I grew up and believed, while in grade and middle school, that the western half of North America was "empty" then I read the Lewis and Clark journals and realized they just went from one village and or tribe to another. Most were friendly and even warned to stay away from certain other tribes that were not so friendly. And that a king/chief rode part way with L&C, to provide safe passage. Also, that most of their travels were by boat, not necessarily by land. That book should still be required reading in schools. I'm 63, and I know most public schools have changed dramatically since I attended.
I was taught the same thing and the problem is that I'm Native American so I asked them if America was empty who was Squanto who is Sacagawea and who did we fight and who fed the pilgrims at the first Thanksgiving LOL do you know what my teacher said there was no one here that counts. I'll repeat that no one here that counts.
Postscript: years later I went back to that teacher and said why did you teach us about the Nissan in World War II but you didn't teach us about the trailer of Tears. I've never met anyone that was taught about the Trail of Tears in school. We have so many people making up pseudohistory. There are Africans claiming they were here first. White people claiming they were here first. It doesn't change the fact that when you did get here and you found us here and I don't mean you personally that you made us walk and committed genocide on us. I have two sources for this one my grandmother's grandfather whom she knew, he was born in 1830 did not die until she was saying she was born in the 1880s and he told her about it but also I read the diary of the captain that took my family west. My family was separated and set North to go west with the Potawatomi and we're not permitted to go west with the rest of the Cherokee. We were taking forcibly by soldiers not allowed to take coats blankets or much of anything. We were told blankets would be provided sure they were come spring. And they were pox infected and per the diary of the captain who nearly resigned because of it they not only knew that they were infected with pox it was quite deliberate. When the captain threatened to resign they told him to go ahead because we'll just find someone more enthusiastic to do his job. He stayed on to save lives. I wish I knew how to find his descendants so that I can honor them in some way for his actions
@@carolmoore1038 I wasn’t told my six great grandfather was the last survivor of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. I discovered it only after both my parents were dead a few years ago; that and much more. He was a blacksmith who the tribes took particular interest in and was subsequently asked to go around after the expedition and teach the friendly tribes metal working. In fact, none of my families history was preserved in public schools. We just somehow popped up in Los Angeles and we’re told to shutup and get to work. All that History was some abstract thing some people did of which no real connection was ever made. Im not Dutch and Irish, Dad. Im Scottish and Jew!
@@glennleedicus my family was at Harrodsburg with Boone many of the things that occurred there have been told to historians who for some reason were told to keep it under wraps. Not sure what my grandkids are going to find out LOL but some of the stories were passed on to me and I don't understand why they don't want them known. Meaning the other Pioneer stock
Their own folklore says they arrived in the Americas and exterminated cannibalistic giants who lived here before them. I would really like to see a series on that history.
@@viridisxiv766some had to survive so idk about pre or post but personally with my tribe the mounds were burial grounds of mounds builders becouse they were so mean the arth rejected them
Beautiful and inspirational juxtaposition of Science and Tradition. Thank you! I have a degree in Anthropology and am continually disappointed in the way people's eyes glaze-over whenever I attempt to share exciting intel of the organization of societies and the fluidity of culture. More recently I get rabid push-back from those who cry "cultural appropriation" without any awareness whatsoever of the transitory nature of the human species, or the documented and established history of exchange between groups (both technical and cultural). Too little critical inquiry and too much politically-motivated interference.
new findings in anthropology is my fave subject. Also early american history White Cargo by Jordan and Walsh and Jewish Pirates of the Caribbean are great reads.
I am Métis Canadian and half Finnish. My British ancestor came over to Canada during the fur trade and married an aboriginal woman. That’s what makes us Métis a mixed people who were neither accepted by the early European settlers nor Aboriginals. We were a people in between the conflict always to be considered half-bloods. I mainly carry Finnish blood over any specific ethnicity. Other parts of my family tree are German, and French. My daughter is half Chinese so the line keeps on moving. I find this history very helpful and informative. Thank you for your research. It applies to everyone born in North America. My family is fortunate to have a Family Tree in a book. Not everyone can trace back their history as far as the time of English conquest. Thanks again for posting this information. 🙏🏻
Ya'et'eh I'm 1 💯% native american apache cree of canada we still here we 0% europeans and yeah not every person intermarried and crees are growing today thank god!
I've never cared about the history of North America until I started watching this series. It's very much like how I didn't care about geology until I linked it to the Flood. Thank you for making me want to learn. 👍
Same, honestly. I loved learning the history of my country (Canada) but everything else was hard to be interested in. Now with these videos I can connect my love for the science of genetics with history and it all tells a story. It's so fascinating!
I live in northeast Arkansas (Jonesboro) and grew up in eastern Craighead county and Mississippi county. I grew up working on many different farms and driving tractors then began a cotton scouting service. I have covered thousands of acres and found dozens of native village sites that are Mississipian and older. There are mounds literally everywhere in northeast Arkansas. However, I have collected thousands of surface artifacts and I have hundreds and hundreds of arrowheads and stone tools that are thousands of years old. I have paleo Clovis points, Dalton points and lots of archaic and woodland era points (Hardin and Adena styles) and, of course, lots of Mississipian artifacts. I have always wondered who built the older mounds like Poverty Point in Louisiana. I have always had a bit of an issue with the timeline proposed by the archeologists that I have worked with as they place the Clovis and Daltons as 7000 years and MUCH older. I volunteered at ASU (Jonesboro) archeology department while in undergrad and I went on to medical school. I now do flint knapping and primitive living skills as a hobby and I'm still fascinated by the ancient north American history. This video presentation answers several questions that I have had. While I was at the Creation Museum in Kentucky I bought a book detailing the genetic distribution of various groups across the globe. The developing study of genetics will probably answer a lot of questions about the past.
Have you read The Book of Mormon? I think the older mound sites, parallel in time with the elephants, are the older population mentioned in that book (the Jaredites in Ether).
@@dannyd7426 I actually have read the B.O.M., when I was 11, I was baptized Mormon, tho no longer practicing. I don't do organized religion anymore, as it's a control the population mechanism. And any religion that espouses polygamy on any level, isnt for me.
There were some in the woods where i grew up. Wet used to climb on them until we found out what they were. then we got the switch if we disobeyed..haha. ohio had quite a few mounds
I was born & raised I'm Southern Ohio, I'm 68, I've lived here my whole life. As a very small child, my father was an excavator. He took me places, showed me some smaller mounds, that no one talks about, we lived 4 miles up the hill from the Ohio river. He was always collecting arrow heads & such, while he was working. I'm fascinated with all of this history. My family arrived in 1802, by flatboat on the Ohio, on my german father's side of the family.
I am descended from Patawomeck Indigenous Peoples and English colonists from Virginia.There is so much lost in the collective human culture of this country.
The material is here in Virginia, they just do not look for it. May I suggest the book White Cargo by Jordan and Walsh and also Jewish Pirates of the Caribbean gives very early explorer info, a fave paperback of mine! And the film made in Virginia entitled New World gives the real story of your famous ancestor here in Stafford County and John Rolfe. Took five years and chatting with indigenous at length to make the film. Cheers!
A TON about Indigenous American cultures is hidden or suppressed as well. Bound to happen when the US government spends 50 years sending anyone who talks about it to the nut house. Our medicine societies went underground, but are still around if you can find them, just very secretive.
I commend your reasoning for trying to fill in the true history of America. All Americans need to know true history, especially of all natives. I'm am Choctaw and would love to know the complete history of America.
I invite you to read to The Book of Mormon Another testament of Jesus Christ. You might be surprised, it’s an amazing record of the people in the Americas.
I really hope you get volunteers and help to complete this. It's a very important part of North American history and the people who lived there. Great video!
I have a book written in 1885 called An Inglorious Columbus, and its about evidence that Hwui Shan and a party of Buddhist Monks from Afghanistan discovered America in the Fifth century A.D. I haven't read it yet because if how fragile it is, but this video reminded about it.
Do really think that humans ie Black people didn't inhabit their own planet, a planet where they appeared first and where they have pictographs of them standing next to dinosaurs? 😂 You hybrids are silly. 😂 You are literally on a Black planet and have the nerve to question whether there were Black people in the Americas as if the Americas aren't the old world and the birth place of humanity? Some of went to good schools and the library and know that socalled nonblack people have only been on the planet for six to ten thousand years and have no history or heritage apart from barbarism and yet they have the audacity to lie about everything associated with civilization and history. Shalom
I have taught 3rd grade Social Studies In Louisiana for 12years . We spend about 4 weeks on Poverty Point. It is such an amazing topic. This place is amazing. Have you ever studied the Chitimacha tribe in South Louisiana?
Great to hear. I am in the north east, we learned about some of the local tribes, but not in great detail (unless you wanted to). Curriculum in the 70-80s focused a lot on the Aztecs, Mayans and Incas, that shaped our world view. At that time anything about 'mound builders' in America was fairly fanciful, and often times was just obscured or forgotten by the newest waves of settlers from Europe. I think it is incredibly interesting to hear about the earliest civilizations in NA, like the mounds in Ohio, rock shelters etc. in PA and elsewhere, the large city in Missouri, and also where Chicago is today, as well as Poverty Point. Great stuff!
I grew up south of Pittsburgh and there are mounds all over the river valley. The state excavated a number of them with documented skeletons over 8 feet tall. A museum in Moundsville WV showcases these.
Awesome, I have family who are descendants from South American Tribes of Cherrua from what is today Uruguay. Can't wait to see the future projects for South America!
I am a member of the ojibway, Mackinac band of the upper peninsula of Michigan. There has been contact with Europeans for at least three hundred years. Any history of the tribe is tales about Mackinac island and a great flood! I was told that the fishing is what they lived on and there really wasn’t all that many deer. The sault tribe does have a website.
I've heard that when the "original settlers" landed that some of the natives spoke English with them. I obviously don't know if that's true. My conclusion on these subjects has been just to not have one. Doesn't much matter anyway
@@chingonbass to clarify, it's not supposed to mean that English speakers were there first. Only that they had been there earlier than what is thought of as the first landing. You sound offended, maybe I am misunderstanding
@@chingonbass google Samoset. I just did it and it clarified that my first statement was correct. He was the first native to enter the settlement and greeted them in English. Again, this isn't some white supremacy claim, just that history as we know it is wrong often
I am Waccamaw Waccamaw Siouan descendant of the Woccon tribe of costal NC I find it very interesting that we was the first of the Siouan speakers there isnt much known history about us and I would love to learn more I hope more of a deep dive is done on are ppl and ancestors
I live in NC in the foothills. The Catawba were in this area when Desoto came through. They were Souix speaking too. They had a really large area. Some think that the Cheraw and Saura were just Catawba that broke of . A lot of people in this area that have some native American ancestry all was say they have Cherokee in them but I would bet it is Catawba or the others I spoke of as they were Souix speaking too. The Cherokee were in the mountains.
I've been reading about NC tribes. These tribes fought each other all the time . The Catawba went all the way to the Great lakes,Pennsylvania. The Cherokee would come down like 1st a year and fight the Catawba's. The Shawnee even came in to Catawba territory and fought. All this is so interesting.
@@roscoeshepard that's interesting I have heard of the Catawba their next on my list cause there where a neighbor tribe to the Waccamaw Siouan AKA (Woccon) and was also a Eastern Sioux speaking Nation I've read bout the Cherokee Nation going to war with a lot of tribes I believe in the 17th and 18th century probably been happening for a while I would love to have some links or what material you read bout the Catawba and there history I'm hoping looking into a few different tribes in the region I can gather some kind of info about my ppl cause there is a very small amount documented bout my tribe that I'm aware of info from guys like who did this video is gems for ppl from tribes like mine where all but are entire culture was erased by the mass death then the worst of all being the boarding schools "save the man kill the savage" honestly was a fate worse than death in my eyes it drives me to learn all I can bout my ppls history and I practice primitive skills to connect with who i am as much as possible
This particular video has nothing to do with gospel oriented messages. He's speculating on ancient Indian migrations. He's lost in the weeds and his employer, Answers in Genesis seem fine with it.
While I am of Scots-Irish ancestry , so I would not be of any value for DNA that you seek . However , I have always held great respect and fascination of the Native American People . I would just like to thank you for the work you are doing , this is something that has truly needed to be done , for a long time . This history needs to be taught to our school children !
you might enjoy the book White Cargo by Jordan and Walsh, and a new book on celtic people entitled The Irish Americans, it has the protestants and R.C. together for the first time, and tells the entire east coast. Cheers. P.S. the Presbyterians were key in colonial history.
Studied & kept notes on your Linguistic/Gnome Project some years ago. Your finding reveal that we are more related than we think. Use to believe that I was specifically Western European, but many do not realize the influence of Asia & Africa. Have influence of Q & C through Mom from NB, Canada. So much for being German/Irish. Just love the connection of the Tower of Babel - Flood and Creation. Visited Hopewell a few years ago on a 30-day camping/traveling trip from New England. Extensively read about Native American History in Central & North America. The Sioux came/driven from the Eastern Lake areas and moved into Minesota and then to the Dakotas. The Red Record - Delawares is really interesting. Read some 15/20 years ago. I believe that some Indian Groups came to the East Coast and interjected into the existing Natives. Not very peaceably. As far as I believe - My First Nations People were in Eastern Canada & Northern New England. Mi'kmaq. As a youth I often heard mentioned Passamaquoddy. Thank you & God Bless. In Jesus' Name. Amen.
My great great grandmother was left on the doorstep of a doctor's house just outside the Choctaw Reservation in Mississippi. I would be interested in a study of the movement of the Choctaw and Chickasaw.
Dr Jeanson you are the historical hero of this and any other century. I am enthralled by every one of your videos and the depths of research you have put into discovering our planetary history while finding the connections to historical worldwide events that have repeatedly reshaped societies. DNA has led you to trace and validate so much about our human roots. I am always excited to learn more from your research.
