Because there wasnt many water sources in the plains, and people generally neeed water to survive
Since American Indians need water to plant food and feed animals, that's why water is so important to them.
why is living by water important to indians
They did that so they can grow crops
From community wells cactus stalks larg rivers or heavy rainfall
Experienced crew, food, water, some relatives.
Civilization began approximately six to eight million years ago when man had conquered his animal nature to the extent that he could co-exist with his fellow man. These were the days of mythology and men banded together in walled villages called nymphs in mythology. There were wood nymphs (villages in forests) and water nymphs (villages built on or near bodies of water.
They drank whatever they could find, wich would be mostly water or goat milk.
They used it in many ways. The main reason was for drinking though.
They did that so they can grow crops
The Anasazi Indians built adobe villages on the sides of cliffs.
How is water wasted in villages.
Buffulo meat, water from catisers
This question depends on 'which' Indians you mean. North American Indians? India Indians? etc. Native American's travel by: Air, ground and water (all forms of transportation). Indian's (from India) travel by: Air, ground and water (all forms of transportation).
The term that has come from the American West (accurate or not) is "firewater."
to complete or accomplish a task or mission
Some villages don't have clean water
hard, not easy conditions, no water, american indians
The Indians lived in the wild, so they got food by plants and they hunted. They also drank water from rivers. That's how they ate.
The reason why they built there villages next to the water because they got food from the water and because the water was one of their transportation [canoe] to get around and get more food from different places by trading.
Because they need to deposit their feces somewhere and they didn't have toilets.