I am from the Sioux Nation my Grandpa was chief elder. This is all very informative, some I knew, some I didn’t. Regarding the GREAT MOUNDS found in the US and all over the workd you mentioned those were NOT made by Native Americans, the mounds were made by the Nephilim. There is many stories within the Native American culture about Giants with 6 fingers, that’s what the “How” ✋🏼 “greeting” came from Natives would raise their hands to see if ppl had 6 fingers or not. And also our cultures speak about The Fallen Angels or Watchers coming from the sky, although the descriptions will be a bit different as you mentioned the Great Flood we have similar story and it’s obvious we take inspiration from the Bible it’s very clear. The Nephilim was here before the Native Americans I believe in America.
If I remember correctly, the nephilim were said to be the offspring of watcher and human mating. Not sure where I came across that info … perhaps the book of Enoch …. it has been a while.
I watched this video in hopes to learn more about those that made the mounds. It's fascinating that understanding is part of your history. Do you have any resources that describe what you're talking about
This is wonderful. I'm Cherokee and my grandson's father is Chickasaw. Sadly all we know about our tribes is who gets the better benefits. Thank you for the hard work and continued work.
This is very interesting My Husbands Grand Mother was a Cherokee & I have some Cheyenne kin in my blood !!! I have heard before about the Cherokee maybe descendants of Hebrew decent !! I'm curious _ would like to know!!
@@gailgregory3045 In the book A Cherokee vision of Eloh' published in 1981 by Bacone Indian College authors Meredith and Sobral reference the Cherokee being a clan of a people with 12 or 13 tribes (can't remember which) who lived in a land that flooded and how they built a great tower to the heavens to escape the flooding. Eventually they left that land and didn't realize how far they had traveled until they found that the land behind them (Atlantis?) had sunk. A later version of that book Cherokee Vision of Elohi was published in 1997. Both are out of print. I am fortunate to have one of the original 1981 copies.
@@madmedic7840 No what??? I'm just telling people about an out-of-print book on the Cherokee relating a supposedly very old story that came down orally.
My dad had a Cherokee grandmother. She married a Caucasian man. I want to learn more but those relatives have passed now. I've tried finding information but so far haven't found much.
I'm in London and visit the British museum once a year, my son loves it. I've been visiting the Native American exhibitions, they're unfortunately a little underwhelming. I recently realised there's an indigenous American exhibition that has to be booked in advance. I visited, WOW!! it's amazing, the aboriginal Americans weren't wiped out, they're still alive and kicking in the NBA and NFL!!
Oh, I hope you're one of those who think black Americans are indigenous Americans. The ones who are related to the American indigenous are hispanics who are mostly indigenous and mestizos.
The Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) founded the Great Law of Peace in c. 1142 A.D. during an eclipse. At this time, they were the Five Nations; Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida and Mohawk. Later, in c. 1722, the Tuscarora joined making it the Six Nations, though they have no place at the Fire. EDIT: I am Seneca (Seneca-Cayuga Nation) of the Haudenosaunee, though I am residing within Choctaw Nation. Even to this day, I plant the Three Sisters using seed that has been passed down for over 400 years.
Planting the three sisters with 400 yr old generational seeds is quite an accomplishment. The three sisters are known by virtually every tribe, everywhere in the N.A continent, I am not certain in C.A or S.A. due to the abundance of staple vegetation that changes in variety depending on climate and environment. Maize is universal in S.A , C.A. and N.A., beans may be universal but squash is a big question mark. The Diné honors the three sisters and have dances regarding them and what happens to them. The dances are beautiful . Thanks for sharing !
I’m 57 years old. My Daddy’s Grandmother was Cherokee. I don’t remember what my Great Grandfather was (my Daddy never mentioned him). Daddy only spoke of his Grandmother a total of times on one hand. I had read about the person who studied & collected the Indigenous languages of the United States that were similar to Hebrew. I follow Chief Joseph AmaHura Riverwind - Taino people from Puerto Rico - has either a piece of a stone tablet or a manuscript with a language very similar to Hebrew. I’m very, very happy to hear that you have found more information about the tribes who were scattered to the ends of the world!
Arabic is related to Hebrew....lots of sailors in the employ of various exploring nations, espec Portugal & Spain, had Arab descended crew members. They could have easily transported their language to the Caribbean....
I don't think there is a book out there that states the history of creation itself and all the genealogies of people and at what age they had a certain son and how long they lived after that and what the Creator wanted them to do and where to go and gave the history of a nation that was dispersed to all corners of the globe and then reconnected as an entire nation (1948) intact with their original language, and predicts the exact happenings during this tribulation period that we are just starting into (if this digital dollar doesn't blare out the beginning of the mark of the Beast period, i don't know what does!!!), other than the Creator's Word Itself!!!??? Open to Revelations and start following along!!!
So much I’d like to say, but I’ll just hit my main thoughts… 1. The work you’re doing is remarkable. 2. You present it so well. 3. I suspect that you may have some idea of how important your work is and will be for years to come (barring a rapture next week or something;)), but I’m confident that YOU and your work on history are now historically important as well. I.e., YOU are making history! Thank you!
@@sandman9390. Everything about history is a lie and people don’t even know DNA they don’t even know about Genesis or the book of Enoch or anything they don’t even know the real truth of slavery like everything is a lie here on earth isn’t it God and I do mean everything.
My son is part Cherokee, part Blackfoot. Unfortunately the grandma was taught to have contempt for her heritage. I said that was horrible & she should learn her heritage! I later cared for our local Native American historian before he passed, & loved hearing his stories!❤
The christians do not look to "recover" knowledge for "us". Christians look to REWRITE HISTORY to their way of doing things. Christians, at the end of the day, are interested in serving their version of a god. Christians will use one positive to justify a slaughter.
This is amazing! My great grandfather was 100% Cherokee and there is so much we don’t know and wish we did. It is like that side of the family is silent, and their story should be heard. I know we miss out on so much because we don’t know. Thank you for doing this. It is absolutely amazing and a worth while endeavor. ❤
My grandfather is 100% Yaqui. My great grandparents left their tribe. I went through so many contacts and loops to trace back to the apache. Somewhere along the way there was Mayan, but there are still so many holes. Just following 2 of my grandparents and their siblings and kids we had 78 family members alive during a 10 year span. I hope we keep writing and archiving as much as we can for the future generations.
I don’t mean to be mean but us natives hear this ALL the time, my great /great great blah blah was Cherokee.... oh what clan or band were they from? Most (99%) have no idea, somewhere along the line someone just picked the most popular tribe bc so and so “looked” native (dark features). I think the best thing to say is “on my mom/ dad side I have indigenous ancestry” We are very tight knit communities with clan systems. Don’t just choose a tribe if your not doing the due diligence of being on the roll of that tribe. We have to prove our blood quantum to be apart if the tribe and when ppl just throw out tribal affiliation with no ties to the community just becomes a joke. Just FYI from a reservation Native whose first language is Navajo.
@JLane Hardy that's why I always make it clear my great grandparents left. They have the blood but our family is no longer affiliated. I would love to be but I don't argue with my elders.
God knows and all Truth will be revealed soon! We are getting closer every day! Most of the records of the natives were destroyed along with the DNA of natives that has been hidden, removed or tampered with for the purpose of keeping us in the dark. By removing or confusing the mass and never disclosing their bloodlines and having many Jews who came to America changed their last names to avoid being persecuted. And many native Americans changed their names to avoid persecution... I am a member of Perdido Bay tribe and my ancestors are the Muscogee tribe aka upper and lower Creek. The lower Creek is my people who hid in the creeks and swamps and refused to go on the trail of tears! Come visit us in Pensacola!
I was a short range missile crewman in the U.S. Army 80-86, my M O S was 16 Poppa/Sierra. We had many Indian/Native names for our Helicopters. Kiowa, Iroquois, Apache... great info here guys.
We sang a song in grade school in Minnesota. It went like this. “ I can fight off Indians Pawnee, Shawnee Comanche Chippewa, Sioux”. I learned later in life that many Europeans were murdered by these tribes.
Genius! This has to be done more often. We must learn more about that important story about America, all America also South America. This is a must. Thenk you very much!
If you are not indigenous ie Black you are not an Indian. Stop lying. Socalled nonblack people could not have appeared anywhere on the planet before Black people due to the fact that nonblack people are not naturally occurring people ie indigenous. Shalawam 👊🏿🕎⚔️🏹🪶🌽💜🙏🏿
@@Lilpumpkin505 Stop lying. As an Autochthonous Being ie Black man I can assure you that the Americas are the old world and that we spread out from America. There was also Atlantis and several other civilizations too old to count in the Americas. The idea that inorganic beings ie nonblack people are qualified to speak of human origins is laughable when we consider the fact that they are not human according to science but hybrids ie sapiens neanderthal who suddenly appeared six to ten thousand years ago and have yet to tell us where they came from and how they came into being. Shalom
TY for your great work. Comments are just as interesting. I'd like to state I'm from the PNW, where a friend of mine was a forest worker. He confessed to me that part of his job was going into certain areas, and redirecting pathways that led to "significant historical areas" so as to hide or cover up most of these sites. Living on the rez now, back where my Grandmother was born. I'd like to say, we are all more a like than we are different. Also, any one person can change the world forever.