I grew up just a few miles from Poverty Point. An interesting and fascinating place. Roughly 3000 years ago these people were engaged in trading across much of North America based on artifacts and rocks used in making arrowheads and spearheads, especially areas in the Mississippi Valley. They disappeared and the great mystery is what happened when the site was abandoned.
@@tatankalemont3606 The Poverty Point culture disappeared. Who knows whether their descendants are still around. Native Americans are not all descended from the same tribes or peoples. Tribes moved across the continent at different times. Whether the Poverty Point people were progenitors of other later tribes is something we will never know. There have never been any human bones found there, so even the remote chance of DNA surviving to be tested is not possible. Their fate remains a mystery.
@@leemack6224there were bones found at Baker Cave in Texas, a shelter site that dates back about 9000 years, with a 10,000 year occupation record before they disappeared around 7000 BC - 8000 BC. The bones have never been tested for DNA that I can find.
I too, as white European Immigrant, and who has since childhood felt curiosity and even kinship with Turtle island People , am very happy that your work is received so well by many. May you prosper, may you receive assistance when you need it. I see the human-nes in all, the acooperative and also warring streakes, call it DNA.
In my Family stories is one of my grandfather's grandfather (Cyrus Hoyt Carver), who built a dugout in Northeast Nebraska in 1869. He and a Samuel Haskins were two homesteaders in Antelope County. Before they started their homesteads, they negotiated with the local Poncans, particularly not to cut trees (which were only found in creek bottoms). Later when the US army were hunting the Poncans down to move them to reservations in Oklahoma, they secreted the tribes locations from the army.
My family settled in northern Nebraska and southern south Dakota, one of my great grandfathers was a brand inspector and mixed blood, they still have part of the ranch north of valentine
~2000 BC, during the time of the Tower of Babel there was a group separated who came here. They wiped each other out after about 1000 years. 600 BC there was a group who came from Jerusalem. Another group who included Mulek, youngest and only living son of King Zedekia king of Judah. There is so much evidence that shows the similarities between Hebrew and many Native American languages, including names and symbols. The record of the people who inhabited the americas is found in The Book of Mormon. The Book of Mormon is a record from the ancient americas.
What an interesting piece of work. I am Delaware and live in Oklahoma where we have the Spiro Mounds. My Great Grandfather was full blood Delaware and was a Methodist Missionary who traveled the rail lines preaching the gospel. His family came from the New Jersey area and settled around Copan and Dewey, Oklahoma. While serving as Assistant Librarian for the Cherokee Nation I learned much about native history. I learned that the Delaware are referred to as the Grandfather tribe and were a woodland and coastal tribe in the early years. I performed in the Trail of Tears outdoor drama for three years while learning about their history. Mostly originating from the North Carolina area. I am interested to watch more of your videos. I love American and world history. I recently discovered the Sage Mountain megalithic wall in Montana and am wondering where it fits into tribal histories or is it from the time of the giants? I noticed your map doesn't encompass that region. Thank you for you work.
Seems maybe you pinned the end of the era where they washed out a few generations and re wrote your peoples narrative . Although your great grandad was accomplished he was propelled because he was a good tool for setting up the treason that still leaves aboriginals handcuffed . But fun to track just the same .
I am happy to see someone investigating this. You gave me a second piece of information that interested me. In minute 42 the mention of knotted cords reminds me of the Incas. Who used knotted cords. Previously I lived briefly near the Huachuca Mts. in AZ. Later I spent a good deal of time in Peru. Well in AZ I was told Huachuca meant Scared Place. In Lima Peru they have sacred sites called Huacas. It's as if a civilization stretched from Peru to southern AZ. Good luck.
That's precisely how actual science is supposed to work. Finding the errors of those who went before is part of the deal. The whole passage from "Men In Black" sums it nicely - what we KNEW until we were proven wrong... unfortunately too many scientists resist being proven wrong - even with overwhelming evidence to the contrary. The old truism about having to wait for the old scientists to die before the new ideas can come out is just that - a truism.
I *LOVE* the work you’re doing in this project! Every episode you publish is more fascinating than the previous. Thank you for webbing together the unknown history of PreColumbian North America!
Fri Nov 24th. Thank you for putting these fascinating videos together. Finally, someone like you has come along and provided some much needed clarity on the Indigenous People's of America. Great enlightening work. Thank you again.
What I love about all of this is I stumbled across your studies be looking for pre-colonization history in the Americas and it was mostly silent. Despite the lip service paid to native Americans, no one is doing this but AIG?? This is amazing information and I love it so much. Can’t wait till you finally get into Californian history.
Where I live there are mounds about a mile from me. 61 acre, has burial mounds, temple/platform mounds a plaza area and a substantial midden. The largest mound they have built a wooden stairway to the top. Once at the top platform you can see the river for quite a long way in both directions. The mound is made of sea shells mostly scallop shells . Crystal River Archaeological State Park. From what I understand they were pre- Columbian. They were there longer than any other native mound builders some 1600 years. They found markings on pottery that was also found on pottery in Mexico.
Okay, so I'm about halfway through your video. I was hired by the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska in 2004 and moved to the Omaha Reservation and lived there for ten years. I took two semesters of Winnebago History at Little Priest Tribal College in 2004-2005. The origin story I heard in history class was this: they were the Mayans. They lived in the Yucatan Peninsula. A shaman back in the day saw that they were about to be hit by a tsunami, a really bad one, and the only way to survive was to leave, and migrate north. They were a hierarchical society then; they did human sacrifice to appease "the gods," and cut the hearts out of the sacrificed ones. They were all beholden to the priests, who got the messages from the gods, and ran everything -- so in other words, they were living in a world where the 1% controlled the 99%, and the 99% were slaves to the 1%. 250,000 of them got their stuff together, started marching north, the tsunami hit, wiped out the priests and the remnants of the culture they left behind, and they escaped to safety. But now they had to decide: did they want to go back to the way things had always been? Was there another way to manage a group of people? They prayed, they did whatever they did, and came up with the clan system. They designed 12 clans (at least one person told me no, it was 25), and each clan had its place around the circle -- it was arranged like a daisy with 12 petals -- so each can had its place, its own animal (bear, deer, water spirit, eagle, hawk, snake, elk, buffalo, Thunder, three more), and its own duties. They thought of everything it would take to manage a civilization. There were four "water" clans, four "earth" clans, and four "sky" clans -- but each clan had a separate function; all together, they managed the people collaboratively and no job went undone. There was no "President," no "House of Representatives," no "Supreme Court." That's hierarchical-based. Each new baby was welcomed into the Tribe, and each baby had its immediate place: its own family, its own clan, its own duties and roles within the tribe, and knew right where it belonged. They kept migrating north out of the Yucatan; they migrated around the Gulf, over to Florida, didn't like the hurricanes, migrated up the east coast where eventually -- here's where it relates to your video -- they encountered the Vikings. They have a Viking helmet in their Medicine Lodge in Wisconsin. Only a select few members have ever gone into the Medicine Lodge. My professor was one of them. They kept going north, and then at the Great Lakes area they ran into the French fur trappers, and that's where things started going south for them. With all of the battles, some of the clans died off or became severely underpopulated, and lost their traditions. There are still a few clans left, but those who are left are extremely western-religionized, sadly -- except those who still attend Medicine Lodge. He mentioned that they are the ones who built a lot of the shape mounds along the Mississippi and in Iowa. They liked to build mounds and could whip one together quickly. The last mound that was built was in Blue Earth, Minnesota. An artifact that had been with them on their migrations for thousands of years became obsolete, so they got together in the 1920s and built a mound together, and buried the artifact. Also he said that on their migration up and around the Gulf, etc., if a group of people wanted to break off and stay put, they did that. They carried a stone with them from the Yucatan, so whenever a group wanted to break off and stay put, the tribe would whack off a piece of stone from the big stone, and that fragment stayed with the remaining tribal members, so that they could always feel connected to the whole group. He named the Biloxi specifically as one of those groups who liked it there and stayed. As for the languages, I didn't memorize the list that our professor talked about, but your list is very similar. He said that the Winnebagos (Ho-Chunks) brought the "root" language and that all of the other languages you mentioned developed from Ho-Chunk; Ho-Chunk is the grandfather language. One possible meaning of "Ho-Chunk" is "people of the big voice"; he said (and I forget his exact wording now) it was more like a meaning that what they said, they followed through on. There is a Ho-Chunk Language and history program (or was, I assume it's still there) with the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska. They might be willing to talk to you. And there's more, but that's enough for now. I own a copy of the Red Record and have spent time reading through it. I totally believe it.
Leif Erickson followed an ancient trans-Atlantic trade route. It existed prior to a mini ice age between Newfoundland/North America, Greenland, Iceland, the British Isles, and Scandinavia. Leif didn't just hop in a long boat with his buddies one day and head out to sea, especially in the frigid North Atlantic. Norsemen knew about North America dating way back.
That was fascinating enough to be looked into, examined, attacked, dismembered, verified and discussed. Thanks for sharing. I hope this information you learned is saved somewhere and not lost for the benefit of future generations
The people who settled the Americas came from basically everywhere. They came by land and sea. I think National Geographic did a documentary on it. The basic idea is that new world has always been a cross road for multiple cultures.
What does 'basically everywhere' mean? Oft quoted theories are the land bridge (from Asia) and by boat (also Asia, but also potentially the south Pacific).
@davidhlnda He has a PhD in Bioinformatics from Harvard. Bioinformatics is using computers to study Genetics and biology. Go read his bio sometime instead of uniformed snide comments.
Tunxis Indians were in Farmington, Connecticut when the town was founded in 1645, my hometown, where I found many “points”, also known as arrowheads. The brook and pond on my parents property were a hunting ground where the arrowheads used by indigenous people were targeting deer while drinking water.
I visited the area a few years back and found it repulsive the disrespect still expressed in repressing the indigenous origins . And with all the fascinating buildings and settlements already existing . I guess if I stole something I would repress and hide its evidence . Especially barbaric treasonous means . At least in NY they have many reservations and heritage trails . Probably why there is still a snobby air in old new england . Better than others to excuse oppression and deviant means . ANyway - you actually seem like a peach but I will bet you know what Im saying . Especially Massachusetts it seemed . Tally Ho ;)
Thank you for taking your personal time to make us this excellent & informative video! Another UA-camr made a video about genetics & they found Hebrew DNA in some of the native Americans DNA. When it comes down to it, we're all related. God bless!
They are likely presuming Hebrew DNA to be something other than what it is. Dr. Jeanson has identified the L-T major branch as the Hebrew branch. I doubt Natives would have anything other than Q, C, or in some rare cases R.
@@robertmize327 I'm not even a Mormon, but it's pretty obvious that Jesus is a created being. _He is the image of the invisible God, the _*_firstborn_*_ of all creation. - Colossians 1:15 - ESV_ _“And to the angel of the church in Laodicea write: ‘The words of the Amen, the faithful and true witness, _*_the beginning of God's creation_*_ - Revelation 3:14 - ESV_ _The Lord _*_created me_*_ at the beginning of his work, the first of his acts of old. - Proverbs 8:22 - RSV_
You are Heaven sent!! I am Salt River Pima. I have so many questions! I cant wait to learn where I came from. (Did I really come from the Aztec?) Our language is similiar to Spanish language. We were actually called "Akmiel Au'thum" (Desert People). The missionaries gave us the name Pima because of a misunderstanding. They would ask us "Who are you people?" Not understanding the English Language, we responded with, "No pimach" which means "we don't understand" and they thought we said we were Pimas.
Oh, how very interesting. I lived in Pima Co. for nearly 50yrs, and knew that Pima meant "we/I don't understand," but I've always wondered why. What the origin was. Thank you for sharing and clarifying the history of your tribe.
Read the Book of Mormon it's all about your people. The Indian people are descended through Joseph who was sold into Eqypt and the tribe of Judah his brother. The native American people are ancient Israelites. See Genesis Chapter 49 verse 22. The wall is the Atlantic Ocean. Look into the findings of Eqyptian mummies discovered in the caves of the Grand Canyon in the late 1800s. Then everything went silent. The Smithsonian shut it all down. To admit that Eqyptians came to the USA would open a big can of worms. Best to keep that one shut and just Deny everything. It would have proved Darwinism wrong as well. We can't have that.
I live in Newark, or as we call it, "nerk". There used to be a 75' tall pyramid near interstate 70 that was torn down and used as part of the dam for Buckeye Lake.
If we discard "Mudflood", "Tartaria", etc, the 'Melinated', 'darker hue', 'bronze' or "Black peoples" were the early indigenous of N.A. Caucasions were still in caves when the Black man inhabited America, Europe, Papa New Guinea, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, etc. There were various types as in size, builds, tribes. Always, there was raw, huh? The Transatlantic slave trade is a typical 'half a hoax', ya know? Very intriguing study/vid. But say it, The Black man was here first after the great flood. UGH!
My brother's wife is German and Blackfoot. This subject is very interesting to me even though I'm not native American. So many states names sound native American. Such great names
My family used to own the property that Poverty Point World Heritage Site exists on and still owns the surrounding lands. According to my Grandfather who raised me and my Great Grandfather, it was a major trading hub that would have from tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of people at Poverty Point and the many, many other mounds that surrounded it that most people aren't even aware of. There's still a couple of small mounds within sight of the large mound, but the mounds that date back the farthest is actually the ones on the LSU Campus. Farming was the main reason that there were probably hundreds of mounds that were destroyed, and I'm sure that was part of it, but they fail to mention what would have been large amounts of money that was paid to the landowners by the Federal Government to let them go in and destroy or flatten out the mounds. This gave the farmers a win/win situation. The Government fixed the land so it could all be farmed and they paid them a good amount of extra money on top of that. Then in the 1950s the Government paid a dredging Company to come in and dredge Bayou Macon, getting them to move further on one side than the other so many ancient artifacts were destroyed and covered in the spoil banks. They did so much that was blatantly wrong just to hide how advanced our ancient ancestors were. Another fact people don't realize is that it's basically on the 33rd Parallel which is where many ancient Archeological sites are.
