What
kinds of things did they eat?
The Huron were horticulturalists,
which means they were farmers or gardeners. They grew their own corn, beans,
and squash. In this longhouse you can see corn and some things that look like
pumpkins. Pumpkins are a type of squash. Why did they grow these three things
together? Corn, beans, and squash are called the Three Sisters. Corn and beans
have amino acids in them. Amino acids are what we need to make protein. We
usually get this from meat, but some people don't eat meat. Some people are
vegetarians. They need to find their protein from other foods. Corn and beans
have amino acids that complement each other. This means that if you eat them
together, you will get a complete protein. If you eat them separately you
will have an incomplete diet. The Huron were also hunters and gatherers. They
hunted animals like deer, bear, and wolves. They fished from the lakes and
rivers around their village. The Huron gathered berries and roots for food,
as well as other things that could be used for making different medicines.
Inuit ate only meat and fish. Lichens and moss were the only types of vegetation
that grew in the Arctic. The Inuit people did not want to eat the lichens
and moss right off the rocks. (Yuck! I don't think you would like to eat moss
either!) There was one way that the Inuit could get the nutrients that they
needed from vegetation and this might surprise you! Caribou like to eat moss
and lichens. When Inuit hunters killed a caribou, they opened up its stomach
to see if the caribou had eaten any lichens and moss. If some of this partially
digested vegetation was in the stomach, the Inuit would eat it to get the
nutrients they needed. This was a delicacy, which means that it was very special
and very desired.
The Haida and other Northwest Coast people did not need to grow their own
food. They had access to many different kinds of food. Because there was a
milder climate, many edible things, as well as things that they used for different
medicines grew in the forests around their villages. They were hunters and
gatherers. They hunted animals like deer, bear, and mountain goats in the
forests and mountains. The Haida also fished in the rivers and lakes. Most
impressive, they hunted large sea mammals like seals and sea lions.
Activity: Growing Corn
Corn, beans and
squash were domesticated in North America. What does domestication mean?
Domestication means
that humans have taken something wild and have tamed it. A long time ago,
when people started to populate North America, they had to search for things
that were good and safe to eat. When they found something that they liked
they would dry the seeds and plant them in them ground year after year. This
was what we call trial and error. If something worked, they would keep doing
it. If something did not work, they would not repeat it. So, things like corn
and wheat once looked like grass with very small seed heads.
What other plants
were domesticated in North America?
Where were plants domesticated?
Africa |
Near
East |
East
Asia |
Europe |
North
America |
Pacific
Islands |
South
America |
sorghum
tef pearl millet finger millet cow pea African rice yams oil palm watermelon okra |
wheat
barley peas chickpeas fava beans lentils carrots beets safflower olive fig dates fenugreek |
rice
millets buckwheat soybean adzuki beans turnips Chinese radish canola seed apricot peach water chestnut cucumber sesame tea |
oats
rye beets hazelnut plum apple cabbage almond pear lettuce carob onions grape |
corn
(maize) common bean lima bean chili pepper sweet potato tobacco sunflower papaya pumpkin tomato bottle gourd squash |
breadfruit
sweet potato taro arrowroot coconut yams lemon grapefruit orange mangos bananas cloves black pepper eggplant sugar cane |
quinoa
common bean manioc squash tobacco cacao sweet potato potato cotton avocado cashews pineapple papaya peanut |
Domesticated plants unavailable
in certain regions were obtained through trade with other groups of people.
Some New World plant strains are now indispensable in Old World cuisine. Imagine
Italian cooking without tomatoes or Irish stew without potatoes. Yet, both tomatoes
and potatoes were domesticated in the New World and were brought to Europe only
since 1492 A.D. And chocolate? What would life be like without chocolate? Where
was it domesticated?
How did
they get their food?
Inuit hunted animals on land and fished through holes in the ice.
The Haida hunted in the nearby forests and mountains, fished in the oceans and
rivers, gathered berries and shellfish as well as other things, and harpooned
large sea mammals such as sea lions and seals.
The Huron were sedentary people who grew their own crops of corn, beans and
squash. They also hunted and gathered in the nearby forests and fished in the
rivers and lakes.
What do
they do with the food that they don't eat right away? How can they make it last
through the winter? Where do they store food?
In the longhouse, corn was
hung to dry. When it was dry some of the kernels were kept for next year to
plant new crops. The rest was ground into corn meal. Fish and meat were hung
to dry or smoked. Smoking the meat gives it a very different flavour. When the
food was dried, it was then ready to be stored. On the floor of the longhouse,
there were storage pits, big deep holes in the ground where food and other things
were kept. Most of these were under the sleeping platforms or in the end compartments
of the longhouse so no one would step on them. They also used big barrels made
from bark to store their food. They always had to be on the lookout for mice.
Mice would get into the storage areas and eat their food.
The Haida stored the food
that they had collected over the summer in boxes of fish oil. They also dried
or smoked fish, meat and berries.
What preservation method would be the easiest in the arctic?
©
Pond Inlet 1953-54 (Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Center)
Activity: Making Cornmeal