Archeologists Discover Who the ORIGINAL Americans Were

Who ruled the Americas before Columbus? For years we’ve been taught that the Americas were sparsely populated by primitive peoples who lived in such harmony with nature that they were nearly invisible. Then Europeans came with their guns, destroying both nature, Native Americans, and Native American culture. New evidence from a surprising source shows this stereotype to be wrong. The source? Mainstream archaeology. (with Ken Ham and Dr. Nathaniel Jeanson)
Visit Answers.tv: All Answers in Genesis videos, live streaming, and much more-all in one place.
Please help us continue to share the gospel around the world: AnswersinGenesis.org/give

Пікірлер: 7 800

  • @gramps5595
    @gramps5595 Жыл бұрын

    A friend of mine was born to a family whose members and relatives were all blond and blue eyed, except her. Her dark brown almond eyes, jet black hair and darkened skin caused all sorts of commotion at her birth. Mother was accused of adultery and divorce proceedings were almost underway until one aunt, the family geneologist announced that the girl's long forgotten great grandfather met and married a beautiful native woman when he was stationed in India when he served as an officer for the British Impirial Forces The couple returned to England and lived out their lives together. My friend did not display 50 or 25 or 13 percent of her great grand mother's genetic material. Human genetics does not play by the roughly calculated arithmetic of Mendel's peas. DNA is far more complicated and fasicnating than that.

  • @cburg6383

    @cburg6383

    Жыл бұрын

    A genetic 'atavism'?

  • @incognito3620

    @incognito3620

    Жыл бұрын

    This is very interesting. If DNA holds true to its particular intricacies, we should all sire black children soon or in the future. I used to believe if we all looked the same. Eyes, skin color, hair there would be less prejudice. I was wrong. Humans are so flawed, we would find something to NOT love our neighbor. We can be so great and likewise so evil. The human species works against nature. To C. Berg. - Ativism is more widespread. We just dont report on it.

  • @gramps5595

    @gramps5595

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cburg6383 Yeah, probably a good description, short order version atavism in her case where inheritable attributes are not diluted but kept relatively intact somehow isolate from the blond blue eye sequences. My brother has reddish hair, no-one else in the family. I suspect the red is due to our distant Scottish/Irish heritage. Mendel only dealt with 2-3 characteristics, the human genome is much more complex and surprising than that.

  • @timeorspace

    @timeorspace

    Жыл бұрын

    I always say genetics seems like a roll of the dice.

  • @bonitahobbs2374

    @bonitahobbs2374

    Жыл бұрын

    General traits categorically are known by geneticist to be able to skip generations. Additionally, there are recessive genes and dominant genes. Generally in the past 200 years they have flipped the factual script on what is dominant. Although it is obvious they decided to create untruths.

  • @sammyspaniel6054
    @sammyspaniel6054 Жыл бұрын

    A native girl around 1900 recorded her tribe's oral history in a book. She speaks of very tall red haired people that were here when her tribe arrived on the continent long ago.

  • @PlanetRockJesus

    @PlanetRockJesus

    Жыл бұрын

    Who was that? And what is the name of her writings?

  • @jdsheleg8332

    @jdsheleg8332

    Жыл бұрын

    Sources, or else stop the nonsense.

  • @sammyspaniel6054

    @sammyspaniel6054

    Жыл бұрын

    @@PlanetRockJesus Her name was Sarah Winnemucca. She was the daughter of a Paiute chief. Many people challenge her account but I see no reason why she would feel the need to lie about something like that.

  • @ljbrizo

    @ljbrizo

    Жыл бұрын

    Squatch is your answer

  • @cranegantry868

    @cranegantry868

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jdsheleg8332 Yep, really true. Indians weren't the first in the WHOLE of America (includes Canada too).

  • @jerrydrouillard
    @jerrydrouillard Жыл бұрын

    Duster’s mistake at the Little Bighorn was that he thought he was attacking unarmed women and children and got surprised by warriors. Custer was a coward and a rapist who attacked villages when the warriors were absent. The one time he faced warriors, it proved to be a fatal encounter.

  • @flyingsword135

    @flyingsword135

    14 күн бұрын

    Just following example of the native Americans' way of war. This is how the natives fought. Perhaps you should look at his civil war record to see how Custer fought.

  • @ambu6478
    @ambu64788 ай бұрын

    I was recently reading some information about the Chickasaw people of Western Tennessee and the Northern Mississippi and Alabama area. The Chickasaw have a "world wide" flood story that tells of a world wide flood that took place years ago and only one family survived with a pair of each kind of animal. There's was no mention of an Ark in the version that I read about, but it was still very similar to the biblical account. It's amazing to find similar flood stories around the world.

  • @daharris41
    @daharris41 Жыл бұрын

    Has anyone else noticed how dark native Americans were back in those pictures compared to how light they are today. It’s a dramatic change

  • @jjdjj5392

    @jjdjj5392

    Жыл бұрын

    Thats cuz they are now very mixed. There are no fullbloods now.

  • @MATT-xv4bh

    @MATT-xv4bh

    Жыл бұрын

    Due mostly I suspect, to photographs being white/grey/black back then (ie. as in 'black and white' photographs)

  • @donvaughn5ify

    @donvaughn5ify

    Жыл бұрын

    Stop it you know deep down inside you know the answer there's no complaints about natives receiving reparations because most of them are white... looking like Sally Field

  • @adriaanbertdeveldeharsenhorst

    @adriaanbertdeveldeharsenhorst

    Жыл бұрын

    Outdoors living my friend. Nothing else. Just look at a Caucasian farmer compared to a bureaucrat in the office.

  • @rondarobbins7194

    @rondarobbins7194

    Жыл бұрын

    Very interesting 🤔

  • @orcaedgemedia
    @orcaedgemedia Жыл бұрын

    Columbus never made it to what we now call "North America" - "He was the first European to sight the Bahamas archipelago and then the island later named Hispaniola, now split into Haiti and the Dominican Republic. On his subsequent voyages he went farther south, to Central and South America. He never got close to what is now called the United States"

  • @williamekasala2861
    @williamekasala2861 Жыл бұрын

    My great grandmother was a New Hampshire Native American, possibly “Abnaki”; great grandfather (Reed) was Scottish. My mother and a couple brothers could have played the “native” roll in cowboy Indian movies. My grandfather passed as Scottish. I was stationed in Japan (marine) in the early fifties and my Japanese crew brought me a photograph of a Japanese boy who looked like me, spitting image! My dna says I’m 80% European, 17% Native American and, get this, 3% sub Saharan African. I’ve got it covered!

  • @Flamelit

    @Flamelit

    Жыл бұрын

    People who use to work for 23 and me said that the tests were not right,so you could be 80 african,17percent native and 3percent European.they do DNA test just like they did with history and the population numbers.

  • @outof_mymind

    @outof_mymind

    Жыл бұрын

    Genealogy tests aren't accurate.

  • @jimbrink9173

    @jimbrink9173

    Жыл бұрын

    That's spelled Abenaki.

  • @shmataboro8634

    @shmataboro8634

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Flamelit that explains why my whole family's DNA matches our genealogy going back to the 1400s except one daughter who did hers with 23 and Me. The rest of us are UK and Scandinavia and hers claims she's got a lot of Sub-Saharan African. Seems mighty impossible considering the family history, the shape if her facial features, and her pale skin, light red hair and million freckles. I think they're trying to rewrite our family history.

  • @davidjacobs8558

    @davidjacobs8558

    Жыл бұрын

    Japanese are mixture of aboriginal Japanese (who looked like aboriginal Australians) and Far East Asians who came in 2000 years ago into Japanese islands. Most aboriginals were wiped out by new comers, but there were still some blood mixing.

  • @jaywinters2483
    @jaywinters248311 ай бұрын

    If you read Alan Eckart's WIlderness War series, you have a book called WIlderness War. It was about observations General Washington's men made when he split half his northern army towards the end of the war and chased "the savages" out of upstate, NY. Eckert's works are highly documented in the back of his book with depositions, journals, diarys, letters, etc. Washington's men found pools of fish hatcheries, orchards, extensive farming, and a high degree of agriculture.

  • @Kilthan2050

    @Kilthan2050

    11 ай бұрын

    His books are great. Most academics hate them because he wasn’t part of academia. But his novels are meticulously sourced.

  • @tlaloqq

    @tlaloqq

    11 ай бұрын

    Do people forget the aztecs, mayans and incans are native americans? I think it speaks more to how people view the native groups of both since technically us native south americans still exist we are just called latino now where as most north natives were genocided

  • @Kilthan2050

    @Kilthan2050

    11 ай бұрын

    @@tlaloqq It wasn't genocide, genocide implies intent. The damage done by small pox was what destroyed populations before Europeans arrived. There was plenty of war fare, and Europeans certainly took advantage of tribal disputes to benefit themsleves. That said, i home school my daughter. I've made it a point when talking about history to discuss the differences between the various native groups here in the Americas. How the Nahua tribes that weren't part of the Aztec Triple alliance sided with the Spanish, intermarried, and created the Mestiso (mestizo? not sure on spelling). How many of south American tribes still exist in numbers higher than those in the US. I live in Arizona and travel through reservations multiple times a year. The Navajo have their own soda brand (Navajo Fizz) that is, hands down, the best soda i've ever had. All natural ingredients (with the exception of the sassparilla flavoring in the Root Beer).