This was such an excellent presentation. I really liked the case you made for the scientific community to take the oral traditions of peoples more seriously. Thank you for the great work you are doing. I'm not Native American but I really enjoyed your video. At the end of the day, learning about the history of our brothers and sisters on this planet is really important and always exciting.
The Red Record is a good read that includes, not only a global flood event, but the IceAge and even encountering Giants, (Mound Builders) along the Mississippi.
Yayy!! @Dr. Jeanson, I love that you're brave enough to be non-PC driven, and so focused and addressing Native History in such a wonderful manner!! I am Inpuiaq. God bless you and protect you and your family!! God bless all your endeavors in the Name of Jesus!!!🙏🏽💖✨
I’d love a kid (elementary) friendly version of this. 🙂We’re covering Native Americans this summer before we start Master Book’s America’s Story next school year and Truth-based resources are so hard to find.
@@GG-vz8zy Age and attention span appropriate. I didn’t say anything about watering down or softening. Way to stretch it to somewhere I never took it though. 🤨
My grandmother was Chiricahua Apache. She and my grandfather never got married because at that time, it was illegal for them to marry because my grandfather was Irish. She did not have a birth certificate. She had a roll number. I am 50 years old and my father is 82 years old. My father is the youngest of 13 kids. Only him and one sister is still alive of the 13 children.
the Ket root language of the Apache is from the southern Siberian redheaded giants of the Tarim Basin. The storytellers say they "brought their own Mongols".
Thank you for all your extensive research and hard work! This is so fascinating to me as I am a First Nation Ojibway in Canada. My 4th great grandfather was named Shawundai (Sultry Heat) and was the last hereditary Chief in our First Nation. He came from the US and his nation was forced onto Grape Island in Lake Ontario, until being settled in 3 separate First Nations here in Canada. I'm asking my brother to get his DNA done as I would like to know more about my paternal lineage. I will ask him to share with you so it can be included as you further your research. My mother was non-native and our maternal lineage goes right back to the maiden Viking warrior found at Birka, Sweden. She also has Sephardic Jewish in her lineage. I just love learning about our history and your books are amazing!
You are so blessed to have information on your lineage. Im 81, my father was born in Czechoslovakia, and i know nothing about it. Continue your search, write it down and share it.
@@sonjaohlmann510 thank you. I must admit, I'm very proud of my heritage and I can't wait to learn more on my dad's side. Take care and Yah bless you and keep you!!!
I finally got a copy of Traced; it would be nice to have The Red Record reprinted so more people could afford copies of it! We have several Indian and part-Indian family members, so this is very interesting to us, and I've really enjoyed following Dr. Jeanson's research.
I was a strange kid who adored history. It was my passion. This lecture would have enthralled me as a kid. I would have watched it over and over the same way i watched world war and civil war documentaries. I devoured books on European history too. BUT i was alone in that. I had ZERO history friends. They all said it was boring...which i found astonishing. So i understand when people request a kid friendly version. I know adults who can't stand five minutes of this. I'm not one. A few months ago i was having trouble sleeping so i chose one of his videos to put me to sleep (he has a soothing voice 😂) unfortunately i was so fascinated by the subject i ended up listening to the whole thing 🙄 I strongly suggest someone reach out to the creator of tuttle twins to make something for the kids. He is actively trying to prevent history from repeating, trying to stop the government from doing to everyone what they did to the indians...and every other minority that wasn't wealthy.
My mother finally became enrolled in the Cherokee Nation. Her family came from Cherokee territory in Tennessee and walked the Trail of Tears to Oklahoma. Her 2x Great grandfather is Cherokee General Stand Watie. We come from the mound building ppl. AKA the Woodland American Indians
Wow! This is excellent. Years ago, I read Charles Mann's '1491' and it blew my mind. It's one of those books that stayed with me. This fills in so many gaps. I'm a genealogist at heart but life gets in the way. Thank you!
Wow. I was checked on my mother's line. South Carolina was native American territory. Cree and catawba. On my dad side we are the7th generations from the chief daughter
Terrific work. Lots of thinking, analysing and perhaps a few sleepless nights trying to figure out how to piece the puzzle together :). Impressive and informative. I’m glad you share some info about Indian tribes because I’m Australian and have little knowledge of native Indian people. Now I’m looking for a copy of The Red Record. Thank you very much for all your hard work. God bless you heaps!
Appreciate the time you took putting this together and to all those involved in amd off the screen like those actually involved for what we all experience in our world as we know it and for what we may not , know
Your research has given me a light bulb moment, It made me realise that I've looked at origins of peoples, native population and even my own people, from an evolutionist perspective rather than a Biblical perspective.
@Sela Moa, Remember one of the evolutionists' agendas is to obscure true history and the existence of God the Almighty. Welcome back to the true path. God bless you.
@@googleuser3110 the Native "Medicine Wheel" is a circle divided into 4 Quarters. The colors are: red, yellow, black and white - the four colors of humans! How did they know? There's something for you to think about!
@@ginakelley749 After the great flood, there was Noah, Shem, Ham , Japeth, and their wives. I'm sure there are 4 colors in there somewhere. That is where we all came from. Thanks for the reply, and God Bless.
What an absolutely intriguing and incredible journey. The Native American history is absolutely fascinating. Can’t wait to hear more about what’s connected and how starting with the biblical account makes it possible.
Am not surprised that every political party’s leaders will disagree even with this clear evidence. If you don’t mind how long have you been following this page?!!?💕🦋.!
What’s amazing is that your work is showing that, even for what many consider the Native Nations of North America, living in North America is but an experience in their journey from their original lands. Such information is crucial for a fuller understanding of where mankind truly originated at. What I mean is that even those nations are not truly indigenous to this land though here for centuries. I don’t say that in disrespect. I say that from the point of view of the bigger picture in the history of humanity. I’m from Puerto Rico, born there to parents of parents born there, but our history shows even our Taino/Arawak descendant connections aren’t from the island of Borikén but from the same origins as those of the nations of the Americas. Same as that of our Afro-Caribbean connections and Spaniard connections. Hope this makes sense. Thank you for your work.
It's true that *most of y'all have Indigenous roots from the main lands, but people will still argue with you about YOUR heritage. Smh My kids' family is from Santulce, Puerto Rico.
This video is so rich in information that it's almost too much for me to take in, but it is so fascinating and exciting. What an amazing spark this can be for gathering and compiling the lost history of these nations. It is also very exciting that the Red Record can now regain its original veracity.
Thank you!! Im from the farthest most Pacific Northwest area and my tribe have many totems and legends to teach our history. My family's early photos are from Chief Frank Hillaire and he has many photos that were taken of him and his family. Our treaty was signed in 1888. Our area was vast but was limited to a huge swampy area near the Canadian border. We have a shared language and my great grandfathers totem shows we were part of a clan along the Pacific Northwest area. Im so glad you have shared!! Hyshqe Si'am (Thank you Friend)
You're from the farthest, most Pacific Northwest area of the "lower 48" modern United States, as my mother's family is from farther North and West, and yet are still Native Americans, not Aleut, Inuit, Yupik all of whom are termed "Native Alaskans" but were previously termed "Eskimo". For now, I'll just say I have friends on Indian Street as well as some named Pointe and Ridley.
@@Jason-hg1pc yes! Thank you for the correction. I spent half of my time in Juneau with my dad so I should know better. I know alot about the Tlingit and Haida and was even given a name by an elder. Alaska is pretty awesome!
Not sure if others have pointed out but all the "names" in the Old Testament are just like that. They have become something different in society but were previously full of meaning.
i find it difficult but not impossible to find peace in the destruction mankind brings apon itself. your work is appreciated, and i hope you discover compassion in your work as well.
I lived in Northern Canada in the 1980s in remote First Nations villages. One village had both language groups. The tribes were very different in language, stature, facial features, and personalities. It was easy to tell what tribe they were from. The Cree were taller, more emotionaly controlled, great story tellers (even with limited english vocabulary), more artistic, overall a powerful people. I also lived in a village in the North West Teritories among the Slavey tribe, who recieved their name from the Cree who would capture them and use them as slaves. The Slavey are a much smaller people than the Cree. The Slavey can also speak with the Navaho of Arizona without much difficulty, which they mentioned to me several times.
I at one time worked with a western Alaskan Native woman who related to me that she and her grandmother had traveled around the western US while she was going to school in Arizon....and that she discovered that they too could speak to Navajo elders.
