the chinook,haidia,pueblo,tuisumi the chinook,haidi.pueblo,and tuisumi
No they did not make totem poles.
They made totem poles, they held potlatch
no
Only 6 Northwest Indian tribes produced totem poles. The Tlingit tribe, the Haida tribe, the Bella Coola tribe, the Kwakiutl tribe, the Tsimshian tribe, and the West Coast tribe.
the miccosukee tribe
Totem poles were not invented by any one Native American tribe. They were widely used by only six different tribes. The name of the tribes responsible for producing the totem pole are the Tlingit Tribe, the Haida Tribe, the Bella Coola Tribe, the Kwakiutl Tribe, the Tsimshian Tribe, and the West Coast Tribe.
they tell a story about the tribe who made it
No, the Gabrielino tribe, also known as the Tongva, did not have totem poles. Totem poles are primarily associated with the Indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest, such as the Haida and Tlingit. The Gabrielino people had their own unique cultural expressions and art forms, which included basket weaving and rock art, but totem poles were not part of their tradition.
the blue heron
totem poles
it was the pomo cheyenne
Totem pole is use for scared other people from other tribe or enemy away from the area, Totem poles may recount familiar legends, tribe legends. Totem poles also mean quarrels, murders, killing and others.