  • @shyquildurham9695

    @shyquildurham9695

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@Kilthan2050 It was Genocide. Smallpox was used as a bio weapon. Before you respond, look up 1st Bio weapons used.

  • @Kilthan2050

    @Kilthan2050

    10 ай бұрын

    @@shyquildurham9695 so.. they didn’t understand how germs spread, but knew it was in blankets that they were trading? The first bio-weapons far predate the colonization. Mongols would launch dead animals into cities to spread disease, it was believes diseases spread through bad air and corpses produced bad air. This was the Miasma theory which held sway until the mid 1800’s The earliest dates i can find for the intentional use of small pox as a bio-weapon were in the revolutionary war. This is 200 years AFTER the introduction of smallpox to the Americas by the first waves of explorers and settlers. Thats assuming they hadn’t already encountered and been ravaged by the disease from the Viking landings. Consider the pilgrims. Tisquantum (Squanto) was the last of his tribe, the rest having died of disease, likely small pox, before the pilgrims arrived in 1620. There is a determination to make the settlers more evil than they were, which is rich considering the native practices of ritual torture followed by cannibalism practiced by many tribes, including the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois). By the time Europeans tried to use it as a bio weapon it had already done its damage. The population was already decimated, worse than decimated which implies 1 of every 10. If it is genocide by negligence, then the Natives are guilty of actual intentional genocide, per their own records having wiped out multiple groups and driven some to live in caves. The focus on the tragedy of the past without regard for the future is part of what holds many on the reservations back. They need to look forward. I drive cross country multiple times a year. I pass through the Navajo Nation. They sell the BEST soda i’ve ever had. Made from all natural ingredients that they grow. they have made something wonderful. This the path forward. They have taken their care of their land and traditions and used it to make something great. Navajo Fizz is delicious, and i recommend anyone who foes through their land to buy some. I hope they expand and start selling it either online or in stores. They could use it create a lot of good for their people. And i hope they do.

  • @mikehenson819
    @mikehenson819 Жыл бұрын

    Where and when i grew up as a child, there was a lot of strip mining going on then, and my father would tell me of how beautiful the land where we lived once was when he grew up there. We were taught in school that the land would never recover in our life time because strip mining destroys it, and it would take hundred of years before vegetation would return. By the time I was 30, those lands looked much better, and now that I'm in my 60s, I have to tell younger people (much to they're astonishment) how it looked when i was a child. People with agendas LIE. Sometime out of ignorance, and sometimes out of purpose. God's creation is changing continually. We can't kill it. We only change it for a moment.

  • @customsongmaker

    @customsongmaker

    Жыл бұрын

    Have you ever heard the song "Paradise" by John Prine?

  • @kp-legacy-5477

    @kp-legacy-5477

    Жыл бұрын

    It still wouldn't be as it was before the mine tho. Your logic is rather flawed here

  • @selassietetevie4966

    @selassietetevie4966

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kp-legacy-5477 what about if the land was in a volcanic area,would you sat the same thing after lava has inundated previously forested land. The thing is wether man made or nature made,the earth continues to evolve.

  • @Superabound2

    @Superabound2

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kp-legacy-5477 nothing is ever the same as it was in the past. Nature changes things all on it's own. A human lifetime is insignificant on a geological timescale. All of human history is. And the only reason nature matters AT ALL is because Humans are here to experience and observe it.

  • @Yenchantress1isaStarr

    @Yenchantress1isaStarr

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kp-legacy-5477When did they ever mention, returning to its original state? How would anyone living have an original state account? Impossible.

  • @THOMMGB
    @THOMMGB Жыл бұрын

    More than a few years ago, the TV program, 60 Minutes produced a segment on the earliest Americans. What the program said was that the people we think of as native Americans actually came from somewhere else and were not the real "native Americans." It was really interesting and well worth trying to find on KZread.

  • @caryfrancis7412

    @caryfrancis7412

    Жыл бұрын

    Well of course, they came from Mongolia.

  • @shirleypaslay2019

    @shirleypaslay2019

    Жыл бұрын

    It’s true. People fled Jerusalem and came over here and brought the records. Some ran south of Jerusalem and took their writing with them too. The ones who ran south had the Dead Sea scrolls. The ones who came here their record was found in NY. They were on metal plates.

  • @caryfrancis7412

    @caryfrancis7412

    Жыл бұрын

    @@shirleypaslay2019 What metal plates ? Where are they ? Why are they NOT part of historical record? And WTH do plates prove anyway ?

  • @andreegross

    @andreegross

    Жыл бұрын

    @@caryfrancis7412 I think she is referring to Joseph Smith's alleged discovery of those dubious metal plates. And you are right.

  • @swannoir7949

    @swannoir7949

    Жыл бұрын

    Christopher Columbus mentioned "copper-colored people" when he arrived. You know, what color copper is, right?

  • @dinabern3121
    @dinabern3121 Жыл бұрын

    Fascinating!!! Thank you so much for such important information. I will must definitely look for all your videos. As a woman born in Guatemala, your revelations touch not only my brain, they also touch my heart.

  • @TheTonymarriott
    @TheTonymarriott Жыл бұрын

    I recently watched a similar article on KZread, it said archaeologists in the US have dated long boats, settlements, weapons, jewellery and ceramics that belonged to Vikings, predating Columbus by several hundred years.

  • @jasonbrown372

    @jasonbrown372

    26 күн бұрын

    Yeah- in Newfoundland, which is Canada, not the U.S.

  • @LemonScreech

    @LemonScreech

    17 күн бұрын

    Pretty well established now. I suspect we seriously underestimate earlier civilisations. I wouldn’t be surprised if VERY early people were all globally connected.

  • @kitchensink1803
    @kitchensink1803 Жыл бұрын

    I'm chuckling. On a much smaller time scale, new people to corporations always think nothing good existed before they showed up and they're there to enlighten those who've been there all along. This is incredible information and has the qualification of enticing modern man to think very differently about our Earth, what has been and what can be. We are so easily distracted. Thanks for sharing!!

  • @grassroot011

    @grassroot011

    Жыл бұрын

    also so easily convinced we are smarter than the previous peoples.

  • @JoeCrump

    @JoeCrump

    Жыл бұрын

    Garbage trash

  • @louisejones5773

    @louisejones5773

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@grassroot011 and you're not

  • @BFFBuddyFionaandFriends

    @BFFBuddyFionaandFriends

    11 ай бұрын

    New people anyplace, especially young people, can’t imagine how anything existed successfully before them.

  • @theurbanthirdhomestead

    @theurbanthirdhomestead

    11 ай бұрын

    We think that because that's what our schools tell us. We're all brainwashed from a very young age.

  • @christinag.7801
    @christinag.7801 Жыл бұрын

    I teach 7th-12th history. I had my students examine the facial features of the Mongolians and Chinese vs. groups of Native Americans along the west coast, as well as examining the "Great Wall" of California. We also looked at similarities between the Maya/Inca/Aztec culture and Egyptian culture. My hope is that it widened their view of history to see the broader story.

  • @JosephDVines

    @JosephDVines

    Жыл бұрын

    If they haven't been compartmentalized,yet....this is not updated news..it should be common knowledge though....

  • @christinag.7801

    @christinag.7801

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JosephDVines I am working on not compartmentalizing them. Thankfully I teach at a private Christian school where I can teach real history. They don't teach this in public schools at all, and only through self-education have I been able to broaden my horizons to the truth. I'm responsible for every student's history education from 7th grade through seniors, so I have a responsibility to teach the truth.

  • @JosephDVines

    @JosephDVines

    Жыл бұрын

    @@christinag.7801 maybe since its private,take the Children to see it for Themselves,not a better teaching tool,than hands on..

  • @l0v3truth

    @l0v3truth

    Жыл бұрын

    @smasher great dialogue, jump straight to forcing an extreme view on those you disagree with.

  • @grigorione7824

    @grigorione7824

    Жыл бұрын

    Australian Aboriginal Dreamtime stories?

  • @adrienebailey9010
    @adrienebailey9010 Жыл бұрын

    That could explain lost knowledge. I went to a place in Mexico that had been an Indian ruins site. You had to walk up like 50 steps then the land was flat. It was concrete slaps and under there were huge concrete well like huge flower pots. The guide said when they broke some of them open there were ppl in praying postions. It was freaky yet beautiful. I love history and this video is wonderful. All the ppls comments were fantastic and I'm hooked. Everyone seems so educated about this, where have I been?

