North American Games
People who lived in North America played both active
games and the kind where you can sit down. Their favorite active game was
lacrosse. Or actually lacrosse and a lot of other games that you play with
a stick and a ball, with rules that were different in different parts of
the country. In lacrosse, as in soccer, the most basic rule is that you
can't touch the ball with your hands. You pick the ball up with a net on
the end of a stick and use the stick to throw the ball. People played lacrosse
mainly in the eastern half of North America, mostly in the Southeast and
the Midwest around the Great Lakes. This would be the land of the Cherokee,
the Choctaw, the Chickasaw, the Iroquois,
and the Ojibwa.
One way that lacrosse was different in different places was that they used different sticks. The Cherokee and Choctaw, and people living near them in the Southeast, used two sticks, one for each hand, and they picked up the ball by pinching it between the two sticks. The Ojibwa used a stick with a hard wooden cup at the end. The Iroquois used the stick we know today, with the net at one end to catch the ball.
One way that lacrosse was different in different places was that they used different sticks. The Cherokee and Choctaw, and people living near them in the Southeast, used two sticks, one for each hand, and they picked up the ball by pinching it between the two sticks. The Ojibwa used a stick with a hard wooden cup at the end. The Iroquois used the stick we know today, with the net at one end to catch the ball.
Another active game that Mississippian
people liked was "chunkey". To play this, one person throws a big stone
disk (like a hockey puck) and then you tried to throw your spear closest
to where the disk was going to roll.
People also played the kind of game where you can sit
down. Inuit people played a game where
each player gets a bag of small seal bones and the winner is the one who
can assemble his bones into the right layout for a seal's flipper in the
shortest time. It's kind of a jigsaw puzzle contest, but also a game of
chance, because you don't necessarily get all the bones you need in your
bag.