True
The first people to live in South Carolina were Native Americans. They arrived to the area thousands are years before European settlers.
There was more than just one disease transferred to the aboriginals of north America when European settlers arrived, but a disease that caused a lot of trouble was smallpox.
At the time European settlers arrived in the late 15th and early 16th centuries, it is estimated that there were between 10 to 18 million Native Americans living in what is now the United States. This population was diverse, consisting of hundreds of distinct tribes and languages. However, the exact number is difficult to determine due to the lack of written records and the subsequent dramatic population decline caused by disease, warfare, and displacement following European colonization.
The native Americans did not have a single economy as we know it today but they were taller and healthier than any sailor on the European ships. They lived by hunting and farming and hadn't suffered the famines that the people of Europe had gone through every ten years.
When European settlers arrived in the Northeast, they encountered diverse Indigenous cultures and established complex trade relationships. They also faced challenges such as harsh weather conditions and unfamiliar terrain, which tested their survival skills. Additionally, the settlers initiated land disputes with Native peoples, leading to conflicts over territory and resources that would shape the region's history.
Persons that were already living in the Americas when European settlers arrived there.
wild grasses
The first people to live in South Carolina were Native Americans. They arrived to the area thousands are years before European settlers.
great plains
== ==
The Great Plains.
cariba and the arawaks
bass
The Native Americans and the English settlers after Lord De La Warr arrived in 1610 negatively affected relations. The hopes of an alliance between the Powhatan and the Virginia settlers was revoked.
There was more than just one disease transferred to the aboriginals of north America when European settlers arrived, but a disease that caused a lot of trouble was smallpox.
The native Americans did not have a single economy as we know it today but they were taller and healthier than any sailor on the European ships. They lived by hunting and farming and hadn't suffered the famines that the people of Europe had gone through every ten years.
The native tribes who were drive back by the Portugese