  • @cgerard100
    @cgerard100 Жыл бұрын

    At roughly 21:40 there is an assertion that there was an over 100 year gap between Columbus arriving in 1492 and the beginning of history in America in 1620 with the arrival of the Pilgrims. That glosses over the establishment of St. Augustine in what is now Florida by Spain in 1565 , Roanoke by the English in 1587 and Jamestown in what is now Virginia in 1607.

  • @jmmazza20011

    @jmmazza20011

    Жыл бұрын

    73years…

  • @Frankie5Angels150

    @Frankie5Angels150

    Жыл бұрын

    Plus, there’s that whole 1619 project Nonsense.

  • @camwinston5248

    @camwinston5248

    Жыл бұрын

    And the attempted establishment of a colony just before St augustine by Spain in the Pensacola FL area that was wiped out by hurricane.

  • @Yabroproductions33

    @Yabroproductions33

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly

  • @markdezuba

    @markdezuba

    Жыл бұрын

    Pensacola

  • @Eli-qr9hc
    @Eli-qr9hc Жыл бұрын

    Leif Erikson was the son of Erik the Red, founder of the first European settlement on what is now called Greenland. Born in Iceland around A.D. 970, Erikson sailed to Norway around A.D. 1000. Erikson sailed off course on his way back to Greenland and landed on the North American continent, where he explored a region he called Vinland. He may also have sought out Vinland based on stories of an earlier voyage by an Icelandic trader. After spending the winter in Vinland. He is believed to be the first European to reach the North American continent, nearly four centuries before Christopher Columbus arrived in 1492.

  • @valeriegiles6524

    @valeriegiles6524

    Жыл бұрын

    He landed in Newfoundland, Canada Their settlements are still there. When asked where the vikings went, the natives people said they went underground.

  • @omarsilva5385

    @omarsilva5385

    Жыл бұрын

    😂...you know the Inuit have been there ...for like 100's of years before

  • @r.b.l.5841

    @r.b.l.5841

    Жыл бұрын

    @@omarsilva5385 In three waves with the currnt group arriving last.

  • @r.b.l.5841

    @r.b.l.5841

    Жыл бұрын

    Columbus arrived in the West Indies, no evidence that he lands on N.America at all. Perhaps it is convenient to refer to Columbus, rather than Leif Erikson hundreds of years before, especially if that landing is in northern Canada, rather than current USA, or John Cabot, who actually did land in N.America, but again in modern day Canada. It may be a good idea with history, to actually TRY to be factual not political. The vast majority of history is yet to be uncovered, we shouldn't be so arrogant that we "know" it. It you have ten pieces of a 10,000 piece puzzle, you don't really know the full picture.

  • @louisejones5773

    @louisejones5773

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@r.b.l.5841 i know what is factual...none of these men founded anything. It was already found

  • @jackjordan7691
    @jackjordan7691 Жыл бұрын

    This is most interesting, thank you so much for your researching. Awesome

  • @carolinemcgreal2382
    @carolinemcgreal2382 Жыл бұрын

    fascinating stuff, thanks brothers sharing.

  • @bouncerslabrealnature9143
    @bouncerslabrealnature9143 Жыл бұрын

    Growing up in Minnesota back in the 60s and 70s , I learned to keep the sites of real giants we found while hunting or foraging needed to be kept secret. There are also other things in the woods that shouldn't be there but are and I'm not talking about crashed UFOs only. 🏆😁

  • @PearlMagnolia

    @PearlMagnolia

    Жыл бұрын

    And whatever you do, you do not tell the government.

  • @johnfree2833

    @johnfree2833

    Жыл бұрын

    Ojibway people know,have known......

  • @jerryparks6123

    @jerryparks6123

    Жыл бұрын

    There's NEVER been a Crashed UFO ! 🛸 they don't Exist!

  • @waynestpeter1065

    @waynestpeter1065

    Жыл бұрын

    Responding to your comment about, ( There are also other things in the woods that shouldn't be there but are.) I live in Maine and I have seen only twice in my life. A large black cat with long hair and a long tail. It shouldn't exist according to wildlife experts. We have no record of such a thing. I was snowmobiling with a friend who has seen 4 of them throughout his life. We stopped on a new logging road and in 3 leaps crossed the road in front of us about 100 yards. This thing must have weighed 100 to 150 pounds. We both seen it and that was my first time. My buddy said he seen them before and he called it a black cat. It didn't have short hair but long hair. Anyway it was very interesting and I'd love to get a picture of one to prove it exists.

  • @PaulYoungMinnesota

    @PaulYoungMinnesota

    Жыл бұрын

    Minnesota is the land of giants- LeSeuer especially. The whole valley there. They are green. Jolly, too. We need to use technology to scan the hills there to detect grave sites with giant bones.

  • @chtrartist
    @chtrartist Жыл бұрын

    Many years ago I found a book in an antique shop. It was written by one of the earliest missionaries who came to the USA from Europe - in the 14th and 15th centuries. The missionary tells how the Odawa chiefs claimed that when they first came to Michigan there were other people already living here (I am from Michigan). The chiefs laughingly bragged that they killed them all and took over the land. Sadly I loaned the book to a special friend who has passed away and her children do not know what happened to the book. But this information is such an important fit into what you are now discussing.

  • @VeritasEtAequitas

    @VeritasEtAequitas

    Жыл бұрын

    What was the book called?

  • @rogerbowers1994

    @rogerbowers1994

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@VeritasEtAequitasmin

  • @RojaJaneman

    @RojaJaneman

    Жыл бұрын

    Missionaries lied a lot. Their entire goal was to spread propoganda against d others and for their own. Need real hard proof. DNA, physical evidences, bloodline etc. Their whole goal was ethnocide and brainwashing of d natives. Heck, church tried to claim Hakenkreuz as swastika to blame d Hindus for their connections with Hitler. They provided him with everything, they were d first ones to give him legitimacy and make treaties. Even today missionaries do some dark deeds. Stole entire lands/kingdoms from d natives, Hawaii for ex. They’re d worst of human kind. Don’t even get started on warring and inquisitions. 😒

  • @darragh5250

    @darragh5250

    Жыл бұрын

    There was no USA before XVIII c. - but what do I know?

  • @chucknorris277

    @chucknorris277

    Жыл бұрын

    But injuns lived in peace before Europeans arrived

  • @SweetE1403
    @SweetE1403 Жыл бұрын

    Great video! I thoroughly enjoyed it

  • @WeAgreeToDisagree1
    @WeAgreeToDisagree111 ай бұрын

    Fascinating! In one episode, you've turned nearly the entirety of what I know and understand to be not only America but also South America on it's ear! I can't wait to see what is in store in episodes to come! I'm an enthusiastic new subscriber..at least!

  • @Quantum36911
    @Quantum36911 Жыл бұрын

    What happened to all the Egyptian artifacts and hieroglyphs found in the Grand Canyon? There were advanced civilizations living in "the states".

  • @FriendOfChrist

    @FriendOfChrist

    Жыл бұрын

    Are you talking about the claims G.E. Kincaid made? I thought those were proven to be a hoax?

  • @matthewmaxcy1574

    @matthewmaxcy1574

    Жыл бұрын

    They weren't Egyptian, they were artifacts of the nephilem giants that were infested in the americas ,that died off and those left killed off .

  • @Jason-hg1pc

    @Jason-hg1pc

    Жыл бұрын

    There were advanced civilizations living in "the states" until the drunken sailors showed up from Europe, disobeyed their Commandments and tried to murder them all.

  • @daguywhoknowz2638

    @daguywhoknowz2638

    Жыл бұрын

    Not at all. Very real

  • @R.Es1

    @R.Es1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@FriendOfChrist absolute hoaxes

  • @barbarastangel8425
    @barbarastangel8425 Жыл бұрын

    Hi everyone, my mother was half Cherokee and my father was half Cherokee. If you truly want to know the history of the Native American people ask them. Even when it was illegal for them to speak their native tongue they continued to pass our history on to the next generation. Thank you for exposing and sharing what we grew up knowing.

  • @karinlarsen2608

    @karinlarsen2608

    Жыл бұрын

    I hope you'll help your people tell their story. All the fuss about atrocities it's wasting the time we have to learn your story. Our children are intermarrying. Soon there will be only mixed race

  • @JoeyArmegeddon

    @JoeyArmegeddon

    Жыл бұрын

    If your mother was half Cherokee, and your father was half Cherokee- that makes you full Cherokee!

  • @anonymousntwiggn8911

    @anonymousntwiggn8911

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mycinnamongirl What makes you say that? We may not know for sure but to insult and dismiss this person isn't the way to go. Just ask her to explain and make that conclusion for yourself.

  • @sheilabell2027

    @sheilabell2027

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JoeyArmegeddon Not necessarily. With DNA, you inherit half of one parent and half of the other parent, but which half do you get? You also need to test your DNA to see what percent of each parent you inherited. If Karin inherited the "other" 50% of each parent, she would have no Cherokee in her blood to pass on.

