Table of Contents
- 1 How did Native Americans cooperate with Europeans?
- 2 How did Native Americans cooperate with colonists?
- 3 How did natives communicate with Europeans?
- 4 What did the colonizers do to the natives?
- 5 What did the Europeans bring to North America?
- 6 Why was the Native American vulnerable during the colonial era?
How did Native Americans cooperate with Europeans?
Local tribes traded corn, squash and furs with the Europeans in exchange for metal tools, blankets, cloth, glass beads, yarn, ribbon, and jewelry. The local currency of exchange was the natives’ shell-bead wampum, which the Europeans adopted and then began to produce for themselves.
How did Native Americans cooperate with colonists?
Initially, white colonists viewed Native Americans as helpful and friendly. They welcomed the Natives into their settlements, and the colonists willingly engaged in trade with them. The Native Americans resented and resisted the colonists’ attempts to change them.
What are two examples of cooperation between early European colonists and natives?
What are two examples of cooperation and two examples of conflict between early European colonists and Native Americans? Cooperation: the Indians taught the colonists to grow food; the colonists traded metals and cloth with the Indians.
How did natives communicate with Europeans?
Both Europeans and Native Americans relied almost entirely on word-of-mouth from people who had encountered other cultures previously. Europeans had reliable written communication, but travel could be slow. Few Native American communities had a written language, but they did have quicker communications networks.
What did the colonizers do to the natives?
Colonization ruptured many ecosystems, bringing in new organisms while eliminating others. The Europeans brought many diseases with them that decimated Native American populations. Colonists and Native Americans alike looked to new plants as possible medicinal resources.
What did the Indians do after they met the Europeans?
Many big changes happened to the first Americans soon after Europeans met them. But Indian people survived diseases, huge shifts in their cultures, and even the destructive slave trade.
What did the Europeans bring to North America?
As the English, French, and Spanish explorers came to North America, they brought tremendous changes to American Indian tribes. Europeans carried a hidden enemy to the Indians: new diseases. Native peoples of America had no immunity to the diseases that European explorers and colonists brought with them.
Why was the Native American vulnerable during the colonial era?
Native Americans were also vulnerable during the colonial era because they had never been exposed to European diseases, like smallpox, so they didn’t have any immunity to the disease, as some Europeans did.
What did the American Indians do for a living?
American Indians were creative. They found ways to live in deserts, in forests, along the oceans, and on the grassy prairies. Native peoples were great hunters and productive farmers. They built towns and traded over large distances with other tribes. These were the people the European explorers met when their ships landed in America.