Eastern woodland people did indeed have towns and farms. These towns and farms may have looked differently than towns and farms today do though.
Towns and farms are built in watersheds because it fills water sources for people.
the farms are like huge ranches with small towns in the middle
All kinds. There are a lot of towns and cities and farms that have been and are built on temperate grasslands.
Just as the rest of the world, Surinamese live both on farms and in cities or towns. Half of the population live in Paramaribo, Suriname's capital city. Only 5 percent live in the forested interior. The rest live near or along the coast east and west of Paramaribo, in towns or on farms.
yes but they didn't have towns around the 1900's they started farming but I'm not sure about the towns
Farms, yes. Towns, not many. But most of Atlanta went up in flames, and the whole of Columbia, South Carolina.
The antecedent for the pronoun 'they' is the noun settlers.Settlers built forts and towns. Settlers also established farms.
All sorts of things! Oil rigs, people, cattle, crops, farms, towns, ranches, rodeos, roads, etc.
Forrest
Some lived in towns some lived in farms, children on a farm would do farming, children from the towns which became an apprentice.
Some lived in towns some lived in farms, children on a farm would do farming, children from the towns which became an apprentice.