  • @-Never-bored

    @-Never-bored

    Жыл бұрын

    “No one” ever asks the real people… the oral history given to me from my great grandmother contradicts most history books.. it seems they are afraid of the real story.

  • @luisguerrero7239
    @luisguerrero7239 Жыл бұрын

    So interesting, thank you so much for sharing the knowledge.

  • @xtevetyler5332
    @xtevetyler5332 Жыл бұрын

    As we have come to expèct from answers in genesis, this is an amazing and very informative documentary, that has again broken the stereotypical view of the pre Columbus America's, that paints the lands and the Indian tribes living there in a completely new light, showing again how the mainstream history is as misguided as it ever was. So Thank you for correcting the narrow view of the culture that predated the European influx, it is always a good day when I can go to bed having changed my world view and learned a new dynamic , one that I suspected but had only scant information to rest it upon, allowing me to view the native people's in their true guise, not one imposed upon us from outdated history books and Hollywood tales, but one based upon proper scientific research and unbiased analysis, I cannot wait to carry on along this avenue as this series progresses. Again thank you, and may many honourable spirits of long dead native people's now rest a little easier knowing that their true story has finally begun to leak out into the modern world.

  • @jasonbrown372

    @jasonbrown372

    26 күн бұрын

    Check out "Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee", it's some non-fiction that might give you more than you expect. This isn't a guilt-trip either, you seem respectful, but it's a hard read. Great gift for Columbus Day, though.

  • @mnfowler1
    @mnfowler1 Жыл бұрын

    I was adopted, and when I studied both the genealogy of my biological and adoptive families, I discovered that my adoptive mother was my distant cousin by a marriage between our distant cousins.

  • @rytvdinners5064

    @rytvdinners5064

    Жыл бұрын

    Your you're own grandad...

  • @keshi5541

    @keshi5541

    Жыл бұрын

    Alabama reference 💀

  • @warrenpuckett4203

    @warrenpuckett4203

    Жыл бұрын

    Well when there are only 25 last names in what used to be in the county phone book. My Aunt Pearl married with a man that had grandma's maiden name. 3rd cousins. There are as many people living in that county today as were there in 1900. BUT what really surprises me is my younger sister looks like a Cherokee.

  • @jhaedtler
    @jhaedtler Жыл бұрын

    It all sounds well and good, but please don't forget that all of these books are just the opinion of the writers. the older I get the more I realise that most writers are just good Story tellers! I often wonder how much is really fact!

  • @weignerleigner3037

    @weignerleigner3037

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah anything to do with ancient history is questionable. A lot of assumptions and coming to conclusions that aren’t really justifiable.

  • @rodbald385

    @rodbald385

    Жыл бұрын

    Anything past 6000 years in just conjecture.

  • @davidvancebrown6020

    @davidvancebrown6020

    Жыл бұрын

    That’s what history is around 80% narrative 20% Truth

  • @stardustgirl2904

    @stardustgirl2904

    Жыл бұрын

    They have been found Celtic markings all over the United States! I believe there were many types of people in America, but the Government refuses to allow us to know the truth, especially if it could prove that Christianity was true!

  • @thomasdalton2404

    @thomasdalton2404

    Жыл бұрын

    Well if it wasn't them. So what, them were there before white man. Or because of this research and them weren't the first justifys what the white man did in the genocide of many distinct native culture's. That most probably did not refer to themselves as so called Americans.

  • @teresawillis2554
    @teresawillis2554 Жыл бұрын

    I'm not sure who doesn't understand we are ALL one people, just different shades of brown. I'm 60 and have been taught that all my life., I'm "white" btw. When I did my first DNA test I was thrilled to see what I already knew there on paper. I embrace all my heritage!

  • @cuppadiem
    @cuppadiem Жыл бұрын

    amazing discussion! lesson for today

  • @joshuaansley1361
    @joshuaansley1361 Жыл бұрын

    The Vikings made landfall on North America way before Columbus bumped into Hispaniola, Columbus made landfall in the America's, and St. Brendan The Voyager from Ireland most likely discovered North America before the Vikings came. From his own writings.

  • @badgerpa9

    @badgerpa9

    Жыл бұрын

    Columbus knew the Islands where there and he knew to go below the Sargasso sea from other Portuguese that had been there before. The story taught about Columbus was a made up story by a story writer, Washington Irving. Columbus never landed on North America.

  • @josephrodriguez2780

    @josephrodriguez2780

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah and on the west coast Asians were there first they ran to the people already here

  • @SunGrazer59

    @SunGrazer59

    Жыл бұрын

    The Chinese were trading with the North Western Indians 3000 years ago.

  • @mikecamacho1934

    @mikecamacho1934

    Жыл бұрын

    Nobody from Europe discovered America lol. It was discovered by the people who settled it first smh.

  • @billystanhope5855

    @billystanhope5855

    Жыл бұрын

    Leif Erickson was the first European born in North America. He later found Martha's Vineyard. And traveled up New England rivers to the Great lakes

  • @lindsaymcpherson4744
    @lindsaymcpherson4744 Жыл бұрын

    What I find fascinating is pyramids in ancient Egypt also similar structures in ancient Aztec / Asia/ India etc

  • @lolagunz

    @lolagunz

    Жыл бұрын

    So do you know that black ppl inspired other nations? I mean the Greeks learned everything from them

  • @firstnamelastname-kr8dv

    @firstnamelastname-kr8dv

    Жыл бұрын

    "The whole earth was of one language & one speech..."

  • @patricial.6758

    @patricial.6758

    Жыл бұрын

    The pyramid shape is a fundamental geometric shape. The circle and the square as well. Just like writing, pyramid shapes can easily be developed in unconnected regions or continents.

  • @StuartwasDrinkell
    @StuartwasDrinkell Жыл бұрын

    Really enjoyed this!

  • @rickhand8228
    @rickhand8228 Жыл бұрын

    Wow! I am learning a LOT!

  • @johnjames5842
    @johnjames5842 Жыл бұрын

    The real Seminole Indians never gave up, and never were relocated to a reservation

  • @mr.naughtypants7069

    @mr.naughtypants7069

    Жыл бұрын

    The real " Seminole" ( which means runaway in Cherokee) were originally a make up of a few tribes that were sent to reservations in Oklahoma. The Indians that broke free or weren't rounded up were runaways " Seminoles" where they ran south to Florida being hunted down. Until the American Civil War came along which saved these Indians from being rounded up or killed. After the Civil war, US Army left them alone not to cause trouble in the south plus these Indians were now in the swamps and met up with other local Indians and were hiding pretty well. Later on they became the Seminole Tribe, which didn't exist in Florida until they ran down to it.

  • @pooppy87

    @pooppy87

    Жыл бұрын

    @Mr. Naughty Pants interesting that they went south to be free... not north. The south was always about freedom.

  • @davegink9222

    @davegink9222

    Жыл бұрын

    @@pooppy87 except for that pesky slavery thing.

  • @claudeyaz

    @claudeyaz

    Жыл бұрын

    @@davegink9222 didnt the native Americans forced on the trail of tears..take their slaves with them? Even freed slaves that were rich enough would buy slaves. Huge mess

  • @DJCole34

    @DJCole34

    Жыл бұрын

    @@claudeyaz to give them better life and free them. Lots of people like to twist the narrative.

  • @goodryan6360
    @goodryan6360 Жыл бұрын

    Keep shaping history We love the info very educational

  • @heavenonearth757
    @heavenonearth75711 ай бұрын

    Can u post recap of major points covered that change perception of history in one slide?

  • @heavenonearth757

    @heavenonearth757

    11 ай бұрын

    In each episode… it would make understanding of significant misperceptions in history easier…

  • @legoat8818
    @legoat8818 Жыл бұрын

    “Facts that you won’t hear anywhere else” I’ve heard everything I needed to hear

  • @jjj32801
    @jjj32801 Жыл бұрын

    Amazing. Open and honest discussion like this should be standard learning procedures. Keep the videos coming.

  • @RojaJaneman

    @RojaJaneman

    Жыл бұрын

    He’s lying. There’s zero physical proof. Where’s d dna or physical proof??

  • @clarencewalker1601

    @clarencewalker1601

    Жыл бұрын

    Most don't say this same thing when some darker skinned people make this claim. They seem to become real byist real fast.

  • @blkdiamond7227

    @blkdiamond7227

    Жыл бұрын

    im sorry but europeans do not have a great track record at being honest.

  • @bengreen171

    @bengreen171

    11 ай бұрын

    there was no honesty here. He lied about what paradigm the evidence supports. It doesn't support a young Earth. Notice that Jeanson dishonestly picks and chooses which science he accepts - he says carbon dating is reliable when it suits him, but as soon as carbon dating shows that his religious book is wrong, he rejects it - with absolutely no reason offered. Even the way he presented this video is dishonest. He's trying to claim the evidence agrees with his religious belief - but the stereotypes he talks about are the product of western Christian assumptions about history that derived from the Bible. When he says it's a surprise to find out that pre columbian Americans had a thriving and diverse civilisation - that's because White Christians insisted it wasn't possible. It's secular science that has proven otherwise.