This was an excellent video. I’m Tuscarora still in NC and my band is a mixture of Iroquoian and Siouan tribes. One misconception is people don’t realize that the Tuscarora was always a north eastern tribe we just migrated to VA/NC. That was one of the reasons we were allowed back to into the confederacy. The Catawba, Woccon, Waccamaw, Pee Dee are all Siouan tribes that are on the East Coast. I’ve enjoyed the video & reading the input from other tribes 💜🤍💜🤍
My 8th grandfather was Chief Black Rabbit Casiah Deer clan. He later intertwined with the Cherokee . I would love to more if you have information. I don’t show any Native American DNA however,we still have some of the culture . My great grandmother was listed a member of the Choctaw nation but also listed on the Dawes Rolls . I actually look like a red headed white Native American, my sister is not white at all. I can go back and look at birth certificates they either say white or black. It’s just left me confused. My grandmother did get her land allotment in Oklahoma. Most all my family were born in Appalachian mountains. So, if anyone can give insight I would love that.❤
I love this bravo for your research and brilliance to connect the dots im italian nyc born. At 15 moved to arizona and got into history of native Americans hit huge stop walls cant wait to see the future of this wonderful recovery of history
Soooo compelling!! Keep up the great work and may you continue to unearth long lost histories and in the process uncover great Truths, demonstrating the legitimacy of the Bible. 😍
I am a part of the Natchitoches Tribe of Louisiana. I appreciate the video. Fascinating stuff!. i hope you can find more information about our tribe. It would be a true blessing.
The chief and his family was brought to Haiti put in the plantation so that’s how we know this guy is lying they was changing census records all over the country they know the American Indians cooper colored are aboriginal Indians because it’s in 1828 Webster dictionary the Americans do your research on Walter placard he started it in Virginia and the government did it around the country it was know African slave trade it was the American cooper colored Indians being taken from here brought to Europe Spain west Africa and other places it was in reverse so can stop lying it out what he talking about is cap even trump is expose it
Wow, this is so exciting. When I was a kid we lived in Blytheville, Arkansas. At the end of our street was a cotton field that had a mound in the middle of it. As kids we would go there to explore looking for arrowheads and such. I think I was always fascinated by anything Native because of my maternal Grandfather who had a beautiful Navajo rug on the wall of the den and a collection of all kinds of arrowheads in a glass case in his office. "Pre-history" and the movement of people groups and how they got to where they ended up has always fascinated me. I love your videos!
cool, maybe u could donate those arrowheads back to the descendents that made them, seeing as its our history and all. oh right. we only ever existed for your entertainment
This was great Dr. Jeanson. I listened to all of your original series, but never quite got the jist of the genetic tree, but this time around it made really good sense. Thank you and keep up the good work!
Your presentation was put together very well. I've been researching this topic for a couple of years and so thank you for putting this all together. I'm of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation tribe and we were mound builders and so I've always wondered about all the connections you brought up and explained so well!!
I've discovered on the internet that eastern European, Hellenic DNA is found amongst the Creek, Cherokee, and others(?). Look up Greek DNA in American tribes - Cherokees Spoke Greek and Came from East Mediterranean.
My maternal grandfather was a full blood Seminole. I found this very informative and interesting. Because I was 8 years old when he died and didn't get to have enough conversations with him about his family tree or connections to other tribes. My maternal great-grandmother was Asian and this is making so much sense to me now.
The asians were bought to America with Africans. What u call african amer>cans were already in America. They're the original ppl. In 1901 the term neg7o was invented to replace the word native. Research. Learn. The Asian lookin Indians were not original of this land. However they were credited everything. Itll be out any day now. Universal law demands truth of history of the original ppl.
No disrespect..but theres not really a such thing as full blood seminole..seminole could be a melungeon.. or ppl/ indians fleeing or fighting for freedom. So they went to territories where they can live freely..
This is so truly beautiful!!! I love the real science being applied here! contrast that to all the false "theory tales" that evolutionists speak of. Bro I love it!
According to evolutionists we all come from Africa descended from monkeys. Those monkey's uncles are trying to make monkeys out of all of us or are preparing us for worldwide slavery to communism and the industrialists who back it. Darwin himself just before he died hated the theory he thought and even stated the theory was not valid. Industrialists siezed the opportunity to put science and scientists in their pockets and have been funding the lie ever since. Eisenhower and Kennedy made mention of the power of industrialists and issued warnings. Johnson was a greedy puppet of the industrialists and so has nearly every President since, not all but nearly. The industrialists intend to rule a communist world ! Meanwhile the Pope is behind it all !
Scalping was introduced by the Dutch as a bounty for Native peoples deaths. Ritual sacrifice was practiced in Europe as well as Shamanism. So you can learn.ftom.your own cultures since it had so much to offer.
@@RonJacksonToahani come on both the same people and have the same ancient ancestors of both of you are idiots. You're both related arguing over who's better this is hilarious😂😂😂
@@RonJacksonToahani Crow Creek Massacre 1325. Indigenous were scalping in North America before Europeans arrived. They may have done it but indigenous learned it on their own.
Thank you, Dr. Jeanson, for your continuous efforts and this fascinating journey of discovery that supports the Bible. Keep up the great work! God bless!
I live in Oregon, and I’ve found a few arrowhead points that are not the typical points. They are like older ones found around Africa that are made out of jasper a very hard material. I believe there has been a plethora of untold information
I've been told a history of Blacks being here before the crossing of the Bering Staits also by my parents that was handed down to them. Look up Khalifians (Califians) who were thru out North America especailly the East/Southeastern United States
Am not surprised that every political party’s leaders will disagree even with this clear evidence. If you don’t mind how long have you been following this page?!!?💕.!!!
I discovered the Jewish connection to our family’s genetic line with the Cherokee Native Indian bloodline. I found this within the past couple of years. My late mother did Genealogy as a hobby for years, while working as an archeologist and anthropologist here in the Southwest with the different native people/tribes. The connection was made through my mother’s father’s family genetic line - his grandmother was 100% Cherokee with a Jewish bloodline. My favorite part of our family…❤
Dna for will be Asian. Dna for the lady will be primarily African with small amount of Asian because Asians INVADED. African dna is older. So dna will support she's the oldest
She's not native American, she's indigenous to the Americas. You on the other hand share a foreign background. I can tell by your talking point and how you gate keep....🍃@@Nicole-q6x
This is absolutely fascinating. I hope you publish on this work. As a side note, I have observed over a number of years, that almost every Caucasian I talk to that has moderate to severe lactose intolerance is part Cherokee. However, I have talked with people that have Sioux or Apache lineage who are not lactose intolerant. There could be an interesting genetic link there.
Wow, now that is very interesting! My husband is somewhere around 1/8 ish (guessing)Cherokee, we're not exactly sure because his great grandmother hid her identity and she was Full Cherokee and he is very sensitive to milk and cheese products. So add another one too that! Thanks for sharing 😊
most cacausians are NOT native american. They make up BS stories like the blacks do.Northern Europeans do well with lactose, all the other europeans not so much. I'm maya, raramuir, otomi. I can drink milk all day long and chase it with Ice cream
Really I've never heard of any Caucasian people I have known to be lactose intolerant.... Except for those vegans they're everything intolerant the only thing they have in common is their veganism they come of all colors races and creeds.
This is so interesting! Amazing how as our technology increases, it makes our world smaller and more connected to each other as one human race, from a single set of parents.😀
Actually it proves we are more separated. Due to DNA and anthropologist discovery we are learning that different humanoid species throughout the world actually bred with different ethnicities.
@@SK-ut6twthere is only one race of humans. with different physical characteristics. Black hair. Blond hair. red hair etc. brown eyes blue eyes. Grey eyes green eyes, etc facial hair non facial hair. Etc.
Funny how when I was a younger kid my mom would always tell me how great it was to be Indian. As I grew up I couldn’t care less about my ethnicity. Dad is a Jew so that makes me a mutt. I just want to be considered a person. I’m just participating in life and not trying to get noticed. Go red, yellow, white, black, brown and whatever other color that represents people.
Fascinating! Most interesting to me is the connections regarding the earth mound builders. So they were called the Talega, and were still active less than a thousand years ago. Their structures are built using the same measurement/celestial alignment system as the Egyptian pyramids, so I'd love to know more about how they ended up in America.
This same phenomenon happens in Central America too. Chicken Itza and the pyramid of the sun god in or near Mexico City. Interesting how Egyptian pyramid types building got over here.
There was a group call the TWA. The were short in stature and many of the mounds have small openings for these small people. Many indigenous people in North and South America have this short stature. There is an oral history. My great grandmother told me that the story of big foot was a first contact story with Europeans.
@@jrsimeon02 Indeed, I couldn't find any haplogroup evidence that the Egyptians migrated to America, so more likely they both inherited the building system from a common ancestor farther back.
Thanks for the maps and state boundaries, because some of your audience aren't from North America, and I appreciated those guides. Those dates of 900 AD and the other less so, correspond to the Polynesian expansion too. What compelled people to migrate (push factors and pull factors) as well as climate at the time would also facilitate migration. Perhaps I'll buy the book and read much more. I read a book 10 years back which purported evidence that the Vikings trading iron tools for Inuit furs helped the Inuit expand their territory/migration over a 400 or so year period - the settlement evidence was infrequent, but it corresponded with records to support migration expansion facilitation.
A study of similarities between a Viking language and the language of a large Indian tribe where the Vikings had a settlement is in an old book I read in the Fifties at the Tampa Public Library.
Dr.NJ your keen logic and dedication to discovery is inspiring and honorable , your heart is truely entangled with the techcnolgy and thats really something to behold, all blessings xoxoxo!
I'm not Native either. I'm native German. Married into Lakota family and felt instant ties. I also learned some of Lakota language, which was nothing I had ever heard before. But later, comparing it to Dine, Apache - it seemed like an easy language for me to learn and pronounce. It reminded me of a mix of Russian, French and German! Besides, my Native friends seemed tickled to see my efforts!