You know..i never exactly dug into our questioned who was here before...i hasn't realized people populated so much after the flood. But it's not hard to accept. So now I'm hearing about Egyptian stuff, Buddha/Tibetan props in the grand canyon and it had led me here. A known source i hope to trust... cool stuff. Now I'm going to be researching and watching all of these videos! Great works! G-d bless your journey in enlightening us and bringing us back to the Bible.
Thanks Nathaniel, very nice presentation, i am happy some of the gray areas seem to become more diverse. A math lover, and geometry for its proofs, love the Mandelbrat set, because the closer you zoom in adding a point, creates a larger polygon, and realizes more information. It may apply to your research. I know of 3 generations of Sioux, black foot, but all from my mothers side, my mom passed at 94, her mom 92, and her mom 90's near my birth in 1956. My grandmother's discussed her growing up in a chicken coup, probably SE PA, one brother a wealthy lawyer in NY-srate. My father's side European. Always an interesting presentation, thanks for your good work.
Some of the dates you shared seem relatable to ancient ecological disasters in Asia and Europe, volcanic eruptions & recorded (and unrecorded) famines). The Sea People migrations effected a lot of the Middle East and southern Europe, plus much more that hasn't been shared to the public yet.
Ageed , although this is informative I feel no closer to real truth . Have to believe the origin of reservations (used to trick as a form of protection only after being subjugated and oppressed to near death ) was to wash "tribal" history by buying elders special rights (elites) to spew an alternative narrative after washing out a few generations . If one was to admit the tribes are still incredibly oppressed ?
Thank you. My grandmother was full blooded Native American, Osage from Indian Country, Oklahoma. I trust the word of the Native people much more than most scholars of European descent. I see bias with many Euro American scholars. The Native people are simply honest and humble. They don't tell tall tales or try to make things fit their preconceived notions. You are doing a great job. You have humility. So, you understand that everything is not as perfectly understood as some people believe it to be I will tell you that my father was a scientist educated in an Ivy League college but he gave great credit to the knowledge of our ancestors. ❤️
I love hearing your findings about the early Americans, amazing research! If I could make one request - your arrow direction is not intuitive to me. My instinct tells me that an arrow showing time should be from the past forward in time, moving forward, not backward. You have the arrows pointing toward the past. Perhaps it would be clearer if your arrows pointed from past location to the new location. But it may just be me. In any case, I love seeing your updates with this research. Thank you for sharing it!
The large earthworks and megastructures weren't made by Native American. The elders say they were there when we moved in to the area. These were probably made by the cultures that were in the area before the great flood.
For what its worth. If you look at old maps Before 1500 The "Americas" were covered with cities all along the east and west coasts. And all over the interior one map that showed the st Lowrance seaway going all the way to Chicago But no great lakes . Then after 1500 maps show the great lakes. My opinion civilization formed in the American continent after the flood. Than somewhear around 13 to 1500. Something devastating destroyed the continent. Perhaps war or earth quake , meteor shower. Something destroyed the civilization, which was very advanced than we are today. The survivors became the stone age like natives the explorers found living here. I am convinced our history is not what we have been told.
I love hearing fact filled history of part of my ancestors. There are stories and there are more modern histories that depict their lives. I can't wait to hear more. Thank you for all your hard work.
Love this. There is so much history we literately cover up, thousands of years of history ignored, that we could learn from. I wish more of it was published and made mainstream like so many other histories. Some of the blanks are filled in by The Book of Mormon: Another Testament of Jesus Christ.
@@davidhlnda Yes, I know very well who they are, and happen to also know that they are very committed scientists who also have the rare quality of also being honest with themselves and the rest of the world. Very different from the science community you are used to.
'Dr. Rob Carter published a piece answering a question about a secular paper, and the degree to which his qualifications and critiques apply to _Traced_ is...notable.' _Traced_ doesn't do what we're told it does. It's full of basic errors and shoddy analysis.
@@FrgvDntFrgt8060 There always detractors to anything that does not toe to the current dogma. I have not read Dr. Carters prognostications, but I will ( if I can find it), and will also find out what his history and funding are. Suffice to say I have a pretty good idea what his argument is, and do not expect to be much impressed.
My grandfather, Ernest R Sutton excavated the Adena mounds in the late 1920s and 1960s in Doddridge County WV. In his opinion, the giant skeletons were of Souian genetics. This research proves it in my eyes. His archeological competence was way ahead of his time, although horribly under-appreciated by the professionals. Thank you! The Doddridge Heritage Museum has his papers/legacy...please research further, everyone!
And Anthony Sutton did good stuff on Wall Street systematically funding every totalitarian regime, plus tech proliferation. Maybe he's a relative, too. Famous research facility in California before they kicked him out
The Lakota Sioux were in posession of the woodland region of Northern Wisconsin as late as the middle 1600's. They were driven out of the area in several battles during that period. They were driven out by the current native Americans in that area, the Ojibwa, and were pushed west across the Mississippi...and later on to the plains of the west.
Most native history is fairly new.. Anything with a horse is PoST columbian.. their verbal history is only a few hundred yrs old... There have been humans here for well over 18k yrs..
I live in Newark Oh and grew up going to the circle mound park. Your right it is amazing. Walking through the entrance you can feel the ghosts of those who built it and imagine their processions or ceremonies. Inside its about 30 acres and has a smaller eagle mound in the center. Its a beautiful place as is the octogan mound which is owned by the country club who built a golf course on it in the early 1900s. They did preserve it but still today the public cannot go to see it unless you golf with the country club. Both mounds are precise and awe inspiring.
Are you interested to know the origin of the Hopewell culture from approximately 600 BC to 400 AD and also the Adena culture form about 2,000 BC and destroyed about 200 BC? These two cultures are recorded in The Book of Mormon.
I always look forward to these videos, watching it for the 2nd time today, lots of great information! Thank you for all the hard work you do on this subject!
This was absolutely fascinating. I'll need to watch it another dozen times or so to take it all in. But I love it. Thank you for this great video. God Bless you.
The Indian Mound adjacent to a golf course is a 10 minute walk from my house. It afford a view of a great deal of the northeastern Ohio region. It is directly adjacent to a former defense facility. It was once involved with the processing of radioactive materials. I’m certain Russian and other foreign governments traveled as tourist to the top of the mound to snap pictures of the formally classified facility.
"It afford a view of a great deal of the northeastern Ohio region" Wow. This sounds so cool!!😲 Then came the next part;. "It was once involved with the processing of radioactive materials"😳🫤🫠
I Attended Osu-Newark and majored in history until i got into a dispute with the head of the History department. She insisted that the natives were peaceful until white europeans showed up. I countered that we find headless bodies buried upside in burial mounds, which indicates violence and dishonored burial. She failed my every assignment and test after this. She now also runs the Gender Studies department… The mounds were in constant dispute. Most of the academics wanted the mounds owned by the golf course to be seized by the state. They claimed the golf course would damage the mounds. The reality was the opposite. The mounds in the park are eroding, as there isn’t funding to maintain them. The mounds in the golf course are meticulously maintained. They make sure they don’t shrink, that they aren’t damaged, and, at least twenty years ago when i was in college, were open to allowing tours. But given the hostility from the academics at OSU-N, I wouldn’t be surprised if they stopped.
The circular mounds aren't a stadium. They are what's left of fortifications in times of war. Large enough to house people and supplies, and usually close to water, they were places of refuge, although some of them are spiritual in nature.
I'm a mix of European and Native American, it's nice to see work being done to trace the tribal groups. We are Cherokee on my moms side and I await your work on our group on the East coast. I thank you.
there is a huge mound on the Pamunky reservation in Virginia on the East Coast. nearby is a road called mt olive-cohoke. perhaps could be related to the Cahokian mound building civilization in Ohio?
This series is truly fascinating. Thank you. There're legends Spaniards meeting natives who were from Europe. Other better known story about Templars came to Nova Scotia area where they stayed with native tribe. Who in turn started to use Templar flag.
@pediavhw yes. and long before Sinclair the vikings had come..perhaps several times with many of them staying. Did you know Sinclair and company also traveled west to atleast the Montana area?.
@@Saer-s9u I didn't know that, thank you for telling me. 😁 I just find it funny that if it hadn't been for the printing press, Sinclair would have gotten credit for what they gave Columbus credit for, the discovery of America, and it wasn't a discovery because it was known about already, lol! I mean the Phoenicians, St. Brendan, the Vikings, Prince Madoc, and Henry Sinclair were all here way before Columbus, and that's just who we know about.
@@ChristChickAutistic yepperdooie!!! it's a fine line in communication. Lore told within families,coded poems and songs and even whispered gossip keep things alive for generations.
When the Pilgrims got there most of the native population had been wiped out. Many think it was disease brought by the Spaniards. Also, they were met by an Indian that already spoke English, so they'd already been in contact with prior settlers.
Yeah? The pilgrims weren’t the first people from England to show up on the east coast. Jamestown was established in 1607. The mayflower sailed in 1620. Squanto learned English from earlier interactions with Englishmen. A lot of the settlers/explorers that came to America learned Algonquin to converse with natives, so teaching them English isn’t that hard.
@Shwatso yes, Celtic. I was surprised when I came across it. I don’t recall their name at the moment. They were a very small tribe. The Atlantic side of the US had an ice bridge just like the Pacific side.
The first people anywhere on the planet were Black people. That's who they found and that's who some of the Europeans were, too. It's always wise to study history from primary sources and see descriptions of the people involved to avoid white surpremacist scholarship. Shalom
There are many strange structures that were found by Europeans when they first arrived in North America that the natives claimed not to have anything to do with. Natives told the settlers that those structures had been there when their ancestors arrived in the region. In the area where I grew up many giant skeletons were found in large stone like sarcophagus. Some disintegrated when air got to them but some remained and were put in museums and private collections which were collected up by the Smithsonian a few years after the Civil War. That was about the same time that Darwinism was taking over in Ivy League schools. The Smithsonian was created by Darwinists exclusively.
@@mantissmith5212 Their real name is Nephites and they were completely destroyed by the Lamanites, from whom most modern American Natives descend. The true origins of pre-Colombian Americans and their history, and their knowledge and relationship with Jesus Christ is detailed in The Book of Mormon, a sacred ancient record of those people revealed to the world in 1830 with the restoration of the true Church of Jesus Christ. Among many other things the Book of Mormon gives an account of Jesus Christ's glorious visit to the North American continent after his resurrection, of his ministry among the inhabitants of that part of the continent, and of the establishment of His church among that people and of his promise to return. Christ personally visitated that group of ancient Americans because they were of the House of Israel, being the descendants of a prophet named Lehi who left Jerusalem, under God's command and guidance, a few years before the Babylonian conquest and destruction of the kingdom of Israel, that is approximately 600 years before Christ's birth. Knowledge of that the one true God of the Bible and of Christ's visit to the North America continent has remained with some Native tribes to this day, and that is why they mistook Christopher Columbus for God when he arrived. Supporting evidence that ancient Americans knew Jesus Christ and had his gospel, as the Gentiles also learned it from the Bible, is found for example in the belief of some Native tribes. The Cherokee for example believe many of the same things from the Gospels, they had drawings of a man with a beard (who looked like the stereotypical image of Jesus) in their art, which is strange because no men in the tribe grew beards. "The Cherokee belived in Yahweh (God of the Hebew,) they worshipped the Supreme Being "Ye ho waah or Yo ho wah," which is very similar to the Hebrew name "Yahweh or Yahoveh" for God. They believe in one Supreme Being--the Creator-- and have surprising connections to Christianity. Ancient Cherokee Indians believed, before 1750, that God was going to appear on Earth as a man and they called this person by five different Old Testament (Hebrew) names for Jesus. They have the stories of the great flood, and many other Old Testament stories. They also adhere to the prohibitions found within the Ten Commandments. Cherokees keep one day without work for prayer. (www.cherokeediscovery.com/religion.html.) The name for Cherokee People is “A ni yun wi yah” which in English means “The Principle People” or akin to “The People of God” or "the Chosen People." The devotion of the Cherokee people was to the Supreme Holy Spirit who could not be looked upon and whose energy was the fire of all creation and the fire of all life and who resided in the heavens and on earth through purified people. They were rigidly non idolaters and neither would they observe any religious images among them or keep idolatrous religious ceremonies, instead the Cherokee people adored the one Great Spirit, God, who they described as “the only Giver and Taker of life.” They were devoted to a higher principled way of living according to their ancient religious beliefs of the one benevolent God. Cherokees believed this sole Author of creation was with them and they with God by His blessing of mankind with animals and all plant and vegetable life. Their religious worship very closely paralleled the Mosiac institution in the Old Testament of the Bible. They were not pagans and were warned each year by their priests, just as the Old Testament warned about “...giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils; speaking lies in hypocrisy; having their conscience seared with a hot iron” (1 Timothy 4:1,2). When we look as far back as the 1600s, there still existed one minority sect of the Cherokee people who declared there existed three entities above who were always joined together in action and spirit, and were of the same mind. It was said that these three entities were always one in sentiment, in thought and action; They created all things and governed all things. The three entities sat on white seats above and all prayers were to be directed toward them. They had helpers and messengers known as angels who came to earth to help attend to the affairs of men. The Cherokees believed that in the beginning this trinity of entities created all creatures and creation to be harmless, as in Eden. The people were obedient to Ye ho waah (Jehovah God) and assembled for worship at the structures they were commanded to erect. They met early in the morning. When the people were all seated and silent, the priest known as "U ku wi a hi" (Uku) would commence his speech. The Uku would command the Cherokees to obey Ye ho waah in every respect, telling people they must do all that He directed them to do and to never disobey Him secretly because they were never alone because Ye ho waah was with them. They were never to indulge in idle or vain conversation, or call anyone wicked names. They were to abstain from all lewdness and polygamy. Children were to be hardworking and obedient to their parents This and many more fascinating facts about the history of the Cherokee people can be found at this link. www.cherokeediscovery.com/religion.html" (source: laetitiasmile.blogspot.com) The Lakota Indians also had similar Judeo-Christian believes. They identify Satan in two evil spirits. They believed there were two spirits who lived on the surface of the earth: Iktomi and Anog-Ite. Iktomi, the spider, was the trickster spirit. Before he was Iktomi, his name was Woksape - “Wisdom” - but lost his name and position when he helped the evil spirit Gnaskinyan play a trick on all the other spirits. This story sounds very much like a corrupted version of the Bible's story about Jesus Christ and Satan (the two spirits mentioned by the Lakota) at the time when "there was a war in heaven," except that Anog-Ite (Jesus Christ) is erroneously identified as another evil spirit. the Bible tells us that Satan was "a morning star" full of light and wisdom," perfect almost as Jesus Christ, but he rebelled against God and attempted to take His power and glory without being worthy of it, and he seduced others ("Gnaskinyan play a trick on all the other spirits") the third part of the stars of heaven" (or the spirit children of God) and convinced them to following him instead of Jesus Christ. Therefore Satan was expelled from heaven to become the father of all lies and the destroyer, losing his "position" as a glorious spirit, as the Lakota also put it. The Book of Mormon, which has been rejected and vilified for so long, is a true scripture and a second witness of Jesus Christ, given to mankind by the hands of other Jews, the "other sheep" Christ was referring to when he said: "And other sheep I have, which are not of this fold: them also I must bring, and they shall hear my voice; and there shall be one fold, and one shepherd." (John 10:16.) Those sheep were not the Gentiles but a branch of the House of Israel, because Jesus said that he came for his people first, the people of the Covenant, and that through them all the world would be evangelized. Therefore, the words of The Book of Mormon, which are the words of the other sheep of the House of Israel, side by side with the words of the Jews of the Bible, testify of the divinity and mission of Jesus Christ; because it is by the mouth of two witnesses that the truth is established. That book is now slowly been proven true by new studies and discoveries such as this one, made by objective scholars who are uncovering facts intentionally hidden for centuries that match facts in the Book of Mormon. If you would like to know the truth about Native Americans and learn about precious Gospel truth long lost, please read The Book of Mormon.
