The agriculture and mythology of a culture has a large influence on the traditions and the way in which a culture behaves. Both agriculture and mythology play huge roles in every day lives of the community under which they thrive. Prior to the settlement of the thirteen colonies in the United States there were several differentiating groups of indigenous people that lived in communities through out the US. These people were the Native Americans and each tribe of these people had different ways of agriculture, mythology, and several other varying facets of life. The Cherokee is a tribe that still thrives currently and has 293,074 people in their population. The ways in which the Cherokee interact with their environment currently may be different but their values remain strong regardless of opposition. However, the agriculture of the Tennessee Cherokee and the overall mythology of the Cherokee nation will be explored and examined, resulting in a closer …show more content…
The women would make a type of bread out of the flour from dried persimmon and they would use the bark from the mulberry trees that would be used for weaving of baskets while the fruit was eaten. However, because the Cherokee people were hunter-gatherers in addition to the cultivators of various other crops, the plants that surrounded their settlements were used in various ways. Walnuts had a large impact on the diets of the Cherokee and were used in many ways. The ways in which walnuts were consumed was in eating: their inner “nutmeat,” they were made into a milk-like beverage and were even pounded and made into oil. The Cherokee also used the walnut tree bark for different purposes such as an antiseptic and an aid to cure a toothache. Several different types of nuts were used by the Cherokee to be either baked into bread or used as a dye for