List of Native American Weapons (North, Central, & South America) [Updated]
Native Americans had thousands of years to perfect their weaponry before the arrival of European explorers and settlers. Intimately connected to the land, Native peoples found creative and effective ways to capture food and defend themselves from enemy groups.
While we may commonly picture an American Indian hunting or fighting with a bow and arrow, there were many other types of weapons utilized by tribes.
The weapons listed here represent the major categories of Native American weapons in North, Central, and South America. The thousands of tribes living on these continents used unique variations of the weapons depending on a number of factors.
We discuss some common examples from well-known tribes. The history, uses, and variations of each weapon are described.
Consider this article a jumping-off point for your research on Native American weapons and their uses.
1) Bow & Arrows

Perhaps the most important Native American weapon was the bow and arrow. The oldest arrowheads found in North America are an estimated 13,000 years old. Nearly every tribe in North America utilized some form of the bow and arrow. For certain tribes, this weapon was absolutely essential.
Native peoples used bows and arrows for both hunting and warfare. Most bows were made of wood and contained animal sinew for extra springiness. After the arrival of horses to the Americas, bows became shorter to accommodate their use on horseback.
Plains Indians relied on the bow and arrow to take down large bison. Even after the introduction of firearms by Europeans, Native peoples of the Plains region continued to prefer the bow and arrow for its accuracy and speed.
Rocky Mountain tribes designed composite bows made from horn and sinew. These weapons could shoot through a large animal with ease.

Native Americans typically made their bowstrings from sinew or plant fibers like yucca. The material used largely depended on the geographic location of the tribe and the resources available.
Arrowheads were most commonly crafted from hard stones like flint. Other options included copper and bone. Arrows used for hunting birds lacked an arrowhead and were instead sharpened to a point.
The Hudson Bay Company brought iron arrowheads to the North America as early as 1671. Metal quickly became a preferred material for arrowheads used in big game hunting.
Most tribes in the Americas added feather fletching to their arrows for straight flying. The Inuit people are one group who did not utilize fletching in their arrow construction.
2) Spear

Spears were powerful weapons used by tribes in North, Central, and South America. These large weapons were made more deadly with the addition of the atlatl or spear thrower. The spear thrower increased the momentum of the spear, making it fly farther and faster.
Spears and spear throwers proved so powerful in Central America that they could pierce the plate armor worn by European conquistadors.
Native American craftspeople made spears out of wood. Spearheads could be crafted from bone or steel. Like other weapons, the spear and its uses varied from tribe to tribe.
Plains Indians used a melee spear as a thrusting weapon. It became a status symbol for mounted warriors.
The Inuit people and tribes on the Northwestern coast of America used harpoons for hunting a range of marine animals on land, on ice, and from boats.
3) Kavikak

The kavikak is a specific type of spear used for fishing. The spear featured back angled prongs as shown above. These prongs proved deadly to fish of all kinds, as they were effective at catching and holding fish.
Inuit peoples and other northern tribes relied on this weapon for fishing. It was a versatile and effective tool in harsh northern environments.
4) War Club

Perhaps no weapon was as varied in its design as the war club. A simple weapon with a long history, the war club was a practical weapon and symbolic item for thousands of Native groups in the Americas.
Most Native Americans crafted war clubs from wood or stone. Designs varied widely from tribe to tribe, but most had either asymmetrical or symmetrical designs.
The Iroquois and Algonquian peoples of the eastern woodlands used ball-headed war clubs for warfare and ceremonial purposes. The ball headed club was an asymmetrical design.

Native Americans living in the Great Plains region used more symmetrical clubs with heads made of stone. These lethal weapons proved effective in battle, but also had ceremonial significance.
Northwestern Indian groups crafted ceremonial war clubs in the shape of baseball bats. Because of their ceremonial and symbolic use, these clubs featured intricate carvings and were commonly inlaid with precious stones.
5) Tomahawk/Axe

Another weapon associated with Native Americans is the axe or tomahawk. Prior to the introduction of iron and steel by Europeans, Native peoples used axes as tools rather than weapons. After the incorporation of metal into the design of the axehead, the tomahawk became a common weapon of many Native groups.
This versatile weapon was quickly preferred over the war club, as it could be used in many ways. The tomahawk proved effective as a hand to hand weapon, a throwing weapon, and an everyday tool.
Most tomahawks measured one to three feet in total length depending on their intended use. Ornate ceremonial versions existed across North America. The pipe tomahawk is one such ceremonial weapon.
6) Knife

Like other people groups around the world, Native Americans utilized the knife for everyday tasks, self defense, hunting, and warfare.
Native people most commonly crafted knives from hard stones like flint and obsidian. Northwestern tribes preferred copper. The Inuit used bone and ivory from the animals they hunted to craft strong blades.
Europeans brought iron and steel to the Americas and Native Americans widely adopted the new material for use in knife designs.
7) Bola

The bola was a unique Native American weapon mainly used for hunting. It was made of ropes and had weights on the end of each rope. A hunter would swing the bola in a circle and launch it at an animal to trap it.
While bolas were utilized across the Americas, they were especially useful to South American and Inuit peoples.
8) Blowgun

The blowgun is another unique Native American weapon that was utilized by groups in Central, South, and North America. While usually thought of as a South American weapon, tribes like the Seminole and Cherokee also crafted their own versions of the weapon.
Native hunters mostly used blowguns for small game hunting. Blowguns were crafted from river cane or other reeds. They varied in length but could be quite large. The pucuna, for example, was seven and a half feet long and could shoot darts at a speed of 289 miles per hour!
9) Slingshot

The slingshot was a small and simple weapon that was also highly effective for small game and bird hunting. Slingshots were fast and easy to make.
Native Americans used rawhide, sinew, animal gut, and plant fibers to make the thong of the slingshot. Stones were an easy-to-find projectile.
10) Firearms

The history and use of firearms by Native Americans is complex. Some of the most popular guns acquired from Europeans were northwest trade guns. These models were marketed specifically for trading to Native Americans.
Fur traders in present day America and Canada traded northwest trade guns to Native peoples and this in turn changed warfare and hunting for some tribes.
Many Native Americans adopted the gun as a primary weapon. Others preferred the traditional bow and arrow even after seeing the power of the gun.
Plains tribes, for example, continued to use the bow and arrow as their main hunting weapon. The bow was simply more effective for buffalo hunting than a gun. While a gun had to be reloaded after a single shot, a bow could be quickly reloaded with countless arrows.
From horseback, guns were difficult to load and less versatile. Still, the introduction of firearms did have an impact on the way Native Americans hunted and defended themselves.

Greetings; I have recently been given/willed a Native American item which I am attempting to identify whether it was a weapon, tool, or possibly even a drum stick? the entire piece is wrapped in animal skin and sewn/stitched. It is roughly 9″ in length. At one end and wrapped in the same animal skin is a stone slightly smaller than a small Irish potato or Kiwi and at the other end is a protruding tip that looks like it may have been a anchoring point for something else, possibly even something decorative such as animal tail or feathers. Any chance you can provide your best guess, I can provide pictures of it.