Yes. The mongoloid Indians told early explorers and anthropologists that they didn't build the mounds and that the mounds were there when they possessed the land so I don't understand why he is still trying to attribute the building of the mounds to these native American groups. That B.C. migration group probably didn't come to the Americas over an Alaskan land bridge. He may not be including some very important dna groups in his study that may provide more concrete answers. How can you look at the Olmec statutes and not include african and autronesian dna in your study? The Olmecs probably had much earlier migrations to the Midwest and southeast than the muscogee creeks because they were probably in the Americas a lot earlier. As a native Georgian, I am happy that he indicated that the muscogee creeks are not native to Georgia and the Southeast and came from Mexico. He did this in another presentation. He needs to discuss the Cherokee oriigins also, they are not native to Georgia either. There are other tribes like the yamasee, yuchi, timuca, guale, ocmulgee, etc. that are probably more plausible candidates for being moundbuilders.
Very nice, I appreciate the work you put into this. I live 20 minutes east of Cincinnati but I grew up down the road from serpent mound. I am currently working at finding lost or forgotten mounds, along with the ones that were described but may or not possibly exist today. Even the ones that have been destroyed can often times still be found and mapped with extensions that were not even visible centuries ago by using lidar to find the remains of the destroyed mounds and hidden remains of existing mounds.
Not only were the vikings and the templars in New England at least 1000 years ago, the Chinese landed on the east coast about 600 years ago. But further back, around 200 AD Christians landed in Connecticut. There alters made of rock are still here.
I love how you accept the history as truth and then see if there are parallels. This is so important in understanding History. I have believed for a long time in the History of the Book of Mormon and believe it also has parallels to this video as it is the history from 600BC to 400AD. Read this book and do so with an open heart of study to see if it fits. The people, their timing, their lives, their forts, their weapons, their beliefs...all seem to "fit" historically. Truth is powerful :)
Also contains history of a group of people who left Jerusalem when the Tower of Babel was built. 2000bc. The Book of Mormon discusses religious, monetary, military, social, financial, judicial histories here including building mounds around their cities to protect from invaders, like evidenced by the hopewell Indians! As the author states here many other peoples probably migrated to the Americas but unfortunately we don’t have any written records of them!
@@DJohn-fr9ox just to make you feel better… There are actually other records. Some of them were unfortunately destroyed by successive waves of invaders, which were driving the different indigenous peoples out of the area. Other records were hidden, and may yet come to light. So there is hope :-)
@@DJohn-fr9ox From what I been told, the Mayan Popul Vue may describe Ephraimite-Canaanite/Phoenician people that departed traveling from North Africa to Central America. Apparently there was a large group based in Egypt; after the plagues, half traveled to North Africa and then on to the Americas, while the other half traveled along the coast to the east, eventually spreading to Polynesia. Not sure if this is all accurate, but it's an interesting theory.
This information & the ongoing research is both fascinating and & important. I always doubted the scant historical information we were taught in elementary school. Thank you & God bless your efforts!
Wow!!!Just found. Subscribed! This is amazing forensic history research using 🧬 then putting it on a real map. super cool!!. And sure hard to argue biological facts matching w the historical docs already available. Hope u get a lot of volunteers for ur studies. Ty for putting this all together n keep up the good work! God bless🙏
Learn from academia, not some biblical opportunist who is making things up in order to fit his interpretations of post flood happenings. Show me bible passages that prove what he is saying. There are none.
I found it really interesting that you found all the literature, noting that they would keep their family history in knots. Recently, they have discovered the Incas also used to keep the history in knots, and a young college student discovered a way to decode they’re not system. He identified the accounting method of the nots
Good research. Because of the channel name, I was expecting some crazy leaps tying Abraham to N. America or something. I'm glad you're following the information and staying grounded. It was actually really entertaining. Thanks for coalescing all this information and sharing it. It is a severely under researched history.
I don't golf. But that must be just great. Both from an esthetic angle as well as relaxing and reflecting next to something ancient that once was meaningful to earlier people. I guess it's also some kind of neopagan/masonic statement for some of these country club members.
Europe (recorded by the Romans) had a major global catastrophe at 535/6AD during that second NA migration period that likely was the forcing function for that excursion. Sea Peoples/Bronze Age collapse happened around 1000BC (same as the first migration). There seems to be a major solar cycle of 12,000 years with smaller cycles at the nodes of the long cycle. 12kyo, 6kyo, 3kyo,1.5kyo which may closely match your genetic breadcrumb events left behind.
Did anyone else notice; This is some type of scientific creationism Christian sub set of research. The dates seem off by thousands of years, coinciding with dates of “creation”
I deeply appreciate the work that went into this It's quite enjoyable indeed and helpful to see so much about North America 😊 At times, I laughed out loud at the delivery and curious forward motion of this minister! Thank you AIG! God is wonderful This kept Acts 17:28-31 in mind
Yes, lost tribes, my grandfather told me I'm party Shawnee yet I'm really white complected.(We're converts my mother and just her children)Lots of people guess me to be "germin" my family tree places me clear to ancient Egyptian, which means natives were Israelites. ( The family tree shows the Jewish names of family members, but can not show my father's origin as solely European dwelling on the Rhine they moved around, from Rome and before! ) Also we're Jews that are pre colonist! Really, how is that? The church has the correct and largest genealogy. Israelites have been coming here and thier mixed decent. Only recently has America become a vast melting pot
@user-bq9ow1wj4jactually the people doing this very video have said that northern tribes have DNA of Jewish descent. You are correct that not all Native Americans have Jewish descent.
What about haplogroup x? Found in the middle east, including Israel...up to 600 AD. Also found in some eastern NA tribes. Have you gotten that far? Thanks.
Champlain named Canada from a word of the Algonquin: Kenatta (My spelling). He thought they were referring to the village, but I suspect they were referring to their race. Here's a key. 'Ite' as in Israelite is likely pronounced 'atta', from my studies. So an Israelite would be Israelatta. So, Kenatta in modern terms would be Kenite. The Kenites lived in Midian. Moses father in law was Kenite. Today Midian is Madyan in Saudi Arabia.
@@jcmaguireIt's possible that this historical perspective could prove your comment otherwise. And the first comment to be closer towards a possible link. After looking back as far as you can and tracing forward, it seems logical that language and travel have a connection to culture over time. However, one must also be able to fully comprehend the cultural context to comprehend the 🔗 links.
I grew up and believed, while in grade and middle school, that the western half of North America was "empty" then I read the Lewis and Clark journals and realized they just went from one village and or tribe to another. Most were friendly and even warned to stay away from certain other tribes that were not so friendly. And that a king/chief rode part way with L&C, to provide safe passage. Also, that most of their travels were by boat, not necessarily by land. That book should still be required reading in schools. I'm 63, and I know most public schools have changed dramatically since I attended.
I was taught the same thing and the problem is that I'm Native American so I asked them if America was empty who was Squanto who is Sacagawea and who did we fight and who fed the pilgrims at the first Thanksgiving LOL do you know what my teacher said there was no one here that counts. I'll repeat that no one here that counts.
Postscript: years later I went back to that teacher and said why did you teach us about the Nissan in World War II but you didn't teach us about the trailer of Tears. I've never met anyone that was taught about the Trail of Tears in school. We have so many people making up pseudohistory. There are Africans claiming they were here first. White people claiming they were here first. It doesn't change the fact that when you did get here and you found us here and I don't mean you personally that you made us walk and committed genocide on us. I have two sources for this one my grandmother's grandfather whom she knew, he was born in 1830 did not die until she was saying she was born in the 1880s and he told her about it but also I read the diary of the captain that took my family west. My family was separated and set North to go west with the Potawatomi and we're not permitted to go west with the rest of the Cherokee. We were taking forcibly by soldiers not allowed to take coats blankets or much of anything. We were told blankets would be provided sure they were come spring. And they were pox infected and per the diary of the captain who nearly resigned because of it they not only knew that they were infected with pox it was quite deliberate. When the captain threatened to resign they told him to go ahead because we'll just find someone more enthusiastic to do his job. He stayed on to save lives. I wish I knew how to find his descendants so that I can honor them in some way for his actions
@@carolmoore1038 I wasn’t told my six great grandfather was the last survivor of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. I discovered it only after both my parents were dead a few years ago; that and much more. He was a blacksmith who the tribes took particular interest in and was subsequently asked to go around after the expedition and teach the friendly tribes metal working.
In fact, none of my families history was preserved in public schools. We just somehow popped up in Los Angeles and we’re told to shutup and get to work. All that History was some abstract thing some people did of which no real connection was ever made.
Im not Dutch and Irish, Dad. Im Scottish and Jew!
@@glennleedicus my family was at Harrodsburg with Boone many of the things that occurred there have been told to historians who for some reason were told to keep it under wraps. Not sure what my grandkids are going to find out LOL but some of the stories were passed on to me and I don't understand why they don't want them known. Meaning the other Pioneer stock
@@carolmoore1038never met someone who didn't learn about the trail of tears
Their own folklore says they arrived in the Americas and exterminated cannibalistic giants who lived here before them. I would really like to see a series on that history.
Gentle giants on the west coast who migrated away and disappeared from contact.
@@surepain3375 I see what you did there.😉
indeed. the pre flood adamites and the nephilim.
@@surepain3375
I am sure conspiracy r us, Jon levi, static in the attic, michelle Gibson, and others would have videos on this for you.
@@viridisxiv766some had to survive so idk about pre or post but personally with my tribe the mounds were burial grounds of mounds builders becouse they were so mean the arth rejected them
Beautiful and inspirational juxtaposition of Science and Tradition. Thank you! I have a degree in Anthropology and am continually disappointed in the way people's eyes glaze-over whenever I attempt to share exciting intel of the organization of societies and the fluidity of culture. More recently I get rabid push-back from those who cry "cultural appropriation" without any awareness whatsoever of the transitory nature of the human species, or the documented and established history of exchange between groups (both technical and cultural). Too little critical inquiry and too much politically-motivated interference.
"Rabid push-back" yeah
new findings in anthropology is my fave subject. Also early american history White Cargo by Jordan and Walsh and Jewish Pirates of the Caribbean are great reads.
I am Métis Canadian and half Finnish. My British ancestor came over to Canada during the fur trade and married an aboriginal woman. That’s what makes us Métis a mixed people who were neither accepted by the early European settlers nor Aboriginals. We were a people in between the conflict always to be considered half-bloods. I mainly carry Finnish blood over any specific ethnicity. Other parts of my family tree are German, and French. My daughter is half Chinese so the line keeps on moving. I find this history very helpful and informative. Thank you for your research. It applies to everyone born in North America. My family is fortunate to have a Family Tree in a book. Not everyone can trace back their history as far as the time of English conquest. Thanks again for posting this information. 🙏🏻
Interesting distinction that in Vietnam French Métis is not complimentary but in the Philippines Spanish mestizo s positive.
@@aislinnkeilah7361 huh?
Where is your DNA evidence?
Ya'et'eh I'm 1 💯% native american apache cree of canada we still here we 0% europeans and yeah not every person intermarried and crees are growing today thank god!
He doesnt have any@@captainsensiblejr.
I've never cared about the history of North America until I started watching this series. It's very much like how I didn't care about geology until I linked it to the Flood. Thank you for making me want to learn. 👍
uh ... @@sterlingfallsproductions3930 MAYBE he's saying, the history didn't ring true to him.
Most of us are too distracted with other things it's always well to take time to learn.
