Apache and Algonquin spring to mind...
There were several Native American tribes that were located in the southwest, including large areas in places such as South Dakota and Arizona. Some of the tribes include the Apache, Navajo, Hopi, and Tewa.
The Comanche Tribe conquered the Apache in the southwest.
Every native American group from Alaska to the southern tip of South America used face and body paints for a variety of purposes.Some paint served to deter mosquito bites, some was for daily wear (like modern make up used by women), some was for celebrations or religious gatherings, some was used by warriors in warfare.Uninformed white observers often make no distinction today and call all of these "war paint", when a large proportion of face and body decoration had nothing to do with war.In some cases it appears that many warriors in a tribe used similar paint schemes in order to help identification in battle: French observers said that the Mohawks favoured black face paint, sometimes a black rectangle covering the face, sometimes in combination with white or red. Individual or clan schemes would have been far more common.In the case of the Thompson tribe of British Columbia, paint and tattoo schemes were recorded by British explorers. The artist George Catlin recorded face and body paint in use by a wide range of tribes in the USA.See links below for images, but remember that many of these represent ordinary, everyday paint schemes, or religious or celebratory schemes rather than "war paint":
Apache, Cherokee, Sioux.Just look it up on google, bro. It's so much easier...
apache
but blood
The Maya and Aztec
Yes
no they did not
face paint
The Apache. Navajo and Ute.
apache, crow,
Apache
They were group of native Americans called the lion apache
APACHE
apache