mud and straw
The great plains were a very dry place. People made there houses out of mud and straw
The houses made of animal skins and were located in the Great Plains are Tepees which are also referred to as Tipi.
Dwellings in the plains made of mud were called 'pueblos' or 'sod houses'. They were inhabited by Native American tribes of the Great Plains.
people here built there houses out of sod. the great plains nearly had any rainfall.
Early houses of the Great Plains were usually one room cabins or slat board houses. The families usually carried out all of their activities from a central location.
Great Plains houses, traditionally known as earth lodges or tipis, were primarily constructed using materials readily available in the region. Earth lodges were built using wooden frames covered with earth and grass, providing insulation and protection from the elements. Tipis, on the other hand, were made from wooden poles covered with animal hides or canvas, designed for mobility and adaptability to the nomadic lifestyle of the Plains tribes. Both types of houses reflected the natural resources and environmental conditions of the Great Plains.
farming and building houses
They were a shelter from the weather. The same reason we build Houses.
Dwellings on the plains made of mud are typically called adobe houses or mud brick houses. These structures are constructed using a mixture of clay, sand, straw, and water, which is then shaped into bricks and left to dry in the sun. The use of mud as a building material is practical in regions where it is abundant and provides good insulation against extreme temperatures.
They used ADOBE.
To build houses
adobe