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Finding an address on a map can be taken for granted in the age of GPS and smartphones. But centuries of forced relocation, disease and genocide have made it difficult to find where many Native American tribes once lived.
Aaron Carapella, a self-taught mapmaker in Warner, Okla., has pinpointed the locations and original names of hundreds of American Indian nations before their first contact with Europeans.
As a teenager, Carapella says he could never get his hands on a continental U.S. map like this, depicting more than 600 tribes — many now forgotten and lost to history. Now, the 34-year-old designs and sells maps as large as 3 by 4 feet with the names of tribes hovering over land they once occupied.
"This isn't really a protest," he explains. "But it's a way to convey the truth in a different way."
originally posted by: InTheLight
I find this fascinating, in that, I was trying to determine which races came over the land and/or ice/snow bridge in ancient times. To me some tribes appear Asian, while others Indian, European and Mongolian through the .pdf and enlargment feature.
www.npr.org...
The first human settlers of the New World may have spent ten millennia on the landmass that linked Siberia and Alaska.
Sediment cores from Alaska and the Bering Sea support genetic evidence that the first human settlers of the New World spent thousands of years inhabiting Beringia, the region that included the land bridge between Siberia and Alaska, scientists say.
originally posted by: Taupin Desciple
a reply to: Blackmarketeer
"This isn't really a protest," he explains. "But it's a way to convey the truth in a different way."
I like that guy. What he should do now is superimpose all of the information over a map of North America without the state/province boundary lines. Take a map that shows topography only and plop down the various tribes on that. Then state what each tribe, in their original name, was known for.....what their skill set was.....farming, basket making, hunting game, etc.....
It would be interesting to see with a birds-eye-view the correlation of those skill sets along with their locations. If Mr. Carapella did that, people would see how how the Native's worked with their natural surroundings. Then, if the information is available somewhere, take it all back in 100 year increments and make a new map to reflect each time period. The changes in populations, or lack thereof, would be interesting to see.
If anyone can do this sort of thing, I think he can.
Good find OP, thanks for sharing.
Nearly one-third of Native American genes come from west Eurasian people linked to the Middle East and Europe, rather than entirely from East Asians as previously thought, according to a newly sequenced genome.
originally posted by: the2ofusr1
the oceans may have been quite different then today and man could have been well equipped and capable of making the journey.
originally posted by: the2ofusr1
Tim Osterholm looks at the different inquires into the subject but he focuses more on names derived from the table of nations in Genesis and then finds who may have been their ancestors with common names .He finds mention of red skinned peoples with names that are close to some of the North American tribe names .I guess the debate is still ongoing and we may never have a definitive answer in our life time . a reply to: Blackmarketeer
originally posted by: ParanoidAmerican
a reply to: InTheLight
Definitely if you look especially east vs west.....interesting