ASCOPE
Carpetbaggers was the term often used to describe such people.
They were called mulattos, but that designation was for one black and one white parent. There were various terms for the percentage of slave blood, such as "quadroon" for a person with one quarter African ancestry, and these terms were used to describe people with differing percentages of 'slave' blood. That is exactly right.
"Federalists"-a term that opponents of centralization had once used to describe themselves-thus implying that they were less committed to a "nationalist" government than in fact they were.
The Paiutes, Gosiutes and some Shoshones used a brushwood shelter today called "wickiup". These varied in size but most were small and all were intended as very temporary shelters. Dead wood or branches were used to form a simple framework, with sagebrush or other brushwood or dry grass as a covering - sometimes with trade blankets thrown over the top. Some used mats made from plant stems tied together. See links below for images:
The Gabrielino or Tongva people inhabited the Los Angeles Basin in Southern California. They lived in thatch huts. There was an intricate inner framework of thin poles that was covered with tule or other thatching material.
ASCOPE
This framework is called the 'skeleton'.
Analytical statistics
It is called a chassis.
physiology
physiology
Skull
Skull
Analytical
it is called as bones
the script.
theory