Some good stuff about the Indian history, but not all true. The Apache dominated the region prior to the migration of the Comanche into the plains portion of the region. The Comanche preferred the homeland just north of the Red River, in what is now Oklahoma. To gain control of a region, a tribe had to be more vicious than those that he took it from...to say one tribe was really more violent than another, is just observing who was actually the dominant tribe in the area. You were wrong as to a totally encompasing view of the Apache dominance through the Southwest somewhat. There were about five tribes that were driven by the Federal troups from the Northwest and all the way from the Florida regions into what was East Texas and down to what is now Corpus Christi, that had a still cannibalistic and very violent tribe, the Karankawas. Another somewhat dominant tribe in the Texas region, after the Civil War period, was the Kiowa. Lipan Apache ranged down towards the Corpus Christi area also...but the Apache were dominated by the Comanche, who not an ounce less ruthless, daring, or violent. The Apache were driven into the mountainous regions..to the west, and on into New Mexico, and south well into Mexico itself. There were very adapatble once in the mountainous regions...I'll grant that. They were conquerable, as evidenced by their eventually raising enough eyre that they were systematically driven from the regions that they were transplanted into...barely holding footholds in Mexico....and you are wrong in that they didn't move much, as tribes of the Apache, once the great American concentration on their place in the country, called an all out attack at just before the turn of the twentieth century...as Apache tribes were driven all the way up to the Dakotas, where there are presently numerous Apache tribes in the region, today....West and North of San Antonio, in a desert region was a Canyon area held to be sacred, first by the Apache, and then later the 'lords' of the region, the Comanche....since the Comanche were predominantly a mobile and buffalo oriented culture, they didn't go too far into the mountains, and remain....but leave no mistake, in protracted battles, the Comanche were consistently victorious over the smaller in stature, Apache.....Albuqurque, ever been down around El Paso? I was up to Albuqurque once, and of course, Alamogordo.. have you ever heard of the Tashiro Estates? Oh well, I won't get into the story covering J.R. Arms, the one armed private investgator who wrote a book that included an acquaintance of mine in one of his chapters, who was previously married to Mr. Tashiro and who was shot point blank range while in bed, following a gamblig debt on the Alli/Foreman boxing match, there in Alamagordo, but that's another story. I remember, when going to Dona Ana, near Waco Tanks, seeing an old dugout along the highway, where an old prospector lived and sat in his rocking chair by the highway...up until he pased away. There was still a deserted gold mine up in the Waco mountains. Every day that we were in exercises in the desert there, we came across a rattler, without fail....I also remember chasing a pair of wild mustangs in our APC across much of the training range....other stories, althoug....