If you were born in this country as a citizen the Lakota are no more Native than you are. They just immigrated here a couple of hundred years before Europeans. That’s in the AD period, not BC.
Regarding the comment "no one is native to America, " that is probably true, but the same could be said of EVERYONE, living anywhere on our Earth. We all came from Adam and Eve... then we spread out everywhere. We have no right to think we're better than others, just because we moved somewhere first. We do have a DUTY to be proud of our families and ancestors, who survived incredible ordeals si we could be living today 😅
I have watched this almost every day since i found this video about a week ago ... brings back memories, i hadn't thought about these things for a long time. Thank you Mr Jeanson and all on your team. This is powerful history.
Last year I did my DNA testing through Ancestry. I was born in New York but my parents and family are from Puerto Rico. Mine ancestry is a fascinating mix.
My great-grandmother is from Georgia and did the trail of tears to Oklahoma they are the builders indigenous to this country..❤MY Grandma Martha Craig wore size 13 shoe. Over 6 ft tall, . Luku Stiles. ....Her Mother, wouldn't tell anyone about herself.❤
I am a Aboriginal lndian which they started calling us Negro which is on my birth certificate, but thanks to my Great Great grandmother and grandmother I have always known who we truly are, on my mother's side I am Ayiyunwiga Cherokee and on my father's side I am Sobaipuri and Cha'hta Apache, and have traced our bloodline back to 1500's here on turtle Island what you call America.
Very interesting! I grew up on the Leech Lake reservation in the Chippewa National Forest. Many of my school friends were Native American. My hometown of Bena, Minnesota means partridge in Ojibwe.
Beautiful work. We really appreciate your dedication but even more so your reasonableness. It's a reasonable history with not a whole bunch of conjecture. Thank you so much for being a man of honesty and integrity and imagination. Oh and faith! Have you looked into the magnificent history of the Totonac of Veracruz Mexico?
I have family who are still full blooded Native Americans. My family hasnt mixed much. Even in Ancestry DNA test i came out at 94% Native American. My grandmothers sister came out at 100% Native American, my mother at 97%.
Are they dark? Because light skin or white skin natives never existed in North America whatsoever even the Eskimos are dark. Orginal Natives made a real distinction between the 2 and you can see the photos for sure.
I don't know why you so called Natives let these Europeans call theirselves natives? Part of the tradition is ancestral cultural ties. Cultural appropriations from white people is not one.
@TeeSpells Dark brown, yes. Black definitely no. Beside I've never seen any black American speaking a native tongue/ dialect. Only their horrible hood English.
@@TeeSpellsit appears you are very unfamiliar with genomes and even more so biome adaptation. Blacks ain’t the only ones who come in different shades. Another rbg taking an L
@@iLL_Eaglez I'm very familiar with genetic ancestral phenotypes of morphology that's why I put the questions to the test. The SLC24A5 gene just recently occured within the last 6000 years all people was dark. Skin complexions comes from mixing not from adaptations as science orginally thought.
I’m from Alabama originally, and as soon as I heard Talega, I thought of Talladega, and also noted we have a river named the Catawba, so these were interesting seeing similarities with this narrative and where I grew up. The Moundville area is fascinating, and there was trade between these builders and S. America also, that seems to tie back to the Serpent Mounds in the Ohio River Valley area. Thanks! Very helpful!
I'm from west Georgia just on the line with Ranburn Alabama. The first thing I thought was talladega also. I bet there is a connection. Thanks to Harley the talladega area is now filled with iron cowboys lol. 🤠
Living in central MS near the Choctaw reservation, we have mounds everywhere. Their history isn’t really covered in school, even in MS history classes. We focus far more on things like the area of the state known as “Old West Florida” than we do on our native history.
we are not "your" natives. white man never cared to ask or look at our history until they came to an age where they felt guilty, and now try to dream up crap like this so they can feel like theyve been here just as long and are nearly as entitled to the lands weve been living on for 10s of thousands of years. just look into very well mapped mitochandrial dna
AIG, I want to thank you for allowing comments on your videos so people can post their thoughts and feelings about this subject and create an honest dialogue between the informed and the uninformed. Dr. Jensen, love your work and am excited to see these DNA series, and feel very blessed to be able to have you as a brother in Christ! You are a blessing!😊❤
Perhaps someone could collect and write your wonderful history? If it hasn't already been done. It would be a blessing to see your family heritage given from those who actually experienced it.
My husband is from this tribe along the Delaware. He always wanted to know his family but was kept quiet( hidden) bcuz they remained while others were forced to leave the area.
I am from the Sioux Nation my Grandpa was chief elder. This is all very informative, some I knew, some I didn’t. Regarding the GREAT MOUNDS found in the US and all over the workd you mentioned those were NOT made by Native Americans, the mounds were made by the Nephilim. There is many stories within the Native American culture about Giants with 6 fingers, that’s what the “How” ✋🏼 “greeting” came from Natives would raise their hands to see if ppl had 6 fingers or not. And also our cultures speak about The Fallen Angels or Watchers coming from the sky, although the descriptions will be a bit different as you mentioned the Great Flood we have similar story and it’s obvious we take inspiration from the Bible it’s very clear. The Nephilim was here before the Native Americans I believe in America.
Wow, that's amazing
If I remember correctly, the nephilim were said to be the offspring of watcher and human mating. Not sure where I came across that info … perhaps the book of Enoch …. it has been a while.
I watched this video in hopes to learn more about those that made the mounds. It's fascinating that understanding is part of your history. Do you have any resources that describe what you're talking about
@@kait-01751 entities and earthworks by fellowship bible chapel is the best I know
@@critical-thought Genesis 6 talks about them.
I am Iroquois,Lenni Lenape.Our People call themselves the people of the Standing Stone- Oneida.This is a terrific story.I will have to read the book.
Why? The Genisis God drowned all your ancestors 5000 years ago?
Michigan we have city Iroquois.
Fake news.
lol. Standing Stone Casino?
This is wonderful. I'm Cherokee and my grandson's father is Chickasaw. Sadly all we know about our tribes is who gets the better benefits. Thank you for the hard work and continued work.
This is very interesting My Husbands Grand Mother was a Cherokee & I have some Cheyenne kin in my blood !!! I have heard before about the Cherokee maybe descendants of Hebrew decent !! I'm curious _ would like to know!!
@@gailgregory3045 In the book A Cherokee vision of Eloh' published in 1981 by Bacone Indian College authors Meredith and Sobral reference the Cherokee being a clan of a people with 12 or 13 tribes (can't remember which) who lived in a land that flooded and how they built a great tower to the heavens to escape the flooding. Eventually they left that land and didn't realize how far they had traveled until they found that the land behind them (Atlantis?) had sunk. A later version of that book Cherokee Vision of Elohi was published in 1997. Both are out of print. I am fortunate to have one of the original 1981 copies.
@@madmedic7840 No what??? I'm just telling people about an out-of-print book on the Cherokee relating a supposedly very old story that came down orally.
My dad had a Cherokee grandmother. She married a Caucasian man. I want to learn more but those relatives have passed now. I've tried finding information but so far haven't found much.
@@madmedic7840
no what??? Do you just go around making random nonsensical comments? 🙄
I'm in London and visit the British museum once a year, my son loves it. I've been visiting the Native American exhibitions, they're unfortunately a little underwhelming. I recently realised there's an indigenous American exhibition that has to be booked in advance. I visited, WOW!! it's amazing, the aboriginal Americans weren't wiped out, they're still alive and kicking in the NBA and NFL!!
Fact s
Spanish conquistadors Great Britain France have really pulled a number on So Called African Americans & Mongolian Philippines & Siberian Mongolian
Where is the indigenous American exhibition located and how far do you have to book in advance?
Oh, I hope you're one of those who think black Americans are indigenous Americans. The ones who are related to the American indigenous are hispanics who are mostly indigenous and mestizos.
Totally true. No time in the history of man has an entire people been wiped out. Never believed that lie
The Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) founded the Great Law of Peace in c. 1142 A.D. during an eclipse. At this time, they were the Five Nations; Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida and Mohawk. Later, in c. 1722, the Tuscarora joined making it the Six Nations, though they have no place at the Fire.
EDIT: I am Seneca (Seneca-Cayuga Nation) of the Haudenosaunee, though I am residing within Choctaw Nation.
Even to this day, I plant the Three Sisters using seed that has been passed down for over 400 years.
you are connectingsomething here !
Wow!
Planting the three sisters with 400 yr old generational seeds is quite an accomplishment. The three sisters are known by virtually every tribe, everywhere in the N.A continent, I am not certain in C.A or S.A. due to the abundance of staple vegetation that changes in variety depending on climate and environment. Maize is universal in S.A , C.A. and N.A., beans may be universal but squash is a big question mark. The Diné honors the three sisters and have dances regarding them and what happens to them. The dances are beautiful . Thanks for sharing !
Deer Nation Bear Clan Wedat (Wyandotte) here.
We want our seeds back!
This is ridiculous, how can you be part of the nation's and not have a seat at the fire!😊
I'm Sho-Ban. I love hearing about the true history of my people. Thank you for making this post.
