The pilgrims thought the native Americans were uncivilized because they were different so they thought they would become like them. But the native Americans did help by teaching the Americans how they make their crops grow healthier (like planting the seeds with a dead fish so the plant can absorb the animals' nutrients and thrive).
They may have also learned about the multiple uses of corn from the Native Americans.
The Native Americans helped the pilgrims by teaching them what foods could be grown in America and how to grow them. They also taught them how to build housing.
If you mean the Thanksgiving feast, the Native Americans or American Indians joined the pilgrims' feast after teaching the pilgrims about native foods.
yes
All the foods that the Native Americans and the Pilgrims had at their disposal were eaten at the first Thanksgiving. It was a multiple day feast. And when the Pilgrims ran out of food the Native Americans came back with more. The food consisted of but was not limited to; venison, goose, turkey, fish, and corn, as well as both Native and English dishes.
Native Americans ate mostly corn, deer, and fish
The Native American (Indians live in India, Native Americans live in America) helped the Pilgrims survive in a new world that the Pilgrims saw as an untamed wilderness due to the lack of modernization like roads, guns, and other commodities. They showed and helped the pilgrims hunt fish and farm. Specifically introducing them to corn.
no
blueberries
Native Americans got their foods by either hunting animals or growing their own food.
Some Native American traditional foods had a lot to do with corn. This included corn bread, stews, and smoked meat. The foods they ate were very natural.
Native Americans planted the three sisters. That is beans, corn, and squash.
acorns, fish, miner's lettuce,