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This is another question impossible to answer, there is no such tribe as the Hopewell. The Hopewell was a tradition describing Indians at many different developmental stages living up the Mississippi Valley from Louisiana to Illinois east to Alabama and Georgia, west to Texas, and into Ohio.
The Alogonquian,souian,and the Iroqauin are American Indian groups that were living in Virginia in 1607
algonquian, sioun, and the iroquain
American Indians are called "indigenous peoples," meaning they belong to the continent of North America. Historians estimate that American Indians have been living in North America for at least 15,000 years.
Those that were living in the east of Mississippi and they were relocated in Mississippi this is by Austin Conaser
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The concept of the middle ground is helpful in understanding the attitudes of Indians living between the Appalachians and the Mississippi.
The Jivaros are a nomadic tribe of South American Indians living on the upper Marañon River in Peru.
those that were living in the east of Mississippi to the lands in the west. They were moved to what is now known as Oaklahoma.
The Indian Removal Act was an act in which Andrew Jackson forced all of the Native American Indian tribes to move west of the Mississippi so that all their land would be taken by gov't or people living in that region. The difference between that and the trail of tears was that the trail of tears was mainly a large amount of deaths involving Native American Indians traveling from East to west to reach west of the mississippi in which it is called the trail of tears because of how many Native American Indians died because of Jackson's Indian Removal Policy.
The Mohawk Indians farmed and hunted for a living.