they were nomads and therefore had to travel to find food cause they don't grow crops.
the crow, the Shoshone, the Ute and the Arapaho tribes.
Ute, Paiute, Gosiutes, Shoshone and Navajo.
Navajo, Paiute, Ute, Goshute, Shoshone. and that is all i know of
by seeing lewis and clark.....
by seeing lewis and clark.....
the Ute tribe did farming and they killed buffalo and deer and antelope
Several Native American tribes can be found in Utah. The most common are Ute, Paiute, and Navajo.
There are two federally recognized tribes in Wyoming today. The Shoshone and the Arapaho tribes which share the Wind River Reservation. Original inhabitants of Wyoming include the Shoshone, the Crow, the Cheyenne, the Ute, and the Arapaho.
Yes, they are both part of the Uto-Aztecan language family. A few examples of words will show the distant connection between them: English..........................Shoshone........................Ute man...............................dainape'.........................tangwace water.............................baa', paa........................paa wolf................................bia'isa............................sinaa-vi white..............................dosa..............................toha black...............................duhu..............................toohoo ten.................................seemoten.......................toghumesueni
Currently, only the Shoshone and the Arapahoe tribes live in Wyoming, on the Wind River Reservation. In the past, the Cheyenne lived in eastern Wyoming, the Ute in south-central Wyoming, and the Crow in north-central Wyoming.
Ute is classed as a Uto-Aztecan language belonging to the Numic branch. It is therefore closely related to the Comanche, Shoshone, Panamint, Mono, northern Paiute and Chemehuevi languages. It is also very distantly related to the Nahuatl language of the Aztecs.The word paa in Ute means water; this word is practically identical in all the Numic languages mentioned above and gives the tribal name Paiute (really paa-Ute or water Ute).The Ute people call themselves nuutsiu, meaning simply "people". It was the Spanish who first called them Yuta, from which the modern name Ute (and Utah) derives.
punky