  • @tommyigoe3952
    @tommyigoe3952 Жыл бұрын

    I could listen to this all day. There is so much we don't know. Subscribed for more :)

  • @darrenpalmer4847
    @darrenpalmer484711 ай бұрын

    Excellent video. Two thumbs up 👍🏼👍🏼. Does Dr. Jamison have a book?

  • @answersingenesis

    @answersingenesis

    11 ай бұрын

    answersingenesis.org/store/product/traced/?sku=10-2-542

  • @mi.an.8678
    @mi.an.8678 Жыл бұрын

    I think the title is somewhat misleading. I expected to listen about the origins of Native Americans, but I listened to the nature of their lives pre-contact instead. Great work though, I enjoyed it, and I'm really thankful for the sources of information being clearly cited, something uncommon on youtube. I hope to see more in the future!

  • @darlabaker7872
    @darlabaker7872 Жыл бұрын

    After viewing the realities between the left and right of recent times, I come to realize that we will never ever know what really happened in the past.

  • @jasonbrown372

    @jasonbrown372

    26 күн бұрын

    see comment above

  • @pamgessler5923
    @pamgessler5923 Жыл бұрын

    There is a rock in the mountains of western North Carolina that is out of the way but tourists like to go see it. It has a lot of letters carved into it that are undeciphered. The Cherokee were asked about it, but they say that the carvings were done by people who lived there before them. Apparently, this generation doesn't know who those people were, but they know there were people here before their people came.

  • @skykc

    @skykc

    Жыл бұрын

    So what? There were over 1,000 different Native languages do you actually think that Cherokees which is not even their real name which you as a white person do not know were the only tribes in what you call now North carolina?

  • @skykc

    @skykc

    Жыл бұрын

    Besides the Cherokees were the most colonized of all the tribes so they lost their history way before all the other tribes did due to christianization and other factors imposed by whites so asking them is like asking a white person they only speak their own language from recovery not in practice

  • @georgerandall5686

    @georgerandall5686

    Жыл бұрын

    @@skykc wow so arrogant! take a chill pill will you!

  • @ckd0680

    @ckd0680

    Жыл бұрын

    Where is it located exactly?

  • @DeshCanter

    @DeshCanter

    Жыл бұрын

    @@skykc What is their “real” name and who gets to decide what it is?

  • @4QBUD
    @4QBUD Жыл бұрын

    Love ya Bill. Thank you and please keep up the good (great) work.

  • @henrycarmona8560
    @henrycarmona8560 Жыл бұрын

    Good information.

  • @wowbagger3505
    @wowbagger3505 Жыл бұрын

    Wow, I blundered on this by accident. Being a fifth generation Appalachian American from an easily traceable Galloway Scot’s family after I started I was persuaded to go all in for Y-DNA analysis, so I have had an introduction to the capabilities of Y-DNA although I am still working at understanding some of the vocabulary. I now can trace this line back to the 1600s. Anyway, I am hooked already!

  • @beno.9958

    @beno.9958

    Жыл бұрын

    Waste of money and time. The so-called experts really don't understand DNA or genetics. Just like everything else, it is all speculation and conjecture by mostly incompetent students and wannabe famous professors. The truth is scientists have been wrong about everything since civilization began. Today there is an intelligence drought in American universities and the DNA testing is just another scam to get your money and personal information.

  • @lindamorgan2678

    @lindamorgan2678

    Жыл бұрын

    Don't trust that DNA read the fine print on the bottom.. most scientists explain it better and how it is not accurate. Kinda a fad now.

  • @rickgriffin1069

    @rickgriffin1069

    Жыл бұрын

    ​​@@atticusmartinschannel ( U G G G)😅

  • @joedominguez2523

    @joedominguez2523

    Жыл бұрын

    It’s easy for some people to rewrite history and present it to others that don’t know history to begin with.

  • @aarongoldesberry2882

    @aarongoldesberry2882

    Жыл бұрын

    My ancestors were the Dixons. They came in the early 1600s. Did you get any Cherokee blood in your bloodline?

  • @JimProctor47
    @JimProctor47 Жыл бұрын

    My question to you is have you read the book " They came before Columbus by Dr. Ivan Van Sertimar ? "

  • @june049
    @june049 Жыл бұрын

    Informative!

  • @jonathandewberry289
    @jonathandewberry289 Жыл бұрын

    I'm happy someone was trying to clarify what these 'DNAandMe34' ancestry test do and 'do not' necessarily tell us. Too many average folks believe what it's telling them is that for 5000+ years they were 'English' or 'East African' but they are far more like saying "about 5 or so generations ago... like we can take you back to about 200 years maybe... you're DNA would be most associated with this known genetic group which would be in Scotland or Nigeria". Many or even most of us aren't really getting what these DNA home-kit tests are trying to say. (they actually do explain this in detailed ways in the material but the average person doesn't always 'get it')

  • @SteelsCrow
    @SteelsCrow Жыл бұрын

    This is the first time I've come to this channel, and so far all the descriptions of how the Americas used to be check out. When farmers clearing land in the Amazon kept finding substantial earthworks grown over by the jungle, it became obvious there used to be more people there. People have since been mapping the ground under the forest canopy with lasers from above, demonstrating widespread habitation. The black earth is replicated by "biochar", or charcoal infused with microbes fed by rich nutrients like urine and flour, that makes plants very healthy. I'll hear what you have to say next.

  • @JS-yv8ks

    @JS-yv8ks

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes the genocide of the Native Americans Is THE largest genocide in history !

  • @Mandy-nt2cs

    @Mandy-nt2cs

    Жыл бұрын

    I am fascinated with the LIDAR work going on in South America. I really wish there were more of an effort to make TV, documentaries, something.. some way to watch & keep up with it.

  • @maggiedoja

    @maggiedoja

    Жыл бұрын

    Like areas kept poor and desolate, take part of Nebraska for one example. They aren't digging or plowing or anything all those bizarre rolling mounds, hills, bluffs and steppes. I dunno about anyone else but it feels electric in certain parts, how better to hide things then to make it almost unbearable to breathe there....

  • @maggiedoja

    @maggiedoja

    Жыл бұрын

    Why do you think they manipulate our food industry?? To only allow the worst practices and enforce ridiculous rules. Run good people off their land, bring in more profit driven controlled idiots to be in charge. Do you know why we don't get stickers on meat telling us where it came from.. why do they regulate seeds why are they not allowing small farms to thrive??

  • @billjohnson9472

    @billjohnson9472

    Жыл бұрын

    "used to be more people there". - so how do you calculate the population from the earthworks? for example how do you know they didn't just move to different locations over time?

  • @incognito3620
    @incognito3620 Жыл бұрын

    Are we not always wrong. The more we discover, the more we discover our ignorance about the past.

  • @Number4lead

    @Number4lead

    Жыл бұрын

    Trust the science. Lololol

  • @teedepefanio4974
    @teedepefanio4974 Жыл бұрын

    Cool.. great presentation.. SUBSCRIBED ❤

  • @bonnieskinner9181
    @bonnieskinner918111 ай бұрын

    So very interesting and eye opening.

  • @jamesconsiglio3726
    @jamesconsiglio3726 Жыл бұрын

    I am a 67 year old male in the US only second generation here in the states . Wile growing up I was told I had Scottish blood from my mother's father ,her mother was said to be Polish and German.My father's parents were both Italian. At 63 I had taken the 23 and me testing and through my father I am 50 % Italian but on my mother's side my grandfather was not Scottish at all he was English , Irish , and Scandinavian...Now my mother's mother had no less than some 41 nationalities starting from north west Africa up through Asia then west through Turkey, and on throughout eastern Europe into western Europe to Poland and up into Russia. NOT A DROP OF SCOTTISH BLOOD ...but as I said I am a second generation American and that's what the people become a mix of all the continually conquered people throughout Europe and then the Americas . And here in the Americas more than anywhere else the acceptance of mixed marriages has relaxed to the point that I believe at some point if not already there will be a people who are of all nationalities.

  • @ScottAndScarlettsDarkHumor

    @ScottAndScarlettsDarkHumor

    Жыл бұрын

    The Irish might still explain it. At one point very far back, the Irish and the Scottish were one people. There was a disagreement and some of them left and settled in what is now known as Scotland. Some Scottish last names are also Irish names that are accepted by Scottish clan societies as accepted descendants of those who were part of the Scottish clan. It sounds like you took a DNA test, if so, that DNA are the dominant genes that consist of you as a person. It does not factor in that you still descend from a Scottish ancestor, it just means you didn't inherit that person's genes when you were being born. It also does not factor in that you are a carrier for the next generation, of genes you don't have as your own personal dominant genes. This is why the paperwork is so important. I look like an Allison, that gene skipped a few generations to get to me but it just doesn't change the fact that I also descend from the Duncans and as such, I still am the 45th great grandson of Duncan I, King of Scots. I am who I am and dna is just a small part of that. It's a good place to start but it's not the final word on the subject like some try to believe that it is. I hope that helps.

