Portal:Indigenous peoples of the Americas/Did you know
Appearance
The following "Did you know" items have appeared on Wikipedia's main page. For more information about "Did you know" procedures (including how to nominate new articles for "Did you know" inclusion on Wikipedia's main page), see Wikipedia:Did you know.
- Current number groups below: 3 (Click here to edit this number if you add more DYK groups below)
Did you know
Did you know 1
Portal:Indigenous peoples of the Americas/Did you know/1
- ... that Lutheran priest Henrik Lund wrote Greenland's nation anthem, Nunarput utoqqarsuanngoravit, in the indigenous Greenlandic language?
- ... that the artwork of full-blood Tsimshian photographer Benjamin Haldane has enjoyed a revival after his glass plate negatives were discovered in an Alaskan dump?
- ... that in traditional Plains hide painting, Native American women painted abstract, geometric designs while men painted representational, narrative images?
Did you know 2
Portal:Indigenous peoples of the Americas/Did you know/2
- ... that even though the Iowa Tribe of Oklahoma only has 519 members, they created the first and only eagle rehabilitation center in Oklahoma?
- ... that among the Taíno people of the Caribbean, a zemi is a spirit or a sculpture representing the spirit?
- ... that critically acclaimed Bolivian Aymara painter, Alejandro Mario Yllanes, disappeared from New York after winning, but not claiming, the Guggenheim fellowship in 1946?
Did you know 3
Portal:Indigenous peoples of the Americas/Did you know/3
- ... that the Cascajal Block, a serpentinite slab from the Olmec civilization, was dated to the which early first millennium BCE and may represent the earliest writing system in the Americas?
- ... that Jim Thorpe (Sac and Fox) won the 1912 Olympic gold medals for the pentathlon and decathlon?
- ...that underwater panthers were creatures appearing in the mythology of a number of Native American traditions, which combined the features of mountain lions or lynx with those of snakes, and were believed to inhabit the deepest parts of lakes and rivers?