Yes, in the American Southwest, Mexico and Mesoamerica turkeys were domesticated. People all over raised and kept dogs. In some places they ate them. In South America Llamas and Alpaca and Guinea pigs were domesticated. Muscovy ducks were also domesticated.
After 1540 or so sheep and horses started to move into North America. Raising sheep became a central part of Navajo culture. Horses became central to many many different groups but it especially transformed the lives of the people of the Plains.
Native americans lit fire in the wood to protect themselves from wild animals or make themselves warm.
Spain treated the Native Americans as animals, and those who they didn't massacre, they enslaved or deported.
Buffalo
because the animals they were hunting would attract other animals that could eat them.Also because that animal could be gone forever/ extinct
It is because the native Americans have a lot of land and also the native Americans land have a lot of native and wild animals feeding on it.
Yes native Americans did raise chickens.
They hunted for there food, and animals.
All people are classed as animals. Native Americans are people. There are therefore more than two native American animals.
Native americans lit fire in the wood to protect themselves from wild animals or make themselves warm.
some animals for eating like Native Americans do
Spain treated the Native Americans as animals, and those who they didn't massacre, they enslaved or deported.
European trappers took so many pelts of various animals, that there became a scarcity of animals that the native Americans depended upon.
Because it was part of their beliefs.
animals people buffalo
kiwi
trout; wild animals
wood and animals skin