The eastern woodland Native Americans used a number of tools. They used bows for hunting. They used spades for working the soil. They used axes and hammers. They used knives and tomahawks for chopping and cutting too.
Baskets were made with birch bark to winnow wild grain and to gather cattails and other long-stemmed vegetation. A variety of hunting traps were employed by the Northeast Indians. Knives made of slate were an important tool.
Tools naturally evolved over time, so those used around 10,500 years ago were not the same as those used in 300 AD; trade with white Europeans after about 1600 provided native groups with metal tools that had previously been unobtainable.
Prehistoric tools included fluted and pressure-flaked stone spear points, scrapers, knives, twist drills, fishing plummets, "ulu" knives, hide scrapers, gouges and other tools. Bone was used to make awls, stoneworking tools and arrow points. Atlatl weights, fishhooks, harpoons, axes, farming hoes, weapons and berry mashers were all made from stone.
They used spears, bow and arrows, nets, knives made from animal claws, etc.
bows and knives and the brain beater
yes
They used wood knifes and such pretty much anything they could find.
they hunt buffaloes either mounted or on foo with arrows and spears
They used the fur to disguise themselves.
They used Bows and spears They used Bows and spears They used Bows and spears
yes
the went kakakakakakakak
The Woodland Indians used natural resources to make their jewelry. Shells that were colorful were used to decorate. The Indians believed there were magic in the wampum shells.
they didnt
They used canoes for transportaion.
They used buffalo skin.
mainly canoes and their feet :D
Eating Drinking Filling water and more
The period in which the bow and arrow was into use was The Woodland Indians. :))))
stuff
with bows and arrows
spears & knives.