Cherokee, Lakota, Cheyenne, Creek, Iroquis, Huron, Hopi.
The Costanoan Rumsen Carmel Tribe are 1 US Tribe. They met with French and Spanish Explorers in the 1600's and 1700's. They live in and around Monterey and Carmel. Father Serra set up his office at Mission Carmel and was very friendly to the Rumsen.
Note Costanoan is a word the Spanish used to describe all coastal tribes. Ohlone was a derivation of Ohlon tribe near San Mateo. They were basically extinct by 1800 but many local tribes started using the term "OHLONE" in front of their Tribal name. The Rumsen were the only California tribe to use a recurve bow and gave us the word abalone.
Cherokee
One Indian tribe that lives in the Pacific Northwest is the Lummi tribe.
cherokee!!!!!!!!
Seminoles
This is another one of those 'myths' associated with Native American's. There is no one tribe that has no fear of heights.
one Indian tribe was the iroqois Indians they lived in the northeast woodlands
[USCIS Officers will be supplied with a list of federally recognized American Indian tribes.]CherokeeNavajoSiouxChippewaChoctawPuebloApacheIroquoisCreekBlackfeetSeminoleCheyenneArawakShawneeMoheganHuronOneidaLakotaCrowTetonHopiInuit
Assuming you mean American Indian, there is no one 'Indian' language. Each tribe has a unique language with their own vocabulary. Also, while some tribes have a written language such as the Cherokee, many American Indian languages are only verbal and have sounds that can't be expressed in English.
Totem poles were not invented by any one Native American tribe. They were widely used by only six different tribes. The name of the tribes responsible for producing the totem pole are the Tlingit Tribe, the Haida Tribe, the Bella Coola Tribe, the Kwakiutl Tribe, the Tsimshian Tribe, and the West Coast Tribe.
American Indian in origin- from the Virginia branch of the Algonquin nation. Yes, that was Pocahontas' tribe. It's name meant "one who rubs with it's hands".
Being born into a native American family, adopted by a native American family, or being accepted as a member of a tribe (citizenship).
The Creek Indian tribe was one of Jackson's foes.