The Navajo people (Dine' in their language) live and have always lived since they became distinct as Navajo people in what is now the American Southwest. The land is mainly high desert plateau. Traditionally the boundaries were the four sacred mountains known today in English as Mt Blanca in Co, Mt Taylor in NM, San Francisco Peaks in AZ and Mt Hesperus in Co. Most of the area is above 4000 ft and below 7500 ft but some peaks are at 10,000. The temperature, precipitation and vegetation varies with elevation. There are lakes and rivers and mesas and mountains and deserts. The Navajo Nation today is 23,000 sq miles, about the size of New England without Maine. There is a month or so of summer "monsoon" rainy thunderstorms in the summer. There is snow in the winter. Pine and fir are higher up. Pinon pine and juniper steppe in the midrange and desert climate in the lower areas. In the higher areas it are a low 4 degrees and a high of 80. The annual rainfall there is from 16 -27 inches. Middle is low of 10F and high of 88 in the summer with 12-16 inches of rain. Lowest areas it is low of 11 and high of 110 with 7-11 inches of rain.
There climate was very warm because they lived in Northern California.
The Chippewa Indians lived in mud and grass huts. Some lived in Tee Pees as well, but most lived in huts.
The Navajo children liked to play archery games and horse riding. They also played with toys and dolls. One of the main traditions in the Navajo was weaving, lots of the Navajo women liked to weave. They weaved things like rugs, blankets, toys, dolls and more.
The land of the Apache (the Spanish called it Apacheria) was mostly mountainous, desert like and brushy country - only in the eastern part of the Apacheria on the Plains was the land flat.
The different groups of Apache people and the Navajo all speak different languages in the same language family. Just like Spanish, Italian and Romanian and French are all in the Romance family, these languages are in the Southern Athabascan family.Navajos speak Navajo or Diné bizaad in the Navajo language.Depending on how you count a language or a dialect there are about 6 Apache languages: Jicarilla, Lipan. Western Apache, Mescalero, Chiricahua, and Plains Apache.Some lump Mescalero and Chiricahua as one language. Sometimes Western Apache (Ndee biyáti') is divided into 3, 4 or 5 languages or dialects.
the navajo lived in hogans mud sticks They were earthen houses - miranda did navajo report in 5th grade
There still are Pueblo Indians living today, they refer to themselves as the Hopi and the Navajo. They live in impoverished slums in reservations. Before European contact they lived in complex multistoried apartment complexes (a few still do). It is assumed that they had a sophisticated and technologically advanced society.
The apache lived mainly around the same place the Navajo did, in New Mexico, Utah, Colorado and Arizona
the navajo lived in hogans mud sticks They were earthen houses - miranda did navajo report in 5th grade
like all plains Indians They lived in Tee-Pees
The Yuma lived in warm weathers while the Pueblo lived in cool weathers
the plaines
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the American Indians liked it where they lived. other people couldn't live with them.they would be called intruders.
They lived in pole huts
The Cree Indians were mostly woodland tribes that lived in the forests of Montana, North Dakota, and Canada. There were also Cree tribes that were plains Indians. They moved along with their food supply.
The hidatsa indians live in their on land