Coquitlam Public Library

Coyote science, McIntyre Media, Season 1

Label
Coyote science, McIntyre Media, Season 1
Language
eng
Characteristic
videorecording
Intended audience
G
Main title
Coyote science
Responsibility statement
McIntyre Media
Runtime
22
Summary
Our Science Questers visit Chief Calvin Craigan of the sh?sh?lh (Sechelt) Nation and their longhouse built of cedar, which has spiritual significance. Longhouses were built using ancient engineering principles, and usually housed several families. An'ostin describes the tipis of his Blackfoot people, with each post representing something important to the builder, and the circular base expressing unity. Tamaireia, from New Zealand (Aotearoa), describes the Maori houses called marae with panels and carvings that tell traditional stories. In all these cultures, building materials were meaningful and represented the spirit and history of the people.In the animated story, The Haunted Tipi, Grace and her little brother visit their grandparents on the rez for the summer and find the source of strange night noises. A hoop dancer demonstrates his skills on a city building roof. Douglas Cardinal from Alberta Blackfoot Nation describes how he, as an architect, designs buildings to meet people's needs and supervises the construction. He uses indigenous knowledge and values in his designs, respecting the land, being in harmony with the Mother Earth, and walking with a drum in one hand and a computer in the other. Kai describes how his brother An'ostin made a cosy lean-to shelter in the woods with long sticks and spruce branches, and questers take a look at Anasazi cliffside dwellings. Christie Lee Charles of the Musqueam Nation performs a lively Halkomelem (Hul'qumi'num) hip hop music piece about ancient teachings. Astronaut John Herrington from the Chickasaw Nation takes us to Peru's Machu Picchu, (?old peak' in Quechuan), now a UNESCO World Heritage site. This sacred place high in the Andes mountains was built by the Inca over 500 years ago; it demonstrates the complexity of these pre-Columbian indigenous terraced cities and buildings engineered to be resistant to earthquakes and mudslides. Indigenous engineering and architectural expertise are evident in the design of longhouses, tipis, hogans, and other indigenous dwellings
Target audience
pre adolescent
Technique
animation and live action
resource.variantTitle
DwellingsCoyote's crazy smart science show, Season 1, Dwellings
Classification
Contributor
Distributor