The central theme of this essay will include Eastern Woodland and Great Plain Native Americans; and will also compare as well as contrast the daily life, culture, habits, and beliefs of these two branches of Native American descendants. The number of disparities among these to are ample, and the amount of similarities are equally important. The Eastern Woodland Indians mainly occupied the east coast of what is now today of the United States. It stretched from the Atlantic Ocean west to the Mississippi River and included parts of southern Canada.In contrast to their Eastern Woodland relatives, the Great Plains Indians inhabited much of the area with low relief and low elevation westbound of the Colorado plateau. They resided in much of modern …show more content…
These groups have made a everlasting name for themselves by proving superiority and outlasting their competition. Around 1000 B.C., farming villages appeared in the eastern part of North America that spanned from the Great lakes to the Gulf of Mexico. The people who resided there grew crops as well as hunted and gathered food (wild plants and berries). The best known people from the era were the Hopewell people of the Ohio River valley, who later extended their culture along the Mississippi River. The Hopewell people, also known as Mound Builders, built glorious earth mounds that were used for ceremonies or tombs for the dead. Some mounds were commonly constructed to mimic the shape of …show more content…
In the summer the men, who like in northeast Indian civilization, left their villages to hunt buffalo. Buffalo was a very essential part of Plains culture and it served many purposes to the lands natives. Buffalo granted the villagers food, provided skin and fur for clothes, weapons constructed out of bones, and even aided them with shelter. The Plains Indians would stretch the skins of buffalo over wooden poles to make modern day tent-like structures called tepees. Tepees were a excellent source of shelter and kept whoever occupied it warm in the winter.
Plain Indians occupied much of modern places like Nebraska, N. Dakota, S. Dakota, Texas, etc.The Southwest covers the territory of present-day New Mexico, Arizona, and Colorado; even parts of Utah. Conditions are dry but rainfall makes farming possible in some areas.
Some of the more notable Native American Groups that inhabited the Plains are people like: Cheyenne, Osage, Apache, Sioux, Navajo, and the Blackfoot. These major native groups are notorious in their own respective way and have made a name in history. Apache and Navajos are the southernmost extension of Athapaskan language speaking Native Americans; according to plainshumanities.com, and covered all of