North Americas topography consists of mountain ranges, coast and beaches, large lakes, and volcanoes. Our mountain ranges are the Appalachian mountians in the East and the Rockies in the west. Our east coast is mainly flat. The Mississippi and Missouri river flow through a lot of North America and flow out into the Gulf of Mexico. Large lakes are mainly in the midwest or central area. Lastly, the volcanoes that are apart of North America are founded in California, Oregon, and Washington State. South America is very similar in many ways with mountain ranges, beautiful coast and beaches, and lastly rivers. They also have the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Ocean, but the also have the Caribbean Sea. Their main mountain is the Andes. With many highlands surrounding like the Brazillan and Guiana. They are most famous for their river, The Amazon, which is the largest in the world. Although, Eruope is over the ocean is also consists of many mountains, but has many beaches, seeing it is bordered by five different oceans/seas. They are the Atlantic to the West, Arctic to the North, Mediterranean to the South, and lastly the Black and Caspian sea which are at the eastern borders. They also have a major river as well the Volga. The topography of these countries are very similar, but their historical is different. The history behind North America goes way back and has been told in many different ways. But it was originally inhabited by Native Americas. These people migrated during the end
Traditional Native American history tells that Native Americans have always inhabited the North American Continent since the beginning of time, but this is open for debate. Many historic scientists have believed in what is known as The Bering Land Bridge Theory, which is a theory that been widely accepted since the early 20th century. The idea of this theory
The North, South, and Western parts of the United States between 1800 through 1850 all had significant differences but also has similarities as well; based on their economy, social structure, daily life, and social attitudes.
Long before the Western countries discovered North America, the Native Americans lived and thrived here. Historians believe these wandering peoples crossed over a land bridge that formed when the earth froze over, officially named Beringia, to get to North America. These nomadic Natives began spreading and forming different tribes around North America. One of the many tribes was the Ais Indians of Florida. By themselves, the tribes reigned the New World, but contact with the Westerns began their tragic demise.
The first Americans came from Asia, beginning as early as thirty thousand years ago, over a land bridge that formed at the Bering Strait during the Ice Age. The new immigrants were hunters and gatherers, and over a period of fifteen thousand years various groups spread over the American continents. By the time of the European “discovery” of the New World, there were perhaps as many as 100 million native Americans, the vast majority living in Central and South America.
British North America by the mid 1700’s consisted of three major regions. The New England region included the colonies of Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island. The Middle Region included the colonies of New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware. The Southern Region, also known as the Chesapeake Colonies, included the Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia. Although all three regions consisted of British colonies, each region differed in terms of climate, geography, population, politics, economy, and religious attitudes. Daily life was very different for the people who lived in each of these
Native Americans were the first people to live in America before any other man came. It is believed that the Native Americans came from Asia way back during the Ice Age through a land bridge of the Bering Strait. When the Europeans first set foot on America, there were about 10 million Native Americans living in America, North of Mexico (“American”). Native Americans had all separated and made their own tribes. Some of the many Native American tribes that still exist are those of the Iroquoian tribes, consisting of five, now six,
The initial inhabitants of North and South America, known as Paleo-Indians, arrived here over thousands of years ago. It is believed that the Native American forefathers reached this country via a piece of land that linked Asia to North America. Upon arrival, the Paleo-Indians split into numerous tribes. They broke off into a number of tribes, including but not limited to, the Paiutes, the Shoshonis, the Algonquians, the Aztecs, and the Mayans. The Paiutes and the Shoshonis tended to migrate seasonally. They are both tribes that settled in Nevada and Utah. The Algonquian tribe inhabited present-day northeastern United States and eastern Canada. They preferred to remain in their territories, they rarely migrated. The Aztecs, a bellicose nation, colonized what is now Mexico and Guatemala. The Aztecs had gained power over central Mexico before the Spanish accessed the new world. The Mayans also settled in Mexico and Guatemala. They were a very intelligent nation that already had writing and mathematics systems in place by the time the Spanish arrived. The various indigenous tribes then settled in a variety of places across the Americas and formed their own religious and cultural practices.
Before Europeans ever ventured to North America, the land had been populated by Native American nations that had their own distinct cultures and social structures. Native Americans had trade routes and established complex relationships between tribes. They were not merely heathens waiting to be civilized by the Europeans. Yet, Europeans would use those justifications to lay claim on their land.
These people that we broadly categorize as Native Americans descended from a small band of men and women who had crossed the Bering Strait land bridge between Alaska and Siberia about 12,000 years ago. The bridge closed about a thousand years after their arrival, effectively barring anyone else from joining them. As a result, they effectively closed themselves out from the rest of the world for thousands of years. This gave them the chance to thoroughly “explore the entire continent” and learn how to properly cultivate the land around them, and also grow their population to 10s of millions (Resendez 139).
- In the geological aspect, the Native Americans that tended to the land did not aggressively control the land leaving rich soil for the incoming Europeans to later on control. But they also burnt down many trees to create living spaces for the tribes. Geographically it was good for the Europeans because it was by the water and all the rocks underneath the top layer of soil were rich for farming.
Natives Americans settled in the New World way before the Europeans. Natives settled here and began colonization. They established villages, where they got the supply of food and water. In 1492 Europeans discovered the Americas they thought this was untouched territory. But they were wrong there was already civilization there. This would mark the continuous growing New World.
Before the Americas were colonized or even discovered Native Americans populated it. In North America there were different tribes distributed along the continent. These tribes all lived according to their environment. Their whole culture and lifestyle depended on it. Although there were no established states or regions; climate, weather, and physical environment changed throughout the territory.
Over the years, North America has developed in many different ways. However, one particular time period in which change was significant was the 1600’s, a time of trade, labor, and territorial settlements. As many people began to settle in different areas of North America, such as the Native Americans, Pilgrims, and more, there came along the fur trade, colony building, and more foreigners looking to live in North America. With these different people coming to North America, they have created ways in which cohabitation is possible, but unlikeable. As more Europeans and Spaniards arrived, the more likely spread was to happen, thus creating an unexpected competition between the developing colonies.
Native people were living in almost every region in North America. They were thinly spread between MesoAmerica (Aztecs) all the way to present day Canada (Eskimo and yellowknife). Between these two regions the Iroquois people had settled in the northeast, the Chocktaw people settled in the southeast, the Yuki people settled in present day California, and the Flathead people settled in the plateu region. For further evidence, the Siox people had settled in the Great Plains, the Navajo people settled in the southwest, and the Shoshoni people settled in the Great Basin. Therefore, North America had a great Native American presence almost all
Since the 1600s, America was inhabited by a number of European nations, Spanish, Portuguese, Dutch and English. All these