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like you have watched to many war films.you had better tell national geographic that you know better than them.:rolleyes:

the horse and EU/UK demand for meat and hides



Native Americans had been hunting bison as their primary game animal since about 10,000 years ago when 34 other large mammal species went extinct at the end of the Pleistocene. Although their subsistence patterns diversified into gardening and the gathering of various plant resources, bison still played a large part in the diet of native Americans when Europeans discovered the Americas in 1462, especially in the plains. What was it, then, that caused such a drastic change in native American behavior and led to large scale hunting of the North American bison? The prevailing theory is that it was the re-introduction of the horse into North America that was the key to the role of the native American in the decline of bison populations.
 
South America has a lot of history and its still there to see. If only the good old US of A didn't turn your noses up at them :rolleyes:. What history is there in North America? (Statue of liberty doesn't count as 1. It's not historical and 2. It's French so not even yours :p
 
the horse and EU/UK demand for meat and hides



Native Americans had been hunting bison as their primary game animal since about 10,000 years ago when 34 other large mammal species went extinct at the end of the Pleistocene. Although their subsistence patterns diversified into gardening and the gathering of various plant resources, bison still played a large part in the diet of native Americans when Europeans discovered the Americas in 1462, especially in the plains. What was it, then, that caused such a drastic change in native American behavior and led to large scale hunting of the North American bison? The prevailing theory is that it was the re-introduction of the horse into North America that was the key to the role of the native American in the decline of bison populations.

so they originally eat them for thousands of years.the rest is only a THEORY,not fact.:rolleyes:
 
so they originally eat them for thousands of years.the rest is only a THEORY,not fact.:rolleyes:

To be fair the use of the horse by the native American was not the sole factor in the destruction of the bison population, nor can it be said to be the most prevailing factor. For surely, though their numbers would still have plummeted, the bison could have thrived on the plains had it not been for man’s desire to thrust forward into the future. The fur trade placed a price on bison hides and both natives and whites sought to collect these bounties. With the aid of the horse the native was able to hunt and collect many more hides than would have been possible on foot.
 
To be fair the use of the horse by the native American was not the sole factor in the destruction of the bison population, nor can it be said to be the most prevailing factor. For surely, though their numbers would still have plummeted, the bison could have thrived on the plains had it not been for man’s desire to thrust forward into the future. The fur trade placed a price on bison hides and both natives and whites sought to collect these bounties. With the aid of the horse the native was able to hunt and collect many more hides than would have been possible on foot.

look,it says the native was able to hunt many more on the horse.rather than on foot.so i am right.:p:rolleyes:
 
Native Americans had been hunting bison as their primary game animal since about 10,000 years ago when 34 other large mammal species went extinct at the end of the Pleistocene. Although their subsistence patterns diversified into gardening and the gathering of various plant resources, bison still played a large part in the diet of native Americans when Europeans discovered the Americas in 1462, especially in the plains. What was it, then, that caused such a drastic change in native American behavior and led to large scale hunting of the North American bison? The prevailing theory is that it was the re-introduction of the horse into North America that was the key to the role of the native American in the decline of bison populations.

Stop answering mud muppet's Green Card questions! :rolleyes: :p
 
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