not much, the mountain men werent settlers and kept moving, the plains indians didnt like settlers, they believed no one owned land, the plains indians didnt need to fight them because they didnt want anything from them.
Well it depends if they were settlers or not, if they were then they would have probably affected them quite bad because of their weapons and new machinery, if they weren't then they probably wouldn't of done, the Indians didn't like settlers so they would of attacked. :)
they didn't really affect many plains Indians because the mountain men were not settlers so they travelled around a lot and the plains Indians would not fight the mountain men because they didn't want anything from them.
caddo, tonkawa, and karankowa were some of the many Indians that lived in the Texas coastal plains
20,000
They used it in many ways. The main reason was for drinking though.
If your asking, "who they traded with", then its the Natives/Aboriginals of Canada. There are many tribes/races/clans that inhabitated Canada (before), so i cannot name all of them. Here are the major ones: Iroquois Huron If your asking, "what they traded", then well they traded many things, such as: - Guns - Food - Clothing - Metals/minerals There are many more things, just search them up. they traded furs too
No one really knows exactly how many Cherokee Indians survived the trail, but approximately it was about 10,000 Indians.
no the plain Indians (mens) only hunted the buffalos for food, clothing, fuel, etc.
caddo, tonkawa, and karankowa were some of the many Indians that lived in the Texas coastal plains
They lived on reservations.
20,000
They used it in many ways. The main reason was for drinking though.
hey sup i think you are weird for thinking that they are not that many of course there arelolanonymous t.
If mountain glaciers disappear there will be no source for many mountain streams, which will then dry up. Many rivers will be reduced in size as a result.
They used buffalo horns for spoons,knives,weapons,screws,and many other tools.
Many lived harsh lives or died
Many lived harsh lives or died
There are many possibilities of how the Kiowa Indians got their name from myths to mountain ranges. One likely story, is that they shared land with the Arapahoe Indians and they gave them that name because Kiowa means "creek people. "
At the 'piedmont', (the foot of the mountain).