Colorado river indian tribes 2016-2019 form-2026

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COMMUNITY PROFILE: The Colorado River Indian Tribes include the Mohave, Chemehuevl, Hopi, and Navajo. The federal government established the Colorado River Indian Tribes Reservation in 1865 originally for the Mohave and Chemehuevl people that had lived along the Colorado River for hundreds of years.
The Navajo name for the river is Ntsskooh, meaning Slim Water Canyon. The Colorado River is considered female by the Navajo, and the location where the Colorado River is mounted by the (male) San Juan River, at what is now Lake Powell, is sacred to the Navajo.
The CRIT Reservation was created in 1865 by the Federal Government for Indians of the Colorado River and its tributaries, originally for the Mohave and Chemehuevi, who had inhabited the area for centuries. People of the Hopi and Navajo Tribes were relocated to the reservation in later years.
The Indigenous people were the agricultural Mohaves and the Chemehuevis. In 1945, a portion of the reservation was reserved for colonization by Indians of other tribes, specifically the Hopis and Navajos.
The Colorado River is a critical resource in the West, because seven basin states (Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming) depend on it for water supply, hydropower production, recreation, fish and wildlife habitat, and other benefits.

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According to the 2018-2022 Census, approximately 8,385 individuals live on the Colorado River Indian Tribe Reservation in western Arizona and California. The Reservation is nearly 300,000 acres, including 90 miles of river shoreline along the Colorado River.

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