In the 16th century, when Spanish explorers first came into contact with Indians in the southeastern United States, most of the tribes depended upon agriculture for their livelihood although hunting and gathering were also important. Trading among friendly tribes was carried out over a network of paths criss-crossing the eastern U.S. Trade items included copper, flint, slaves, furs and skins, salt, and handicraft items. Those same paths would later be used for trade with Europeans. When English and French settlers began to come into contact with the interior tribes in the late 17th century, the region was much changed. In a process called the
Mississippian shatter zone, the powerful chiefdoms visited by the Spanish such as
Cofitachequi in
South Carolina and
Coosa in
Tennessee and
Georgia had largely disappeared. The Indian population had decreased, probably due to the impact of the Spanish, the ravages of
European diseases such as
smallpox, and the growing capture and trade in Indian slaves. The survivors of the chiefdoms and refugees and migrants from other peoples coalesced into new entities by the late 17th century. The best-known of the southeastern peoples were the
Five Civilized Tribes:
Cherokee in the southern
Appalachian Mountains;
Muscogee Creeks in Georgia and Alabama;
Choctaw in
Alabama and
Mississippi,
Chickasaw in northern Mississippi, and
Seminole in northern
Florida (although the Seminole were still in a process of formation in the 18th century.). The southeastern trade in deer hides was stimulated by several factors. First,
Charleston, South Carolina was founded in 1670. Charleston became the center of trade for the two main commodities exchanged between whites and Indians, deer hides and slaves. Second, the defeat of the
Occaneechi by whites in colonial Virginia in 1676 and the
Westo in South Carolina by whites and
Shawnee in 1680 opened up the southeastern interior for white and Indian traders. Third, beginning about 1710, recurrent epidemics of
rinderpest killed large numbers of Europe's cattle, including in Britain, the main trading partner of the American colonies. As a consequence, the demand for American deerskins increased because of the reduced production in Europe of cattle hides used to make leather. ==The trade==