about 4000 years ago
they were made by the Iroquois. Iroquois canoe was made out of birch-bark and sometimes tree trunks it depends.
Canoe
They used a bark canoe.
A canoe can be made of tree bark sewed to a frame, from reeds lashed together, or by hollowing out a log.
the birch bark makes the canoe sturdier :)
For example: My dog loves to bark at the mailman. The rabbits had stripped the bark from all around the base of the new tree. The canoe was made of birch bark and pine pitch. His bark was worse than his bite.
They adopted the Indian's swift, graceful bark canoe for water travel. They used bark from trees to make a canoe for water travel. They adopted the Indian's swift, graceful bark canoe for water travel. They used bark from trees to make a canoe for water travel.
Australian Aborigines did not make teepees. Being a nomadic people, their "humpies" were simple lean-tos made of sticks and bark.
They dug the bark of the tree and shaped it.
the spamish exlporers
Years ago, before the Europeans arrived, the Natives of north America that lived beside the rivers and lakes, developed a canoe whose skin was the bark of the birch tree. Birch bark can be stripped from the tree in such a way as to make long wide unbroken lengths of bark that can be laid onto the frame of a wooden canoe. Birch bark is water proof (as is all bark) and is also light enough to make carrying the canoe an easier task than the old idea of hollowing out a log.
The Advantages were they could move faster