Near the Colorado River in California, Arizona
The Colorado river is in the desert region of california
yes, the Mojave Indian tribe did.
The tools that the Mojave Indian tribe used were bow and arrows,spears,nets,traps,clubs,leather shields,and knifes.
We learned about these people in 3rd grade. They are a tribe of course, they used to live in Colorado.
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yes
yes, the Mojave Indian tribe did.
needles california
They lived in the Mojave desert
no, they live in California, Arizona and Nevada
the mojave indians had trouble with not catching fish there were very little fish so,therewas not enough fish in the desert for the mojave to survive
the mojave was the tallest group
was there a medicine mans son called lone wolf
Ten tribes occupy Indian reservations with rights to the Colorado River: the Chemehuevi Indian Tribe; the Cocopah Indian Community; the Colorado River Indian Tribes, the Fort Mojave Indian Tribe; the Jicarilla Apache Tribe, the Navajo Nation, the Northern Ute Tribe, the Quechan Indian Tribe of the Fort Yuma Reservation, the Southern Ute Indian Tribe, and the Ute Mountain Ute Indian Tribe.
The tools that the Mojave Indian tribe used were bow and arrows,spears,nets,traps,clubs,leather shields,and knifes.
From the mojave desert
The name [Mojave] is composed of two Indian words, aha, water, and macave, along or beside. Aha denotes either singular or plural number. Mojaves translate the idiom "along or beside the water," or freely as "people who live along the water (river)." For more than a century the name "Mojave," or its counterpart "Mohave," has been used as the name of an Indian tribe who lived - and whose survivors still live - along the Colorado River. It has come to be the name also of such geographic features as Mojave River, Mojave Desert, Mojave Mountains, Mojave Valley, Lake Mojave. Allegedly it is an Indian name, and supposedly the geographic features were named after the Mojave, Mohave Indian tribe. Indians who bear the name, however, say that it is a misnomer and not their real tribal name. They claim that their true Indian name always was, and is, Aha macave (pronounced aha makav, all a's sounded as the a in "father," the c as in "cool," the e silent). The one form, Aha macave, is both singular and plural.
The Cahuilla tribe inhabited parts of the Mojave Desert in Southern California.