for a while yes. For as long as them have been Navajo, as distinguished from other Southern Athabascans, they have grown corn, beans, and squash and since the 1600's peaches, melons, onion, and chillies and raise sheep and goats. To do this they mainly lived in one place in a hogan but they often had a second place they lived where higher up where they brought the herds in the summer. This is called transhumance, not nomadic. It is thought that much earlier, before they entered the southwest, they were nomadic.
Nomadic.
Nomadic
true
The Xiongnu and Scythians greatly influenced Central Asia.
Apaches, Comanches, Karankawas Couhuiltecan, Whichitas, Mescalero Apaches, Kiowas
they are alike because they are both American tribes
Some tribes of native Americans were nomadic, others were not. For example the plains tribes were nomadic to follow the migrations of their main food source: Bison herds. But many other tribes were farmers or fishermen that stayed in one place.
Anasazi
Anasazi
Anasazi
Nomadic.
Most of the Native American Indian tribes in the United States were nomadic peoples. The Cheyenne and the Sioux were tribes that moved with the seasons and with the buffalo herds. Others were forced to move around to find food or keep away from the soldiers who were trying to do them harm.
Transhumance tribes have a fixed pattern of movement while nomadic tribes have not.
The Navajo
The Navajo
the tribes are pennacook and abenaki
The Hebrews were nomadic people organized in tribes