No they did not make totem poles.
NO! They didn't make totem poles!!!!!!
Depending on what you mean, the haida used paint and cedar to make totem poles and they used copper to make the chiefs masks and all the important people if the tribe had things made out of copper...
No and yes. Traditional totem poles were made by various Northwest Coast tribes in what are now Alaska and British Columbia. However, after the totem pole became famous among Anglo-Americans, many non-Northwest Coast tribes made totem poles that appeared at tourist attractions all over Canada and the United States. So, while totem poles were not part of the Seneca Tribe's traditional material culture, there may have been instances where members of the Seneca Tribe produced "roadside" totem poles for the purpose of attracting tourists.
The Kwakiutl tribe lived in present day Vancouver, right above Washington state. The Kwakiutl tribe was big on making totem poles with very intracate design.
Yes, and only Northwetern Native American Tribes used or had Totem Poles.
the native Americans where the first one to make totem poles. i think?
yes there are because people make totem poles and sell them for double the price
yes they did they made the Totem poles were used as offerings for the gods that presinted rain
The Jumano tribe lived in Texas, where no Western Red Cedar trees grow.Since it is these huge Pacific coast trees that were made into totem poles, the Jumano can not have made totem poles, nor did any other tribes in the Americas - just those on the north-west coast of the USA and the west coast of Canada.
boogers
The Algonquins did NOT make Totem Poles.Totem Poles were erected only by Native Americans from the Northwest Coast of the United States and Canada.The Algonquins were an eastern tribe.