An Athapascan is another term for an Athabascan, a group of peoples inhabiting Alaska, Canada, the Pacific coast of California and Oregon, believed to be part of the second great migration of peoples into the Americas.
Kate C. Duncan has written: 'Some warmer tone' -- subject(s): Exhibitions, Athapascan beadwork, Athapascan art, Beadwork 'Bead embroidery of the Northern Athapaskans' -- subject(s): Athapascan art, Beadwork, Indian embroidery
Kenny Thomas has written: 'Crow is my boss =' -- subject(s): Athapascan Indians, Social life and customs, History, Biograpahy, Tanacross language
Jan Harper-Haines has written: 'Cold river spirits' -- subject(s): Athapascan Indians, Biography, History, Social conditions
William E. Simeone has written: '\\' -- subject(s): Material culture, Catalogs, Athapascan Indians, Indians of North America, Field Museum of Natural History
John William Pollock has written: 'Early cultures of the Clearwater River area, northeastern Alberta' -- subject(s): Antiquities, Athapascan Indians, Indians of North America
Elisabeth Gemberling has written: 'The role of secondary education in the development of indigenous leadership in American Indian communities' -- subject(s): Athapascan Indians, Education, Indians of North America, Oglala Indians
Ian R. Wilson has written: 'Archaeological investigations at the Atigun site, Central Brooks Range, Alaska' -- subject(s): Athapascan Indians, Eskimos, Implements, Indians of North America
The term "Athapaskan" refers to a large family of languages spoken from Alaska to New Mexico - so there can not be "the Athapaskan word" for anything.In Gwich'in the word meaning it is stormy or windy is ahtr'eii. In Ahtna it is łteni. In Navajo it is ne-ol.
Claire. Fejes has written: 'Villagers, Athabaskan Indian life along the Yukon River' -- subject(s): Social conditions, Athapascan Indians 'Cold starry night' -- subject(s): Biography, Women artists, Frontier and pioneer life, Artists
John W. Ives has written: 'A spatial analysis of artifact distribution on a Boreal forest archaeological site' -- subject(s): Antiquities, Excavations (Archaeology), Indians of North America 'A theory of Northern Athapaskan prehistory' -- subject(s): Antiquities, Athapascan Indians, Indians of North America
hi everyone! the answer is English, French, and Spanish There are hundreds of languages in North America, not just the three main European idioms listed above. East of the Rocky Mountains, about 50 languages belong to the Algonquian family. In the West, the large Uto-Aztecan familiy includes Hopi. Navaho is in the the Athapascan family.
The Apache came from the far north in today Alaska or Canada - they spoke one dialect of the Na-Dene-branch of the Athapascan language stock.They arrived in the Southwest and in northern Mexico around 1300 or 1400 BC. and lived by hunting, gathering, some agriculture and raiding neighboring tribes and later white settlers. The last documented raids occurred in Mexico around 1930 against Lower Pima settlements and white settlers. By 1882 the major portion of the Apache were settled on reservations in the USA or in villas in northern Mexico.