I am a seventh grader and we were studying this back in the second six weeks. I found out that the Jumano Indian tribe lived in adobe houses in the mountains and basins region.
The Jumano Tribe, primarily located in present-day Texas and the surrounding regions, had a rich spiritual life that intertwined with their daily practices. They believed in a variety of spiritual forces and often engaged in rituals that honored natural elements, such as the sun and water, which were vital for their survival. The Jumano were known to have shamanic figures who acted as spiritual leaders, guiding the community in healing practices and ceremonies. Their beliefs were deeply connected to the land and reflected a profound respect for nature and its cycles.
The Jumano tribe lived in Texas, where no Western Red Cedar trees grow.Since it is these huge Pacific coast trees that were made into totem poles, the Jumano can not have made totem poles, nor did any other tribes in the Americas - just those on the north-west coast of the USA and the west coast of Canada.
the games on friday
The Jumano groups suffered at the hands of Spanish explorers and settlers and they were also pushed south and persecuted by the Apache tribes moving in from the north. They appeared to disappear completely by about 1750 - but they did not die out and were really absorbed into the general Mexican/Spanish/native population.Today the Jumano descendants in western Texas have applied to the US government for federal recognition and are very proud of their native heritage; they generally have Mexican surnames (Acosta, Lavario, Menendez, Mendoza and so on) indicating long exposure to Spanish/Mexican culture and integration into the overall population.
The Jumano women roles were to plant crops like corn,squash,and beans. Luckly the Jumano women didn't do everything . The men would sometimes hunt for food.Even though the womens would do more than the men.
There were leaders for every village so there is no leader of them in general.
how was the jumano culture like.
No. The last records of them are from the mid 1700s in west Texas.
dried corn, beans, squash, and they traded tourqouise for meats from other neighboring tribes.
the jumano are a hunter-gatherer tribe
i
yes! of course they gathered nuts and berries what kind of indian tribe doesn't seriously!
The Jumano Tribe, primarily located in present-day Texas and the surrounding regions, had a rich spiritual life that intertwined with their daily practices. They believed in a variety of spiritual forces and often engaged in rituals that honored natural elements, such as the sun and water, which were vital for their survival. The Jumano were known to have shamanic figures who acted as spiritual leaders, guiding the community in healing practices and ceremonies. Their beliefs were deeply connected to the land and reflected a profound respect for nature and its cycles.
Karankawa
Their tribe went from Arizona New Mexico to Texas.
nikki
Nobody really knows. There aren't many historical records of this tribe, which went extinct in the 18th Century.