The hunt fish and gather so the mostly eat nuts berries turkey deer and fish
yes
stone tools,digging sticks
because there life wasshort
They supported themselves by farming and trading with the Lenni Lenapes Indian tribe
I know what they ate! They ate succotash a stew of meat and beans. They also hunted so they ate the meat inside of deer. You might want to watch the movie the Indian and the Cupboard. It is so good. I am Abby Smith and I approve this message.
The Lenapes helped the Dutch by teaching them how to fish, hunt and grow crops (beans, corn, tobacco and squash)
The Lenapes. The Lenape tribe inhabited New York City before the Europeans, and it was they who sold Manhattan to the Dutch.
The Lenapes helped the Dutch by teaching them how to fish, hunt and grow crops (beans, corn, tobacco and squash)
The Lenape tribe. The Lenape tribe inhabited Manhattan before the Europeans arrived, and it was the Lenapes who sold the island of Manhattan to the Dutch.
The unofficial name of the few Indians who were said to have sold Manhattan to the Dutch were called Manhattoes. Other sources indicate that Peter Minuit bought Manhattan from the Lenapes.
the lenape indians wore skirts and went shirtless in the summer. and in the winter the lenapes wore the same exact thing except with a bunch of animal skins wrapped all over there body and slippers on
They live along Delaware and Hudson Rivers. Addition: The Lenni Lenapes were original people of the mid-Atlantic area. The Lenapes were found in New Jersey, Delaware, New York and Pennsylvania. Most Lenape Indians were driven out of their homeland by the British to the Ohio area. The Americans eventually relocated them to Oklahoma, Canada, and Wisconsin, where the modern Delaware Indian tribes are located today. Other Lenape people joined the Nanticoke or Munsee Delawares. There are also some small Lenne Lenape communities remaining in New Jersey and Pennsylvania. The total Lenape population is estimated around 16,000.