fire
Yes
Walking with clay pots on their heads {with water in them} Camel Wagons pulled by dogs {they thought dogs were big horses in those times}
It was a sphere shape mainly because they made lots of pottery
they used certain traps such as the teeth of death First the question should be " "How did the Mohawk Indians praparetheir food" The answer does not connect to the question. The answer is: the boiled their food in clay pots or containers made out of bark and roasted it on the fire. The used slings for traps, they had no iron traps. They hunted with bows and arrows, spears and knives until they had guns around mid 1600. I noticed that most answers on wiki.answers are brief and often incorrect.
Pots & pans for cooking
Yes, the French developed a very strong interpersonal relationship with the Native Americans. Frenchmen often married Indian woman and had children. The French traded furs with the Indians for things like guns, pots and pans, mirriors, things they thought of as frivolous and everday, but the Indians saw as amazing, technological wonders.
they made there pots out of buffalo stomach .. they basiclly used wat they had in nature
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Yes! They use their pots to cook, everybody does.
Beeds, blankets, guns, pots, and lead fro the French...furs from the Indians
What are the art and crafts and designs the Cheyenne indians did?They made vases, pots, pans, and they were being creative.
Colonists we taught by the Native Americans on how to plant corn, beans, and pumpkins and where to hunt and fish. Colonists traded iron pots, blankets, and guns for the Native Americans' furs. Colonists and The Native Americans competed for the land and then finally war broke out in 1636.
Primarily by trading with the Native Americans who were anxious to obtain firearms, metal tools, colored ribbons, beads and cooking pots.
Native Americans (or First Nations as they are called in Canada) traded furs for iron pots and tools (knives, hatchets chisels), clothing, blankets, guns, black powder, tobacco
Karana uses clay from the riverbed to make pots to cook in. She shapes the clay into pots and then fires them to harden them, creating functional cooking vessels.
Walking with clay pots on their heads {with water in them} Camel Wagons pulled by dogs {they thought dogs were big horses in those times}
The Cherokee cooked their food over open flame and in clay pots. This was a good way for them to cook because they had no technology to make stoves or metal pots.
Wood fires and clay pots.