There are a vast array of myths surrounding the Blackfoot Native Americans as well as Aboriginal people.
These stories, myths, origins, and legends play a big role in their everyday life, such as their religion, their history, and their beliefs.
[1] People such as George B. Grinnell, John Maclean, D.C. Duvall, Clark Wissler, and James Willard Schultz were able to obtain and record a number of the stories that are told by the tribes.
Apistotoke created the first Sspommitapiiksi (Sky Beings): Naato'si (the Sun) to be light and warmth to all creation; Natosi's wife Ko'komiki'somm (the Moon); and their children (the stars), including Aapisowaahs (the hero Morning Star), to light the night sky for all creation.
Na'pi taught the Blackfoot people what plants to eat and animals to hunt, including their main food source, the buffalo.
He clung to it so hard that his fingers left marks, giving the tree the distinctive pattern it has today.
[4] Red Coulee is an actual place located between McLeod and Fort Benton next to the Marias River in Montana.
Years later, a Blackfoot tribe gathered a group of men and headed off to find the stone.