😂😂😂😂 your true history u people are funny
@@Great734
These Europeans are hilarious. She definitely White
@WilliamFranklin-s3s you have a problem with folks seeking to learn more about their ancestors?
@@Great734lmfaoooooooo i think she means her ancestors were apart of the crew that exploited shoban
I’m 57 years old. My Daddy’s Grandmother was Cherokee. I don’t remember what my Great Grandfather was (my Daddy never mentioned him). Daddy only spoke of his Grandmother a total of times on one hand.
I had read about the person who studied & collected the Indigenous languages of the United States that were similar to Hebrew. I follow Chief Joseph AmaHura Riverwind - Taino people from Puerto Rico - has either a piece of a stone tablet or a manuscript with a language very similar to Hebrew.
I’m very, very happy to hear that you have found more information about the tribes who were scattered to the ends of the world!
Arabic is related to Hebrew....lots of sailors in the employ of various exploring nations, espec Portugal & Spain, had Arab descended crew members.
They could have easily transported their language to the Caribbean....
I heard that all of us are related to Noah and/ or his sons.
Family Search is free
I found my tree and discovered Native Heritage
Keep searching
I don't think there is a book out there that states the history of creation itself and all the genealogies of people and at what age they had a certain son and how long they lived after that and what the Creator wanted them to do and where to go and gave the history of a nation that was dispersed to all corners of the globe and then reconnected as an entire nation (1948) intact with their original language, and predicts the exact happenings during this tribulation period that we are just starting into (if this digital dollar doesn't blare out the beginning of the mark of the Beast period, i don't know what does!!!), other than the Creator's Word Itself!!!??? Open to Revelations and start following along!!!
My dad's grandmother was too. Trying to find information but haven't found much.
I am Ojibwa from Red Lake, my dad is Ojibwa, my grandfather, great grandfather and so on. Great video, this is much needed information.
Beautiful people ❤
See also Terra Papers, can be viewed here on RUclips ❤
"Sometimes I go about in pity for myself, and all the while, a great wind carries me across the sky."
A native would not say this is much needed information as its BS
@@wojapi7538 How so?
So much I’d like to say, but I’ll just hit my main thoughts… 1. The work you’re doing is remarkable. 2. You present it so well. 3. I suspect that you may have some idea of how important your work is and will be for years to come (barring a rapture next week or something;)), but I’m confident that YOU and your work on history are now historically important as well. I.e., YOU are making history! Thank you!
He has a religious bias.
@@Anonymus-z3zeveryone has bias
Rapture is a 1800s heresy.
Read the Bible is declares the opposite.
DNA and genetics has no bias. It IS SCIENCE. 😮@ErikaM683
Cherokee here! Thank you for diving into this topic and recovering this knowledge for us ❤️
❤️✝️
@@sandman9390. Everything about history is a lie and people don’t even know DNA they don’t even know about Genesis or the book of Enoch or anything they don’t even know the real truth of slavery like everything is a lie here on earth isn’t it God and I do mean everything.
My son is part Cherokee, part Blackfoot. Unfortunately the grandma was taught to have contempt for her heritage. I said that was horrible & she should learn her heritage! I later cared for our local Native American historian before he passed, & loved hearing his stories!❤
You don't look nothing like a native American Karen lol 🤣
The christians do not look to "recover" knowledge for "us". Christians look to REWRITE HISTORY to their way of doing things. Christians, at the end of the day, are interested in serving their version of a god. Christians will use one positive to justify a slaughter.
This is amazing! My great grandfather was 100% Cherokee and there is so much we don’t know and wish we did. It is like that side of the family is silent, and their story should be heard. I know we miss out on so much because we don’t know. Thank you for doing this. It is absolutely amazing and a worth while endeavor. ❤
My grandfather is 100% Yaqui. My great grandparents left their tribe. I went through so many contacts and loops to trace back to the apache. Somewhere along the way there was Mayan, but there are still so many holes. Just following 2 of my grandparents and their siblings and kids we had 78 family members alive during a 10 year span. I hope we keep writing and archiving as much as we can for the future generations.
100% or 100% $5? 🤔
I don’t mean to be mean but us natives hear this ALL the time, my great /great great blah blah was Cherokee.... oh what clan or band were they from? Most (99%) have no idea, somewhere along the line someone just picked the most popular tribe bc so and so “looked” native (dark features). I think the best thing to say is “on my mom/ dad side I have indigenous ancestry” We are very tight knit communities with clan systems. Don’t just choose a tribe if your not doing the due diligence of being on the roll of that tribe. We have to prove our blood quantum to be apart if the tribe and when ppl just throw out tribal affiliation with no ties to the community just becomes a joke. Just FYI from a reservation Native whose first language is Navajo.
@JLane Hardy that's why I always make it clear my great grandparents left. They have the blood but our family is no longer affiliated. I would love to be but I don't argue with my elders.
God knows and all Truth will be revealed soon! We are getting closer every day! Most of the records of the natives were destroyed along with the DNA of natives that has been hidden, removed or tampered with for the purpose of keeping us in the dark. By removing or confusing the mass and never disclosing their bloodlines and having many Jews who came to America changed their last names to avoid being persecuted. And many native Americans changed their names to avoid persecution... I am a member of Perdido Bay tribe and my ancestors are the Muscogee tribe aka upper and lower Creek. The lower Creek is my people who hid in the creeks and swamps and refused to go on the trail of tears! Come visit us in Pensacola!
I was a short range missile crewman in the U.S. Army 80-86, my M O S was 16 Poppa/Sierra. We had many Indian/Native names for our Helicopters. Kiowa, Iroquois, Apache... great info here guys.
We sang a song in grade school in Minnesota. It went like this. “ I can fight off Indians Pawnee, Shawnee Comanche Chippewa, Sioux”. I learned later in life that many Europeans were murdered by these tribes.
Genius! This has to be done more often. We must learn more about that important story about America, all America also South America. This is a must.
Thenk you very much!
This is brilliant. As a Ojibwa-Cree metis I am so grateful to hear a young-earth perspective of our history. Blessings from northern Canada!
Here in Minnesota there are a lot of Chippewa and Sioux tribes,and the richest Indians have mystic lake casino in prior lake, Minnesota.Good for them.
If you are not indigenous ie Black you are not an Indian. Stop lying. Socalled nonblack people could not have appeared anywhere on the planet before Black people due to the fact that nonblack people are not naturally occurring people ie indigenous. Shalawam 👊🏿🕎⚔️🏹🪶🌽💜🙏🏿
It's frustrating. The indigenous came to the Americas 20,000 years ago from Asia.
@@Lilpumpkin505 Stop lying. As an Autochthonous Being ie Black man I can assure you that the Americas are the old world and that we spread out from America. There was also Atlantis and several other civilizations too old to count in the Americas. The idea that inorganic beings ie nonblack people are qualified to speak of human origins is laughable when we consider the fact that they are not human according to science but hybrids ie sapiens neanderthal who suddenly appeared six to ten thousand years ago and have yet to tell us where they came from and how they came into being. Shalom
@@Lilpumpkin505Yeah the $5 ones did!!!😂😂😂😂
TY for your great work. Comments are just as interesting. I'd like to state I'm from the PNW, where a friend of mine was a forest worker. He confessed to me that part of his job was going into certain areas, and redirecting pathways that led to "significant historical areas" so as to hide or cover up most of these sites. Living on the rez now, back where my Grandmother was born. I'd like to say, we are all more a like than we are different.
Also, any one person can change the world forever.
This was such an excellent presentation. I really liked the case you made for the scientific community to take the oral traditions of peoples more seriously. Thank you for the great work you are doing. I'm not Native American but I really enjoyed your video. At the end of the day, learning about the history of our brothers and sisters on this planet is really important and always exciting.
The Red Record is a good read that includes, not only a global flood event, but the IceAge and even encountering Giants, (Mound Builders) along the Mississippi.
Those socalled mounds were built by Israelites ie Shemites ie Black people. Shalom
Yayy!! @Dr. Jeanson, I love that you're brave enough to be non-PC driven, and so focused and addressing Native History in such a wonderful manner!! I am Inpuiaq. God bless you and protect you and your family!! God bless all your endeavors in the Name of Jesus!!!🙏🏽💖✨
What does PC mean?
@@june049 "Politically Correct"
@@shiammi907 PC is a ravaging disease that all Leftist's have.
Personal computer @@june049
Personal computer
I’d love a kid (elementary) friendly version of this. 🙂We’re covering Native Americans this summer before we start Master Book’s America’s Story next school year and Truth-based resources are so hard to find.
friendly ? History is about the truth .Do you tell a friendly version of the nazis an the jews?
What here is inappropriate for children?
@@louistart1173 Nothing is inappropriate. It’s long. My 8 and 5 year olds are not going to sit and absorb the information.
@@GG-vz8zy Age and attention span appropriate. I didn’t say anything about watering down or softening. Way to stretch it to somewhere I never took it though. 🤨
@@emilyabbott133 i feel ya. I am watching this in 15 minute sections because i must also have a childs attention span.
I am Haudenosaunee I absolutely love this! So much indigenous history has been lost to time! Thank you, from the bottom of my heart THANK YOU!
