spainards
Spaniards
The Crow got their first horses from the Plains Shoshone around the year 1740. The Shoshone got their horses from the Comanche about twenty years earlier, and the Comanche got them from the Spanish in west Texas in the late 1600's.
The Native Americans finally got guns in the 1600's according to the "America History of our Nation" Textbook by: Prentice Hall
In the 700s to about 900 they died of diseseed
becaus there was too much pee in the streets in the other colines connecticut has lots of horses and booze
If you mean when did European settlers first discover New Jersey, Europeans first came into contact with Lenape Indians living in New Jersey in 1600. It's hard to tell how long the Lenape Indians had been settled there before the Europeans arrived.
The Crow got their first horses from the Plains Shoshone around the year 1740. The Shoshone got their horses from the Comanche about twenty years earlier, and the Comanche got them from the Spanish in west Texas in the late 1600's.
The Native Americans finally got guns in the 1600's according to the "America History of our Nation" Textbook by: Prentice Hall
the 1600's
Carriages, horses, and by foot.
Your question supposes that horses arrived all over the Great Plains at the same time, which is a false assumption.In fact it took a very long time for horses, and the skills involved in riding them, to spread north from Mexico to Canada. It is estimated that the process began shortly before 1600; horses may have reached the Canadian Plains by about 1770. So it took at least 170 years for the lifestyles of the native peoples in that area to change - and probably a lot longer than that.
1600 or less... and 1.5 million through out Australia
The Friesian horse originated in Friesland, which is in the Netherlands.
If you mean as in a form for smoking, it was introduced by Portuguese traders in AD 1600. The same traders introduced seeds (in the 1700's) which were the basis for the beginning of tobacco farming.
Hans Staden has written: 'SUAS VIAGENS E CAPTIVEIRO ENTRE OS SELVAGENS DO BRAZIL' 'Warhaftige Historia' -- subject(s): Indians of South America, Description and travel, Tupinamba Indians, Early accounts to 1600 'The captivity of Hans Stade of Hesse' -- subject(s): Indians of South America, Description and travel, Tupinamba Indians, Early accounts to 1600 'Duas viagens ao Brasil' -- subject(s): Indians of South America, Description and travel, Tupinamba Indians, Early accounts to 1600 'The true history of his captivity, 1557'
Kenneth S. Lane has written: 'The Montagnais Indians, 1600-1640' -- subject(s): Montagnais Indians
The Friesian horse dates back to the early 1600's. It's a cross between West German horses and the Andalusian horses. These horses were bred by the monks of Friesland, a province in the Netherlands.
European explorers in the 1400's to the 1600's traded with the native Americans in the Bahama's. Europeans would trade cows, pigs, horses, sugarcane, and would deliver smallpox. the Indians would trade them turkey, corn, and other natural resources.