The Iowas (Báxoje) were a marginal Plains tribe like the Missouri, Kansas and Osage. They hunted buffalo using portable tipi-style lodges, but also had semi-permanent villages of earth lodges (later bark-covered cabins) and grew crops: maize, beans, pumpkins and squash.
they mostly eat salmon and there on toesloldont know why but my friend who is subarctic told meshe don't lie my frienddd
No, the Costanoan or Ohlone people had no access to buffalo, so they could not make tipis. They made domed huts of tule grass and conical huts of redwood bark over a wooden framework.
The Menominee (Wild Rice People), who called themselves Mamaceqtaw, built two types of dwelling: small, domed birchbark-covered wigwams and larger rectangular bark-covered lodges. The lodges were used during the winter, with small hunting bands using the wigwams during the summer months.Menominee named villages were recorded as Fort Howard (Green Bay), Keshena, Menominee, Milwaukee, Neopit, and Tokaunee, but there were probably many more. The links below take you to images of Menominee dwellings:
Some Native American tribes lived in multifamily adobe houses, tipis, longhouses, mat-covered houses, earth lodges, bark/mat-covered wigwams, thatched houses, barrel-shaped longhouses, brush shelters, plank houses, conical shelters, rectangular thatched houses, domed round houses, a-shaped houses, round houses, and etc.
The Potawatomi were very closely related to the Ojibwe and Ottawa people; they originally lived in the peninsula of Michigan before gradually moving south and west. They made both small domed wigwams and larger rectangular lodges, both covered with large sheets of bark or a thatch of cattail stems. Small domed sweat-lodges were used by the men. See links below for images:
The Iowas (Báxoje) were a marginal Plains tribe like the Missouri, Kansas and Osage. They hunted buffalo using portable tipi-style lodges, but also had semi-permanent villages of earth lodges (later bark-covered cabins) and grew crops: maize, beans, pumpkins and squash.
The domed hut known as a "wigwam" or a "wetu" was constructed of a framework of cedar branches with bark, cattail reeds, or grass for the covering.
they mostly eat salmon and there on toesloldont know why but my friend who is subarctic told meshe don't lie my frienddd
No, the Costanoan or Ohlone people had no access to buffalo, so they could not make tipis. They made domed huts of tule grass and conical huts of redwood bark over a wooden framework.
The Cree tribe lived in buckskin tepees. =========================================================== Answer: There is definitely no such thing as a "buckskin tepee". The very far-ranging Cree people historically lived in two types of dwelling: birch-bark-covered wigwams in the woodlands area, and buffalo-hide tipis on the northern Great Plains.
Algonquian is not the name of a tribe, but of a huge family of related languages, spoken in many parts of the North American continent.Tribes on the Great Plains speaking Algonquian languages include the Blackfoot, Cheyenne and Arapaho - all lived in tipi-style lodges (but they did not call them tipis).Tribes in the eastern woodlands and the Great Lakes areas used wigwams covered in birch bark, or longhouses with bark covering.
The Menominee (Wild Rice People), who called themselves Mamaceqtaw, built two types of dwelling: small, domed birchbark-covered wigwams and larger rectangular bark-covered lodges. The lodges were used during the winter, with small hunting bands using the wigwams during the summer months.Menominee named villages were recorded as Fort Howard (Green Bay), Keshena, Menominee, Milwaukee, Neopit, and Tokaunee, but there were probably many more. The links below take you to images of Menominee dwellings:
The Sasquehanna or Susquehannock tribe lived in fortified villages of longhouses, each around 80 feet long and covered with sheets of bark.
The Sasquehanna or Susquehannock tribe lived in fortified villages of longhouses, each around 80 feet long and covered with sheets of bark.
The Mohawk people lived in the Longhouse. They were usually made out of elm trees.
Pocahontas/Mataoka was a member of the Powhatan tribe who lived in longhouses covered with birch bark sheets. Powhatan longhouses had flat ends and curved roofs - see link below for an image: