North American Environment for Kids - How did the environment change after the last Ice Age? Where did the buffalo come from? Why didn't more people live in North America?

North American Environment


Nunavut
The north
Most of North America was (and is) just not very good for people to live in, which is why not that many people lived in North America before 1500 AD. In the north, it's too cold to support very many people. The winters are too long to grow crops, and there isn't enough plant life growing wild to support people unless there is a lot of land for each person.

In the south-west, there are huge deserts, and even most of the way up the Pacific coast (in what is now California) it is generally too dry for farming. You can only farm that land by using irrigation, and that's what the early Pueblo people did.

Great Plains
The Great Plains
In the middle of the continent, you have the Great Plains, which are grassland good for herds of animals like buffalo, but mostly still too dry for farming without irrigation. People who lived on the Plains, like the Sioux, did not farm, but lived mainly by hunting buffalo. In the Rocky Mountains, also, the soil was no good for farming, and people like the Ute lived by hunting and gathering.

Along the Mississippi Valley and the Atlantic coast, there was good farmland, and there people like the Mississippians, Iroquois and the Cherokee farmed sunflowers, corn, and beans. There were more people living there.

But you shouldn't think from this that the environment was always the same, never changing. In fact it did change a good deal between the last Ice Age (about 12000 BC) and 1500 AD, partly because of natural factors and partly because of things people did. During the Ice Age, when people crossed over the land bridge from East Asia, North America was partly covered with glaciers. All of the northern part of North America lay under thick sheets of ice, all year round. The ice reached all the way south of the Great Lakes, and covered most of New York State. The Rocky Mountains had glaciers on them too. In the part of the land that wasn't covered by glaciers, there were a lot of very big animals like mammoths and a huge kind of bison, as well as early horses and camels. Historians call this the Paleo-Indian period.
With the end of the Ice Age, about 10,000 BC, the glaciers melted and shrank, until they only covered the most northern part of North America (and a little of the Rocky Mountains and other mountains). The climate became warmer all over North America, and there was less grass for the big animals to eat. Most of them became extinct, including the mammoths, the big bison, and all of the horses and camels. On the other hand, new animals like the cattle that became the American buffalo, and the dogs that came with people (and the people themselves), moved in from East Asia.
People who had moved to North America to hunt the mammoths needed to find new ways of getting food in this Archaic period. They learned to hunt buffalo, and eventually they learned to farm corn and beans. But they also destroyed some forests by burning the wood for their fires. Some scientists think that the reason the Southwest (southern California, Arizona, and New Mexico) is so desert-like is that the people living there changed the landscape by cutting down all the forests for fuel.
In other places, people learned to manage the landscape so it would produce enough food for them and be convenient to move around in. The Chinook, for instance, set huge fires on purpose to burn out the undergrowth in the forests, and to allow new grass to grow on the prairie. They hunted the buffalo, and the passenger pigeon, to control the size of the herds and flocks. So the environment of North America, by 1500 AD, was a very carefully managed, human-controlled situation.

To find out more about the North American environment before 1500, check out these books from Amazon.com or from your library:


Main North America page
Main South America page
Kidipede - History for Kids home




Tell a friend about this page

Save to del.icio.us/digg

Did Kidipede answer your question?

Yes, thanks! / No, can you help me?




Grinding grain



Kidipede's Pledge to You

Kidipede is a site for children in fifth grade to eighth grade. We help middle school children and teenagers do research for their reports and understand their homework. Whether you're traditional school or homeschool, we're there for you when you need us! Check out our kids' book recommendations at the bottom of each page, too.


Summer Camp for Kids




Experience true business class 
web hosting only at Dewahost!
Dewahost offers premium web hosting service at a great price. Kidipede is proudly hosted by Dewahost!