viking
Chinook Indians traveled in canoes that were carved from cedar logs.
it is a representation of their most used food source, the Chinook salmon
Mary Lynn Stender has written: 'Chinook jargon vocabulary as an indicator of cultural change' -- subject(s): Chinook jargon, Social life and customs, Chinook Indians
very hard and stressful.
a style or a part of life you like
wooden plank houses
wooden plank houses
Drumming and singing.
northwest
Chinook jargon was spoken from California to Alaska. It made it possible for many diverse people to communicate and carry out trade.
Chinook people lived in cedar plank houses. You can visit a modern plank house at Ridgefield, Washington. The Chinook lived in long houses with more than fifty people sharing one house. In 2005, a full-scale replica of a Chinook-style cedar plank house was built at the Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge near Ridgefield, Washington. This area was once an area of inhabitance for the Cathlapotle tribe (a Chinook people). The Chinook Indians lived in longhouses made out of cedar wood. The houses were usually up to 70ft. long.