  • @russelbrown6275

    @russelbrown6275

    Жыл бұрын

    Yea. It will be a time of no pure breeds but just a bunch of heinz 57s or oreos

  • @ScottAndScarlettsDarkHumor

    @ScottAndScarlettsDarkHumor

    Жыл бұрын

    @Picalo Pete They are and when someone wants to get a test done they are the first ones I mention but I always tell them exactly what they're getting so they know that while it is a great place to start, it won't be everything.

  • @deadcatbounce3124

    @deadcatbounce3124

    Жыл бұрын

    My parents' DNA tests both showed Scottish ancestry when there's no family history from that area, it was all recorded as Scandinavia and Germany, with the surprise being Hungarian/Magyar, but that's easily explained by the nearness of the regions. Doing a little more digging, I think it's the preponderance of the haplogroup (I think it's R1b) that predominates in Scotland, even though it's common across Europe that made 23 assign you Scottish ancestry. If you're really curious, My True Ancestry will match your DNA to archeological finds, and what I found with my family is that yes, we really do match finds in Scotland and England, but they're generally from the Bronze Age, and Viking Age England. For my family, we're pretty much everything north of the Alps, back to Hunter Gatherers, with Scythian (from modern day Ukraine and Russia) as the exception.

  • @ScottAndScarlettsDarkHumor

    @ScottAndScarlettsDarkHumor

    Жыл бұрын

    @@deadcatbounce3124 Exactly, it's those type of things that mess people up. That's a good option to help people understand. I have Russian and Roman ancestors and when my dad did his test, it didn't even pick that up. It's a great place to start but like I said, the tests aren't everything.

  • @NicoleReevesnjdr
    @NicoleReevesnjdr11 ай бұрын

    My family has always identified as having Creek and Cherokee heritage 🪶🪶🪶 (Alabama) The phenotypes, stories and accounts from the elders, etc. in my family all make sense. Unfortunately, my/our accounts are many times dismissed and we are called derogatory names such as WABOs 😢 Anyway, your research has been the most thourough I’ve found and I appreciate it. ❤

  • @lukecarey613

    @lukecarey613

    11 ай бұрын

  • @beestoe993

    @beestoe993

    10 ай бұрын

    I guess Im just an old fart, I had to look that slur up, never heard of it before. Apparently it can have numerous meanings and as such it is meaningless. People are rotten sometimes. Don't give jerks the gratification of letting them get you down. They are not worth it. Hold your head high, always.

  • @Thomas_Oklahoma

    @Thomas_Oklahoma

    10 ай бұрын

    Native Americans are not ancient Black, White or anything other, we are our own people. You all have your own histories in your respective Old World region. DNA alone debunks you all.

  • @sandysanders6873
    @sandysanders6873 Жыл бұрын

    I'm new to this channel. It's very interesting. When you count population and generation groups are you counting only post flood population?

  • @guloguloguy
    @guloguloguy Жыл бұрын

    WOW!!!!!!! THANK YOU, FOR PRESENTING THIS AMAZING INFORMATION, TO US!!! THIS IS ASTOUNDING!!!...

  • @heidirobinson3352
    @heidirobinson3352 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this video.

  • @sweetpeasandyarrowaranchdi8327
    @sweetpeasandyarrowaranchdi8327 Жыл бұрын

    I just watched a Hopi man's interview. He said the Hopi had been on their land forever, but the Navajo came from Alaska. The Hopi had to build their villages on top of mesa's, so they could see attacks coming. Also the farmland in the jungles makes more sense, when you see the pyramids and other ancient ruins there.

  • @davedahowell8694

    @davedahowell8694

    Жыл бұрын

    Do you know the Hopi religious beliefs? I dont remember where I heard this decades ago, but I think I remember someone saying that they were monotheistic. The Hopi didn't worship spirits like other tribes in that area, but a single creator god.. They also had legends of someone similar to a Messiah or Savior. (I could be completely wrong, so please don't quote me on this.)

  • @carolwright7503

    @carolwright7503

    Жыл бұрын

    The kachina dolls were made for good and bad by the Hopi. The dolls for me, were made to say they had more than one god....

  • @ramsfire

    @ramsfire

    Жыл бұрын

    Ironically, The American Hopi Tribe shows similarities with The Dogon Tribe of Mali, West Africa. Truly remarkable.

  • @Jason-hg1pc

    @Jason-hg1pc

    Жыл бұрын

    @Rick Anglin You lied. The "Navajo" and "Apache" both speak the same language as my mother's family from Alaska, Native speakers say it's like someone from Texas giving directions to someone from Scotland that's asked for a menu. The names for numbers are the same.

  • @Jason-hg1pc

    @Jason-hg1pc

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MissCleo24 The Navajo speak the Athabaskan language, as do the Apache, and the Alaskan Athabaskans are one of the largest private landowners in North America. The Inuit are a minority population that reside above the Arctic Circle, and were previously referred to as Eskimo.

  • @jenv9782
    @jenv9782 Жыл бұрын

    Extremely interesting! I couldn't stop watching from beginning to end. Thank you!

  • @rosebudadkins6803
    @rosebudadkins6803 Жыл бұрын

    I am Lakota. My ancestors killed Custer.

  • @judyweigl9604
    @judyweigl9604 Жыл бұрын

    How do I find all of these talks?

  • @Orenotter
    @Orenotter Жыл бұрын

    This isn't what I expected. The title has ORIGINAL in all caps, so I thought you'd be discussing who settled North America before the tribes we have today.

  • @petermorton301

    @petermorton301

    Жыл бұрын

    It toke a different turn real quick.

  • @PANTHEON71

    @PANTHEON71

    Жыл бұрын

    every 100 years the new take over from the "originals" perpetually forever till the end of days.

  • @sombra6153
    @sombra6153 Жыл бұрын

    Interestingly in something else I had seen suggested that the first European explorers navigating the Amazon reported encountering large cities along the river. A century later, explorers couldn’t find them and said the previous accounts were not true. I’ve seen some areas in my metro that have fallen into disrepair and became uninhabited, that after 50 years nature will have done a pretty good job of reclaimation as evidenced by just ten years of neglect. Of course the Vikings who visited North America apparently didn’t feel compelled to share iron working secrets with the inhabitants they encountered. I really wonder how much real contact Iron Age societies had with the Americas prior to then.

  • @richardavery4692

    @richardavery4692

    Жыл бұрын

    Europeans carried diseases, notably small pox, that decimated entire tribes of native Americans. It's entirely possible, I'd say probable, those cities were very real & were abandoned due to outbreaks within a month of contact with those early explorers & reclaimed by the jungle. That pattern was seen throughout the western hemisphere & there's no reason to believe South America would fare any different.

  • @donaldscobie8455

    @donaldscobie8455

    Жыл бұрын

    Read 1491

  • @bigshagg3815

    @bigshagg3815

    Жыл бұрын

    It's amazing what one little European germ can do

  • @joycelatham3074

    @joycelatham3074

    Жыл бұрын

    11:07

  • @SunGrazer59

    @SunGrazer59

    Жыл бұрын

    We recently discovered those cities using LIDAR imiging.

  • @waveInfinite
    @waveInfinite Жыл бұрын

    Great video.

  • @bonniearmstrong6564
    @bonniearmstrong65642 ай бұрын

    Thank you for Mr. Mann ‘s name. I had brought this book, but lost it because of moving and just started reading it. Looking forward to reading this book.

  • @juliesteimle3867
    @juliesteimle3867 Жыл бұрын

    Glad you found the book 1491.... When I found it, it amazed me some of the discoveries he had observed in South America. I studied North American Archaeology briefly years ago, and the one thing they always impressed upon us that disease was the main killer, and the people that remained were more like refugees than anything else. The Hopewell mound builders are proof that there used to be a great big nation and trade in the North once.

  • @nancyscott9582

    @nancyscott9582

    Жыл бұрын

    What is the name of the book and where might I find it?

  • @taisontaison4118

    @taisontaison4118

    Жыл бұрын

    But how do you explain copper in europe in ancient times from isle royale. How do they explain bodies in a bog in florida that still had brain matter in them, and it is said the dna was caucasian. And the mounds here and mounds in ireland etc. History is not what we think it is. And what about these red haired giants with six toes and six fingers of which it was said at least one was killed in afghanistan. It was apparently killing and eating people for a long time there and it killed apparently some u.s. soldiers. Then others were sent there and they killed it. I have heard story's of indians apparently waging a battle against giants in the u.s. and giant skeletons being taken and apparently destroyed. It talks in genesis about giants. And another thing, I have heard of indians having treats with these giants and the giants stayed in certain places, and the Indians avoided them. Makes you wonder what is killing these people in the national parks that dave paulidas talks about. Seems strange these places were designated as national parks in the first place. I also think there may be different kinds of cryptids. Natives talk about skinwalkers and people just laugh. But I think we have to stop thinking inside of a little box and think outside the box. Many people have seen strange things especially in those parks. People try to say " oh it was a bear". I was a hunter and I know a bear when I see one plus they were extremely rare where I am. And those way up north were only black bear. And I doubt there is a black bear between 13-15 ft. I think many hunters have seen the sasquatch but do not say anything because their afraid of ridicule. Btw I know someone who claims to have seen a dogman. I just inquired as to where, so I can avoid that area.

