Solution
Nomadic herding is a basic form of sustenance where herders rely on animals for food, clothing, housing, tools, and transportation. They and their livestock move from one location to another. Characteristics include:
Pastoralism in its most basic form, in which herds and flocks graze on natural vegetation known as pastures
It is an old occupation in which each nomadic group, according to their traditions and culture, occupies a well-defined zone.
According to local cultural and physical traits, nomads have different types of animals in their herd.
Camels, sheep, and goats are the most sought animals in North Africa and the Middle East. Other valuable animals include horses, yaks, reindeers, and llamas.
The nomadic herders' existence is reliant on their animals, which provide food, clothes (made from their wool, hair, or skins), transportation, and materials for building their homes.
They transfer their herds from one location to another as the seasons change. Sheep or other animals may graze in alpine meadows in the summer and then be herded back down into valleys for the winter, which is known as transhumance.