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Arizona
The Pueblo Indians are not thought to be related to the Hohokam just the Anasazi, Sinagua and Mogollon. The modern Pueblo dry land farm like the Anasazi especially in the western Pueblos. They grow the same crops but added ones that were brought by the Spanish like peaches and melons. In the eastern Pueblos they irrigated their farms which is similar to the Hohokam but not the same and not not thought to be related. They have the same housing patterns, the same pottery styles, the same weaving of cotton. The kachina cult is thought to have started among the Anasazi at the end of their time and continues among the Pueblo.
Likely the Native Americans from Mesoamerica, (from the south) who became the Hohokam Indians. Later in time, the Anasazai migrated in from the north.
the pima people
There are no pictures of the Anasazi, as they were an ancient people.
The Anasazi Indians stretched from present Arizona, and New Mexico all the way to central Utah and Colorado. Close by, the Mogollon and Hohokam people occupied smaller regions which were identical to the Anasazi culture.They lived south of the Anasazi region, and some even stretched into present day Mexico. newtest3 by tyje jones Stephanie Smith
The modern Pueblo people are the direct desecndants of the Anasazi and other peoples of the Southwest such as Mogollon and Hohokam as well. There is a direct continum over time from those older people. Pottery, buildings, farming techniques, kachina religion and everything else that make the Pueblo people distinct are from there ancestors the Anasazi or Ancstoral Pueblo peoples and they are mostly known as today. Of course these are living cultures and practices changed and evoled over time. Only newer tradtions that clearly come from the Spanish are not from the Anasazi. One example of this would be the Moros y Cristianos festivals in San Juan or the running of bulls at Jemez.
No.
Hohokam
berries and stuff like that
The Hohokam people primarily relied on agriculture for their diet. They cultivated crops such as maize, beans, squash, and other vegetables. They also hunted and gathered wild foods like mesquite pods, wild plants, and small game animals.
The Hohokam people acquired shells through trade with other indigenous groups, primarily from the Gulf of California. They used shells for ornamentation, tools, and as a form of currency. Shell artifacts have been found in Hohokam archaeological sites, demonstrating their importance to the culture.