Answer: A people who lived by natural rules.
Step-by-step explanation:
The earliest sources of North American natives date back to the first European explorers of that continent and colonists. These sources are imbued with religious narratives and represent the subjective opinion of the author. Yet from these earliest descriptions, we can learn much about the Indian way of life. The natives lived in deep harmony with nature. Even their religious beliefs were connected to nature. They survived by hunting and planting crops. The Indians never hunted more than they needed, but always as much as they needed. They had warlike trade relations but not to the extent that they were represented in Europe.
With the arrival of the first European migrants, they accepted European trade patterns and traded with the Dutch and the English. They lived in social communities in which there was a hierarchy. At the head of the tribe was the chief sachem and besides him, a significant role was played by a tribal council composed of older members of the tribe. They fought each other, but there were no liquidation cases of innocent women, children, the elderly and the infirm. Individual disputes were resolved by battles of the best warriors from opposing tribes. Based on that, it is possible to conclude that they valued life more. A negative phenomenon among certain indigenous tribes of North America is cannibalism, which especially horrified European immigrants. Today, it is a nation that is fully involved in the American way of life.