History, asked by adwitadixit08, 4 months ago

Write a short note of pastoral tribes

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Answered by kalyanink87gmailcom
4

Answer:

Pastoralism is a form of animal husbandry where domesticated animals known as livestock are released onto large vegetated outdoor lands (pastures) for grazing, historically by nomadic people who moved around with their herds. The species involved include cattle, camels, goats, yaks, llamas, reindeer, horse and sheep

Explanation:

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Answered by AnkitaSahni
0

'Pastoral' societies are those who have 'disproportionate subsistence stress' on 'swarming' domesticated 'placental'. 'pastoral nomadism', one amongst the '3' general kinds of 'nomadism', how of a 'lifetime of peoples' who 'don't live' regularly within the 'same place' however move 'cyclically' or 'sporadically'.

  • 'Pastoral nomads', who depend upon 'domesticated eutherian mammal', 'migrate' in a 'longtime territory' to 'search out' 'pasturage' for his or her 'animals'.
  • Some of the renowned 'pastoral wanderer tribes' in the 'continent area' unit the 'Maasai', 'Berbers', 'Somali', 'Boran', and some others. Most of those 'tribes' raise 'cows' like 'goats', 'camels', 'sheep', 'donkeys' etc. They sell their 'milk', 'hides', 'meat', 'fur', 'wool' etc to earn a 'living'.

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