ojibwa/chippewa by andrea & megan

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Ojibwa/Chippewa By Andrea & Megan

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Ojibwa/Chippewa By Andrea & Megan. Food. Here are some pictures of what they ate. They ate Bison, corn, Berries , Deer, and wild rice. Were they lived. Ojibwa Indians lived in birch bark houses that they made from birch bark trees. Clothing. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Ojibwa/Chippewa By Andrea & Megan

Ojibwa/ChippewaBy Andrea & Megan

Page 2: Ojibwa/Chippewa By Andrea & Megan

Food

Here are some pictures of what they ate.

They ate Bison, corn, Berries , Deer, and wild rice.

Page 3: Ojibwa/Chippewa By Andrea & Megan

Were they lived

Ojibwa Indians lived in birch bark houses that they made from birch bark trees.

Page 4: Ojibwa/Chippewa By Andrea & Megan

Clothing

Here are some pictures of Ojibwa/Chippewa clothing.

They made patterns in some of the clothing.

They either made cloths or traded for cloths.

There clothing was made of animal skin sometimes. But other times they do not have clothes that warm.

Page 5: Ojibwa/Chippewa By Andrea & Megan

Hunting

They sometimes would hunt fish. How do they do it? They do it in a canoe. They go out in the night and use a lantern to attract the fish, then they see a fish and BAAM! The fish is dead because they stabbed it.

Page 6: Ojibwa/Chippewa By Andrea & Megan

Beliefs

One thing that these native Americans believed in was dream catchers. They believed that the dream catchers would let good dreams go through and bad dreams would get stuck.

Page 7: Ojibwa/Chippewa By Andrea & Megan

Were they live.

Chippewa Indians use to live around lake Superior. They also lived in Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota.

Page 8: Ojibwa/Chippewa By Andrea & Megan

Europeans

Europeans took food and took the land from our tribe. They took there kids too, and turned them into Europeans. Europeans called the Indians the Indian problem.

Page 9: Ojibwa/Chippewa By Andrea & Megan

Flags

Here are some flags Ojibwa Indians used. I do not really know what they mean though.

Page 10: Ojibwa/Chippewa By Andrea & Megan

Games

Ojibwa children did have dolls and toys. But one thing they liked to play with was called Ojibwa string game.

Page 11: Ojibwa/Chippewa By Andrea & Megan

Interesting facts

Chippewa woman were responsible for making cloths. To make cloths soft they used animal brains and rubbed them against the cloths.

Page 12: Ojibwa/Chippewa By Andrea & Megan

The End

I hope in you learned a lot in this slide show and enjoyed it a lot.