| A | B |
| trading | the exchanging or buying and selling of goods |
| Apalachee mounds | Were used as burials, or temples or to build the chief's home on top of it |
| culture | different ways of speaking, behaving and dressing |
| ancestor | an early family member |
| Appalachees and Timucuans are alike because... | they had enough food to store some of it for later use. |
| The most powerful Native American tribe of the five were? | Calusas were the most powerful tribe in the Southwest Florida |
| archeologist | scientist who studies artifacts to learn what life was like long ago |
| artifact | an object made by people in the past |
| cacique | chief |
| weir | a fence built across the river in order to trap fish |
| What tribe used weirs? | Timucuans |
| How is the climate different from 12,000 years ago? | It is much cooler and drier. |
| shaman | a religious leader |
| What are the Three Sisters? | corn, bean and squash |
| When they stopped being Nomads, what food did Early Floridians eat? | Smaller animals, such as deer, rabbits and frogs. |
| Timucuans lived | South Georgia to Orlando |
| Jaques le Moyne | French mapmaker and artist who visited Florida in 1564 |
| Timucuans & Calusas | Built dugout canoes |
| Which tribe was called the "Fierce People"? | Calusas |
| The Tocobagas lived in... | The West Coast, Tampa Bay area. |
| Which tribe lived in the Southeast Florida (Miami)? | Tequestas |