ANSWERS: 11
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Yes. http://www.accessgenealogy.com/native/tribes/blackfeet/blackfeetindiantribe.htm
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I believe they were crow. I'm not sure what part of the country they lived in though - sorry.
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Yes, I am sure I heard about this tribe.
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yes Black Foot
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The Blackfoot Indians of the United States and Canada were divided into three main groups: the Northern Blackfoot or Siksika, the Kainah or Blood, and the Piegan. The three as a whole are also referred to as the Siksika (translated Blackfoot).
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yes there is such a tribe! I have a little bit of blackfoot in me.!
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Yes.
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yes, and two members of that tribe created a band in the 70's called, (uh, ironically), blackfoot... (band website) http://www.blackfootrocks.com/ (blackfoot nation website) http://www.blackfoot.org/
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Yes there was anyway. I don't know how many of them are left.
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Yes. My granddaddy was a quarter Black Feet, thus, making me partially Black Feet.
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1) "Blackfoot may refer to: Blackfeet, the Piegan tribe in western Montana Blackfoot (Nitsitapii), a group of indigenous people in North America The Blackfoot language of the Nitsitapii, an Algonquin language The Siksika Nation belonging to the Nitsitapii The "Blackfoot Sioux," or Sihasapa branch of the Lakota people Blackfoot (band), a rock band Blackfoot, Idaho, a city in the United States located in southeast Idaho Eastern Blackfoot or Southern Blackfoot, term sometimes used for the Saponi and other Virginia Siouans who left the tribe and joined other ethnicities. Pied-noir, meaning Blackfoot, the literal English translantion of a member of the former Franco-Algerian population Blackfoot (Warriors), the Clan leader in the Warriors (novel series) by Erin Hunter, now called Blackstar. Blackfoot, an 18th century name for Irish Catholics who co-operated with the Protestant establishment in Ireland; see Whiteboys. Blackfoot diatreme, a volcanic pipe in British Columbia, Canada" Source and further information: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackfoot_(disambiguation%29 2) "The Blackfoot Confederacy or Niitsítapi (meaning "original people"; c.f. Ojibwe: Anishinaabeg and Quinnipiac: Eansketambawg) is the collective name of three First Nations in Alberta and one Native American tribe in Montana. The Blackfoot Confederacy consists of the North Peigan (Aapátohsipikáni), the Blackfeet or South Piegan (Aamsskáápipikani), the Kainai Nation (Káínaa: "Blood"), and the Siksika Nation ("Blackfoot") or more correctly Siksikáwa ("Blackfoot people"). The South Peigan are located in Montana, and the other three are located in Alberta. Together they call themselves the Niitsítapi (the "Original People"). These groups shared a common language and culture, had treaties of mutual defense, and freely intermarried." Source and further information: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_foot 3) "People: The Blackfoot Nation today actually consists of four distinct Blackfoot nations, who share a historical and cultural background but have separate leadership: the Siksika Nation (whose name literally means Blackfoot), the Akainawa Nation (also called Kainai or Bloods), the Pikanii or Peigan Nation (variously spelled Piikani, Pikani, Pikuni, or Piegan), and the Blackfeet Nation. The first three nations are in Alberta, Canada, and the fourth is in Montana. ("Blackfeet," though the official name of this tribe, is actually a misnomer given to them by white authorities; the word is not plural in the Blackfoot language, and some Blackfoot people in Montana resist this label.) The Blackfoot were nomadic plains hunters, traditional enemies of the Shoshone and Nez Perce. There are about 14,000 Blackfoot Indians today all told. " Source and further information: http://www.native-languages.org/blackfoot.htm
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