Five Civilized Tribes
FIVE CIVILIZED TRIBES
Five Civilized Tribes is a name white settlers gave to the Chickasaw, Choctaw, Cherokee, Creek, and Seminoles in the 1800s after these Native American tribes adopted Christianity and European customs. When the colonists arrived on the North American mainland, these native peoples were living in the southeastern United States. They had settled there in small villages and farmed and hunted for subsistence.
The Indians were not immune to many illnesses the settlers brought to the new world. Smallpox, measles, pneumonia, and other sicknesses claimed many lives and reduced the populations of these tribes by an estimated 75 percent in less than two hundred years. Thus, by the time colonists won the American Revolution (1775–1783), relatively small numbers of Chickasaw, Choctaw, Cherokee, Creek, and Seminoles survived; of necessity they began to adapt to the growing culture around them. They attended church services, sent their children to school, and even bought plantations. Nevertheless, under the Indian Removal Act of 1830 the U.S. government claimed the lands of the five tribes in Kentucky, Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, and Mississippi.
The government moved the tribes westward to "Indian Territory" in Oklahoma. The forced migration along the Trail of Tears, which claimed four thousand lives, was completed by 1842.
Installed in their new lands, each of the Five Civilized Tribes was given the status of a nation. While they lived on communally held land, each tribe drew up its own constitution, formed its own government, and set up schools. They successfully farmed the rich soil of their new lands in peace, but their independence was again threatened by the further encroachment of white settlers, who moved ever westward in what finally became the Land Rush (of 1889). Eventually the Oklahoma lands were opened to white settlers; the Five Civilized Tribes became increasingly assimilated into the culture around them. In 1907 the state of Oklahoma (which is a Choctaw word meaning "red people") was created by merging Indian Territory with the Oklahoma Territory.
See also: Native American Policy, Oklahoma, Trail of Tears
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TABUN, FANIA (KURNOSOV)
Newspaper article from: Portland Press Herald (Maine); 5/11/2007; 170 words
; Portland Press Herald (Maine) 05-11-2007 TABUN, FANIA (KURNOSOV) Edition: FINAL Section: LOCAL & STATE Column: Services and Visiting Hours TABUN, FANIA (KURNOSOV) - 95, of Falmouth & Portland, in Falmouth, May 8, 2007...
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TABUN, FANIA (KURNSOV)
Newspaper article from: Portland Press Herald (Maine); 5/10/2007; 170 words
; Portland Press Herald (Maine) 05-10-2007 TABUN, FANIA (KURNSOV) Edition: FINAL Section: LOCAL & STATE Column: Services and Visiting Hours TABUN, FANIA (KURNSOV) - 95, of Falmouth & Portland, in Falmouth, May 8, 2007...
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Reports outline chemical toxicology study findings from J. Kassa and colleagues.
Newspaper article from: Ecology, Environment & Conservation; 8/7/2009; 700+ words
; ...combination with atropine in rats poisoned with tabun at a sublethal dose (180 mu g/kg i.m.; 80% LD50) were studied. The tabun-induced neurotoxicity was monitored by...Republic report. "The neurotoxicity of tabun was monitored at 24 hours and 7 days following...
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Recent studies by E. Carletti and co-authors add new data to aging findings.
Newspaper article from: Biotech Week; 4/1/2009; 700+ words
; ...the enzyme. The inhibition of ChEs by tabun and the subsequent aging reaction are of particular interest, because tabun-ChE conjugates display an extraordinary...and aged forms of hBChE inhibited by tabun, and by updating the refinement of non...
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Data on physical chemistry reported by researchers at University of Paris.
Newspaper article from: Chemicals & Chemistry; 8/28/2009; 700+ words
; ...inhibition of AChE by P compounds." "Tabun is one of the more potent ner e agents...We studied the four possible attacks of tabun on the oxygen of Ser203 using two crystallographic...structures PDB codes 2C0P and 3DL7 : S) tabun with the cyano group syn to the oxygen...
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Late Acheulian Variability in the Southern Levant: A Contrast of the Western and Eastern Margins of the Levantine Corridor
Magazine article from: Near Eastern Archaeology; 6/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...sample that one of us had studied from Tabun Cave, located in the western Levant on...excavations undertaken by Arthur Jelinek at Tabun in the 1967-1972 seasons. We used a...as flake cores). Two features of the Tabun bifaces were immediately clear. First...
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Research reports from Institute for Medical Research and Occupational Health provide new insights into life sciences.
Newspaper article from: Biotech Week; 11/12/2008; 700+ words
; ...bispyridinium para-aldoximes with native and tabun-inhibited human cholinesterases,' are...inhibition of native and reactivation of tabun-inhibited human erythrocyte acetylcholinesterase...06 mM for BChE). The reactivation of tabun-inhibited AChE was efficient by K074...
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Study results from Institute for Medical Research and Occupational Health in the area of poisoning published.
Newspaper article from: Biotech Week; 11/12/2008; 671 words
; ...acetylcholinesterase and antidotes in therapy against tabun poisoning,' are detailed in a study published...have limiting reactivating potency in tabun poisoning." "We tested oximes varying...find more effective oximes to reactivate tabun-inhibited human erythrocyte AChE. Three...
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Research results from J. Kassa and colleagues update understanding of enzyme research.
Newspaper article from: Biotech Week; 11/4/2009; 621 words
; ...bispyridinium compounds (K250, K251) in reactivating tabun-inhibited acetylcholinesterase and reducing tabun-induced lethal toxic effects was compared...Studies determined percentage of reactivation of tabun-inhibited blood and tissue AChE in poisoned...
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Research from Institute for Medical Research and Occupational Health yields new findings on life sciences.(Report)
Newspaper article from: Biotech Week; 11/12/2008; 700+ words
; ...their biological efficiency in soman and tabun poisoning' new findings in life sciences...AChE) and their effects on soman-and tabun-poisoned mice," scientists in Zagreb...with K074, when AChE was inhibited by tabun. The protective potency (P(50)) of...
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Tabun
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of Espionage, Intelligence, and Security
Tabun Tabun (or "GA") is one of a group of synthetic chemicals that were developed in Germany during the 1930s and 1940s (Tabun was developed in 1936). The original intent of these compounds, including...
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tabun
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
tabun , liquid chemical compound used as a nerve...the skin, but the vapor is not. Although tabun is destroyed by its reaction with bleaching...cyanogen chloride is produced. Chemically, tabun is cyanodimethylaminoethoxyphosphine oxide...
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Nerve Gas
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of Espionage, Intelligence, and Security
...in Leverkusen first prepared the agent Tabun (ethyl-dimethylphosphoramidocyanidate...research eventually led to the synthesis of Tabun as an extremely powerful agent against...little as 5 parts per million (ppm) of Tabun killed all the leaf lice used in his experiments...
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Chemical Warfare
Encyclopedia entry from: The Gale Encyclopedia of Science
...by Iranian-supported Kurds. The Iraqi military attacked Halabja with two rapidly acting neurotoxins, known as sabin and tabun, which cause rapid death by interfering with the transmission of nerve impulses. About 5, 000 people, mostly civilians...
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soman
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...death may result within 15 min of exposure. In nonfatal concentrations it is hazardous to the eyes. Soman is more powerful than tabun, acting faster and at lower concentrations. Chemically, soman is fluoromethylpinacolyloxyphosphine oxide.
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