The Hopi Indians lived in the Southwestern United States in Arizona and New Mexico. They farmed in the dry, flat desert landscape with high plateaus, growing crops like corn, beans, and squash using irrigation. They built multi-story adobe homes called pueblos and were skilled weavers, potters, and jewelers, making clothing, pottery, and jewelry using materials like cotton, wool, shells, beads, and turquoise. They held religious ceremonies in underground rooms and believed in many nature spirits that they represented with carved Kachina dolls.