@@sterlingfallsproductions3930
Not really, you're just projecting.
@@sterlingfallsproductions3930these people are insane.
Same, honestly. I loved learning the history of my country (Canada) but everything else was hard to be interested in. Now with these videos I can connect my love for the science of genetics with history and it all tells a story. It's so fascinating!
I live about 20 miles from Poverty Point, and I’ve visited it several times over the years mostly as a child. It might just be time for another visit.
I live in northeast Arkansas (Jonesboro) and grew up in eastern Craighead county and Mississippi county. I grew up working on many different farms and driving tractors then began a cotton scouting service. I have covered thousands of acres and found dozens of native village sites that are Mississipian and older. There are mounds literally everywhere in northeast Arkansas. However, I have collected thousands of surface artifacts and I have hundreds and hundreds of arrowheads and stone tools that are thousands of years old. I have paleo Clovis points, Dalton points and lots of archaic and woodland era points (Hardin and Adena styles) and, of course, lots of Mississipian artifacts. I have always wondered who built the older mounds like Poverty Point in Louisiana. I have always had a bit of an issue with the timeline proposed by the archeologists that I have worked with as they place the Clovis and Daltons as 7000 years and MUCH older. I volunteered at ASU (Jonesboro) archeology department while in undergrad and I went on to medical school. I now do flint knapping and primitive living skills as a hobby and I'm still fascinated by the ancient north American history. This video presentation answers several questions that I have had. While I was at the Creation Museum in Kentucky I bought a book detailing the genetic distribution of various groups across the globe. The developing study of genetics will probably answer a lot of questions about the past.
AMEN! TRUTH!
The oldest man on earth lived 6000 years ago
Yup yup I spent 2 years in NWA and 5 or so in NE Oklahoma ...the fossils and such to be found were amazing. ❤
I am born n bred in Plymouth, Ma.
Have you read The Book of Mormon?
I think the older mound sites, parallel in time with the elephants, are the older population mentioned in that book (the Jaredites in Ether).
@@dannyd7426 I actually have read the B.O.M., when I was 11, I was baptized Mormon, tho no longer practicing. I don't do organized religion anymore, as it's a control the population mechanism. And any religion that espouses polygamy on any level, isnt for me.
Why am I so enthralled by this? Truth is always powerfully attractive!
So glad to see you include the Red Record. It really made an impression on me, and makes sense. Thanks for sharing your knowledge 🙏🏼
I live in Ohio. There are undocumented mounds almost everywhere.
All over the Midwest and from Eastern Texas eastward and down into central Florida.
There were some in the woods where i grew up. Wet used to climb on them until we found out what they were. then we got the switch if we disobeyed..haha. ohio had quite a few mounds
I'll go climb on those mounds any day. 😛
Same here. Paint Creek area Greenfield Ohio.
I was born & raised I'm Southern Ohio, I'm 68, I've lived here my whole life. As a very small child, my father was an excavator. He took me places, showed me some smaller mounds, that no one talks about, we lived 4 miles up the hill from the Ohio river. He was always collecting arrow heads & such, while he was working. I'm fascinated with all of this history. My family arrived in 1802, by flatboat on the Ohio, on my german father's side of the family.
I am descended from Patawomeck Indigenous Peoples and English colonists from Virginia.There is so much lost in the collective human culture of this country.
The material is here in Virginia, they just do not look for it. May I suggest the book White Cargo by Jordan and Walsh and also Jewish Pirates of the Caribbean gives very early explorer info, a fave paperback of mine! And the film made in Virginia entitled New World gives the real story of your famous ancestor here in Stafford County and John Rolfe. Took five years and chatting with indigenous at length to make the film. Cheers!
A TON about Indigenous American cultures is hidden or suppressed as well. Bound to happen when the US government spends 50 years sending anyone who talks about it to the nut house. Our medicine societies went underground, but are still around if you can find them, just very secretive.
Thank you for addressing this and sharing what you have been able to see.
I commend your reasoning for trying to fill in the true history of America. All Americans need to know true history, especially of all natives. I'm am Choctaw and would love to know the complete history of America.
I invite you to read to The Book of Mormon Another testament of Jesus Christ. You might be surprised, it’s an amazing record of the people in the Americas.
Interesting, I'm part Choctaw also. You're the first person that I have heard about that was also, other than the story in the movies
Study real stuff on the subject, not some crazy guy's hypothetical musings. Your educational level is showing.
We don’t even know the history of every land mass out there. Why stop at America?
@@sterlingfallsproductions3930it’s all theories. People should learn that there’s a huge difference between theories and facts
I really hope you get volunteers and help to complete this. It's a very important part of North American history and the people who lived there. Great video!
Go to Cahokia....there's a whole museum based on the Mound Builders!!
I would, but I live in NZ😃@@pennygreenler4351
I have a book written in 1885 called An Inglorious Columbus, and its about evidence that Hwui Shan and a party of Buddhist Monks from Afghanistan discovered America in the Fifth century A.D. I haven't read it yet because if how fragile it is, but this video reminded about it.
Maybe get it microfilmed? Then you can donate the microfilm to historical libraries and museums, keep the book!
By Edward D. Vining. Keep that antique copy intact, you can download the pdf online for free.
They sell current printing on Amazon
Do really think that humans ie Black people didn't inhabit their own planet, a planet where they appeared first and where they have pictographs of them standing next to dinosaurs? 😂 You hybrids are silly. 😂 You are literally on a Black planet and have the nerve to question whether there were Black people in the Americas as if the Americas aren't the old world and the birth place of humanity? Some of went to good schools and the library and know that socalled nonblack people have only been on the planet for six to ten thousand years and have no history or heritage apart from barbarism and yet they have the audacity to lie about everything associated with civilization and history. Shalom
@@benyahudadavidl We humans love to embrace theories and speculations and to turn them into beliefs without the hard work of scientific proof.
I have taught 3rd grade Social Studies In Louisiana for 12years . We spend about 4 weeks on Poverty Point. It is such an amazing topic. This place is amazing. Have you ever studied the Chitimacha tribe in South Louisiana?
You teach 3rd grade, huh? So really, you only need a 4th grade education.
Great to hear. I am in the north east, we learned about some of the local tribes, but not in great detail (unless you wanted to). Curriculum in the 70-80s focused a lot on the Aztecs, Mayans and Incas, that shaped our world view. At that time anything about 'mound builders' in America was fairly fanciful, and often times was just obscured or forgotten by the newest waves of settlers from Europe. I think it is incredibly interesting to hear about the earliest civilizations in NA, like the mounds in Ohio, rock shelters etc. in PA and elsewhere, the large city in Missouri, and also where Chicago is today, as well as Poverty Point. Great stuff!
@@SS-zg6ofsome were Amorites
I've waited my whole life to know this- Thank you!
Then you should of asked the Native Populous about America,.....not this guy who didn't,.....
I grew up south of Pittsburgh and there are mounds all over the river valley. The state excavated a number of them with documented skeletons over 8 feet tall. A museum in Moundsville WV showcases these.
Are they at the museum? No pictures of them online or mentioned by the museum website.
The Smithsonian would’ve took this asap and hid it like they do everything else
@@leedurham3144yeah, and the earth is flat, aliens built the pyramids and santa clause delivers toys to all the good girls and boys too, right?
@@cliftongaither6642 you still believe what the government is telling you?
@@dfirment1064 take off your tinfoil hat and join reality.
Awesome, I have family who are descendants from South American Tribes of Cherrua from what is today Uruguay. Can't wait to see the future projects for South America!
I am a member of the ojibway, Mackinac band of the upper peninsula of Michigan. There has been contact with Europeans for at least three hundred years. Any history of the tribe is tales about Mackinac island and a great flood! I was told that the fishing is what they lived on and there really wasn’t all that many deer. The sault tribe does have a website.
Great flood stories are pretty normal amongst the OG americans. It's in the maya, aztec origin stories, hopi have it, navajo, apache, Otomi, Inca etc.
I've heard that when the "original settlers" landed that some of the natives spoke English with them. I obviously don't know if that's true. My conclusion on these subjects has been just to not have one. Doesn't much matter anyway
@@markalton4610 that's pure BS.
@@chingonbass to clarify, it's not supposed to mean that English speakers were there first. Only that they had been there earlier than what is thought of as the first landing. You sound offended, maybe I am misunderstanding
@@chingonbass google Samoset. I just did it and it clarified that my first statement was correct. He was the first native to enter the settlement and greeted them in English. Again, this isn't some white supremacy claim, just that history as we know it is wrong often
I am Waccamaw Waccamaw Siouan descendant of the Woccon tribe of costal NC I find it very interesting that we was the first of the Siouan speakers there isnt much known history about us and I would love to learn more I hope more of a deep dive is done on are ppl and ancestors
I live in NC in the foothills. The Catawba were in this area when Desoto came through. They were Souix speaking too. They had a really large area. Some think that the Cheraw and Saura were just Catawba that broke of . A lot of people in this area that have some native American ancestry all was say they have Cherokee in them but I would bet it is Catawba or the others I spoke of as they were Souix speaking too. The Cherokee were in the mountains.
I've been reading about NC tribes. These tribes fought each other all the time . The Catawba went all the way to the Great lakes,Pennsylvania. The Cherokee would come down like 1st a year and fight the Catawba's. The Shawnee even came in to Catawba territory and fought. All this is so interesting.
@@roscoeshepard that's interesting I have heard of the Catawba their next on my list cause there where a neighbor tribe to the Waccamaw Siouan AKA (Woccon) and was also a Eastern Sioux speaking Nation I've read bout the Cherokee Nation going to war with a lot of tribes I believe in the 17th and 18th century probably been happening for a while I would love to have some links or what material you read bout the Catawba and there history I'm hoping looking into a few different tribes in the region I can gather some kind of info about my ppl cause there is a very small amount documented bout my tribe that I'm aware of info from guys like who did this video is gems for ppl from tribes like mine where all but are entire culture was erased by the mass death then the worst of all being the boarding schools "save the man kill the savage" honestly was a fate worse than death in my eyes it drives me to learn all I can bout my ppls history and I practice primitive skills to connect with who i am as much as possible
respect
Any account of the Lumbee Tribe..
Of N.C ?..
My Girlfriend and family are from N.C and have this ancestry
Please give Dr. Jeanson another place to do the videos. Thank you! Your research and knowledge is just awesome! God bless you!
He has his own channel, too if you want to see him there 🙂
Please, don't.
This particular video has nothing to do with gospel oriented messages. He's speculating on ancient Indian migrations. He's lost in the weeds and his employer, Answers in Genesis seem fine with it.
A very thorough, precise, and fascinating presentation of a history we are only recently becoming more aware of. Well done!
While I am of Scots-Irish ancestry , so I would not be of any value for DNA that you seek . However , I have always held great respect and fascination of the Native American People . I would just like to thank you for the work you are doing , this is something that has truly needed to be done , for a long time . This history needs to be taught to our school children !
Hey pal they have found Scottish kilt weave in Chile millennium old
Bravo!👍
you might enjoy the book White Cargo by Jordan and Walsh, and a new book on celtic people entitled The Irish Americans, it has the protestants and R.C. together for the first time, and tells the entire east coast. Cheers. P.S. the Presbyterians were key in colonial history.
Studied & kept notes on your Linguistic/Gnome Project some years ago. Your finding reveal that we are more related than we think. Use to believe that I was specifically Western European, but many do not realize the influence of Asia & Africa. Have influence of Q & C through Mom from NB, Canada. So much for being German/Irish. Just love the connection of the Tower of Babel - Flood and Creation. Visited Hopewell a few years ago on a 30-day camping/traveling trip from New England. Extensively read about Native American History in Central & North America.
The Sioux came/driven from the Eastern Lake areas and moved into Minesota and then to the Dakotas. The Red Record - Delawares is really interesting. Read some 15/20 years ago. I believe that some Indian Groups came to the East Coast and interjected into the existing Natives. Not very peaceably.
As far as I believe - My First Nations People were in Eastern Canada & Northern New England. Mi'kmaq. As a youth I often heard mentioned Passamaquoddy.
Thank you & God Bless. In Jesus' Name. Amen.
I am so thankful I kept looking for a video to watch.
Blessings to you and yours in everyway 🙏🏼
My great great grandmother was left on the doorstep of a doctor's house just outside the Choctaw Reservation in Mississippi. I would be interested in a study of the movement of the Choctaw and Chickasaw.
Dr. Jeanson's previous video in this series covers the Choctaw and Chickasaw.
I have friends there.
@@ChristChickAutistic Familiar with Meridian?
@@williamrodgers2476 yup! I used to live in Morton, and went to Meridian a lot.
Very intriguing information about the previously lost history of North America. I'm hooked, and waiting for the next video, brother!
Previously lost history? Lol. No proof, it's still, obviously, lost.
Dr Jeanson you are the historical hero of this and any other century. I am enthralled by every one of your videos and the depths of research you have put into discovering our planetary history while finding the connections to historical worldwide events that have repeatedly reshaped societies. DNA has led you to trace and validate so much about our human roots. I am always excited to learn more from your research.
So happy to see Poverty Point mentioned. I grew up near there. Always fascinating to me!
I grew up just a few miles from Poverty Point. An interesting and fascinating place. Roughly 3000 years ago these people were engaged in trading across much of North America based on artifacts and rocks used in making arrowheads and spearheads, especially areas in the Mississippi Valley. They disappeared and the great mystery is what happened when the site was abandoned.
We did not disappearr, we are still walking around, He with the pen writes history. We have ben written out for now.
@@tatankalemont3606 The Poverty Point culture disappeared. Who knows whether their descendants are still around. Native Americans are not all descended from the same tribes or peoples. Tribes moved across the continent at different times. Whether the Poverty Point people were progenitors of other later tribes is something we will never know. There have never been any human bones found there, so even the remote chance of DNA surviving to be tested is not possible. Their fate remains a mystery.
