Native Americans: Land Stewards and Survival Guides

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The Native Americans society was based on what the land around them produced, which they saw as land for everyone's use, but not to own. When the Europeans ventured across the Atlantic, they began to build with the intentions of staying rather than exploring. Despite having developed the greater high-tech capability to organize wars far from home, the Europeans entered the New World with little to no knowledge on how to survive and often relied on the Native Americans to do so. To the Europeans, they gave their knowledge on how to produce crops, which saved them from starvation , yet the Spanish were still very cruel towards the Indians. However, because the Indians brought mainly men to America they began to intermarry with them. In spite …show more content…

This caused the Indian population to decrease further, not only from disease, but from the cruelty of the conquistadors, “the breath, blood, sweat, and lice of the colonizers conveyed especially deadly pathogens that consumed the Indians” (Taylor, Ch 2). The positive effects of exchange was the Europeans introduction of sugar, livestock, and most importantly the horse which revolutionized the Indian society. Indians exchanged corn and other agricultural techniques and soon became the principle labor source. As far as technological knowledge “when the Europeans invaded, the Native Americans realized their own technological disadvantages” (Taylor, Ch 1). The Native Americans lacked steel weapons and amor as well as wind and water mills to process wood and grain. Despite these disadvantages they used what they knew in order to help their enemies the Europeans by showing them how to fertilize their soil and make food grow, they also taught them how to use bow and arrows to catch food. From an agricultural standpoint the Natives knew that in order to survive “you must kill fish and animals and tear down trees” (Taylor, Ch 1), however they believed spirits lived within plants, animals, rocks, wind, clouds and bodies of water. Because of this they had to decide when they could manipulate the spirits and when they should appease them. Unlike the Natives, the Europeans believed “supernatural intervention came from without rather than within plants and animals” (Taylor, Ch 1) this made it safe for them to harvest resources because they knew they were not offending any

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