There were 30 Native American Tribes in the 13 colonies. Connecticut had the Pequot and Mohegan; Delaware had the Nanticoke and Lenni Lenape; Georgia had the Creek and Cherokee; Maryland had the Conoy, Assateague and Susquehannock; Massachusetts had the Wampanoag, Nauset and Massachuset; Maine had the Micmac and Abenaki; New Hampshire had the Pennacook and Abenaki; New Jersey had the Lenni Lenape; New York had the Iroquois and Algonquian; North Carolina had the Hatteras, Cherokee and Catawba; Pennsylvania had the Shawnee and Seneca; Rhode Island had the Narragansett and Nipmuc; South Carolina had the Yamasee, Catawba and Cherokee; and Virginia had the Powhattan.
Traditional Native American tribal governments were restored with the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934. It is sometimes referred to as the Indian New Deal.
Bureau of Indian Affairs
To my knowledge all Tribal groups practiced a decentralized form of government, with very few exceptions; those being central American tribal orginizations.
In that area there were many people living there. You need to provide a tribal name. In the area where Jamestown was built there was an empire of 15,000 Native Americans and in North America were millions of Native Americans.
tribal government
Traditional Native American tribal governments were restored with the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934. It is sometimes referred to as the Indian New Deal.
yes
There are over 5,000 tribal dialects from which to choose.
The extermination of the buffalo
There are over 5,000 tribal dialects from which to choose.
There is no language called "Native American." If you want to know what something is called in a Native American language, you must first determine which tribal language you are looking for.
Indian Reorganization Act of 1934.
No, Salvadorians are Hispanic and Native American (tribal people).
Bureau of Indian Affairs
There are over 5,00 tribal dialects to choose from.
No Native American tribe has adopted Buddhism as a tribal religion.
That is the correct spelling of the proper noun (Native American tribal name) "Wampanoag."