Want this question answered?
yes
True
The warm climate of the Tidewater region provided ideal agricultural conditions to grow crop for both Native Americans and European settlers alike. European settlers cultivated crops such as cotton, sugar, and rice to export to England.
Native Americans were forced to adopt "European" or "Christian" names by the settlers. These same settlers saw a problem with with names such as Moose Dung (A Ojibwa tribal leader c.1860).
Diseases such as smallpox which they had no immunity to because of foreign European settlers.
They would be enjoying the pleasures of Europe (still today).
yes
The Native Americans had land. The European Settlers wanted it. That is not just the "most likely" cause, that is the cause.
YES
Native Americans were more likely to die from the diseases that European settlers brought to America because they had less immunity to these diseases than the settlers did.
they moved to different places at the same time with conflict
True
The warm climate of the Tidewater region provided ideal agricultural conditions to grow crop for both Native Americans and European settlers alike. European settlers cultivated crops such as cotton, sugar, and rice to export to England.
Native Americans were forced to adopt "European" or "Christian" names by the settlers. These same settlers saw a problem with with names such as Moose Dung (A Ojibwa tribal leader c.1860).
well, there were alot of Peters and Virginias, I mean, where do you think all these Americans came from?
natural grassland; fields of corn
loss of land