boars
Before they were almost wiped out, bison herds in North America numbered in the millions and often stretched for miles.
The Assiniboine tribe primarily inhabited the Great Plains region of North America, which includes parts of present-day Canada and the northern United States. This landscape is characterized by vast grasslands, rolling hills, and river valleys, providing ample resources for hunting, gathering, and later, agriculture. The tribe’s lifestyle was closely tied to the buffalo herds that roamed these plains, which served as a crucial source of sustenance and materials for shelter and tools.
Groups of indians who followed herds of buffalo were
They did so to follow their prey, the Animals migrated and the people followed.
Gauchos are the cowboys of the Pampas, mostly in Argentina. At first they rounded up the herds of horses and cattle that roamed freely on the vast grasslands east of the Andes. In the early 19th century they fought in the armies that defeated the Spanish colonial regime and then for the caudillos who jockeyed for power after independence. Argentine writers have celebrated the gauchos, and gaucho literature is an important part of the Latin American cultural tradition.
deer a+ boars
Antelope
boars
Ms. Avar.
Most horses in America were brought from Europe with explorers. Some escaped and bred in the wild forming herds that are now known as the Mustang. These ferel horses once roamed over dozens of states but are now mostly found in Nevada and a couple other western states.
The main factor that contributed to the destruction of the southern buffalo herds was the massive slaughtering of the herds by white hunters and entrepreneurs, encouraged and promoted by the U.S. Army. In 1840, more than sixty-million buffalo roamed the Plains, and by 1886, there were fewer than one hundred free-roaming buffalo left.
Schnauzers once roamed the Great Plains of the U.S. in great herds until white people and native Americans with guns decimated their natural prey, the bison.
Before they were almost wiped out, bison herds in North America numbered in the millions and often stretched for miles.
The North American Bison (wrongly called a buffalo) once roamed the prairies in huge numbers.
The Lakota people traditionally inhabited the Great Plains region of North America, which has a semi-arid climate with hot summers and cold winters. The landscape consisted of vast grasslands, rolling hills, and rivers. Bison herds roamed the plains, and the Lakota relied on them for food, clothing, and shelter.
The nomadic herds from Antarctica and Russia were the first people to discover America.
The great plains! The Dakotas, the sunflowers, Kansas, Wheat, Iowa, corn & soybeans