The Algonquian Indian group that lived on Long Island is primarily known as the Lenape, also referred to as the Lenni Lenape. They inhabited the region before European colonization, living off the land through fishing, hunting, and agriculture. The Lenape culture and language significantly influenced the area's history and development. Today, their descendants continue to preserve their heritage and traditions.
The Algonquian Indians did.
Some of the Indian tribes that lived near Roanoke Island include the Secotan, Croatan, and Roanoke tribes. These tribes were part of the Algonquian linguistic group and inhabited the coastal regions of present-day North Carolina.
There is no such thing as the Algonquian tribe. The term Algonquian applies to a very large family of distantly-related languages spoken by tribes across the entire North American continent. So, for example, the Arapaho (who spoke an Algonquian language) lived on the Great Plains and lived entirely different lifestyles to the Powhatan (another Algonquian-speaking group) who lived in the tidewater areas of Virginia.
The first known inhabitants of Indiana were the Paleo-Indians. Around the 1600's, the Miami Indians, a part of the Algonquian group of Indians, lived in Indiana. In the Miami tribe, women planted the fields and grew crops and men hunted for meat.
The dominant group of Aztec Indians lived in Mexico
whichita
The Iroquois
Wichita
They lived on an island close to Alaska
Iroquios and Algonquian
the flat headed Indians
The Great Plains Indians lived in Pen Island