Yes, the Pueblo people had plants and farming but not quite how it is done in other areas of North America. Because of such a dry climate, they had to adapt to the lack of moisture and started herding sheep, goats, and others for meat and clothing.
They also developed a form of irrigation that watered all of the plants because the water spread through canals.
they farmed corn
pueblos
because most religious ceremonies were linked to farming
Teepees for the Plains/nomadic tribes and Pueblos for the stationary/farming tribes.
Pueblos are traditional communities of aboriginal Americans in the southwestern United States of America. The communities are recognized worldwide for adobe buildings, which are sometimes called "pueblos," although some pueblos only have a few of these buildings still standing In the Spanish missions, pueblos were adobe buildings used for farming. The labor was provided by the neophytes. The crops grown in the pueblo was sent to a nearby mission to provide food for it.
Many pueblos are located along rivers where there is more vegetation and farming can be made possible. Also as a developing territory in the mid and late 1800s pueblos were major trading areas.
The farming method for the Hebrews is when they farm they plants a whole and then they bring the water from the lake and then they have the plants grow and then they pick them.
Farming. Agricuture is to do with land and farming (animals). ((HORTIULTURE is to do with plants.))
Yes. Pueblos are a people who are somewhat like the Aztecs. They built pueblos out of stone and adobe that surved as homes for them.
pueblos
nothing
4 pueblos