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Culture Areas
As the people traveled over thousands of years they eventually inhabited and lived within what are now called "culture areas" by anthropologists. America is loosely sectioned into several regional "culture areas".
The term "culture area" means that the tribes which lived within a "culture area" were more similar to one another than to tribes which inhabited other regions. The tribes within a "culture area" might share similar clothing styles, foods, customs, stories & myths, languages and there may be marriages between the various tribes.
Idaho has very different regional areas, such as the: Snake River Plain, Salmon River country and mountains, the Panhandle and arid Western Idaho. Each of these regions have differing climates, geography, plants, animals, fish and other resources such as rocks, minerals, and water. Not amazingly, the tribes which came into these areas after 4,000 years ago used the variety of regional resources in differing ways.
Plateau Culture Area
Today anthropologists identify two "culture areas" in Idaho. The Northern Panhandle area is designated as part of the Plateau culture area which was inhabited by the Nimi'ipuu (Nez Perce), Kalispel, Kootenai and Schitsu'umsh (Coeur d' Alene) tribes. The Plateau culture area also included tribes of people living in eastern Washington.
Great Basin Culture Area
Great Basin culture area extends over much of Nevada and Utah and reaches north into Idaho to Corn Creek on the Salmon River. The Great Basin culture area of Idaho is inhabited by the Shoshoni, Bannock and Northern Paiute tribes.
Great Plains Culture Area
The Shoshoni and Nez Perce tribes were influenced by tribes living east of Idaho in the Great Plains culture area. Among the Great Plains tribes were the Piegan and Blood (Blackfoot), Tsistsistsas & Suhtai (Cheyenne), Arapaho, and Lakota (Sioux). The Nimi'ipuu (Nez Perce) and Shoshoni peoples adopted clothing styles, hunting techniques, horses and shelter designs from their neighbors on the Great Plains.
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