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Question
what is one way that indigenous communities in the southwest differed from those in the northeast? choose 1 answer: a southwest peoples hunted while moving across grasslands, and northeast peoples lived in small fishing villages. b southwest peoples carved totem poles and built ocean canoes, while northeast peoples built ceremonial mounds. c southwest peoples lived in tipis and avoided farming, while northeast farmed in forests. d southwest peoples farmed with irrigation in desert towns, while northeast peoples farmed in forests and lived in longhouses.
To solve this, we analyze each option:
- Option A: Southwest Indigenous communities (like those in desert regions) didn't primarily hunt while moving across grasslands (grasslands are more associated with Plains tribes), and Northeast peoples' fishing villages description is inaccurate (they had diverse lifestyles including farming and living in longhouses).
- Option B: Totem poles and ocean canoes are associated with Northwest Coast tribes, not Southwest. Ceremonial mounds were built by Mississippian cultures (not Northeast in this context).
- Option C: Tipis are associated with Plains tribes (not Southwest), and Southwest peoples did farm (using irrigation), so this is incorrect.
- Option D: Southwest Indigenous groups (e.g., Pueblo) farmed with irrigation in desert - like towns, and Northeast Indigenous groups (e.g., Iroquois) farmed in forested areas and lived in longhouses. This matches the historical and cultural patterns of these regions.
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D. Southwest peoples farmed with irrigation in desert towns, while Northeast peoples farmed in forests and lived in longhouses.