
Contents
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Global Producers and Consumers Global Producers and Consumers
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Warfare in a Deadlier Age Warfare in a Deadlier Age
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Indigenous Expansion Indigenous Expansion
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Creating Multiple Alliances Creating Multiple Alliances
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Thinking about Our Place in the World Thinking about Our Place in the World
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Dealing with Settlement: Small-Scale Dealing with Settlement: Small-Scale
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Dealing with Settlement: Large-Scale Dealing with Settlement: Large-Scale
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World War World War
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Notes Notes
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Bibliography Bibliography
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3 Living in a Reordered World, 1680–1763
Get accessKathleen DuVal is a professor of history at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. She is the author of The Native Ground: Indians and Colonists in the Heart of the Continent, Interpreting a Continent: Voices from Colonial America, and a forthcoming book on the American Revolution on the Gulf Coast.
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Published:07 April 2016
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Abstract
From 1680 to the late eighteenth century, Indians remained the most powerful polities in a politically reorganized North America. When disruptions occurred across most of the continent, they tended to come from other Indians, from new cycles of disease, or as a consequence of adopting new goods or ideas, rather than as a direct consequence of European actions. This chapter explores this interpretive theme through overviews of Quapaw consumerism in the middle Mississippi valley, the Chickasaws and the southeastern slave trade, Osage expansion in the western Mississippi valley, the Five Nations Iroquois Grand Settlement of 1701, the adoption of horses on the Great Plains, and two places that experienced the less common but better-known situation of living with permanent European settlers: the Rio Grande valley and southern New England.
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