That totally depended upon where you lived. The Pequots were known for their fierceness in the Connecticut region. Some Apache were feared in the south west. In the plains the Sioux and Cheyenne were feared. Basically, every region had a tribe that was particularly feared.
There were no forms of census back then, and there has been some debate about such things. The Ojibwa (Chippewa) held the largest areas of land, what is today the nation of Canada and some lands in the United States. Given general land to population ratio's it can be argued that they had the largest population.
It's just an opinion.
The Lakota Tribe were the most powerful of the plains Native American groups. They settled in present-day North and South Dakota.
The chief of the tribe was the most important member of the tribe. :)
The Great Law of Peace was what bound together six Native-American Nations and turned them collevtively into the most powerful native tribe in North America, the Iroqouis Confederacy.
The Cherokee Nation with a current US population of almost 730,000 members.
the cherokee's
the iroquois
cahuilla
papago
The answer is navajo:) im a navajo
Collectively as Indians, American Indians, Native Americans or by their tribe's name.
they were the most powerful tribe
Native American tribes are just that Native American - you are born with Native heritage. You just can't "join" a tribe as it is an ancestry.AnswerA Native American Tribe is a legally defined group. The Bureau of Indian Affairs, under the Department of the Interior keeps track of all American Indian tribes. To join a tribe, you must meet federal and, in some cases, tribal criteria. This includes proof of tribal descent, so you will have to do some ancestry searching.