The Apache Indians are a southern branch of the Athabaskan language group of North America. Most historians believe that the Apache arrived in the American Southwest after 1000 A.D. but well before Spanish colonization of the area. The Apache tribe consisted of many different politically noncohesive bands that included the Lipan Apache of Texas, the Mescalero Apache of western Texas and southeastern New Mexico, the Jicarilla of northeastern New Mexico, the Navajo of northwestern New Mexico, the Chiricahua Apache of southwestern New Mexico, the Western Apache of Arizona, and the Plains Apache of Oklahoma. Apache dress was similar in all of these bands and was usually made from the tribe's lifeblood, the buffalo.
eHow Article: About Apache Dress
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lanzavolante said
on 5/13/2009 This is an example of ill informed people giving information they have no expertise on. Lumping all Apaches together is like lumping a white people as being Ku Klux Klan members. The buffalo was not the only animal that Apaches depended upon for food and clothing. Research people goes a long way.