Heavily influenced culturally by the Carib, they adopted agriculture sometime after the 16th century, and further acculturation followed European contact.
The lowland central coast, however, seems never truly to have adopted agriculture.
One exception to this was the lowland central coast which never truly adopted agriculture.
The Fremont culture of central Utah (700-1300 CE) developed pottery after adopting agriculture.
It established a separate and compulsory school system, a program of land grants designed to encourage Ainu to adopt agriculture, and provided some welfare benefits.
The Akamba were originally hunter-gatherers, but later adopted agriculture due to the arability of the new land that they came to occupy.
This has changed earlier assumptions that complex construction arose only after societies had adopted agriculture, become sedentary, often developed stratified hierarchy, and generally also developed ceramics.
Gallo is also encouraging its contract growers to adopt organic or sustained-yield agriculture, which minimizes the use of chemicals.
By 1200 AD, the local Indians had adopted agriculture and lived in small, closely knit settlements, which the Spaniards later called pueblos.
These early Wichita people were hunters and gatherers who slowly adopted agriculture.