Bear, Deer, rabbit, plenty of large animals at 4000-8000 ft elevation
There were (and still are) plenty of large animals in Nevada, including deer, bighorn sheep, and bears.
Typically there are a large population of Native American Indians living within the United States, approximately 2.7 million at the large Census Bureau count. These are split over a variety of states with over one third being split between Arizona, California and Oklahoma.
The Paleo-Indians hunted a wide variety of large game animals. They may have also fished and hunted smaller game. Creatures we know that they hunted include mammoths, camelops (a species of American camel), American horses, deer, and bison.
Yes, though "Native Americans" is much more correct than "American Indians". The early explorers accidentally mistook the natives for Indians because they did not know a world outside of Asia, Europe and Africa. They sailed west thinking they would hit India, but instead ran into America. Because they thought they landed in India, the Indian term stuck, even though the Native Americans are not Indians. (Indians are Caucasians while Native Americans are more related to East Asians).
The Seminole Indians of Florida were a large tribe which lived along the Gulf of Mexico.
because the American government was the only ones who had money. and why they had to borrowed it was because the independence war had a large debt on them.
Some Indians did not need to farm because food was readily available in the form of fish and other seafood, plus berries and fruits gathered in the forest, and small and large game animals.
We can learn that they got their food from large animals and that animals were here because they die then leave there bones here.
· American Alligator · Antelope
Typically there are a large population of Native American Indians living within the United States, approximately 2.7 million at the large Census Bureau count. These are split over a variety of states with over one third being split between Arizona, California and Oklahoma.
this might be the wrong but i think they do that because large hoofed animals have a lot of meat
Yes, because they are fierce.
The Paleo-Indians hunted a wide variety of large game animals. They may have also fished and hunted smaller game. Creatures we know that they hunted include mammoths, camelops (a species of American camel), American horses, deer, and bison.
Fighting in the South during the American Revolution was especially vicious because of the large concentration of Loyalists there. They aligned with the Cherokee Indians who hated the Patriots for encroaching on their land. They were known for their savage fighting and brutality.
The Cherokee Indians invented many things including tools and medicines. These people also invented things like hunting techniques for large animals.
Yes, though "Native Americans" is much more correct than "American Indians". The early explorers accidentally mistook the natives for Indians because they did not know a world outside of Asia, Europe and Africa. They sailed west thinking they would hit India, but instead ran into America. Because they thought they landed in India, the Indian term stuck, even though the Native Americans are not Indians. (Indians are Caucasians while Native Americans are more related to East Asians).
I think any vet can work with large zoo animals because a vet works with all animals unless they specialise in a certain animal
the native Americans of North America related to their envirorment by learning how to farm because they could no longer hunt because all the large animals died