Some of the Algonquian tribes made canoes from hollowed logs - the Powhatan of the Virginia tidewater area certainly did. Many other Algonquian tribes made canoes of birch bark over a timber frame, including the Ojibwe, Maliseet, Cree, Algonkin and Naskapi.
Canoes made by the Iroquois tribes were generally of elm bark over a timber frame.
birchtrees
It took Algonquins 1 hour or less to make their wigwams.
the Iroquois made canoes by chopping down huge trees and then lighting small fires in the logs. After burning out the middle, they would scoop out the ashes by using stone tools. They fashioned huge oars from the limbs of the trees. An giant canoe could hold up to 100 people. Read more: How did the Arawak Indians make a canoe Read more: How did the Arawak Indians make a canoe
So they could travel and fish.
cedar bark trees - Michelle
birchtrees
help
Dugout canoes can be purchased on eBay and Etsy. One can also make their own dugout canoes by using the instructions listed on the website "Mother Earth News".
The Iroquois made dug out canoes by taking and shaping fallen trees. They would dig out a hold in the tree's center to sit in.
the men did but the women helped build it
The Tainos were a tribe which inhabited the northern part of South America. They used dugout canoes, which are made by hollowing out a tree trunk.
The Algonquins reside in Canada. They made things like birchbark houses, clothing, and canoes. They didn't make much of their own food because they were hunters and gatherers.
Trees were important to the Northwest Coast people because they used them to make dugout canoes which they used to hunt whales.
Well there was a dugout canoe that weighed 2000 lbs. but they made the canoes out of logs and trees. They made 2 replacement canoes that took a week to make because all they had were tools like axes. They would have to work 12 hrs. a day just to make them. So basically the canoes were made of wood from trees and logs. I hope that helps.
It took Algonquins 1 hour or less to make their wigwams.
There is evidence showing that there were Canoes a hundred feet long that could hold 80 men. The size of a dugout canoe is limited only by the size of the tree trunk you could work to make it; if you include redwood's and several types of cedar, the canoe could be very large. Inuits (Eskimo) used canoes to hunt whales, if that gives you any ideal of their size.
Yes, Birch Bark was used to cover Canoes, and to make Shelters.