My grandmother was Chiricahua Apache. She and my grandfather never got married because at that time, it was illegal for them to marry because my grandfather was Irish. She did not have a birth certificate. She had a roll number. I am 50 years old and my father is 82 years old. My father is the youngest of 13 kids. Only him and one sister is still alive of the 13 children.
My grandfather was also! C. Apache. Hello sister!
My GM was Lipan.
My grandmother is as well. ✊🏼
Hey I'm part apache too cool
the Ket root language of the Apache is from the southern Siberian redheaded giants of the Tarim Basin. The storytellers say they "brought their own Mongols".
Thank you for all your extensive research and hard work!
This is so fascinating to me as I am a First Nation Ojibway in Canada. My 4th great grandfather was named Shawundai (Sultry Heat) and was the last hereditary Chief in our First Nation. He came from the US and his nation was forced onto Grape Island in Lake Ontario, until being settled in 3 separate First Nations here in Canada.
I'm asking my brother to get his DNA done as I would like to know more about my paternal lineage. I will ask him to share with you so it can be included as you further your research.
My mother was non-native and our maternal lineage goes right back to the maiden Viking warrior found at Birka, Sweden. She also has Sephardic Jewish in her lineage.
I just love learning about our history and your books are amazing!
Very neat!!!! 👍👍 I love reading these kinds of comments, Thank you for sharing!
Native, Viking, and Jewish? Now that’s a warrior!
You are so blessed to have information on your lineage. Im 81, my father was born in Czechoslovakia, and i know nothing about it. Continue your search, write it down and share it.
@@karentate9114 thank you. I will. Blessings.
@@sonjaohlmann510 thank you. I must admit, I'm very proud of my heritage and I can't wait to learn more on my dad's side.
Take care and Yah bless you and keep you!!!
I finally got a copy of Traced; it would be nice to have The Red Record reprinted so more people could afford copies of it! We have several Indian and part-Indian family members, so this is very interesting to us, and I've really enjoyed following Dr. Jeanson's research.
Indigenous peoples
I listened to audio book of the Red Record on youtube
"part indian?" Which parts? the foot, the legs, the finger, left nut?
We’re not Indians.
We are not Indian, we NA, first nation's. I wish people would drop the name given to us by some ignorant person who come to our land in 1492.
Thank you so much for this wonderful gift of our history ❤
Outstanding lecture, very informative and at a level that us layman can comprehend, thanks.
What a great site, we need to know this! Thanks for all your hard work!
I was a strange kid who adored history. It was my passion. This lecture would have enthralled me as a kid. I would have watched it over and over the same way i watched world war and civil war documentaries. I devoured books on European history too.
BUT i was alone in that. I had ZERO history friends.
They all said it was boring...which i found astonishing.
So i understand when people request a kid friendly version. I know adults who can't stand five minutes of this. I'm not one.
A few months ago i was having trouble sleeping so i chose one of his videos to put me to sleep (he has a soothing voice 😂) unfortunately i was so fascinated by the subject i ended up listening to the whole thing 🙄
I strongly suggest someone reach out to the creator of tuttle twins to make something for the kids. He is actively trying to prevent history from repeating, trying to stop the government from doing to everyone what they did to the indians...and every other minority that wasn't wealthy.
And I agree about the turtle twins.
````I had a Dad who stopped at every roadies historical site/sign!! My Mom made me be a pharmacist
Just here to appreciate interaction between like minded individuals with listening and learning in mind.
Me, to.o
I still watch it.
My mother finally became enrolled in the Cherokee Nation. Her family came from Cherokee territory in Tennessee and walked the Trail of Tears to Oklahoma. Her 2x Great grandfather is Cherokee General Stand Watie. We come from the mound building ppl. AKA the Woodland American Indians
cHEROKEES were NOT moundbuilders they are decended from. U blax are something else. Culture vampires
Wow! This is excellent. Years ago, I read Charles Mann's '1491' and it blew my mind. It's one of those books that stayed with me. This fills in so many gaps. I'm a genealogist at heart but life gets in the way. Thank you!
Read his "1493".
Wow. I was checked on my mother's line. South Carolina was native American territory. Cree and catawba. On my dad side we are the7th generations from the chief daughter
Terrific work. Lots of thinking, analysing and perhaps a few sleepless nights trying to figure out how to piece the puzzle together :). Impressive and informative. I’m glad you share some info about Indian tribes because I’m Australian and have little knowledge of native Indian people. Now I’m looking for a copy of The Red Record. Thank you very much for all your hard work. God bless you heaps!
I appreciate how your reaching out to native communities to help connect the dots in history ❤
It is great, and much can be shared to compile some truth as much as possible! Loving this.
Appreciate the time you took putting this together and to all those involved in amd off the screen like those actually involved for what we all experience in our world as we know it and for what we may not , know
Your research has given me a light bulb moment, It made me realise that I've looked at origins of peoples, native population and even my own people, from an evolutionist perspective rather than a Biblical perspective.
It is eye opening. We are all related. One race.
@googleuser3110 Yes, we are, and it's now time that people begin to see this and be open to all the old ways.
@Sela Moa, Remember one of the evolutionists' agendas is to obscure true history and the existence of God the Almighty. Welcome back to the true path. God bless you.
@@googleuser3110 the Native "Medicine Wheel" is a circle divided into 4 Quarters. The colors are: red, yellow, black and white - the four colors of humans!
How did they know? There's something for you to think about!
@@ginakelley749 After the great flood, there was Noah, Shem, Ham , Japeth, and their wives. I'm sure there are 4 colors in there somewhere. That is where we all came from. Thanks for the reply, and God Bless.
Great work sir. So interesting. Love that you're building a network of information from all available sources
What an absolutely intriguing and incredible journey. The Native American history is absolutely fascinating. Can’t wait to hear more about what’s connected and how starting with the biblical account makes it possible.
圣经? 一本造假和剽窃的书籍
哈哈
I Could Listen to All Your Works 100 Times ! Thank You
Am not surprised that every political party’s leaders will disagree even with this clear evidence. If you don’t mind how long have you been following this page?!!?💕🦋.!
Thank you for your research and for sharing this with us. Truly amazing.
A fantastic study into the history of Native America. It needs to get a deeper dive and a deeper exploration! We need to see and hear more of this.
Always look forward to your videos, Nathaniel! Keep teaching the Truth!
What’s amazing is that your work is showing that, even for what many consider the Native Nations of North America, living in North America is but an experience in their journey from their original lands. Such information is crucial for a fuller understanding of where mankind truly originated at. What I mean is that even those nations are not truly indigenous to this land though here for centuries. I don’t say that in disrespect. I say that from the point of view of the bigger picture in the history of humanity.
I’m from Puerto Rico, born there to parents of parents born there, but our history shows even our Taino/Arawak descendant connections aren’t from the island of Borikén but from the same origins as those of the nations of the Americas. Same as that of our Afro-Caribbean connections and Spaniard connections. Hope this makes sense.
Thank you for your work.
It's true that *most of y'all have Indigenous roots from the main lands, but people will still argue with you about YOUR heritage. Smh
My kids' family is from Santulce, Puerto Rico.
This video is so rich in information that it's almost too much for me to take in, but it is so fascinating and exciting.
What an amazing spark this can be for gathering and compiling the lost history of these nations.
It is also very exciting that the Red Record can now regain its original veracity.
Thank you!! Im from the farthest most Pacific Northwest area and my tribe have many totems and legends to teach our history. My family's early photos are from Chief Frank Hillaire and he has many photos that were taken of him and his family. Our treaty was signed in 1888. Our area was vast but was limited to a huge swampy area near the Canadian border. We have a shared language and my great grandfathers totem shows we were part of a clan along the Pacific Northwest area.
Im so glad you have shared!!
Hyshqe Si'am (Thank you Friend)
You're from the farthest, most Pacific Northwest area of the "lower 48" modern United States, as my mother's family is from farther North and West, and yet are still Native Americans, not Aleut, Inuit, Yupik all of whom are termed "Native Alaskans" but were previously termed "Eskimo". For now, I'll just say I have friends on Indian Street as well as some named Pointe and Ridley.
@@Jason-hg1pc yes! Thank you for the correction. I spent half of my time in Juneau with my dad so I should know better. I know alot about the Tlingit and Haida and was even given a name by an elder. Alaska is pretty awesome!
Buffalo soldiers the Indians called africans
@@Noctessa😅
Not sure if others have pointed out but all the "names" in the Old Testament are just like that. They have become something different in society but were previously full of meaning.
i find it difficult but not impossible to find peace in the destruction mankind brings apon itself. your work is appreciated, and i hope you discover compassion in your work as well.
So informative, excellent work. So much new info about the true history.
I lived in Northern Canada in the 1980s in remote First Nations villages. One village had both language groups. The tribes were very different in language, stature, facial features, and personalities. It was easy to tell what tribe they were from. The Cree were taller, more emotionaly controlled, great story tellers (even with limited english vocabulary), more artistic, overall a powerful people. I also lived in a village in the North West Teritories among the Slavey tribe, who recieved their name from the Cree who would capture them and use them as slaves. The Slavey are a much smaller people than the Cree. The Slavey can also speak with the Navaho of Arizona without much difficulty, which they mentioned to me several times.
