Native Americans
Officials Rename Popular Grand Canyon Site to Honor Havasupai Tribe
The National Park Service forcibly removed members of the tribe from the area in the 1920s
A Century Ago, This Water Agreement Changed the West. Now, the Region Is in Crisis
Much has changed since the Colorado River Compact was signed in 1922
Harvard Museum Pledges to Return Hair Samples of 700 Native American Children
The samples come from students who were forced to attend government-run boarding schools
Massachusetts Museum Returns Wounded Knee Artifacts to Sioux Tribes
A ceremony on Saturday marked the conclusion of a long repatriation process
A Long-Deserved Tribute to Native American Veterans
A ceremonial procession kicked off a weekend of events to dedicate the National Native American Veterans Memorial
Have Women Ever Run a Native American Nation? And More Questions From Our Readers
You've got questions. We've got experts
The Blue That Enchanted the World
Indigo is growing again in South Carolina, revived by artisans and farmers with a modern take on a forgotten history
How Would Crazy Horse See His Legacy?
Perhaps no Native American is more admired for military acumen than the Lakota leader. But is that how he wanted to be remembered?
Nicole Mann Becomes the First Native American Woman in Space
She is the mission commander of NASA’s SpaceX Crew-5 mission that will spend five months on the International Space Station
Archaeologists Dig Up 1,400-Year-Old Native American Canal in Alabama
The nearly mile-long structure allowed inhabitants to paddle to rich fishing grounds and access trade routes
Hundreds of Federal Sites Officially Drop Racial Slur From Their Names
The Interior Department is renaming locations across the country to remove the derogatory word for Native American women
Indigenous Rights Activist Sacheen Littlefeather Dies at 75
Marlon Brando sent her to decline his Best Actor award in protest over Hollywood’s depiction of Native Americans
The Art of Wearing Works of Art
From Japanese kimono silks to Navajo jewelry, Smithsonian’s 2022 Craft2Wear brings shoppers into a world of wearable craft and design
3,000-Year-Old Dugout Canoe Recovered From Wisconsin Lake
Archaeologists believe it’s the oldest canoe ever found in the Great Lakes region
The Breathtaking Glen Canyon Reveals Its Secrets
Water woes threaten America’s second largest reservoir—but leave new vistas in their wake
The World's Largest Collection of Standing Totem Poles Keeps Getting Bigger
Eighty sculptures in and around Ketchikan, Alaska, tell the ancestral stories of Indigenous clans
Why Can We See the Moon During the Day? And More Questions From Our Readers
You've got questions. We've got experts.
Hawai’i Volcanoes National Park Is Expanding by 16,000 Acres
The National Park Service is taking over stewardship of Pōhue Bay, an area full of cultural sites and endangered animals
How Indigenous Sea Gardens Produced Massive Amounts of Food for Millennia
Communities created bountiful food without putting populations at risk of collapse
Drug Overdose Deaths in the U.S. Are Increasing More in Black and Indigenous Populations
The CDC reports a 44 percent increase in drug overdose fatalities in Black people and a 39 percent increase in Native Americans from 2019 to 2020
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