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  2. Maidu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maidu

    The Maidu spoke a language that some linguists believe was related to the Penutian family. While all Maidu spoke a form of this language, the grammar, syntax, and vocabulary differed sufficiently that Maidu separated by large distances or by geographic features that discouraged travel might speak dialects that were nearly mutually unintelligible.

  3. Maidu language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maidu_language

    Maidu / ˈ m aɪ d uː /, [3] also Northeastern Maidu or Mountain Maidu, is an extinct Maiduan language of California, United States.It was spoken by the Maidu peoples who traditionally inhabit the mountains east and south of Lassen Peak in the American River and Feather River basins.

  4. Maidu Museum & Historic Site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maidu_Museum_&_Historic_Site

    The Maidu Museum & Historic Site is an interpretive center [1] museum dedicated to public education about the Maidu peoples of what is now California, United States.. The museum sits at an ancient site where Nisenan Maidu families lived for 3,000 years.

  5. Nisenan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nisenan

    The name Nisenan derives from the ablative plural pronoun nisena·n,. [6]The Nisenan have been called the Southern Maidu and Valley Maidu. While the term Maidu is still used widely, Maidu is an over-simplification of a very complex division of smaller groups or bands of Native Americans.

  6. Maiduan languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maiduan_languages

    They are not mutually intelligible, even though many works often refer to all of the speakers of these languages as Maidu. The Chico dialects are little known due to scanty documentation, so their precise genetic relationship to the other languages probably cannot be determined (Mithun 1999), and in any case may have been not a fourth Maiduan ...

  7. Maidu traditional narratives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maidu_traditional_narratives

    Maidu traditional narratives include myths, legends, tales, and oral histories preserved by the Maidu, Konkow, and Nisenan people of eastern Sacramento Valley and ...

  8. Marie Mason Potts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie_Mason_Potts

    Marie Mason Potts (1895 – 1978) was a Mountain Maidu cultural leader, activist, educator, writer, journalist, and editor. [1] [2] She was an influential California Native American activist who travel lectured on tribal sovereignty, heritage, and cultural preservation. [3]

  9. Harry Fonseca - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry_Fonseca

    Fonseca was particularly taken by petroglyphs in the Coso Range near Owens Lake, California, and petroglyphs from throughout the West and Southwest United States. In 1991 he reinterpreted the Maidu creation story using imagery influenced by petroglyphs. He began a series of paintings he called Stone Poems, that draw heavily from these petroglyphs.