Potawatomi Location: Michigan and Wisconsin
Homes: Wigwam
Food: corn, beans, squash, tobacco, wild rice berries, deer, elk, wild birds, fish, maple syrup
Transportation: Birch bark canoes
Clothing: Women; long deerskin dresses Men; breechcloths, leggings, and deerskin shirts
Cheyyenne Location: South Dakota, Wyoming, Nebraska, Colorado, and Kansas
Homes: Wigwams or Teepees
Food: corn, squash, and beans. Hunted deer and buffalo
Transportation: Travois
Clothing: Women; long deerskin dresses Men; breechcloths, leggings, and deerskin shirts
Salish Location: Washington
Homes: Earthen lodges sometimes known as "pit houses
Food: staple food was salmon. Men also hunted for elk, buffalo, mountain sheep, and small game. Women gathered nuts, roots, and berries to add to their diet.
Transportation: Birchbark canoes
Clothing: Breech cloths with leggings and short buckskin shirts with patterns of holes punched into them. Women wore buckskin dresses with leggings and sometimes a fringed cape
Navajo Location: Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, and Colorado
Homes: Hogan
Food: corn, beans, and squash. Also hunted deer, antelope, and small game, gathered nuts, fruits, and herbs
Transportation: Travois
Clothing: men wore breechcloths and the women wore skirts made of woven yucca fiber. Shirts were not necessary in Navajo culture, but both men and women wore deerskin ponchos or cloaks of rabbit fur in cool weather, and moccasins on their feet.
Cherokee Location: Georgia, North and South Carolina, Virginia, Kentucky, and Tennessee
Homes: Made of rivercane and plaster, with thatched roofs
Food: corn, beans, squash, and sunflowers. Also gathered berries, nuts and fruit to eat. Hunted deer, wild turkeys, and small game and fished in the rivers
Transportation: long dugout canoes from hollowed-out logs. Over land, the Cherokees used dogs as pack animals
Clothing; men wore breechcloths and leggings. Cherokee women wore wraparound skirts and poncho-style blouses made out of woven fiber or deerskin
Wampanoag Location: Massachusetts and Rhode Island
Homes: Wigwam
Food: corn, squash and beans. Men hunted for deer, turkeys, and small game and went fishing in their canoes. Wampanoag children collected other food like berries, nuts and herbs
Transportation: dugout canoes by hollowing out huge trees
Clothing: women wore knee-length skirts. men wore breechcloths with leggings. Neither women nor men had to wear shirts in the Wampanoag culture, but they would dress in deerskin mantles during cool weather