The archaic indians heated up there homes by rubbing sticks together and that how they made a fire and they also stone or rocks and rubbed sticks together for hours and hours and added more and more sticks at a time when it burned they did that in there mound and tepes all the time in the winter and summer sometimes even that is how the indians expesially Archaic indians the way we do it is take a lighter and put it on the sticks and logs and if u wanted a big fire you throw some gasaline on it or oil thats how u make a fire now sence 1600 to now wich is 2013-2014
They used fire and the sun
oil does not heat up homes is use for a machine that uses the oil to work like gas from cars but the oil used for heating machines is not the ones car uses it made from it and that's how it works
The archaic word for dried up or withered is "adust."
Their first residences were in an Indian village of the Yaocomico Indians who gave up their village to the Colonists. Their first homes were wigwams.
Plains Indians homes were built by bufflo hides that were held up by wooden poles .
It Stops Convection - heat rises you stop it going up with the loft insulation and therefore the heat stays in for longer
making coffee, or making tea.
Archaic refers to an earlier period of time, usually describing a period prior to vast civilization. Archaic also can be used to describe something that is no longer up to date.
The Cherokee round up has no specified start point. Cherokee Indians were removed and "round up "from their homes in Alabama, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Georgia.
males do not go in heat but they need different homes when they grow up they always fight
To service your electric heat pump, you would need to call your local heating and air conditioning repair company. Look them up in the phone book and choose one that is licensed.
Log homes are made up of logs. this is a kind of Eco friendly homes