@@leemack6224there were bones found at Baker Cave in Texas, a shelter site that dates back about 9000 years, with a 10,000 year occupation record before they disappeared around 7000 BC - 8000 BC.
The bones have never been tested for DNA that I can find.
@@tatankalemont3606the victors write the history and we all should know the truth of the original peoples.
I too, as white European Immigrant, and who has since childhood felt curiosity and even kinship with Turtle island People , am very happy that your work is received so well by many. May you prosper, may you receive assistance when you need it. I see the human-nes in all, the acooperative and also warring streakes, call it DNA.
I look forward to every episode, and Dr Jeanson never disappoints! ❤
In my Family stories is one of my grandfather's grandfather (Cyrus Hoyt Carver), who built a dugout in Northeast Nebraska in 1869. He and a Samuel Haskins were two homesteaders in Antelope County. Before they started their homesteads, they negotiated with the local Poncans, particularly not to cut trees (which were only found in creek bottoms). Later when the US army were hunting the Poncans down to move them to reservations in Oklahoma, they secreted the tribes locations from the army.
White folks did kill off the natives! He didn't say Christopher Columbus was a lie.
My family settled in northern Nebraska and southern south Dakota, one of my great grandfathers was a brand inspector and mixed blood, they still have part of the ranch north of valentine
~2000 BC, during the time of the Tower of Babel there was a group separated who came here. They wiped each other out after about 1000 years. 600 BC there was a group who came from Jerusalem. Another group who included Mulek, youngest and only living son of King Zedekia king of Judah. There is so much evidence that shows the similarities between Hebrew and many Native American languages, including names and symbols.
The record of the people who inhabited the americas is found in The Book of Mormon. The Book of Mormon is a record from the ancient americas.
Look into the Nemenhah records, as well. They are Lamanite in origin.
None of BoM has been verified according to Gleason Archer: Secret History.
What an interesting piece of work. I am Delaware and live in Oklahoma where we have the Spiro Mounds. My Great Grandfather was full blood Delaware and was a Methodist Missionary who traveled the rail lines preaching the gospel. His family came from the New Jersey area and settled around Copan and Dewey, Oklahoma. While serving as Assistant Librarian for the Cherokee Nation I learned much about native history. I learned that the Delaware are referred to as the Grandfather tribe and were a woodland and coastal tribe in the early years. I performed in the Trail of Tears outdoor drama for three years while learning about their history. Mostly originating from the North Carolina area. I am interested to watch more of your videos. I love American and world history. I recently discovered the Sage Mountain megalithic wall in Montana and am wondering where it fits into tribal histories or is it from the time of the giants? I noticed your map doesn't encompass that region. Thank you for you work.
Seems maybe you pinned the end of the era where they washed out a few generations and re wrote your peoples narrative . Although your great grandad was accomplished he was propelled because he was a good tool for setting up the treason that still leaves aboriginals handcuffed . But fun to track just the same .
I am happy to see someone investigating this. You gave me a second piece of information that interested me. In minute 42 the mention of knotted cords reminds me of the Incas. Who used knotted cords.
Previously I lived briefly near the Huachuca Mts. in AZ. Later I spent a good deal of time in Peru. Well in AZ I was told Huachuca meant Scared Place. In Lima Peru they have sacred sites called Huacas.
It's as if a civilization stretched from Peru to southern AZ.
Good luck.
Thanks for showing us the ineptitude of past scholastic prowess and the ability to upend and revise the little mistakes.
That's precisely how actual science is supposed to work. Finding the errors of those who went before is part of the deal. The whole passage from "Men In Black" sums it nicely - what we KNEW until we were proven wrong... unfortunately too many scientists resist being proven wrong - even with overwhelming evidence to the contrary. The old truism about having to wait for the old scientists to die before the new ideas can come out is just that - a truism.
I *LOVE* the work you’re doing in this project! Every episode you publish is more fascinating than the previous. Thank you for webbing together the unknown history of PreColumbian North America!
Fri Nov 24th. Thank you for putting these fascinating videos together.
Finally, someone like you has come along and provided some much needed clarity on the Indigenous People's of America.
Great enlightening work.
Thank you again.
Silly. A lot of people have hypothesis. This doesn't even get close to the level of scientific theory. Read real stuff, not made up crap.
So cause he's telling you a lie he's telling the truth huh cause hes white 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@@gambofini do you mean his last name, White?
@@oirampeceda2409 no his skin complexion
@@gambofini okay, but coincidentally, his last name is, White.
Thank you. As history is being even more hidden today than in the past, your project brings honor back to "his-story".
What I love about all of this is I stumbled across your studies be looking for pre-colonization history in the Americas and it was mostly silent. Despite the lip service paid to native Americans, no one is doing this but AIG?? This is amazing information and I love it so much. Can’t wait till you finally get into Californian history.
Where I live there are mounds about a mile from me. 61 acre, has burial mounds, temple/platform mounds a plaza area and a substantial midden. The largest mound they have built a wooden stairway to the top. Once at the top platform you can see the river for quite a long way in both directions. The mound is made of sea shells mostly scallop shells . Crystal River Archaeological State Park. From what I understand they were pre- Columbian. They were there longer than any other native mound builders some 1600 years. They found markings on pottery that was also found on pottery in Mexico.
Dude, this is incredibly intelligent and full of layered insights. Well done!!
I love your book Traced👍🏼I'm still enjoying it.
Okay, so I'm about halfway through your video. I was hired by the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska in 2004 and moved to the Omaha Reservation and lived there for ten years. I took two semesters of Winnebago History at Little Priest Tribal College in 2004-2005.
The origin story I heard in history class was this: they were the Mayans. They lived in the Yucatan Peninsula. A shaman back in the day saw that they were about to be hit by a tsunami, a really bad one, and the only way to survive was to leave, and migrate north.
They were a hierarchical society then; they did human sacrifice to appease "the gods," and cut the hearts out of the sacrificed ones. They were all beholden to the priests, who got the messages from the gods, and ran everything -- so in other words, they were living in a world where the 1% controlled the 99%, and the 99% were slaves to the 1%.
250,000 of them got their stuff together, started marching north, the tsunami hit, wiped out the priests and the remnants of the culture they left behind, and they escaped to safety.
But now they had to decide: did they want to go back to the way things had always been? Was there another way to manage a group of people?
They prayed, they did whatever they did, and came up with the clan system.
They designed 12 clans (at least one person told me no, it was 25), and each clan had its place around the circle -- it was arranged like a daisy with 12 petals -- so each can had its place, its own animal (bear, deer, water spirit, eagle, hawk, snake, elk, buffalo, Thunder, three more), and its own duties. They thought of everything it would take to manage a civilization. There were four "water" clans, four "earth" clans, and four "sky" clans -- but each clan had a separate function; all together, they managed the people collaboratively and no job went undone.
There was no "President," no "House of Representatives," no "Supreme Court." That's hierarchical-based. Each new baby was welcomed into the Tribe, and each baby had its immediate place: its own family, its own clan, its own duties and roles within the tribe, and knew right where it belonged.
They kept migrating north out of the Yucatan; they migrated around the Gulf, over to Florida, didn't like the hurricanes, migrated up the east coast where eventually -- here's where it relates to your video -- they encountered the Vikings. They have a Viking helmet in their Medicine Lodge in Wisconsin. Only a select few members have ever gone into the Medicine Lodge. My professor was one of them.
They kept going north, and then at the Great Lakes area they ran into the French fur trappers, and that's where things started going south for them. With all of the battles, some of the clans died off or became severely underpopulated, and lost their traditions. There are still a few clans left, but those who are left are extremely western-religionized, sadly -- except those who still attend Medicine Lodge.
He mentioned that they are the ones who built a lot of the shape mounds along the Mississippi and in Iowa. They liked to build mounds and could whip one together quickly. The last mound that was built was in Blue Earth, Minnesota. An artifact that had been with them on their migrations for thousands of years became obsolete, so they got together in the 1920s and built a mound together, and buried the artifact.
Also he said that on their migration up and around the Gulf, etc., if a group of people wanted to break off and stay put, they did that. They carried a stone with them from the Yucatan, so whenever a group wanted to break off and stay put, the tribe would whack off a piece of stone from the big stone, and that fragment stayed with the remaining tribal members, so that they could always feel connected to the whole group. He named the Biloxi specifically as one of those groups who liked it there and stayed.
As for the languages, I didn't memorize the list that our professor talked about, but your list is very similar. He said that the Winnebagos (Ho-Chunks) brought the "root" language and that all of the other languages you mentioned developed from Ho-Chunk; Ho-Chunk is the grandfather language. One possible meaning of "Ho-Chunk" is "people of the big voice"; he said (and I forget his exact wording now) it was more like a meaning that what they said, they followed through on.
There is a Ho-Chunk Language and history program (or was, I assume it's still there) with the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska. They might be willing to talk to you.
And there's more, but that's enough for now.
I own a copy of the Red Record and have spent time reading through it. I totally believe it.
You should contact Jeanson either through Answers in Genesis or other more direct means. He may never read this post.
Thanks so much for sharing this ❣️
Leif Erickson followed an ancient trans-Atlantic trade route. It existed prior to a mini ice age between Newfoundland/North America, Greenland, Iceland, the British Isles, and Scandinavia.
Leif didn't just hop in a long boat with his buddies one day and head out to sea, especially in the frigid North Atlantic.
Norsemen knew about North America dating way back.
That was fascinating enough to be looked into, examined, attacked, dismembered, verified and discussed. Thanks for sharing. I hope this information you learned is saved somewhere and not lost for the benefit of future generations
Amazing
Dr Nate, still enjoying your content! I too always wondered about our Americans! Keep your videos coming!!
The people who settled the Americas came from basically everywhere. They came by land and sea. I think National Geographic did a documentary on it. The basic idea is that new world has always been a cross road for multiple cultures.
Bingo
National Geographic don't tell the truth who is it run by just white wash lies
What does 'basically everywhere' mean? Oft quoted theories are the land bridge (from Asia) and by boat (also Asia, but also potentially the south Pacific).
Rest assured that most of what National Geography says is not true.
@@SS-zg6of Genetically, they all came from Asia
Thank again, Dr Jeanson for your works
Doctor? Seriously? Of what? Christ is king church? Dudes bs
@davidhlnda He has a PhD in Bioinformatics from Harvard. Bioinformatics is using computers to study Genetics and biology.
Go read his bio sometime instead of uniformed snide comments.
Tunxis Indians were in Farmington, Connecticut when the town was founded in 1645, my hometown, where I found many “points”, also known as arrowheads. The brook and pond on my parents property were a hunting ground where the arrowheads used by indigenous people were targeting deer while drinking water.
I visited the area a few years back and found it repulsive the disrespect still expressed in repressing the indigenous origins . And with all the fascinating buildings and settlements already existing . I guess if I stole something I would repress and hide its evidence . Especially barbaric treasonous means . At least in NY they have many reservations and heritage trails . Probably why there is still a snobby air in old new england . Better than others to excuse oppression and deviant means . ANyway - you actually seem like a peach but I will bet you know what Im saying . Especially Massachusetts it seemed . Tally Ho ;)
Thank you for taking your personal time to make us this excellent & informative video! Another UA-camr made a video about genetics & they found Hebrew DNA in some of the native Americans DNA. When it comes down to it, we're all related. God bless!
They are likely presuming Hebrew DNA to be something other than what it is. Dr. Jeanson has identified the L-T major branch as the Hebrew branch. I doubt Natives would have anything other than Q, C, or in some rare cases R.
The Book of Mormon gives an account of some of the early American peoples.
Jesus Christ is the Word. Be sure your church doesn't relegate Him to created status.
JOHN 1
@@robertmize327 I'm not even a Mormon, but it's pretty obvious that Jesus is a created being.
_He is the image of the invisible God, the _*_firstborn_*_ of all creation. - Colossians 1:15 - ESV_
_“And to the angel of the church in Laodicea write: ‘The words of the Amen, the faithful and true witness, _*_the beginning of God's creation_*_ - Revelation 3:14 - ESV_
_The Lord _*_created me_*_ at the beginning of his work, the first of his acts of old. - Proverbs 8:22 - RSV_
Native American tribes have a common story of a white bearded God who visited their ancestors.
Very interesting and informative. Thank you for covering this history for us. God bless you and your ministry.
thank you for your hard work and dedication in piecing just a part of our history, a lot has been lost but I truly believe a lot can be learned
You are Heaven sent!! I am Salt River Pima. I have so many questions! I cant wait to learn where I came from. (Did I really come from the Aztec?) Our language is similiar to Spanish language. We were actually called "Akmiel Au'thum" (Desert People). The missionaries gave us the name Pima because of a misunderstanding. They would ask us "Who are you people?" Not understanding the English Language, we responded with, "No pimach" which means "we don't understand" and they thought we said we were Pimas.
❤fascinating!
Oh, how very interesting. I lived in Pima Co. for nearly 50yrs, and knew that Pima meant "we/I don't understand," but I've always wondered why. What the origin was.
Thank you for sharing and clarifying the history of your tribe.
You came from Adam
Read the Book of Mormon it's all about your people. The Indian people are descended through Joseph who was sold into Eqypt and the tribe of Judah his brother. The native American people are ancient Israelites. See Genesis Chapter 49 verse 22. The wall is the Atlantic Ocean. Look into the findings of Eqyptian mummies discovered in the caves of the Grand Canyon in the late 1800s. Then everything went silent. The Smithsonian shut it all down. To admit that Eqyptians came to the USA would open a big can of worms. Best to keep that one shut and just Deny everything. It would have proved Darwinism wrong as well. We can't have that.
Sad you rely on our enemies to know where you came from ?
I live in Newark, or as we call it, "nerk".
There used to be a 75' tall pyramid near interstate 70 that was torn down and used as part of the dam for Buckeye Lake.
