Multiple Choice Q's;The Land and the O'odharn

Multiple Choice Q's;The Land and the O'odharn Project description You are to make 5 multiple choice questions from the reading and 5 multiple questions from the lecture. Multiple choice questions should be difficult to answer. The Land and the O'odharn At the edge of the world It is growing light. The trees stand shining. I like it. It is growing light. At the edge of the world It is growing light. Up rears the light. Just yonder the day dawns, Spreading over the night. RUTH M. UNDERHILL, Singing for Power From the underworld, l'itoi led our ancestors, the O'odham, upward into their land, a land stark and dry, yet beautiful. With patience, the O'odham came to understand the- land, and from it, they learned to shape their lives and their unique and lasting traditions. Many years ago, the Crodham lands reached as far south as the San Ignacio Arroyo. Perhaps even farther south of this arroyo, the ancient O'odham shared lands with the Seris and some Opatas. The eastern boundary of the traditional O'odham lands was probably the San Miguel River valley north of Cucurpe, but some of the O'odham may have used the area between the San Miguel and the Sonora rivers, and even eastward into the mountains. To the north, not far from the source of the Sonora River, begins the San Pedro River. It flows north-ward through a valley that borders the eastern boundary of the tradi-tional O'odham lands. Eventually, the San Pedro River joins the Gila River, which flows west to the Colorado River. The Gila River marks the northern extent of the traditional lands. The Colorado River and the Gulf of Cali-fornia form the western boundary of the lands. used by the Tohono O'odham. These lands encompassed a large portion of what is now called the Sonoran Desert. At various times, the peoples who have come to the PLACE THIS ORDER OR A SIMILAR ORDER WITH US TODAY AND GET AN AMAZING DISCOUNT :)