Indigenous Cultures of Nevada

Across continents, people learned the same lessons in different landscapes

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Photo by Sinitsyn Zarin

Native Nations of Nevada

Indigenous Peoples & Cultural Legacy

Nevada is home to a rich tapestry of Indigenous cultures and Tribal Nations with deep historical roots stretching back thousands of years. These Native Nations have lived in and cared for the landscape long before modern borders were drawn, and their traditions continue to shape cultural identity in the region today..

Diverse Tribal Nations

Nevada is home to 28 federally recognized tribes and Indigenous communities, each with unique languages, histories and cultural traditions. These nations are part of larger cultural groups such as the Washoe, Northern Paiute (Numu), Southern Paiute (Nuwuvi), and Western Shoshone (Newe).

Strong Ties To Land And History

Indigenous peoples of the Great Basin traditionally lived in close harmony with the seasonal rhythms of the land — adapting to desert conditions through deep ecological knowledge of local plants, water sources, wildlife, and climate cycles. Basket weaving, seed preparation, hunting, gathering medicinal plants, and fire management were all part of this cultural system.

Cultural Worlds Experienced Disruption

Colonization, forced assimilation, industrialization, and displacement attempted to break the transmission of ancestral knowledge. Yet traditions survived — often quietly — in households, kitchens, workshops, and oral memory.

Women preserved textile and food traditions. Elders safeguarded stories. Craft persisted not because it was documented, but because it was practiced.

These Practices Are Recognized Within Addacha Crafts Incubator

What We Do

Basketry
Basketry
Advanced ecological craft combining function, identity, and cultural memory.
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Featherwork & Regalia
Featherwork & Regalia
Ceremonial making rooted in responsibility, ancestry, and cultural protocol.
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Woodworking & Tools
Woodworking & Tools
Functional craftsmanship shaped by land, survival, and embodied learning
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These practices are recognized within Addacha Crafts Incubator as living knowledge systems, preserved through mentorship, ethical documentation, and educational collaboration.