Well, at least a pagan structure went to good use.
Pagans were in Europe. Your welcome.
@@paulbriggs3072sheesh there's a lot of ignorant people, so easy to taint the mind against others with bs they're so eager to believe
If we discard "Mudflood", "Tartaria", etc, the 'Melinated', 'darker hue', 'bronze' or "Black peoples" were the early indigenous of N.A.
Caucasions were still in caves when the Black man inhabited America, Europe, Papa New Guinea, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, etc.
There were various types as in size, builds, tribes. Always, there was raw, huh?
The Transatlantic slave trade is a typical 'half a hoax', ya know?
Very intriguing study/vid.
But say it, The Black man was here first after the great flood.
UGH!
My nickname is Sechem. I am Cree, Chippewa, Métis, French, Irish from North Dakota.
I am German, French, Hungarian, and Crow. For the most part , though some relatives have said Blackfeet. It is good to hear you
Interesting, I am Chippewa Cree Blackfoot and Crow plus French and Germanic white grew up in Indiana
My brother's wife is German and Blackfoot. This subject is very interesting to me even though I'm not native American. So many states names sound native American. Such great names
Means wise leader or Elder
My family used to own the property that Poverty Point World Heritage Site exists on and still owns the surrounding lands. According to my Grandfather who raised me and my Great Grandfather, it was a major trading hub that would have from tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of people at Poverty Point and the many, many other mounds that surrounded it that most people aren't even aware of. There's still a couple of small mounds within sight of the large mound, but the mounds that date back the farthest is actually the ones on the LSU Campus.
Farming was the main reason that there were probably hundreds of mounds that were destroyed, and I'm sure that was part of it, but they fail to mention what would have been large amounts of money that was paid to the landowners by the Federal Government to let them go in and destroy or flatten out the mounds. This gave the farmers a win/win situation. The Government fixed the land so it could all be farmed and they paid them a good amount of extra money on top of that. Then in the 1950s the Government paid a dredging Company to come in and dredge Bayou Macon, getting them to move further on one side than the other so many ancient artifacts were destroyed and covered in the spoil banks. They did so much that was blatantly wrong just to hide how advanced our ancient ancestors were.
Another fact people don't realize is that it's basically on the 33rd Parallel which is where many ancient Archeological sites are.
Wonderful and exciting!
You know..i never exactly dug into our questioned who was here before...i hasn't realized people populated so much after the flood. But it's not hard to accept.
So now I'm hearing about Egyptian stuff, Buddha/Tibetan props in the grand canyon and it had led me here. A known source i hope to trust... cool stuff.
Now I'm going to be researching and watching all of these videos!
Great works! G-d bless your journey in enlightening us and bringing us back to the Bible.
Thanks Nathaniel, very nice presentation, i am happy some of the gray areas seem to become more diverse. A math lover, and geometry for its proofs, love the Mandelbrat set, because the closer you zoom in adding a point, creates a larger polygon, and realizes more information. It may apply to your research. I know of 3 generations of Sioux, black foot, but all from my mothers side, my mom passed at 94, her mom 92, and her mom 90's near my birth in 1956. My grandmother's discussed her growing up in a chicken coup, probably SE PA, one brother a wealthy lawyer in NY-srate. My father's side European. Always an interesting presentation, thanks for your good work.
Some of the dates you shared seem relatable to ancient ecological disasters in Asia and Europe, volcanic eruptions & recorded (and unrecorded) famines). The Sea People migrations effected a lot of the Middle East and southern Europe, plus much more that hasn't been shared to the public yet.
Ageed , although this is informative I feel no closer to real truth . Have to believe the origin of reservations (used to trick as a form of protection only after being subjugated and oppressed to near death ) was to wash "tribal" history by buying elders special rights (elites) to spew an alternative narrative after washing out a few generations . If one was to admit the tribes are still incredibly oppressed ?
Thank you. My grandmother was full blooded Native American, Osage from Indian Country, Oklahoma. I trust the word of the Native people much more than most scholars of European descent. I see bias with many Euro American scholars. The Native people are simply honest and humble. They don't tell tall tales or try to make things fit their preconceived notions.
You are doing a great job. You have humility. So, you understand that everything is not as perfectly understood as some people believe it to be
I will tell you that my father was a scientist educated in an Ivy League college but he gave great credit to the knowledge of our ancestors. ❤️
I love hearing your findings about the early Americans, amazing research! If I could make one request - your arrow direction is not intuitive to me. My instinct tells me that an arrow showing time should be from the past forward in time, moving forward, not backward. You have the arrows pointing toward the past. Perhaps it would be clearer if your arrows pointed from past location to the new location. But it may just be me. In any case, I love seeing your updates with this research. Thank you for sharing it!
The large earthworks and megastructures weren't made by Native American. The elders say they were there when we moved in to the area. These were probably made by the cultures that were in the area before the great flood.
That was a thought of mine, but this man seem pretty certain the natives built them.
They saw the cool structures and decided to move in, just like we do when we buy a house in a new area.
Aliens
For what its worth.
If you look at old maps
Before 1500
The "Americas" were covered with cities all along the east and west coasts.
And all over the interior
one map that showed the st Lowrance seaway going all the way to Chicago
But no great lakes .
Then after 1500 maps show the great lakes.
My opinion civilization formed in the American continent after the flood.
Than somewhear around 13 to 1500.
Something devastating destroyed the continent.
Perhaps war or earth quake , meteor shower.
Something destroyed the civilization, which was very advanced than we are today.
The survivors became the stone age like natives the explorers found living here.
I am convinced our history is not what we have been told.
@@SamuelHammond-ok4ur sounds about right to me.
I love hearing fact filled history of part of my ancestors. There are stories and there are more modern histories that depict their lives. I can't wait to hear more. Thank you for all your hard work.
Love this. There is so much history we literately cover up, thousands of years of history ignored, that we could learn from. I wish more of it was published and made mainstream like so many other histories. Some of the blanks are filled in by The Book of Mormon: Another Testament of Jesus Christ.
The freemasonic book of demon heresies contains no religious truth.
Maybe it's good for some cultural anthropology studies on Smith. Period
This is fascinating work. Thank you for the passion you bring. I look forward to even more discoveries.
Just so you know this dude bases his research on evangelical Christian belief systems not science. Research his group
@@davidhlnda
Yes, I know very well who they are, and happen to also know that they are very committed scientists who also have the rare quality of also being honest with themselves and the rest of the world. Very different from the science community you are used to.
'Dr. Rob Carter published a piece answering a question about a secular paper, and the degree to which his qualifications and critiques apply to _Traced_ is...notable.' _Traced_ doesn't do what we're told it does. It's full of basic errors and shoddy analysis.
@@FrgvDntFrgt8060
There always detractors to anything that does not toe to the current dogma. I have not read Dr. Carters prognostications, but I will ( if I can find it), and will also find out what his history and funding are. Suffice to say I have a pretty good idea what his argument is, and do not expect to be much impressed.
In short, Jeanson makes elementary math and function mistakes at every step in order to produce the conclusions he _must_ have.
Wow. Thanks for helping to decipher a lost history. Great video.
My grandfather, Ernest R Sutton excavated the Adena mounds in the late 1920s and 1960s in Doddridge County WV. In his opinion, the giant skeletons were of Souian genetics. This research proves it in my eyes. His archeological competence was way ahead of his time, although horribly under-appreciated by the professionals. Thank you! The Doddridge Heritage Museum has his papers/legacy...please research further, everyone!
And Anthony Sutton did good stuff on Wall Street systematically funding every totalitarian regime, plus tech proliferation.
Maybe he's a relative, too.
Famous research facility in California before they kicked him out
@@chrise-ih4ixThat's a No...
@@nford3886 anyhow not few quality authors with that last name seemingly
The Lakota Sioux were in posession of the woodland region of Northern Wisconsin as late as the middle 1600's. They were driven out of the area in several battles during that period. They were driven out by the current native Americans in that area, the Ojibwa, and were pushed west across the Mississippi...and later on to the plains of the west.
Most native history is fairly new.. Anything with a horse is PoST columbian.. their verbal history is only a few hundred yrs old... There have been humans here for well over 18k yrs..
The Lakota and the other plains tribes are all originally from the Ohio valley.
I live in Newark Oh and grew up going to the circle mound park. Your right it is amazing. Walking through the entrance you can feel the ghosts of those who built it and imagine their processions or ceremonies. Inside its about 30 acres and has a smaller eagle mound in the center. Its a beautiful place as is the octogan mound which is owned by the country club who built a golf course on it in the early 1900s. They did preserve it but still today the public cannot go to see it unless you golf with the country club. Both mounds are precise and awe inspiring.
Are you interested to know the origin of the Hopewell culture from approximately 600 BC to 400 AD and also the Adena culture form about 2,000 BC and destroyed about 200 BC? These two cultures are recorded in The Book of Mormon.
I always look forward to these videos, watching it for the 2nd time today, lots of great information! Thank you for all the hard work you do on this subject!
This was absolutely fascinating. I'll need to watch it another dozen times or so to take it all in. But I love it.
Thank you for this great video. God Bless you.
The Indian Mound adjacent to a golf course is a 10 minute walk from my house. It afford a view of a great deal of the northeastern Ohio region.
It is directly adjacent to a former defense facility. It was once involved with the processing of radioactive materials. I’m certain Russian and other foreign governments traveled as tourist to the top of the mound to snap pictures of the formally classified facility.
Hmmm......
"It afford a view of a great deal of the northeastern Ohio region" Wow. This sounds so cool!!😲 Then came the next part;. "It was once involved with the processing of radioactive materials"😳🫤🫠
& Now It's A Nuclear END One Way OR The Other @ 39 CPM Cancer Lotto
I Attended Osu-Newark and majored in history until i got into a dispute with the head of the History department. She insisted that the natives were peaceful until white europeans showed up. I countered that we find headless bodies buried upside in burial mounds, which indicates violence and dishonored burial. She failed my every assignment and test after this. She now also runs the Gender Studies department…
The mounds were in constant dispute. Most of the academics wanted the mounds owned by the golf course to be seized by the state. They claimed the golf course would damage the mounds. The reality was the opposite. The mounds in the park are eroding, as there isn’t funding to maintain them. The mounds in the golf course are meticulously maintained. They make sure they don’t shrink, that they aren’t damaged, and, at least twenty years ago when i was in college, were open to allowing tours. But given the hostility from the academics at OSU-N, I wouldn’t be surprised if they stopped.
This is exactly , precisely why Native Americans don’t like to spread their knowledge. This is what ends up happening to earth. Wastelands
The circular mounds aren't a stadium. They are what's left of fortifications in times of war. Large enough to house people and supplies, and usually close to water, they were places of refuge, although some of them are spiritual in nature.
Totally agree with you. The earthworks are very similar to what was done here in New Zealand by the Maori in war against the colonial govt.
Theory….only another theory
I'm a mix of European and Native American, it's nice to see work being done to trace the tribal groups. We are Cherokee on my moms side and I await your work on our group on the East coast. I thank you.
there is a huge mound on the Pamunky reservation in Virginia on the East Coast. nearby is a road called mt olive-cohoke. perhaps could be related to the Cahokian mound building civilization in Ohio?
This series is truly fascinating. Thank you.
There're legends Spaniards meeting natives who were from Europe. Other better known story about Templars came to Nova Scotia area where they stayed with native tribe. Who in turn started to use Templar flag.
So when Sinclair came there in 1398 he would have known about it already, amarite?
@pediavhw yes. and long before Sinclair the vikings had come..perhaps several times with many of them staying. Did you know Sinclair and company also traveled west to atleast the Montana area?.
@@Saer-s9u I didn't know that, thank you for telling me. 😁 I just find it funny that if it hadn't been for the printing press, Sinclair would have gotten credit for what they gave Columbus credit for, the discovery of America, and it wasn't a discovery because it was known about already, lol! I mean the Phoenicians, St. Brendan, the Vikings, Prince Madoc, and Henry Sinclair were all here way before Columbus, and that's just who we know about.
@@ChristChickAutistic yepperdooie!!! it's a fine line in communication. Lore told within families,coded poems and songs and even whispered gossip keep things alive for generations.
@@ChristChickAutistic I forgot to add..the internet also. that is a real double edged sword so need to sift wheat from chaff
Your work is so so needed. Thank you
When the Pilgrims got there most of the native population had been wiped out. Many think it was disease brought by the Spaniards. Also, they were met by an Indian that already spoke English, so they'd already been in contact with prior settlers.
Yeah? The pilgrims weren’t the first people from England to show up on the east coast. Jamestown was established in 1607. The mayflower sailed in 1620. Squanto learned English from earlier interactions with Englishmen. A lot of the settlers/explorers that came to America learned Algonquin to converse with natives, so teaching them English isn’t that hard.
There was a very small tribe in Alabama that were Celtic in origin. People came to America from all over.
@Shwatso yes, Celtic. I was surprised when I came across it. I don’t recall their name at the moment. They were a very small tribe. The Atlantic side of the US had an ice bridge just like the Pacific side.
@ShwatsoYup, very light brown hair and lightly tanned skin from mixing with the natives were observed by 1st person accounts.
The first people anywhere on the planet were Black people. That's who they found and that's who some of the Europeans were, too. It's always wise to study history from primary sources and see descriptions of the people involved to avoid white surpremacist scholarship. Shalom
There are many strange structures that were found by Europeans when they first arrived in North America that the natives claimed not to have anything to do with. Natives told the settlers that those structures had been there when their ancestors arrived in the region.
In the area where I grew up many giant skeletons were found in large stone like sarcophagus. Some disintegrated when air got to them but some remained and were put in museums and private collections which were collected up by the Smithsonian a few years after the Civil War. That was about the same time that Darwinism was taking over in Ivy League schools. The Smithsonian was created by Darwinists exclusively.
Those "giants" were Denisovans
Someone who has a clue
@@red2blackprofitswho are the Denisovans?