  • @graymatters7584

    @graymatters7584

    Жыл бұрын

    Great book - along with its companion 1493. Both good, but I personally enjoyed 1491 a little more. Guns, Germs & Steel is very good, too. Also Sapiens by Yuval Harari.

  • @farmeral7566

    @farmeral7566

    Жыл бұрын

    Diseases and war

  • @meanqkie2240

    @meanqkie2240

    Жыл бұрын

    @@graymatters7584 Yuval Harari is godless mess! I wouldn’t pollute my mind by anything he wrote!

  • @TinaShay
    @TinaShay Жыл бұрын

    Subscribing! Your great at transmitting hard to grasp ideas... A lot like the guy on the Florida Marquise Channel does. Very enjoyable time spent watching. Thank you!

  • @dfacedagame
    @dfacedagame11 ай бұрын

    Wow, some of these views fly in the face of the norm and ideologies of ANSWERS IN GENESIS and yet they had this interview and discussion and posted this video. Bravo ! This is how we gain knowledge. Ken Ham's face was priceless, when Dr. Jeanson said "That doesn't account for the 100,000 years of human life ".

  • @BlazinRiver1
    @BlazinRiver111 ай бұрын

    Randall Carlson, Ben Davidson and Dr. Jeanson should have a round table.

  • @calebfielding6352
    @calebfielding6352 Жыл бұрын

    This is actually helpful for me. I am writting an alternate history/time travel series, and one of the characters is dealing with Texas and mezoamerica in the first century. Good to know more information to help me write correct characters. The series starts with "Earth's Eulogy" and I am about to release book 7 once I get it back from the editor.

  • @lindabuck2777

    @lindabuck2777

    Жыл бұрын

    Interesting.

  • @arcanexciii623

    @arcanexciii623

    Жыл бұрын

    I’d love to have a read. Consider the Hermetica, A Book of The Beginnings, Atlantis: The Antediluvian World and Other Worlds - Other Tongues. Kurimeo Ahau is also worth looking into, he has a channel here. Bobby Hemmit, Phil Valentine, and Dr Delbert Blair have plenty of lectures available on their websites, as well as bits and pieces of lectures on KZread. Mind Unveiled is also a treasure trove for ideas and potential areas of research

  • @DC-kx1qj

    @DC-kx1qj

    Жыл бұрын

    And Cahokia?

  • @RealHooksy

    @RealHooksy

    Жыл бұрын

    Don’t use this video if you want accurate information. It’s just a bunch of vague suppositions and mostly garbage, masquerading as research.

  • @hollyprincipato3287

    @hollyprincipato3287

    11 ай бұрын

    Good luck on your book

  • @sexgod57able
    @sexgod57able Жыл бұрын

    So interesting. Thanks for sharing.

  • @manleynelson9419
    @manleynelson9419 Жыл бұрын

    This information is great and if you combine it with all the lidar that's been done in the Amazon you can pretty much draw the conclusion that there were huge populations

  • @rhondawhite5202
    @rhondawhite52023 ай бұрын

    I'm from North Carolina and my paternal heritage in America goes back to the early 1600's in North America. My great .... great grandfather (Irish) married my great ... great grandmother, who was a Native American and they lived in the Five Nations Territory as documented in the National Archives. My father always spoke about and showed me Indian Culture and history. The Native American map you showed would put us in the Catawba area. My dad was always pointing out Indian names that I am familiar with in the Southeastern United States. Thank you for this video.

  • @mccoy2558
    @mccoy2558 Жыл бұрын

    Yes, we've had giants found in my area. One was found at the Lovelock caves and Pyramid Lake. Its pretty crazy to drive by and know what was found there.

  • @rmac1199

    @rmac1199

    Жыл бұрын

    As I read when I lived up there, A researcher started digging out in the caves sometime at the turn of the century in the early 1900's and found skulls, and parts of hands. When it was reported, the Smithsonian came out to Lovelock, closed off the area, excavated the entire site and left. No one has seen anything since. And the Smithsonian never mentioned it or displayed it. The Humboldt Museum in Winnemucca has a giant skull (not one of those from the cave) but it is still a giant skull.

  • @garnettforgiven5890

    @garnettforgiven5890

    Жыл бұрын

    O bet it was only reported locally. The liberal education narrative would have taken a hit otherwise

  • @rodneysnextchapter615

    @rodneysnextchapter615

    Жыл бұрын

    Bigfoots maybe ?

  • @joanneshepard5449

    @joanneshepard5449

    Жыл бұрын

    yes, cleopatras twins (Helios and Selene) brought the whole family crip over here and reburied them in southern ill, (Alexander the great) cleopatra, mark Anthony, were all reburied here in America :) check out (Harry Hubbard) on KZread, he has researched this for 25 years :)

  • @strattuner

    @strattuner

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rmac1199 yeah between the SMITHSONIAN AND THE VATICAN,nothing will be added to,but much will be taken away,we the people know what they are doin,we just are pissed off enough,its coming though,my neighbors are pissed at everything,no conversation ends with low blood pressure

  • @davidlampe4153
    @davidlampe4153 Жыл бұрын

    I read 1491 about ten years ago and found it fascinating and interesting that the Indian tribes were terraforming the area long before Columbus. The blaze of color in the fall leaves was in many parts of the northeast an actual blazing fire or fires set by the tribes to remove the understory of brush and invasive plants and create new growth of grasses to encourage the herds of animals to grow nearby.

  • @HIGHLANDER_ONLY_ONE

    @HIGHLANDER_ONLY_ONE

    Жыл бұрын

    I read that same book!!!

  • @echofoxtrot2.051

    @echofoxtrot2.051

    Жыл бұрын

    Me too. In a US history class. Btw, the reason California keeps having wildfires that are so hard to control is that they've banned those essential controlled burns that the people did long before Europeans came.

  • @michaeljarvis5489

    @michaeljarvis5489

    Жыл бұрын

    @@echofoxtrot2.051 But, but, but, but, but, no, its the global warming. Uh, wait a minute, yeah? Oh! The global climate change. Wait, what now? Oh, ok, I see. Its the man made gl- What now? Fine. Its the human caused climate change, but not from all humans. The uber rich people's jet fuel and giant vehicles aren't as bad as the regular cars the commoners use. How dare you cause forest fires with your going to work and moving around the world somewhat freely!

  • @christophermosier3754

    @christophermosier3754

    Жыл бұрын

    And?

  • @szymonbaranowski8184

    @szymonbaranowski8184

    Жыл бұрын

    like one fishing tribe only?

  • @cubicinfinity2
    @cubicinfinity2 Жыл бұрын

    It seems like native American history is a lot more interesting than we think.

  • @sunnyray7819
    @sunnyray78197 ай бұрын

    The Indians never met Columbus, He never even stepped foot on North American soil.

  • @bvictory5698
    @bvictory5698 Жыл бұрын

    The world is far smaller than we all think especially in our younger years. I had the blessing of living on both coasts by the time I was 4 and living in Colorado but the time I turned 5. My dad has gone down south for vacation and long lost friends have grabbed him in crowds he hasn’t seen in years and hugged him. It took me 46 hours to drive across the country when I was 21, that was nothing to me then, even less now. Even without cars you can cross great distances with the proper determination and preparation. Some people have walked across the US in just over a month. It’s really not that hard to see just how small the world really is. It seems vast in your mind but when you go out and explore it physically, it’s clear this world is pretty small.

  • @brit8802

    @brit8802

    Жыл бұрын

    Love it

  • @user-id4ke8mx4b

    @user-id4ke8mx4b

    Жыл бұрын

    most of the earth is still unexplored according to the data, even with that many people, for every individual it is a very huge and vast place, and in the past it was common for entire armies to walk between countries within a few days, they were stronger and more versatile

  • @blackloki9

    @blackloki9

    Жыл бұрын

    If the world so small how come black african never left the jungles of Central africa.

  • @drydirttelepathy6150

    @drydirttelepathy6150

    Жыл бұрын

    @@blackloki9 they didn't need to.

  • @doniphan72ify

    @doniphan72ify

    Жыл бұрын

    @@blackloki9 ... Because they knew that the Africans on the coasts would round them up, and sell them as slaves?

