The eat fish,moose,and women gatherd shellfish,seaweedand berries
they were friends with them too
I know it has some thing to do with the indians
They had mountain and valleys they lived in the eastern woodlands.
Betty Jane Meggers has written: 'Archeological investigations at the mouth of the Amazon' -- subject(s): Antiquities, Indians of South America 'Amazonia' -- subject(s): Indians of South America, Human geography, Adaptation (Biology), Environmental conditions, Biotic communities 'Prehistoric America' -- subject(s): Ecology, Antiquities, Indigenous peoples, Paleo-Indians, Paleogeography, Human geography, Paleoecology 'Prehistoric America' -- subject(s): Human geography, Antiquities, Indians, Ecology, Paleogeography, Paleoecology, Indigenous peoples, Paleo-Indians
they used and had many tress, rivers/lakes, and fertile soil.
The land has many trees and they lived near rivers
describe the geography of the area the blackfoot lived in
In my opinion, I think their geography helped them thrive on crops and their neighbouring Indians. I don't think that geography has the same impact on our economy today, because we have technology, and a lot of things we can benefit from, that they did not have.
Victor A. Konrad has written: 'The archaeological resources of the Metropolitan Toronto Planning Area' -- subject(s): Antiquities, Indians of North America 'Geography of Canada' -- subject(s): Physical geography, Geography
The geography and the climate of the southwest cultural region most likely affected the American Indians who lived there by controlling what they could grow and how they had to live with the scarcity of water and high temperatures.
The geography and the climate of the southwest cultural region most likely affected the American Indians who lived there by controlling what they could grow and how they had to live with the scarcity of water and high temperatures.