Quote:
Originally Posted by GH85Carrera

The Arapaho people lived spread out across Wyoming and Colorado. They have a very strong oral tradition and share their tribal stories with their people and younger generations to keep their transitions alive. Their second love was agriculture.
They became a nomadic tribe in the 1830s, living in teepees and riding their horses while working hard on their fields, growing crops like beans and corn. They would often trade goods with the Arikara and Mandan tribes. Everything they wore had meaning, including the beads on their garbs and the feathers in their headpieces
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???
This sounds like it was written by a really bad AI bot.
I think they meant, "...keep their
traditions alive," not "... keep their
transitions alive." Although, as nomadic farmers they had a lot of transitions to cover.
How does being a nomadic farmer work? Farmers are tied to the soil, nomads by definition have no connection to place. Do they carry their corn plants around in pots?