  • @Non-Serviam300
    @Non-Serviam300 Жыл бұрын

    Reminds me of the movie “Apocalypto” that has scenes that reflected intense landscape-altering activity by aboriginal people right before the Spanish arrived.

  • @edbutzwiggle4227
    @edbutzwiggle4227 Жыл бұрын

    Incredible! thanks

  • @dorian4373
    @dorian4373 Жыл бұрын

    Great video thank you

  • @ww1and2expert85
    @ww1and2expert85 Жыл бұрын

    I would love to get tested at Answers in Genesis. How do I go about that?

  • @ronbrockway3665
    @ronbrockway366514 күн бұрын

    Did you get this information from genesis?

  • @jrabbit6862
    @jrabbit6862 Жыл бұрын

    I like the theory that we've had 5 civilizations that were wiped out in extinctions. This answers how tools and other artifacts are found in coal and other materials. Gotta wonder how far they went with technology and if that played a part in any or all of the global catastrophes that nearly wiped out all life on earth repeatedly.

  • @mountain_man89
    @mountain_man89 Жыл бұрын

    They just did a test on a native here in Montana. His ancestors were here for like 30k years. His ancestors talked about how they walked across the ice from Russia to Alaska.

  • @juliawescott8332

    @juliawescott8332

    Жыл бұрын

    Well, 30k years goes along with evolution, not creation~

  • @johnisrael5183

    @johnisrael5183

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah If you wanna use science to exaggerate the amount of years humans were not here 30 years ago, and if they were those are the people you all are digging up, that was a part of the flood that got washed away in the book of Genesis, so that proves the Bible true, not evolution!

  • @johnisrael5183

    @johnisrael5183

    Жыл бұрын

    I meant to say 30,000 years ago and those were pre-flood era people, which lines up with biblical history, perfectly not evolution! The more you are trying to disprove the Bible, the more you prove it to be true!

  • @beam3819
    @beam3819 Жыл бұрын

    Hi, I find this so intersting. Reminds me of the permaculture movement that for 50 years aprox have been doing this. Also reminding of Canadas woodlands that contained all foods and was preserved like you mentioned like a sofisticated park. Thanks for closing the gap in historie were this ancient highly productive farming was "forgotten".

  • @garystewart5443

    @garystewart5443

    Жыл бұрын

    The people who were here where black people they were the Indians historians don't want to admit it but the original that inhabited this land we're black

  • @lindakleckner215

    @lindakleckner215

    Жыл бұрын

    @@garystewart5443 yeah, dark skinned that's right. We have to all get along.

  • @lindamorgan2678

    @lindamorgan2678

    Жыл бұрын

    @@garystewart5443 haha you know whites were in the middle east to begin with and got killed off. That is why alot of afghans have blue eyes. and NO Jesus was not black either. White flight and White death

  • @louisejones5773

    @louisejones5773

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@lindakleckner215 they were black people not must dark skinned

  • @louisejones5773

    @louisejones5773

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@Ketazowski the bible. Try reading it. We are the originals. All land on this earth was willed to 3 black men...Noah's sons

  • @lifealliancegroup
    @lifealliancegroup Жыл бұрын

    Why is that Star of A.D 1492 in The wrong location on the map of the Americas @ time stamp 21:59 ?

  • @TheWorldIsWatching11
    @TheWorldIsWatching11 Жыл бұрын

    What is your probability on migrating based on core samples, and where can we view this?

  • @almyers8074
    @almyers8074 Жыл бұрын

    It would be interesting to hear how one proves the populations listed for these areas, especially North America.

  • @Wayne306

    @Wayne306

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree. I’m interested myself with some of the numbers that he stating. Especially the numbers of Europe. It is well documented that between 1346 and 1353 Europe experienced a black plague that wiped out between 75 to 200,000,000 Europeans. Which at that time was over 2/3 of the population. One of the main reasonings for slavery when they expand it was, they didn’t have any human resources which led to the edict of demarcation that started slavery out of Africa. I just don’t understand how Europe could have the most people in the world, but yet stole human resources out of Africa, that populated in some cases more so than Europeans that were in these expanded areas, but out of Africa.

  • @davidflitcroft7101

    @davidflitcroft7101

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Wayne306 Not likely. The total population of Europe before the Plague was under 70 Million. Most sources estimate the plague killed 1 in 3 Europeans, although higher percentages were recorded in Northern Italy and some other densely populated cities. After this event, a mini-Ice Age depopulated much of northern Europe, and wiped out Greenland's Vikings.

  • @Wayne306

    @Wayne306

    Жыл бұрын

    @@paulpowell4871 I try really hard when engaging on subjects like this to just speak to the facts nothing more nothing less. The point that I made was not pointing or suggesting anything at anyone, but just questioning the population that was stated in the video for Europe. Everything I stated was based on my premise that the population could not have been that great in Europe around the time suggested in the video based on the black plague, and as a side effect to the black plague and Europeans, hunger for empire, their wasn’t enough population therefore, it gave birth to the edict of demarcation. All of these are historical facts. Now dealing with your statement normally when a statement like the one you just made is stated by European it looks to justify one of if not the worlds greatest sin against another member of the human family. Your statement of slavery existing in Africa, or by Africans before Rome does not take away from the point I made based on the subject that all facts . Now, Mr. smarty-pants slavery. At that point, in history was nothing more than your current day, definition of prisoner of war. Since you want to bring up wine wine would do the same thing when they were parade, Kings, and rulers of other nations in front of the Roman population, as they are prisoners of war. Now when the European came on the scene and entered slavery after in slaving their own people first I might add, they changed the definition of slavery from prisoner of war to eternal servitude. And this was based on the definition that the Catholic Church gave in the edict of demarcation: hereditary servitude. Please, for future reference, when you make statements try to be fair and sensitive to others, when making such insensitive remarks that appear to be attempting to justify under definition that the average person doesn’t know the sins of one of the whirls. Worst virus to humanity. Respectfully.

  • @Muskiehunter4841

    @Muskiehunter4841

    Жыл бұрын

    ?? Proof read your novel before “sending”))) you might have some points, but it’s hard to know

  • @brit8802

    @brit8802

    Жыл бұрын

    Seriously? Muskie person your reply sucked nuts and his was great. Do some figurin before postin

  • @ThatGuyTheOriginal
    @ThatGuyTheOriginal7 ай бұрын

    I am surprised that you didn't mention any visits pre Columbus, such as the Vikings.

  • @davidthomas936
    @davidthomas936 Жыл бұрын

    The great Italian explorer Giovanni da Verrazzano was the first European to explore what is now the East Coast of the United States. By ship, he sailed up the east coast from Florida to New York. His eyewitness account is found in a 10 page letter he penned to the King of France in 1524 , 100 years before the Pilgrims, stating that ALL of the people he encountered during his voyage of the American east coast were DARK SKINNED with SHORT thick hair. His exact quote is that they look just like Ethiopians!!!!! None of the people who we currently describe as Native Americans (Indians) were ever mentioned!!! He kidnapped a small boy and took him back to France where the boy was looked upon as being AFRICAN!!!!!

  • @jasonbrown372

    @jasonbrown372

    26 күн бұрын

    Good thing we have DNA tests now, isn't it?

  • @user-nm3jh4ow3y
    @user-nm3jh4ow3y Жыл бұрын

    I lived in Wendover NV. For years and did a lot of exploring, as my curiosity began when digging in my yard I found sea shells.

  • @brendaann727

    @brendaann727

    Жыл бұрын

    That's neat. Growing up we lived on an inland river that had clay cliffs full of shell fossils. We often found shark teeth. Once when we were traveling throught the mountains of Tennessee, we went swimming in a murky lake and found shell fossils there too.

  • @NakedProphet

    @NakedProphet

    Жыл бұрын

    You might want to follow SuspiciousObservers channel and view his playlists. It looks like the sun catestrophically erupted about 12,000 years ago and the crust of the earth broke free of the mantle. The seas overtopped the Rockies coming from the west. You would enjoy

  • @carolynbillington9018
    @carolynbillington9018 Жыл бұрын

    well done

  • @wattsiswhat
    @wattsiswhat Жыл бұрын

    Oooh...I'm only at the 4:25mark but this sounds like a good one. It will be in the queue.

  • @r.b.l.5841
    @r.b.l.5841 Жыл бұрын

    The simplist approach, that assumes all the native groups were static, and all got along like a big family, is obvliously mistaken. They had warriors, so clearly there were conflicts. Names of places and water, to today, reveil movements. Lake Huron today is surrounded by Ojibwa people, the Huron (Wyndot) left in the 1650's and are now in Nebraska. The lack of written accounts, and deliberate erasure of their history has lead to our current lack of knowledge. Hopefully we can continue to piece it all back together.

  • @andrewcharles1734
    @andrewcharles1734 Жыл бұрын

    I find it fascinating. I wish I would have had more conversations with grandparents and great grandparents.

  • @liveyourlife495
    @liveyourlife495 Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely fascinating.

Келесі