A complete answer would fill many books, but a few examples are:
. . . . the list could go on indefinitely.
George Bonga
in a drug store
The 17th and 18th centuries
No, but the Black Hills of South Dakota are sacred to the Sioux.
Yes they did. They usually wore feathers on them too.
Ojibwa and Dakota
In 1797
in their kitchen moam
wigwams
Canada
E.S Rogers has written: 'The Round Lake Ojibwa' -- subject(s): Ojibwa Indians, Indians of North America - Ontario
Peant butter
Sophia Williams has written: 'Weagamow notebook' -- subject(s): Ojibwa Indians, Ojibwa art, Trapping, Indians of North America
Emerson S. Coatsworth has written: 'Nomads of the Shield: Ojibwa Indians' -- subject- s -: Juvenile literature, Ojibwa Indians
Mark Diedrich has written: 'Ho-Chunk Chiefs' 'The chiefs Hole-in-the-Day of the Mississippi Chippewa' -- subject(s): Ojibwa Indians, History, Kings and rulers, Biography, Indians of North America 'Sitting Bull' 'Ojibway chiefs' -- subject(s): Ojibwa Indians, Biography 'Famous Dakota Chiefs' 'Winnebago Oratory' 'The odyssey of Chief Standing Buffalo and the Northern Sisseton Sioux' -- subject(s): Sisseton Indians, Biography, History
what was the food source of the dakota indians
Erminie Wheeler Voegelin has written: 'Chippewa Indians' -- subject(s): Ojibwa Indians 'An anthropological report on Indian use and occupancy of northern Michigan' -- subject(s): Ojibwa Indians, Indians of North America, History