshats Matissati Name given them by their southern neighbors the St George band Uainuints Gunlocks instead bestowed the term to some Southern Paiute bands northeast of them Lived near Gunlock 31 in southwest UtahKaibab Kai vi vits Kaipapicɨcimɨ Kaivavwits Kaibabits Kaipa pici Kaivavituvingui Mountain Lying Down People the Kaibab Plateau and Kaibab National Forest in northern Arizona are named after them 31 Indian Peak Band Kwee choovunt Peak People Kaiparowits Mountain home of the people lived along the Escalante River and were hunting the Kaiparowits Plateau in Utah 31 therefore also known as Escalante bandLas Vegas band Nɨpakantɨcimɨ Nuvagantucimi People of Charleston Peak 31 Moapa Muapaa Moapats Muddy Creek Paiute 31 32 Pahranagat Pata nikicɨ Person who sticks his feet in the water named for the Pahranagat Valley Nevada 31 Panaca Tsouwaraits Matisabits Named for Panaca Nevada 33 Panguitch Pakiucimi Fish people named for Panguitch Utah 33 San Juan band Kwaiantikowkets People being over on the opposite side from the San Juan River in northern Arizona 33 Shivwits Sipicimi Shebits Subuts People who live in the East 33 or See veetseng Whitish Earth People Uinkaret Yipinkatɨtɨcimɨ People of Mount Trumbull 33 Uainuints Uenuwunts Tonaquints Hunted and farmed from Hebron Shoal Creek Fort Enterprise and Pinto southward along the Santa Clara River also called Tonaquint River to his mouth into the Virgin River south of today s Saint George Utah therefore called St George Band 33 Contemporary Southern Paiute federally recognized tribes edit Kaibab Band of Paiute Indians of the Kaibab Indian Reservation Arizona Kaibab Indian Reservation Kaibab Arizona Las Vegas Tribe of Paiute Indians of the Las Vegas Indian Colony Las Vegas Nevada Moapa Band of Paiute Indians of the Moapa River Indian Reservation Moapa River Indian Reservation Moapa Nevada Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah Cedar City Utah Cedar City Band of Paiutes Kanosh Band of Paiutes Koosharem Band of Paiutes Indian Peaks Band of Paiutes Shivwits Band of Paiutes San Juan Southern Paiute Tribe of Arizona Navajo Nation Tuba City ArizonaNotable Southern Paiutes editTau gu 1845 1895 Leader in the 1870s Tony Tillohash 1886 1972 Linguist and politicianGallery of traditional dress hairstyles buildings and basket making edit nbsp Young men in Reno Nevada circa 1870 nbsp Paiute group Cottonwood Spring Nevada 1871 nbsp Traditional dress and hunting bow 1872 nbsp Basket weaver photographed circa 1873 nbsp Paiutes near Mountain Meadows southwestern Utah 1880 nbsp Chipping a stone knife 1901 nbsp Basket maker 1902 nbsp Homes circa 1906 nbsp Adobe house 1909Notes edit Warner 1995 pp 187 193 cites Dominguez amp Velez de Escalante 1776 References edit Peoples of Mesa Verde The Ute Southern Paiute Connection Crow Canyon Archaeological Center 2014 Retrieved May 3 2023 a b About The Southern Paiute National Park Service Retrieved May 3 2023 Stoffle Richard W Loendorf Lawrence Austin Diane E Halmo David B Bulletts Angelita February 2000 Ghost Dancing the Grand Canyon Southern Paiute Rock Art Ceremony and Cultural Landscapes Current Anthropology Chicago University of Chicago Press 41 1 12 doi 10 1086 300101 PMID 10593723 S2CID 142526911 Retrieved May 4 2023 via ResearchGate Richard Arnold Spoon Jeremy Nuwuvi Southern Paiute Ancestral Territory International Union for Conservation of Nature Retrieved May 4 2023 Nuwuvi Southern Paiute Native Land Digital August 7 2022 Retrieved May 4 2023 a b Holt Ronald L April 22 2016 Paiute Indians Utah State Department of Community amp Cultural Engagement Bunte Pamela Franklin Robert 1992 You Can t Get There from Here Southern Paiute Testimony as Intercultural Communication Anthropological Linguistics 34 1 4 19 44 JSTOR 30028366 a b Reeve W Paul 2006 Mormons Miners and Southern Paiutes Making Space on the Western Frontier University of Illinois Press ISBN 9780252031267 JSTOR 10 5406 j ctt1xcnr6 Riggs Christopher K 2000 American Indians Economic Development and Self Determination in the 1960s Pacific Historical Review 69 3 431 463 doi 10 2307 3641716 JSTOR 3641716 Indian Tribe of Utah History Utahpaiutes org Retrieved 7 January 2019 Holt Ronald L Paiute Indians Utah Department of Heritage and Arts 17 Aug 2016 heritage utah gov history uhg first peoples paiute indians Our History the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah a b c Patapoff E Director 1979 The Earth is Our Home Retrieved October 12 2018 via Kanopy a b Cultural Resources Management program 2012 Rock Art of the Malheur Marshlands The Wada Tika Ancestors of Today s Burns Paiute Tribe Oregon US Fish and Wildlife Service Retrieved November 12 2018 Allison James R Meegan Cathryn M Murray Shawn Sabrina 2008 Archaeology and Archaeobotany of Southern Paiute Horticulture in the St George Basin Southwestern Utah KIVA Journal of Southwestern Anthropology and History Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society 73 4 417 449 doi 10 1179 kiv 2008 73 4 003 JSTOR 30246559 S2CID 129614910 via Taylor amp Francis Smithsonian Institution Department of Anthropology Catalogue Number E 12034 0 a b c Berger Billy 2010 Treasures of the Smithsonian Part V Archery of the Southwestern United States Paiute Primitive Archer Volume 18 5 October November 2010 Pages 2025 Photograph of Willard George Shooting a Bow and Arrow Neb 1899 1900 University of Nevada Las Vegas University Libraries n d Notes Taken in Nebraska Willard George left is showing a relative how to shoot a Paiute bow and arrow Smithsonian Institution Department of Anthropology Catalogue number E 14539 Smithsonian Institution Department of Anthropology Catalogue Number E 12038 0 Stoffle Richard W Halmo David B Austin Diane E 1997 Cultural Landscapes and Traditional Cultural Properties A Southern Paiute View of the Grand Canyon and Colorado River American Indian Quarterly 21 2 229 doi 10 2307 1185646 ISSN 0095 182X JSTOR 1185646 via ResearchGate Knack Martha C 2004 Boundaries between the Southern Paiutes 1775 1995 University of Nebraska Press pp 20 25 ISBN 9780803278189 via Google Books Steward Julian 1933 University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology Berkeley California University of California Press pp 233 250 a b c d Kelly amp Fowler 1986 p 394 Trafzer Clifford E August 1 2015 A Chemehuevi Song The Resilience of a Southern Paiute Tribe Seattle Washington University of Washington Press published June 2015 pp 17 18 ISBN 978 0 295 80582 5 via Google Books Ocampo Daisy June 13 2023 Where We Belong Chemehuevi and Caxcan Preservation of Sacred Mountains Tucson Arizona University of Arizona Press p 56 ISBN 978 0 8165 4868 2 via Google Books a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Chemehuevi Indian Tribe Southern California Tribal Chairmen s Association Retrieved May 4 2023 Knack Martha C November 1 2004 Boundaries Between The Southern Paiutes 1775 1995 University of Nebraska Press p 96 ISBN 978 0 8032 7818 9 via Google Books Nuwuvi A Southern Paiute History Inter Tribal Council of Nevada 1976 p 10 via University of Utah a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Lefler Brian January 1 2000 Nuwuvi Southern Paiute Ecological Knowledge of Pinon Juniper Woodlands Implications for Conservation and Sustainable Resource Use in Two Southern Nevada Protected Areas Master of Anthropology thesis Portland State University p 10 doi 10 15760 etd 2006 S2CID 126665057 a b c d e f Kelly amp Fowler 1986 p 395 Yanawant Paiute Places and Landscapes in the Arizona Strip Volume Two Of The Arizona Strip Landscapes and Place Name Study Part 2 Page 63 Link a b c d e f Kelly amp Fowler 1986 p 396 Sources editDominguez Atanasio Velez de Escalante Silvestre 1776 Derrotero de los Padres Fray Francisco Atanacio Dominguez and Fr Silvestre Velez de Escalante en sus exploraciones desde las missiones de Zuny del Nuevo Mexico hasta las ymmediaciones de Monte Rey de California Hogan C Michael 2008 Burnham A ed Morro Creek Ancient Village or Settlement in United States in The West The Megalith Portal Archived from the original on May 24 2013 Kelly Isabel T Fowler Catherine S 1986 Southern Paiute In d Azevedo Warren L ed Handbook of North American Indians Vol 11 Great Basin William C Sturtevant general editor Smithsonian Institution pp 368 397 ISBN 978 0 16 004581 3 Kroeber Alfred L 1925 Handbook of the Indians of California Bulletin Smithsonian Institution Bureau of American Ethnology Vol 78 Washington D C Government Printing Office Pritzker Barry M 2000 Paiute Southern A Native American Encyclopedia History Culture and Peoples OUP ISBN 978 0 19 513877 1 Warner Ted J ed 1995 The Dominguez Escalante journal their expedition through Colorado Utah Arizona and New Mexico in 1776 Translated by Chavez Angelico foreword by Robert Himmerich y Valencia University of Utah Press ISBN 978 0 87480 447 8 Further reading editDutton Bertha Pauline 1976 The Rancheria Ute and Southern Paiute Peoples 2nd ed Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 752923 0 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Paiute Tribes edit Paiute Indian Tribe of UtahLanguage edit Southern Paiute Collection of Charles Cairns at AILLA contains audio recordings of words phrases and a story in the Southern Paiute language Other edit Removing Classrooms from the Battlefield Liberty Paternalism and the Redemptive Promise of Educational Choice 2008 BYU Law Review 377 The Piutes and the Legacy of Richard Henry Pratt clarification needed Traditional Southern Paiute Territory Band Divisions Southern Paiute Tribal Boundary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Southern Paiute people amp oldid 1195158080, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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