yes, they definitely did
a bunch
The influence between Native Americans and colonizers were reciprocal, in that colonialists and Native Americans learned new skills or refined existing ones.
Cherokee Native Americans skills are pottery blowgun and bead crafts
The first Native Americans depended on their hunting skills, and gathering skills to survive. They learned how to live off the land and respect nature.
Native Americans showed the settlers survival skills.
i will take u any day
At first the Pilgrims and the Native Americans got along well but as more and more settlers arrived and they demanded more land, the relationship between the Native Americans and the Pilgrims snapped and they went to battle in King Philip's War.
The Dutch colony in New York didn't teach Native Americans to grow sugar cane. Sugar cane is only grown in tropical areas like Cuba and Cuba wasn't a Dutch colony, but Spanish. So, the Dutch didn't teach Native Americans to grow sugar cane.
The Native Americans taught the colonists many skills. Planting corn was an important one. They also taught them about hunting for various animals. There were also the building of watercraft and how to travel through the areas of the countryside.
The so-called "mountain men" traveled hundreds or thousands of miles beyond charted territory to find furs.They made the first European contact with many Native American tribes and often formed friendships and business partnerships with them. Native American people even taught these mountain men some of the skills they needed to survive in their new environment. When mountain men returned from their journeys they told stories of the wild, rugged lands that they had encountered. Yet, by 1800, the majority of European Americans still had no idea what existed beyond the Mississippi.Answer: fur traders
archery
The most important advances of ancient Native Americans were their ability to live on the benefits of nature without damaging it and their architectural and artistic skills.