To keep enemies away from there villages
Haudenosaunee villages are usually built upon plains.
The Haudenosaunee, also known as the Iroquois Confederacy, built canoes to travel long distances across rivers and lakes. These canoes were typically made from birch bark, which was lightweight and durable, allowing for efficient navigation. In addition to canoes, they also utilized well-established paths and trails for land travel, connecting their villages and resources across their territory.
Coastal people built their villages by the beaches to be closer to their food transportation and traders. The same reason most inland villages, today's cities, are found along water ways such as rivers.
The Anasazi Indians built adobe villages on the sides of cliffs.
It is the way the Iroquois followed life in a sence that in every seventh generation one would have to have 4 boys in order for you to have the crops built enough for the consensus to run
To keep enemies away from there villages
Most Iroquois Indian villages are built near the southern part of America.
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Because they need to deposit their feces somewhere and they didn't have toilets.
To keep enemies away from there villages
The pueblo people.
They built villages on mud and stone and grew agriculture.
Haudenosaunee villages are usually built upon plains.
by man
The Iroquois that lived along the coasts of Canada built special canoes
They where built to protect villages or as a fall back position
The Makah people first built villages in what is now Neah Bay, Washington, about 3,800 years ago. Today, they own the Makah Indian Reservation.