Native Americans lived freely in the lands. It belonged to the tribes and not to individuals and anyone could use its wealth as long as it wasn't exploitation or destructive. They practiced their cultural beliefs and didn't think that there should be a reason for them to move out of the land.
The Settlers were capitalists so they wanted the land to use it for agriculture and hunting and things like that and to sell it and buy it individually as personal property. They also believed that the Natives were savages and that their beliefs were blasphemous and that they had no claim to the land at all.<span />
I believe the best answers are: humans moved out of Africa, and h<span>umans learned how to control fire
But i'm not sure since there are not any options available</span>
In the debate over the ratification of the U.S constitution, a
Federalist would have argued that the Articles of Confederation were far
too weak, and needed to be replaced with a stronger document.
Divide and Rule Policy
After 1858, the British continued to follow the policy of divide and rule by turning the princes against the people, province against province, caste against caste, group against group, and, above all, Hindus against Muslims.
Buffalo was a need to the natives that was their food as well as they used its hide for things