Respuesta :

This resulted in the Indians being able to hunt food easier and travel farther.

Answer:

The American Indians quickly adapted the horses and used it in many of their daily activities, such as hunting, traveling and transporting different elements.

Explanation:

In the North American territory there were prehistoric horses, which became extinct 10,000 years ago. The history of the horse in America began again with the order of the Catholic Monarchs to send twenty horses and five mares to the New World from Spain. These horses arrived in America on the second voyage of Christopher Columbus. The horses arrived from Cuba with Hernán Cortés to New Spain. The horses that populated the North American plain arrived from Mexico with Juan de Oñate's expedition.

The adoption of the horse in the daily activities of the American Indians took place little by little. During the presence of the Spaniards in the New Mexico area, there were many ranchers who owned this animal. The natives were forbidden to ride and own them, but some learned to live with them. Since the seventeenth century, several conflicts caused their acquisition, while French and English trafficked weapons in exchange for skins. It is likely that the Utes took these animals with them when they abandoned their Spanish patrons to New Mexico, and over time this ethnic group would become an important town in the Great Basin area. The Taos also took horses with them to the Kansas area, from where they spread to the Comanches, Wichita, Kiowa and other ethnicities. On the occasion of the People's Rebellion of 1680 many horses were left available to the natives.