The address of the Jemez Pueblo Community Library is: 020 Mission Rd, Jemez Pueblo, 87024 0650
This is a difficult question to answer because the word "Tribe" does not fit the pueblo people very well. A tribe is a social organization of people consisting of a number of families, clans, or other groups who share a common ancestry and culture and among whom leadership is typically neither formalized nor permanent. Currently, in New Mexico there are 19 pueblos that are independent political organizations. Which one could call a Tribe. Some people divide or organize these 19 pueblos according to the language or language dialects. This method also causes problems as the 19 pueblos belong to 3 distinct language groups and are further divided into 5 separate languages and these five languages have many discrete dialects. Because you mentioned 5 tribes I believe you may be looking for the five languages which are Keresan, Tewa, Tiwa, Towa, and Zuni. But many Pueblo people will disagree that these are "tribes". The nineteen current pueblos in New Mexico are the: Acoma, Cochiti, Jemez, Isleta, Laguna, Nambe, Ohkay Owingeh, Picuris, Pojoaque, Sandia, San Felipe, San Ildefonso, Santa Ana, Santa Clara, Santo Domingo, Taos, Tesuque, Zia, and Zuni. This leaves out one very important pueblo group the Piro Indians. They had a language that is now extinct but was part of the Tiwa language. These Indians occupied the area around Socorro, and San Acacia, New Mexico. Most of them fled with the Spanish during the Pueblo Revolt of 1680 and moved to Socorro del Sur near present El Paso.
Owingeh | Picuris | Pojoaque | Sandia | San Felipe | San Ildefonso | Santa Ana | Santa Clara | Santo Domingo | Taos | Tesuque | Zia | Zuni Acoma | Cochiti | Isleta | Jemez | Laguna | Nambe | Ohkay here is all 19 so that you can the history of them also :)
There are 21 modern Pueblos today in New Mexico, Arizona and Texas. There were more when the Spanish first came in contact with them. Each group is a little different and some speak very different unrelated languages. Here is a list of today's people: Hopi, Zuñi, Keresan speakers at Acoma, Laguna, Santa Ana, Zia, Cochiti, Santo Domingo, and San Felipe. Towa at Jemez, Tewa speakers in San Juan, San Ildefonso, Santa Clara, Tesuque, Nambe, Pojoaque, and Hano (on the Hopi), and Tiwa speakers at Taos, Picuris, and Southern Tiwa (Sandia, Isleta).
Recent advances in technology have allowed the extraction of mitochondrial DNA from prehistoric skeletal material. Haplogroup B4'5 is thought to have been common among the Anasazi of the ancient U.S. Southwest. Haplogroup B4'5 appears to have been a fixture in the Southwest at least since the introduction of agriculture to the region from Mesoamerica 2,500 to 3,500 years ago. In some areas the haplogroup is found in 100% of the Native American population and sometimes multiple populations share the identical forms of the haplogroup; for example, a single variant of haplogroup B4'5 is shared by the Navajo, Zuni, Jemez and Seri groups, as well as others. Haplogroup B4'5 reaches levels of 75-90% among the Pueblo groups of New Mexico and Arizona, which are thought to descend from the cliff-dwelling Anasazi who occupied the Southwest from the 8th century AD until their sudden disappearance in the early 12th century. The Anasazi didn't literally disappear; modern Pueblo people and most scholars believe warfare or environmental catastrophe forced them to abandon their elaborate cliff dwellings for settlements in the Rio Grande valley. Recent studies of DNA extracted from 2,000-year-old remains have supported that view by establishing the presence of haplogroup B4'5 among the Anasazi. There may have also been some small amounts of the "X" haplogroup as well. Dr. Smith was able to examine the haplogroups of ancient Anasazi skeletons and to compare these to samples from current populations. The study showed a makeup that was consistent with previous studies showing the Anasazi to be part of the pueblo family that includes the Hopi and other tribes in the Southwest. But the study also revealed the presence of another haplogroup which appears similar to an "X" haplogroup found in the Navajo, but which has not been found in the Hopi. Haplogroup X is an oddball among the branches of the human mitochondrial DNA tree. It is scattered around the globe in the Northern Hemisphere, but aside from concentrations in a few isolated groups it almost never rises above a small percentage of the population. The presence of haplogroup X2 among Native Americans was something of a mystery when originally discovered, and to some degree still is.
The Dine' (navajo) did and do live in parts of south east Utah, probably from the 1700's onwards. In the area north of the San Juan river up towards the Bears Ears, The Blue mountains, Blanding, and Monticello. They also live in north western AZ, north eastern NM. They are one of the small number of tribes that still live in much of their traditional lands. The Traditional sacred mountains make the traditional self perceived boundaries of their territory, although there was overlap with other tribes and it shifted at times. Those mountains are in English: Mount Blanca Co (eastern mt), Mt Taylor NM ( south), San Francisco Peaks near Flagstaff ( west) and Mt Hesperus CO (north) . The traditional emergence place into this world in Dine' stories is a small lake in southern CO. and the traditional core of the first homeland is Dinetah in thhe Upper San Juan river valley basin area in North western NM and southern Co. Jemez Pueblo oral tradition puts the Navajo in the area around 950 AD which is not far from Navajo oral history. Navajo oral history mentions the arrival of the Ute people into southern utah and CO and is probably pretty accurate. Not coincidentally, This is the general area that archeologists find evedence of the earliest distinctly Dine' people, southern Athabascans with corn growing as an important part of the culture and living in hogans. These sites date from the 1500's.
The phone number of the Jemez Pueblo Community Library is: 575-834-9171.
The address of the Jemez Springs Public Library is: 030 Jemez Plaza, Hwy. 4, Jemez Springs, 87025 0479
The phone number of the Jemez Springs Public Library is: 505-829-9155.
47.5 miles.
The address of the Jemez State Monument is: , Jemez Springs, NM 87025
Marvin Fragua was born on March 18, 1952, in Jemez Pueblo, New Mexico.
The Pueblo Indians (Jemez, Tesuque, Taos, Sandia, Pecos)
Jemez Valley Public Schools's motto is 'Caring Community Schools, Providing Every Student, Opportunities for Success'.
Joe S. Sando has written: 'Ife of Paa Peh' 'Pueblo nations' -- subject(s): History, Pueblo Indians 'The life of Paa Peh' -- subject(s): Biography, Genealogy, Jemez Indians, Social life and customs 'The Pueblo Indians' -- subject(s): Pueblo Indians
The jemez Indians lived in Pueblos.
The phone number of the Jemez State Monument is: 505-476-5004.
Jemez Mountains Electric Cooperative was created in 1948.