@@mantissmith5212
Their real name is Nephites and they were completely destroyed by the Lamanites, from whom most modern American Natives descend. The true origins of pre-Colombian Americans and their history, and their knowledge and relationship with Jesus Christ is detailed in The Book of Mormon, a sacred ancient record of those people revealed to the world in 1830 with the restoration of the true Church of Jesus Christ.
Among many other things the Book of Mormon gives an account of Jesus Christ's glorious visit to the North American continent after his resurrection, of his ministry among the inhabitants of that part of the continent, and of the establishment of His church among that people and of his promise to return. Christ personally visitated that group of ancient Americans because they were of the House of Israel, being the descendants of a prophet named Lehi who left Jerusalem, under God's command and guidance, a few years before the Babylonian conquest and destruction of the kingdom of Israel, that is approximately 600 years before Christ's birth.
Knowledge of that the one true God of the Bible and of Christ's visit to the North America continent has remained with some Native tribes to this day, and that is why they mistook Christopher Columbus for God when he arrived.
Supporting evidence that ancient Americans knew Jesus Christ and had his gospel, as the Gentiles also learned it from the Bible, is found for example in the belief of some Native tribes. The Cherokee for example believe many of the same things from the Gospels, they had drawings of a man with a beard (who looked like the stereotypical image of Jesus) in their art, which is strange because no men in the tribe grew beards.
"The Cherokee belived in Yahweh (God of the Hebew,) they worshipped the Supreme Being "Ye ho waah or Yo ho wah," which is very similar to the Hebrew name "Yahweh or Yahoveh" for God.
They believe in one Supreme Being--the Creator-- and have surprising connections to Christianity.
Ancient Cherokee Indians believed, before 1750, that God was going to appear on Earth as a man and they called this person by five different Old Testament (Hebrew) names for Jesus.
They have the stories of the great flood, and many other Old Testament stories. They also adhere to the prohibitions found within the Ten Commandments. Cherokees keep one day without work for prayer. (www.cherokeediscovery.com/religion.html.)
The name for Cherokee People is “A ni yun wi yah” which in English means “The Principle People” or akin to “The People of God” or "the Chosen People." The devotion of the Cherokee people was to the Supreme Holy Spirit who could not be looked upon and whose energy was the fire of all creation and the fire of all life and who resided in the heavens and on earth through purified people. They were rigidly non idolaters and neither would they observe any religious images among them or keep idolatrous religious ceremonies, instead the Cherokee people adored the one Great Spirit, God, who they described as “the only Giver and Taker of life.” They were devoted to a higher principled way of living according to their ancient religious beliefs of the one benevolent God.
Cherokees believed this sole Author of creation was with them and they with God by His blessing of mankind with animals and all plant and vegetable life. Their religious worship very closely paralleled the Mosiac institution in the Old Testament of the Bible.
They were not pagans and were warned each year by their priests, just as the Old Testament warned about “...giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils; speaking lies in hypocrisy; having their conscience seared with a hot iron” (1 Timothy 4:1,2).
When we look as far back as the 1600s, there still existed one minority sect of the Cherokee people who declared there existed three entities above who were always joined together in action and spirit, and were of the same mind. It was said that these three entities were always one in sentiment, in thought and action; They created all things and governed all things.
The three entities sat on white seats above and all prayers were to be directed toward them. They had helpers and messengers known as angels who came to earth to help attend to the affairs of men. The Cherokees believed that in the beginning this trinity of entities created all creatures and creation to be harmless, as in Eden.
The people were obedient to Ye ho waah (Jehovah God) and assembled for worship at the structures they were commanded to erect. They met early in the morning. When the people were all seated and silent, the priest known as "U ku wi a hi" (Uku) would commence his speech. The Uku would command the Cherokees to obey Ye ho waah in every respect, telling people they must do all that He directed them to do and to never disobey Him secretly because they were never alone because Ye ho waah was with them. They were never to indulge in idle or vain conversation, or call anyone wicked names. They were to abstain from all lewdness and polygamy. Children were to be hardworking and obedient to their parents This and many more fascinating facts about the history of the Cherokee people can be found at this link. www.cherokeediscovery.com/religion.html"
(source: laetitiasmile.blogspot.com)
The Lakota Indians also had similar Judeo-Christian believes. They identify Satan in two evil spirits. They believed there were two spirits who lived on the surface of the earth: Iktomi and Anog-Ite. Iktomi, the spider, was the trickster spirit. Before he was Iktomi, his name was Woksape - “Wisdom” - but lost his name and position when he helped the evil spirit Gnaskinyan play a trick on all the other spirits.
This story sounds very much like a corrupted version of the Bible's story about Jesus Christ and Satan (the two spirits mentioned by the Lakota) at the time when "there was a war in heaven," except that Anog-Ite (Jesus Christ) is erroneously identified as another evil spirit.
the Bible tells us that Satan was "a morning star" full of light and wisdom," perfect almost as Jesus Christ, but he rebelled against God and attempted to take His power and glory without being worthy of it, and he seduced others ("Gnaskinyan play a trick on all the other spirits") the third part of the stars of heaven" (or the spirit children of God) and convinced them to following him instead of Jesus Christ. Therefore Satan was expelled from heaven to become the father of all lies and the destroyer, losing his "position" as a glorious spirit, as the Lakota also put it.
The Book of Mormon, which has been rejected and vilified for so long, is a true scripture and a second witness of Jesus Christ, given to mankind by the hands of other Jews, the "other sheep" Christ was referring to when he said: "And other sheep I have, which are not of this fold: them also I must bring, and they shall hear my voice; and there shall be one fold, and one shepherd." (John 10:16.) Those sheep were not the Gentiles but a branch of the House of Israel, because Jesus said that he came for his people first, the people of the Covenant, and that through them all the world would be evangelized. Therefore, the words of The Book of Mormon, which are the words of the other sheep of the House of Israel, side by side with the words of the Jews of the Bible, testify of the divinity and mission of Jesus Christ; because it is by the mouth of two witnesses that the truth is established.
That book is now slowly been proven true by new studies and discoveries such as this one, made by objective scholars who are uncovering facts intentionally hidden for centuries that match facts in the Book of Mormon.
If you would like to know the truth about Native Americans and learn about precious Gospel truth long lost, please read The Book of Mormon.
Yes. The mongoloid Indians told early explorers and anthropologists that they didn't build the mounds and that the mounds were there when they possessed the land so I don't understand why he is still trying to attribute the building of the mounds to these native American groups. That B.C. migration group probably didn't come to the Americas over an Alaskan land bridge. He may not be including some very important dna groups in his study that may provide more concrete answers. How can you look at the Olmec statutes and not include african and autronesian dna in your study? The Olmecs probably had much earlier migrations to the Midwest and southeast than the muscogee creeks because they were probably in the Americas a lot earlier. As a native Georgian, I am happy that he indicated that the muscogee creeks are not native to Georgia and the Southeast and came from Mexico. He did this in another presentation. He needs to discuss the Cherokee oriigins also, they are not native to Georgia either. There are other tribes like the yamasee, yuchi, timuca, guale, ocmulgee, etc. that are probably more plausible candidates for being moundbuilders.
Very nice, I appreciate the work you put into this. I live 20 minutes east of Cincinnati but I grew up down the road from serpent mound. I am currently working at finding lost or forgotten mounds, along with the ones that were described but may or not possibly exist today. Even the ones that have been destroyed can often times still be found and mapped with extensions that were not even visible centuries ago by using lidar to find the remains of the destroyed mounds and hidden remains of existing mounds.
Not only were the vikings and the templars in New England at least 1000 years ago, the Chinese landed on the east coast about 600 years ago. But further back, around 200 AD Christians landed in Connecticut. There alters made of rock are still here.
Lol
I love how you accept the history as truth and then see if there are parallels. This is so important in understanding History. I have believed for a long time in the History of the Book of Mormon and believe it also has parallels to this video as it is the history from 600BC to 400AD. Read this book and do so with an open heart of study to see if it fits. The people, their timing, their lives, their forts, their weapons, their beliefs...all seem to "fit" historically. Truth is powerful :)
Also contains history of a group of people who left Jerusalem when the Tower of Babel was built. 2000bc. The Book of Mormon discusses religious, monetary, military, social, financial, judicial histories here including building mounds around their cities to protect from invaders, like evidenced by the hopewell Indians! As the author states here many other peoples probably migrated to the Americas but unfortunately we don’t have any written records of them!
@@DJohn-fr9ox just to make you feel better… There are actually other records. Some of them were unfortunately destroyed by successive waves of invaders, which were driving the different indigenous peoples out of the area. Other records were hidden, and may yet come to light. So there is hope :-)
@@DJohn-fr9ox
From what I been told, the Mayan Popul Vue may describe Ephraimite-Canaanite/Phoenician people that departed traveling from North Africa to Central America. Apparently there was a large group based in Egypt; after the plagues, half traveled to North Africa and then on to the Americas, while the other half traveled along the coast to the east, eventually spreading to Polynesia. Not sure if this is all accurate, but it's an interesting theory.
@@DJohn-fr9ox THE BOOK OF MORMON DISRESPECT THE DARK BROWN PEOPLE.
Watch out for Mormon heresy
This information & the ongoing research is both fascinating and & important. I always doubted the scant historical information we were taught in elementary school. Thank you & God bless your efforts!
Wow!!!Just found. Subscribed! This is amazing forensic history research using 🧬 then putting it on a real map. super cool!!. And sure hard to argue biological facts matching w the historical docs already available. Hope u get a lot of volunteers for ur studies. Ty for putting this all together n keep up the good work! God bless🙏
Learn from academia, not some biblical opportunist who is making things up in order to fit his interpretations of post flood happenings. Show me bible passages that prove what he is saying. There are none.
Looking back at this video many months after I saw it the first time, I can now see where the holes in the research are.
Where’s that
Wow, cool video. I'm one of those children you mentioned at end of video, who was never thought about this.
Look up Wayne May, archeologist that shows Book of Mormon geography.
I found it really interesting that you found all the literature, noting that they would keep their family history in knots. Recently, they have discovered the Incas also used to keep the history in knots, and a young college student discovered a way to decode they’re not system. He identified the accounting method of the nots
Would you happen to have any direct sources? I'm interested in learning about it.
please forgive me. Knots.
Good research. Because of the channel name, I was expecting some crazy leaps tying Abraham to N. America or something. I'm glad you're following the information and staying grounded. It was actually really entertaining. Thanks for coalescing all this information and sharing it. It is a severely under researched history.
Science owes creationism
There is a strong correlation between with ancient sites and what are now golf courses or parks. Something to look into.
I don't golf. But that must be just great. Both from an esthetic angle as well as relaxing and reflecting next to something ancient that once was meaningful to earlier people. I guess it's also some kind of neopagan/masonic statement for some of these country club members.
Europe (recorded by the Romans) had a major global catastrophe at 535/6AD during that second NA migration period that likely was the forcing function for that excursion. Sea Peoples/Bronze Age collapse happened around 1000BC (same as the first migration). There seems to be a major solar cycle of 12,000 years with smaller cycles at the nodes of the long cycle. 12kyo, 6kyo, 3kyo,1.5kyo which may closely match your genetic breadcrumb events left behind.
Did anyone else notice; This is some type of scientific creationism Christian sub set of research. The dates seem off by thousands of years, coinciding with dates of “creation”
I deeply appreciate the work that went into this
It's quite enjoyable indeed and helpful to see so much about North America 😊
At times, I laughed out loud at the delivery and curious forward motion of this minister!
Thank you AIG!
God is wonderful
This kept Acts 17:28-31 in mind
Acts 17:28 is an allusion to the Hymn to Zeus, written by the Cilician poet Aratus. In combination, the author is subtly denigrating worship of Zeus.
We as lds members , uave been teaching most of this since the church began.
Yes, lost tribes, my grandfather told me I'm party Shawnee yet I'm really white complected.(We're converts my mother and just her children)Lots of people guess me to be "germin" my family tree places me clear to ancient Egyptian, which means natives were Israelites. ( The family tree shows the Jewish names of family members, but can not show my father's origin as solely European dwelling on the Rhine they moved around, from Rome and before! ) Also we're Jews that are pre colonist! Really, how is that? The church has the correct and largest genealogy. Israelites have been coming here and thier mixed decent. Only recently has America become a vast melting pot
@user-bq9ow1wj4jyet more and more proof comes to light every year of how true the Book of Mormon is 🤷🏻♂️
@user-bq9ow1wj4jactually the people doing this very video have said that northern tribes have DNA of Jewish descent. You are correct that not all Native Americans have Jewish descent.
The video on LDS history on Expedition Bible is immensely helpful in understanding church/Book of Mormon teaching.
Myths not historical facts
What about haplogroup x? Found in the middle east, including Israel...up to 600 AD. Also found in some eastern NA tribes.
Have you gotten that far?
Thanks.
Great work Nathaniel. Thank you.
Champlain named Canada from a word of the Algonquin: Kenatta (My spelling). He thought they were referring to the village, but I suspect they were referring to their race. Here's a key. 'Ite' as in Israelite is likely pronounced 'atta', from my studies. So an Israelite would be Israelatta. So, Kenatta in modern terms would be Kenite. The Kenites lived in Midian. Moses father in law was Kenite. Today Midian is Madyan in Saudi Arabia.
Interesting 💜
The odds those two people are related is extremely low.
@@jcmaguireIt's possible that this historical perspective could prove your comment otherwise. And the first comment to be closer towards a possible link. After looking back as far as you can and tracing forward, it seems logical that language and travel have a connection to culture over time. However, one must also be able to fully comprehend the cultural context to comprehend the 🔗 links.
That has got to be the dumbest comment I’ve heard on this video yet, and that’s really saying something.
OMG there have been Hebrew artifacts found in Mexico and South America! I like your conclusion