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To: hinckley buzzard
The EASTERN part of the Great Plains had plenty of trees cut down for farming. I know, because I grew up there.

The mid-west extends all the way to the eastern Ohio border and the Ohio Valley was once the homeland of multiple Siouxian tribes before the Huron and other tribes pushed them further west starting in the 15th century.

The Mandan, in particular, were quite adept at agriculture and cleared forests to make fields, using the timber to build earthen lodge villages both in their original homeland of the Ohio River Valley and they new adopted homeland of what is know the Knife and Missouri River Valleys in North Dakota.

By the time the white man came, the massive bison herds were much smaller herds at points in the eastern mid-west and didn't become massive until the grasslands really started about near what is now Lincoln, Nebraska in the more westerly part of the mid-west.

32 posted on 11/17/2021 12:28:51 PM PST by Vigilanteman (The politicized state destroys aspects of civil society, human kindness and private charity.)
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To: Vigilanteman

https://www.upworthy.com/america-has-more-trees-now-than-its-had-in-100-years-but-were-not-out-of-the-woods-yet


34 posted on 11/17/2021 1:49:21 PM PST by JD_UTDallas ("Veni Vidi Vici" )
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