You don't give a time frame, but it looks as if you are thinking either of the Goths or the Vikings.
there were three major tribal groups: the eastern Germanic peoples lived along the Oder and Vistula rivers; the northern Germanic peoples inhabited the southern part of present-day Scandinavia; and the western Germanic peoples inhabited the extreme south of Jutland and the area between the North Sea and the Elbe, Rhine, and Main rivers.
they had no impact at all.
They had permanently settled into areas.
All of the above. (APEX)
The vikings settled in Newfoundland Labrador (Canada) They settled in many other places also! They had a settlement on Greenland to provision ships for example. Roughly 1400 people lived there farming and raising sheep.
The people who first settled the areas along the Volga were called the Rus. In German, Russia is "Rusland".
Grows on the ground in mountains, forests, and arctic areas. Iceland, Scandinavia, Great Britain, North America, Russia and in other areas in the northern Hemisphere. Also grows in Antarctica.
White wolves typically live in arctic areas where the color of their coat gives them camouflage. This includes Alaska, northern Canada, Russia, and Scandinavia.
What is land beyond settled areas
Yes, in the Far-North of Scandinavia
The vikings came from the countries we now know as Denmark, Norway and Sweden. These areas are located in Scandinavia. Scandinavia is in the northern part of Europe.
you me and depree
Spain explored and settled areas from the Ameican West to the tip of South America except Brazil.
Simply northern Europe. Or there are smaller areas, like scandinavia.
The Vikings.
According to the Britannica Concise Encyclopedia:It is the characteristic vegetation of the subpolar region of northern Eurasia (principally Russia, including Siberia, and Scandinavia) and northern North America..."For more information on the taiga biome on Answers.com, click on the Related Link.canada russia
there were three major tribal groups: the eastern Germanic peoples lived along the Oder and Vistula rivers; the northern Germanic peoples inhabited the southern part of present-day Scandinavia; and the western Germanic peoples inhabited the extreme south of Jutland and the area between the North Sea and the Elbe, Rhine, and Main rivers.