Good insight from actual experience with native Americans. Might help with the research.
I am same and with you
I at one time worked with a western Alaskan Native woman who related to me that she and her grandmother had traveled around the western US while she was going to school in Arizon....and that she discovered that they too could speak to Navajo elders.
This was an excellent video. I’m Tuscarora still in NC and my band is a mixture of Iroquoian and Siouan tribes. One misconception is people don’t realize that the Tuscarora was always a north eastern tribe we just migrated to VA/NC. That was one of the reasons we were allowed back to into the confederacy. The Catawba, Woccon, Waccamaw, Pee Dee are all Siouan tribes that are on the East Coast. I’ve enjoyed the video & reading the input from other tribes 💜🤍💜🤍
My 8th grandfather was Chief Black Rabbit Casiah Deer clan. He later intertwined with the Cherokee . I would love to more if you have information. I don’t show any Native American DNA however,we still have some of the culture . My great grandmother was listed a member of the Choctaw nation but also listed on the Dawes Rolls . I actually look like a red headed white Native American, my sister is not white at all. I can go back and look at birth certificates they either say white or black. It’s just left me confused. My grandmother did get her land allotment in Oklahoma. Most all my family were born in Appalachian mountains. So, if anyone can give insight I would love that.❤
Ive been newly learning about what said about the giants nepilim and watchers. So amazing, its finally coming out!
I love this bravo for your research and brilliance to connect the dots im italian nyc born. At 15 moved to arizona and got into history of native Americans hit huge stop walls cant wait to see the future of this wonderful recovery of history
Where did the $5.00 Indians come from?
Thank you so very much for your passion and dedication to research this. This is huge for our future generations! ❤️❤️❤️
Hopefully not!! This is pseudoscience.
New Spain, Portugal, French, Russia? Asian slaves
Olmec
Soooo compelling!! Keep up the great work and may you continue to unearth long lost histories and in the process uncover great Truths, demonstrating the legitimacy of the Bible. 😍
I am a part of the Natchitoches Tribe of Louisiana. I appreciate the video. Fascinating stuff!. i hope you can find more information about our tribe. It would be a true blessing.
Only thing they describe as blacks
The chief and his family was brought to Haiti put in the plantation so that’s how we know this guy is lying they was changing census records all over the country they know the American Indians cooper colored are aboriginal Indians because it’s in 1828 Webster dictionary the Americans do your research on Walter placard he started it in Virginia and the government did it around the country it was know African slave trade it was the American cooper colored Indians being taken from here brought to Europe Spain west Africa and other places it was in reverse so can stop lying it out what he talking about is cap even trump is expose it
It’s all kinds of books describe the American Indians being called negroes
Wow, this is so exciting. When I was a kid we lived in Blytheville, Arkansas. At the end of our street was a cotton field that had a mound in the middle of it. As kids we would go there to explore looking for arrowheads and such. I think I was always fascinated by anything Native because of my maternal Grandfather who had a beautiful Navajo rug on the wall of the den and a collection of all kinds of arrowheads in a glass case in his office. "Pre-history" and the movement of people groups and how they got to where they ended up has always fascinated me. I love your videos!
My mother's family is from that area. She remembers picking cotton in her family fields as a child. She is from the Easter family.
cool, maybe u could donate those arrowheads back to the descendents that made them, seeing as its our history and all. oh right. we only ever existed for your entertainment
@@TRUMPeterswan1624perhaps the writer is a Native themself
This was great Dr. Jeanson. I listened to all of your original series, but never quite got the jist of the genetic tree, but this time around it made really good sense. Thank you and keep up the good work!
Fascinating! I love hearing and seeing TRUE history.
Wow! This is incredible to hear. Thank you for your knowledge on this history
Your presentation was put together very well. I've been researching this topic for a couple of years and so thank you for putting this all together. I'm of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation tribe and we were mound builders and so I've always wondered about all the connections you brought up and explained so well!!
I've discovered on the internet that eastern European, Hellenic DNA is found amongst the Creek, Cherokee, and others(?). Look up Greek DNA in American tribes - Cherokees Spoke Greek and Came from East Mediterranean.
Thank you so very much for putting forth your time and effort developing this treasure of history.
My maternal grandfather was a full blood Seminole. I found this very informative and interesting. Because I was 8 years old when he died and didn't get to have enough conversations with him about his family tree or connections to other tribes. My maternal great-grandmother was Asian and this is making so much sense to me now.
The asians were bought to America with Africans. What u call african amer>cans were already in America. They're the original ppl. In 1901 the term neg7o was invented to replace the word native. Research. Learn. The Asian lookin Indians were not original of this land. However they were credited everything. Itll be out any day now. Universal law demands truth of history of the original ppl.
My dad died when I was 8 and it took me almost 50 years to find out exactly what I am. It's been a journey
@@michelleawe1899
But you are finding who you are🙌🏼💕
@@Pearlruby718 yes 🥰
No disrespect..but theres not really a such thing as full blood seminole..seminole could be a melungeon.. or ppl/ indians fleeing or fighting for freedom. So they went to territories where they can live freely..
My daughter is Ojibwe and Hmong, indigenous from Asia and North America. So beautiful!
Thanks Dr. Jeanson! As always very interesting and enlightening. Please continue the great work the Lord has given you to do!!
This is so truly beautiful!!! I love the real science being applied here! contrast that to all the false "theory tales" that evolutionists speak of. Bro I love it!
What's a "theory tail"??
@@davidu8688like a fairy tale. It is poking fun at theories of evolution. I got a good laugh out of it actually.
@@MilVetGaming evolution is a more of a faith than anything but fairy tale is pretty good
@@davidu8688 a poison double faith perhaps?
According to evolutionists we all come from Africa descended from monkeys. Those monkey's uncles are trying to make monkeys out of all of us or are preparing us for worldwide slavery to communism and the industrialists who back it. Darwin himself just before he died hated the theory he thought and even stated the theory was not valid. Industrialists siezed the opportunity to put science and scientists in their pockets and have been funding the lie ever since. Eisenhower and Kennedy made mention of the power of industrialists and issued warnings. Johnson was a greedy puppet of the industrialists and so has nearly every President since, not all but nearly. The industrialists intend to rule a communist world ! Meanwhile the Pope is behind it all !
The world needs to listen and respect the Indigenous peoples. We have a lot to learn. ❤ Thank you.
Yeah about how to scalp and ritual sacrifice and shamanism
Scalping was introduced by the Dutch as a bounty for Native peoples deaths. Ritual sacrifice was practiced in Europe as well as Shamanism. So you can learn.ftom.your own cultures since it had so much to offer.
@@RonJacksonToahani come on both the same people and have the same ancient ancestors of both of you are idiots. You're both related arguing over who's better this is hilarious😂😂😂
@@RonJacksonToahani Crow Creek Massacre 1325. Indigenous were scalping in North America before Europeans arrived. They may have done it but indigenous learned it on their own.
@@anamarisa2800 Don't forget cannibalism blamed on Wendigo
just found this as a 60s scoop Ojibway born in Thunder Bay. Great video.
I appreciate your work, Dr. Jeanson. It's really exciting to hear what really happened.
Thank you, Dr. Jeanson, for your continuous efforts and this fascinating journey of discovery that supports the Bible. Keep up the great work! God bless!
I live in Oregon, and I’ve found a few arrowhead points that are not the typical points. They are like older ones found around Africa that are made out of jasper a very hard material. I believe there has been a plethora of untold information
Stonehound Africans was the first people to step foot in America.
I've been told a history of Blacks being here before the crossing of the Bering Staits also by my parents that was handed down to them. Look up Khalifians (Califians) who were thru out North America especailly the East/Southeastern United States
Cool but we weren’t black.
@@Blox_fruit_master1No
10:03
All of this is so exciting. Thank you very much.
Am not surprised that every political party’s leaders will disagree even with this clear evidence. If you don’t mind how long have you been following this page?!!?💕.!!!
Mind blown! Thank you very much. I can hardly wait to see more of this research
I discovered the Jewish connection to our family’s genetic line with the Cherokee Native Indian bloodline. I found this within the past couple of years. My late mother did Genealogy as a hobby for years, while working as an archeologist and anthropologist here in the Southwest with the different native people/tribes. The connection was made through my mother’s father’s family genetic line - his grandmother was 100% Cherokee with a Jewish bloodline. My favorite part of our family…❤
Jews came from Shem and native americans are from Shem as well
@@caitlinjohnny3828 ❤️❤️❤️ that!!! 😊
Thank you I’m native and this blessed me greatly
Our family records date back to the 1500s
Ai🔥Ai🔥Ai🔥
@ayashajones3183 That's all? 500 years? Most can go back 1000's. What does your dna test say? I can guarantee it's not native American.
Dna for will be Asian. Dna for the lady will be primarily African with small amount of Asian because Asians INVADED. African dna is older. So dna will support she's the oldest
She's not native American, she's indigenous to the Americas. You on the other hand share a foreign background. I can tell by your talking point and how you gate keep....🍃@@Nicole-q6x
Thanks!
