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Habitat
Excepting the Asiniboin, who are chiefly in
Canada, nearly all of the Siouan Indians are now gathered on
the reservations indicated on earlier pages, most of these
reservations lying within the aboriginal territory of the
stock.
At the advent of white men, the Siouan territory was vaguely
defined, and its limits were found to vary somewhat from
exploration to exploration. This vagueness and variability
of habitat grew out of the characteristics of the tribesmen.
Of all the great stocks south of the Arctic, the Siouan was
perhaps least given to agriculture, most influenced by
hunting, and most addicted to warfare; thus most of the
tribes were but feebly attached to the soil, and freely
followed the movements of the feral fauna as it shifted with
climatic vicissitudes or was driven from place to place by
excessive hunting or by fires set to destroy the undergrowth
in the interests of the chase; at the same time, the
borderward tribes were alternately driven and led back and
forth through strife against the tribes of neighboring
stocks. Accordingly the Siouan habitat can be outlined only
in approximate and somewhat arbitrary fashion.
The difficulty in defining the priscan home of the Siouan
tribes is increased by its vast extent and scant peopling,
by the length of the period intervening between discovery in
the east and complete exploration in the west, and by the
internal changes and migrations which occurred during this
period. The task of collating the records of exploration and
pioneer observation concerning the Siouan and other stocks
was undertaken by Powell a few years ago, and was found to
be of great magnitude. It was at length successfully
accomplished, and the respective areas occupied by the
several stocks were approximately mapped.1
As shown on Powell's map, the chief part of the Siouan area
comprised a single body covering most of the region of the
Great plains, stretching from the Rocky mountains to the
Mississippi and from the Arkansas-Red river divide nearly to
the Saskatchewan, with an arm crossing the Mississippi and
extending to Lake Michigan. In addition there were a few
outlying bodies, the largest and easternmost bordering the
Atlantic from Santee river nearly to Capes Lookout and
Hatteras, and skirting the Appalachian range northward to
the Potomac; the next considerable area lay on the Gulf
coast about Pascagoula river and bay, stretching nearly from
the Pearl to the Mobile; and there were one or two
unimportant areas on Ohio river, which were temporarily
occupied by small groups of Siouan Indians during recent
times.
There is little probability that the Siouan habitat, as thus
outlined, ran far into the prehistoric age. As already
noted, the Siouan Indians of the plains were undoubtedly
descended from the Siouan tribes of the east (indeed the
Mandan had a tradition to that effect); and reason has been
given for supposing that the ancestors of the prairie
hunters followed the straggling buffalo through the cis-Mississippi
forests into his normal trans-Mississippi habitat and spread
over his domain save as they were held in check by alien
huntsmen, chiefly of the warlike Caddoan and Kiowan tribes;
and the buffalo itself was a geologically recent—indeed
essentially post-glacial—animal. Little if any definite
trace of Siouan occupancy has been found in the more ancient
prehistoric works of the Mississippi valley. On the whole it
appears probable that the prehistoric development of the
Siouan stock and habitat was exceptionally rapid, that the
Siouan Indians were a vigorous and virile people that arose
quickly under the stimulus of strong vitality (the
acquisition of which need not here be considered), coupled
with exceptionally favorable opportunity, to a power and
glory culminating about the time of discovery.
1 Seventh
Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology,
for 1885-86 (1891), pp. 1-142, and map.
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The Siouan Indians, Fifteenth Annual Report of Bureau of Ethnology, 1893 - 1894
Siouan IndiansFree
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