They are nomadic hunting and gathering, rural agrarian, urban, commercial, industrial and post-industrial societies.
The "unreached" Indians have lived for centuries in nomadic hunting and fishing communities that have been pushed back with increasing speed by the advance of settled farming.
The archeological record reveals an Archaic-period desert culture, whose inhabitants developed a nomadic hunting and gathering lifestyle that remained virtually unchanged for several thousand years.
These builders, descended from nomadic hunting and gathering people who had arrived 10,000 years earlier, stayed in their settlements for 750 years and then abruptly departed.
Delano supported the slaughter of buffalo, essential to the Plains Indians' lifestyle, in order to stop their nomadic hunting.
The Plains tribes adopted use of the horse from the Spanish settlers in the 17th and 18th centuries, which greatly increased their range of nomadic hunting.
Moreover, the tribes would be converted from nomadic hunting to a farming lifestyle.
The main traditional activity is nomadic and semi-nomadic hunting of deer, moose, wild sheep, and sable, as well as fishing.
It is unique in being an example of a permanent village on the plains: an area associated with nomadic hunting.
They are one of the smallest of the Amerindian groups with a population estimated at around 1137 people and are a nomadic hunting and gathering group.