Category
page 1Southwest tribes
Puebloan peoples
Native Americans in the Southwestern United States
Ancestral Puebloans
ancient Native American culture in Four Corners region of the United States
Tohono O'odham
group of Native American people

Tewa people
thumb|upright=1.25|Chaiwa, a Tewa girl with a butterfly whorl hairstyle, photographed by Edward S. Curtis in 1922
thumb|Tewa girls, 1922, photographed by Edward S. Curtis
thumb|A Southern Tewa (Tano) anthropomorphic figure with rattle, petroglyph in the [[Galisteo Basin, a major Tano homeland prior to the Pueblo Revolt of 1680]]
The Tewa are a linguistic group of Pueblo Native Americans who speak the Tewa language and share the Pueblo culture. Their homelands are on or near the Rio Grande in New Mexico north of Santa Fe. They comprise the following communities:
Nambé Pueblo
Pojoaque Pueblo
Tiwa people
Ethnic group of Pueblo Native Americans
Cochise Tradition
Archeology of prehistoric southwestern USA circa 5000 — 200 BC archeology
Sobaipuri
The Sobaipuri were one of many Indigenous groups occupying Sonora and what is now Arizona at the time Europeans first entered the American Southwest. They were an O'odham group who occupied southern Arizona and northern Sonora (the Pimería Alta) in the 15th–19th centuries. They were a subgroup of the O'odham or Pima, surviving members of which include the residents of San Xavier del Bac which is now part of the Tohono O'odham Nation and the Akimel O'odham.
Basketmaker culture
Pre-Ancestral Puebloan period