1500s - Eastern Woodland Tribes, Great Plain Tribes, Western Tribes (26 ene 1500 año – 2 feb 1599 año)
Descripción:
In 1500, about 10 million Native Americans lived across North America. They adapted to various environments and were grouped into three major regions:
Eastern Woodlands Tribes: Included the Algonquian, Iroquoian, and Muskogean language groups. The Algonquians, spread from New England to the Carolinas, were skilled in fishing, hunting, and agriculture. The Iroquois (New York and Pennsylvania), with permanent agricultural villages, had a matriarchal society. Muskogean-speaking tribes (Creeks, Chickasaws, Choctaws) lived in the South.
Great Plains Tribes: Nomadic groups like the Sioux, Cheyenne, Blackfeet and Apache focused on hunting bison.
Western Tribes: Along the Pacific coast, tribes like the Chinook and Pomo depended on fishing and whaling.
Añadido al timeline:
fecha:
26 ene 1500 año
2 feb 1599 año
~ 99 years