which of the following factors most likely led to the development of the longhouse a narrow bark coverd and long dwelling used as shelter by the iroquois
longhouse
An Iroquois home is called a longhouse.
An Iroquois longhouse was made of wood, bark, and mud.
A longhouse has a framework built of posts and poles and is covered with sheets of bark
Longhouse
A longhouse is what the Pomo Indians lived in. They covered the shelter with dry grass, brush, or plant stems. In these homes the Pomo fit at least 60 people.
Tree Bark
Get some Popsicle sticks, dried moss, and Tacky glue at a craft store. Look at a picture in your history book or online. Get a piece of cardboard, wooden sticks. Build your longhouse from the Popsicle sticks, place the moss on the sticks and around it. Place all of this on the cardboard, make your sticks/moss look like a forest. You are done.
The Iroquois longhouse was a building usually 60 - 100 feet long, sometimes much longer, 16-20 feet wide, and 15-16 feet high. It had a frame of saplings (young slender trees) and was covered with sheets of bark on the sides and top. It was occupied by a group of families; for every two families there would be a fire, usually spaced about 20 feet apart, with a hole in the roof above to let the smoke out. The hole could be covered with another piece of bark during rain or snow.
The mohawk lived in wigwams and longhouses. The wigwams were dome shaped constructed of a base of saplings. This base was covered either in reeds or bark, leaving an opening for smoke. The longhouses were similarly constructed but were shaped rectangularly and housed many people.
No, the word wigwam specifically refers to a dwelling covered in birchbark. A hut, such as those used by the Carib and Arawak people of northern Brazil, is generally made of timber, reeds or other material roofed with thatch.
portable, round tent covered with skins or felt and used as a dwelling by nomads