The Navajo and the Zuni enjoyed the finely crafted cotton or woolen woven blankets and clothing that the Pueblo peoples provided.
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they traded for corn and stuff like that
The Hopi Indians traded often. They traded with the tribes known as pueblo.
Yes. They had once traded with eachother.
they traded the things that the navajos needed and the pueblos need
Possibly, but this is unknown. They more likely had ambassadors that traded with other pueblo cultures that existed in Mexico.
When you trade, you also share cultures and idea. The Pueblo, Navajo, and Apache is a good example for that. The Navajo and Apache group were nomadic, meaning they were hunter-gatherers. They have come to the Southwest region later than the Pueblo. They traded the food they gathered and hunted, like cactus, roots, and pinon nuts for crops that the Pueblo had grown. Over time, the Navajo adopted farming and other Pueblo practices.
the Pueblo Indians traded their pigments, feathers, gem stones, shells, cotton, corn, furs, hides, woven cloth, salt, pinon nuts, dried meat, dried berries, squash, wild plants, beans, wild gathered fiber, turkeys.
the Sioux Indians traded buffaloes for corn. they traded with their linguistic cousins the Mandan and Hidatsa
The Pueblo Revolt was a mass protest by the Pueblo Indians in 1680. The Pueblo Indians were protesting the influx of the Spaniards into their lands.
The Pueblo Revolt was a mass protest by the Pueblo Indians in 1680. The Pueblo Indians were protesting the influx of the Spaniards into their lands.
The address of the Pueblo Zoo is: 3455 Nuckolls Ave, Pueblo, CO 81005-1234
no the pueblo peoples were not and are not nomadic...they lived in pueblos