all the above- apex
rights to tribal self-rule, federal aid for education, and federal aid for health care
TRUE
Californios and Native Americans were not welcome, because Americans thought any person other than themselves had no right no take gold from the land of 'free and enlighted citizens'.
Brought new diseases back to England and existing diseases to the new land - causing large number of deaths due to the unprotected Native Americans' immune system not recognizing the illness and fighting it off.
Sadly, the primary effect of Native Americans attacking settlements was to enforce the prejudices of the settlers against them, and to reinforce the image of them as savages, hellbent on destroying civilization.
The Dawes Severalty Act of 1887 was the division of Native American land that was then given to individual Native Americans. The Act remained in effect until it was amended by the Burke Act in 1906.
Federal aid went directly to tribal governments
Federal aid went directly to tribal governments
The government cut off aid to tribal governments for services such as education and health care
I think it had a good effect on the Native Americans because it guaranteed freedom of religion and trials by jury.
Native Americans lost much of the land that they had before the passage of the act.
by killing them
wealth and power
they had a war
The arrival of the Europeans did not affect the native americans in Mexico.
The Native Americans lived happy with the national cap
This crisis had little to nothing to do with Native American's.
The American revolution did not directly effect the lives of Native Americans. Politically little if anything changed; the only difference being that the newly formed United States accepted the terms and obligations of all treaties formally held between Native American governments and governments in Europe (see Delaware Treaty of 1778: Treaty of Fort Pitt) and attempted at least in part to disconnect those Native Governments from any contact (or treaties) with nations from Europe.