Totems, the protective spirits - Contenido educativo
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Hello everyone and welcome to the project of totems of fifth grade of primary.
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Most of us have seen a totem pole before, but what were they usually used for?
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Let's find out today a bit of the colossal questions totem poles are for wooden sculptures.
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Made by the indigenous people of the Pacific Northwest Coast from what's now Washington State all the way up the coast to Alaska.
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say for sure how long people have been making them. But the mid-1800s was definitely the peak
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for totem pole making. Once artists started to use metal poles instead of stone. Totem poles
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served a lot of purposes and there is a digger to see basic types. Her big poles and yes same poles,
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well-grown poles were as tall as 40 feet possibly even taller. They were covered with different
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humans, animals, and mythological figures, templates.
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At the edge of a lake, a river of the beach
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to welcome guests or warn strangers.
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Memorial poets were pulled a year after the war.
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We here at honor the design of the place
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and totem poles. The pole was also a bit like a ring because the pole was tied with a piece of wood.
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But thinking about it from then, if there were poles, I liked totem poles.
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Then, birthday poles are held up like a casket and are wrapped into one.
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They were covered with boxes to hold the ashes of someone who died.
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They are the rarest type of totem pole, and some of the titles usually 15 to 17 feet high.
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Some posts, like house posts, are just as practical as they are pretty.
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These posts are used as the big roof beams.
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Inside the house, usually two to four of them help hold the roof.
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Outside the house was another important post,
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where a request for family posts were usually 20 to 40 feet tall.
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And now they have a shop of the most stylish garments that told the story of their families, clan or village.
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And then they will wear the same coat, also called indigo, because they fit both.
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It would work when a person or a group would give something to a bag.
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Most often when they didn't pay a debt.
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Once the business was made right, the poor was taken down.
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Landmark Highlights skills were money.
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It was a big factory who couldn't have totem poles made.
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And how extravagant they could be.
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And all the labor isn't cheap.
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Often there are people who was hired to carve the totem poles.
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Wolves actually live with the family while they work for bigger projects ahead of carbon.
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Mice even have a property to help animals.
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The animals were usually dragons, eagles, owls, bears and eagles.
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walls, rocks, clear walls, clear walls, and a mythological theater called Thunderburg that made thunder and lightning.
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The temples were covered with red or yellow seracaba paint, and painting using traditional colors, black, white, red, yellow, purple, and blue.
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Well-coloured options were limited by whatever natural pavements.
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What was the most common sand? It was usually made from linden, fruit of fora, and wheat coal.
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The bones in a common cap size. White came from clay, limestone, or gibbous.
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Red came from a special clay called red ochre. Yellow can come from clay too.
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Gray juice for purple pigments and blue-green came from copper.
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Sandy science totems cover our carpet from wood and wood tends to rot over time in rainy places.
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Like the Pacific Northwest, very few totem poles remain that were made before the 1,000
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Nazis.
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Meet a lot of different things to different people across the Pacific Northwest.
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It's also one of the most iconic styles of Native American art, and they're definitely
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not same in that thank you for watching our presentation see you soon
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- Autor/es:
- CEBIP CARPE DIEM
- Subido por:
- Cp carpediem villanuevadelpardillo
- Licencia:
- Reconocimiento
- Visualizaciones:
- 4
- Fecha:
- 20 de mayo de 2023 - 18:45
- Visibilidad:
- Clave
- Centro:
- CP INF-PRI CARPE DIEM
- Duración:
- 05′ 59″
- Relación de aspecto:
- 1.78:1
- Resolución:
- 1920x1080 píxeles
- Tamaño:
- 648.95 MBytes