Hi I figured out the awnser the awnser is tomato
The first fruit was bananas
the native americans smell bad
a tomato
tomatoes
Yes they did! They didnt really have much else to eat, did they.
Early settlers and pioneers wrote with quill pens. Quill pens are made from a flight feather from a large bird.
Wild grapes produce very little fruit compared to the cultivated varieties. Also the flavours often become unpleasant when fermented. Finally, even with grapes they most likely lacked the appropriate supply, knowledge and control of yeast.
They did dry farming and grew corn squash, melons, beans, and fruit
Farmers' cooperatives were common among fruit growers in the west.
Hi I figured out the awnser the awnser is tomato
The: Strawberry, Cranberry, Tomato (yes a tomato is a fruit), Paw-Paw (Pawpaw), and Chili peppers (to name a few).
Although no one knows for sure, ethnobotanists believe that the tomato plant originated in South America, perhaps in Peru. In fact, many of the settlers, having no famililiarity with the fruit, considered it to be poisonous, since it belongs in the same family as deadly nightshade.
The Native Americans for pelts and hides which were exported and for fruit, nuts and mushrooms for their own food.
The same way as anyone else
Today, most Native Americans have stores and markets available to them where they can purchase almost any fruit they wish.
Native Americans ate a variety of foods and fruits. Depending on the specific tribe and their locations, they were able to gather berries, nuts, and banana-like fruits.
Native Americans ate a variety of foods and fruits. Depending on the specific tribe and their locations, they were able to gather berries, nuts, and banana-like fruits.
Yes they did! They didnt really have much else to eat, did they.
A yukka fruit tends to be fleshy or dry. It has a number of small, black seeds inside it. It was used by Native Americans, either eaten or fermented into a beverage they drank in the winter.
grasses, sticks animal hide, vegitables, meat , stone, and fruit.
grasses, sticks animal hide, vegitables, meat , stone, and fruit.