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1 MB / Created June 20, 2019 / Updated November 18, 2025
Perching and flying higher than other birds, no other bird is considered as sacred as the Bald Eagle.
1.9 MB / Created June 10, 2019 / Updated November 18, 2025
Great blue herons typically are found wading near the shoreline of any water body looking for fish, crayfish, frogs, salamanders, and any other food.
1.6 MB / Created June 10, 2019 / Updated November 18, 2025
Cardinals can be found throughout Cherokee Nation as well as in the Cherokee ancestral homelands in the eastern United States.
2.1 MB / Created June 10, 2019 / Updated November 18, 2025
Cottonmouths typically are found near permanent water sources with plenty of cover. They are quick to show their cottony-looking mouths if bothered.
2 MB / Created June 10, 2019 / Updated November 18, 2025
Eastern cottontail rabbits are found throughout much of the eastern United States.
1.6 MB / Created June 10, 2019 / Updated November 18, 2025
Gray squirrels can be found in almost any habitat in northeast Oklahoma but prefer areas that have mast-producing trees, such as oak, hickory, pecan, walnut.
2.6 MB / Created June 10, 2019 / Updated November 18, 2025
Great egrets can be found anywhere there is a shoreline. Although not as common as the great blue heron, they can be found in the same locations.
1.8 MB / Created June 10, 2019 / Updated November 18, 2025
The Red-tailed Hawk is said to be a protector spirit of the Cherokees and is therefore considered sacred. Tail feathers were and are used ceremonially.
1.7 MB / Created June 10, 2019 / Updated November 18, 2025
Snowy egrets, though much smaller than the great blue heron and great egret, are large wading birds with white feathers.
2.7 MB / Created June 10, 2019 / Updated November 18, 2025
The Deer Clan is one of the 7 Cherokee Clans making the White-tailed Deer a sacred animal.
Updated November 18, 2025