Annotated+Bibs

5th Global Natives Annotated Bibliography 08/09
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 * Williams, Suzanne Morgan. //Chinook Indians//. Chicago, Illinois: Heinemann Library, 2003. This book is very useful in providing information about the lifestyle and culture of the Chinook Tribe. There are many examples(pictures) of possible cultural artifacts about this tribe that show their cultural identity. Pictures on page 24 are some good examples of possible artifact options for a museum piece.
 * "Chinook Indian Tribe:Chinook Nation." Chinook Indian Tribal Council. 1999-2005.  [|http://www.chinooknation.org] 17 Nov 2008.This website is the official site of the Chinook Nation today. There is a student history download on the bottom left corner of the page that has some history and some diagrams. The download was very wordy, but the diagrams looked different from the book information and could . The other parts to the website were not useful.

Interesting information about the Chinook in a very readable form and not overwhelming.
 * ====Drucker, Philip. "Chinook (American Indian tribe)." //Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia//. 2008. Grolier Online. 17 Nov. 2008 http://gme.grolier.com/cgi-bin/article?assetid=0061320-0.====

Information has a few more facts than the previous site, but clicking on the web links brings up another annotated list of sources. Great!
 * ======Gould, Richard A. "Chinook." //Encyclopedia Americana//. 2008. Grolier Online. 17 Nov. 2008 http://ea.grolier.com/cgi-bin/article?assetid=0091640-00.======

 This site only gives small pieces of information, but different than previous found. No pictures.
 * "Oregon." //CultureGrams States Edition//. 2008. ProQuest. 17 Nov 2008 .

> Retells the story of how the Chinook Indians came to be. Very short, but interesting part of their oral tradition. The story would be a great example of cultural identity dealing with religion or beli
 * "Chinook Creation Story." 17 November 2008 


 * "National Lewis and Clark Bicentennial Commemoration: Chinook Indian Tribe." 17 November 2008 .
 * This site gives excellent information in relation to the Lewis and Clark expedition and meeting the Chinook Indians.
 * "The Chinook Tribe Then and Now." 17 November 2008 . This site was found using Webpath Express from the Library Catalog, Destiny. It was created by 4th graders in Oregon and has some excellent information and primary resources. The Chinook Tribe is located on the left side tab. After clicking on the tab, the web page about the Chinook is well organized and easy for students to understand. The resources are easily identified and includes quotes from the journals of Lewis and Clark.