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      • There is currently no one in the area who is living the way Native Americans did prior to 1850, any more than there is a member of an Anglo culture who is living the life of a mid-nineteenth century miner, farmer, or merchant.
      www.nps.gov › redw › learn
  1. Nov 1, 2023 · This November, you can learn more about North Americas first inhabitants by finding out which Indigenous lands you live on, using a collaborative, interactive map.

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  3. Nov 14, 2023 · Today, many of those landscapes are the same ones we go to for relaxation and recreation. In celebration of Native American Heritage Month, we created an interactive map that you can use to recognize the ancestral lands you or your favorite places are on.

  4. Jan 12, 2023 · Native American tribes have populated the Bay Area for about 10,000 years, according to the latest estimates. They were here long before the arrival of Spanish and Mexican colonists and the Gold Rush-era invasion of Americans.

    • Dan Brekke
    • KQED Editor And Reporter
  5. Dec 6, 2023 · Despite federal repatriation laws, the remains of at least 9,000 Native Americans are still in the university’s possession, kept in a basement and in other campus buildings. As the Berkeley Hills grew crowded with homes in the 1900s, boulders were integrated into the architecture.

    • Contributing Reporter
  6. Native American Student Development recognizes that UC Berkeley sits on the territory of xučyun (Huichin), the ancestral and unceded land of the Chochenyo speaking Ohlone people, the successors of the sovereign Verona Band of Alameda County.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ChochenyoChochenyo - Wikipedia

    The Chochenyo reside on the east side of the San Francisco Bay (the East Bay), primarily in what is now Alameda County, and also Contra Costa County, from the Berkeley Hills inland to the western Diablo Range. Ohlone elders at Alisal Rancheria (now Pleasanton California)

  8. Mar 18, 2024 · Under an agreement worked out by the City of Berkeley, a Native American burial site will now be returned to the indigenous people who once occupied what we now call the East Bay. It is important to recognize that Corrina and all of us have been fighting for something that should have already happened.

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