This is absolutely fascinating. I hope you publish on this work. As a side note, I have observed over a number of years, that almost every Caucasian I talk to that has moderate to severe lactose intolerance is part Cherokee. However, I have talked with people that have Sioux or Apache lineage who are not lactose intolerant. There could be an interesting genetic link there.
Blackfoot genes, I am not lactose intolerant nor my kids
Wow, now that is very interesting! My husband is somewhere around 1/8 ish (guessing)Cherokee, we're not exactly sure because his great grandmother hid her identity and she was Full Cherokee and he is very sensitive to milk and cheese products. So add another one too that! Thanks for sharing 😊
most cacausians are NOT native american. They make up BS stories like the blacks do.Northern Europeans do well with lactose, all the other europeans not so much.
I'm maya, raramuir, otomi. I can drink milk all day long and chase it with Ice cream
Cherokee and Choctaw here and lactose intolerant.
Really I've never heard of any Caucasian people I have known to be lactose intolerant.... Except for those vegans they're everything intolerant the only thing they have in common is their veganism they come of all colors races and creeds.
This is so interesting! Amazing how as our technology increases, it makes our world smaller and more connected to each other as one human race, from a single set of parents.😀
Jesus was a son of Mary from the lineage of King David
Actually it proves we are more separated. Due to DNA and anthropologist discovery we are learning that different humanoid species throughout the world actually bred with different ethnicities.
Sorry, but I have no relations to pwle faced demons walking the earth.
@@SK-ut6twthere is only one race of humans. with different physical characteristics. Black hair. Blond hair. red hair etc. brown eyes blue eyes. Grey eyes green eyes, etc facial hair non facial hair. Etc.
@@nicolesamuels4679you have low critical thinking blinded by hate and prejudice.
Thanks Dr. Jeanson for working really hard to enlight us :)
Long Live the Native Indian Culture and Heritage and People!
Funny how when I was a younger kid my mom would always tell me how great it was to be Indian. As I grew up I couldn’t care less about my ethnicity. Dad is a Jew so that makes me a mutt. I just want to be considered a person. I’m just participating in life and not trying to get noticed. Go red, yellow, white, black, brown and whatever other color that represents people.
Your dad marrying your mom makes him Apache. Not half this, not a quarter that. Apache.
Thoses $5 Indians just not going to make the team 😢
Fascinating! Most interesting to me is the connections regarding the earth mound builders. So they were called the Talega, and were still active less than a thousand years ago. Their structures are built using the same measurement/celestial alignment system as the Egyptian pyramids, so I'd love to know more about how they ended up in America.
This same phenomenon happens in Central America too. Chicken Itza and the pyramid of the sun god in or near Mexico City. Interesting how Egyptian pyramid types building got over here.
If you go farther back, Egyptians got their ziggurat-like style of building from Babel
There was a group call the TWA. The were short in stature and many of the mounds have small openings for these small people. Many indigenous people in North and South America have this short stature. There is an oral history. My great grandmother told me that the story of big foot was a first contact story with Europeans.
@@jrsimeon02 Indeed, I couldn't find any haplogroup evidence that the Egyptians migrated to America, so more likely they both inherited the building system from a common ancestor farther back.
@@dekutree64 Dr Jeanson goes into a migration to the Yucatan peninsula on a video a couple years ago but he didn't say where from.
Thanks for the maps and state boundaries, because some of your audience aren't from North America, and I appreciated those guides. Those dates of 900 AD and the other less so, correspond to the Polynesian expansion too. What compelled people to migrate (push factors and pull factors) as well as climate at the time would also facilitate migration. Perhaps I'll buy the book and read much more. I read a book 10 years back which purported evidence that the Vikings trading iron tools for Inuit furs helped the Inuit expand their territory/migration over a 400 or so year period - the settlement evidence was infrequent, but it corresponded with records to support migration expansion facilitation.
awesome
A study of similarities between a Viking language and the language of a large Indian tribe where the Vikings had a settlement is in an old book I read in the Fifties at the Tampa Public Library.
I’ve been enjoying the whole series of the lost human history! Thank you Dr. Jeansen.
Not lost, stifled or hidden
Dr.NJ your keen logic and dedication to discovery is inspiring and honorable , your heart is truely entangled with the techcnolgy and thats really something to behold, all blessings xoxoxo!
“Your heart is ‘truely’ entangled with the techcnolgy..” makes no sense! Let alone the spelling 🤦🏼♀️
I'm not Native either. I'm native German. Married into Lakota family and felt instant ties. I also learned some of Lakota language, which was nothing I had ever heard before. But later, comparing it to Dine, Apache - it seemed like an easy language for me to learn and pronounce. It reminded me of a mix of Russian, French and German! Besides, my Native friends seemed tickled to see my efforts!
If you were born in this country as a citizen the Lakota are no more Native than you are. They just immigrated here a couple of hundred years before Europeans. That’s in the AD period, not BC.
@@Frankie5Angels150 No one is native to America.
Regarding the comment "no one is native to America, " that is probably true, but the same could be said of EVERYONE, living anywhere on our Earth. We all came from Adam and Eve... then we spread out everywhere. We have no right to think we're better than others, just because we moved somewhere first. We do have a DUTY to be proud of our families and ancestors, who survived incredible ordeals si we could be living today 😅
It's not probably true. It is true. Fact. @@BisquickTheNinja
Our bodies will die and then we will wait to be resurrected with new bodies. Those who receive the LORD Jesus the Christ will live again
I have watched this almost every day since i found this video about a week ago ... brings back memories, i hadn't thought about these things for a long time. Thank you Mr Jeanson and all on your team. This is powerful history.
This was very intriguing. Have you done a similar study on natives of the Caribbean? I am interested in learning more about the Taino origins.
Last year I did my DNA testing through Ancestry. I was born in New York but my parents and family are from Puerto Rico. Mine ancestry is a fascinating mix.
My great-grandmother is from Georgia and did the trail of tears to Oklahoma they are the builders indigenous to this country..❤MY Grandma Martha Craig wore size 13 shoe. Over 6 ft tall, . Luku Stiles. ....Her Mother, wouldn't tell anyone about herself.❤
Been nothing but immigrants to USA
They may always just travelled by boats
Explained will be the northern USA immigration to SW & NW from East Coast & Great Lakes regions. Indigenous peoples
@@garnerjoyce606, that's not true. Do you know what indigeous means?
I would be interested to hear your opinions on the reports that an "Egyptian" presence has been discovered in parts of the Grand Canyon..
What. About the giants where do they fit in the history of America's these people had battles with the Paiute, there were some in Mexico
@@davidortega357 i agree..those, too.
You mean the Buddha type statues? You can tell that’s a myth cause there’s no photos or even a definitive answer to what exactly they found
Fake
I am a Aboriginal lndian which they started calling us Negro which is on my birth certificate, but thanks to my Great Great grandmother and grandmother I have always known who we truly are, on my mother's side I am Ayiyunwiga Cherokee and on my father's side I am Sobaipuri and Cha'hta Apache, and have traced our bloodline back to 1500's here on turtle Island what you call America.
Hmm...i checked your profile picture. You look exactly like a Wakandan. No offense 😎
Word they got 2 Wakandas in America…
🔥
Sure you are, never mind what science, especially genetics say. Wabo🤡
Wow amazing you know sooo much of my people, pls do speak our mother languages since you have always been here!
Very interesting! I grew up on the Leech Lake reservation in the Chippewa National Forest. Many of my school friends were Native American. My hometown of Bena, Minnesota means partridge in Ojibwe.
Mi’kmaq here! Interesting. Looking forward to hear more about this.
Beautiful work. We really appreciate your dedication but even more so your reasonableness. It's a reasonable history with not a whole bunch of conjecture. Thank you so much for being a man of honesty and integrity and imagination. Oh and faith! Have you looked into the magnificent history of the Totonac of Veracruz Mexico?
I am acquainted with some people from Vera Cruz...they are thin and very nice looking. My guess is they are from Shems line
I have family who are still full blooded Native Americans. My family hasnt mixed much. Even in Ancestry DNA test i came out at 94% Native American. My grandmothers sister came out at 100% Native American, my mother at 97%.
Are they dark? Because light skin or white skin natives never existed in North America whatsoever even the Eskimos are dark. Orginal Natives made a real distinction between the 2 and you can see the photos for sure.
I don't know why you so called Natives let these Europeans call theirselves natives? Part of the tradition is ancestral cultural ties. Cultural appropriations from white people is not one.
@TeeSpells Dark brown, yes. Black definitely no. Beside I've never seen any black American speaking a native tongue/ dialect. Only their horrible hood English.
@@TeeSpellsit appears you are very unfamiliar with genomes and even more so biome adaptation. Blacks ain’t the only ones who come in different shades. Another rbg taking an L
@@iLL_Eaglez I'm very familiar with genetic ancestral phenotypes of morphology that's why I put the questions to the test. The SLC24A5 gene just recently occured within the last 6000 years all people was dark. Skin complexions comes from mixing not from adaptations as science orginally thought.
I’m from Alabama originally, and as soon as I heard Talega, I thought of Talladega, and also noted we have a river named the Catawba, so these were interesting seeing similarities with this narrative and where I grew up. The Moundville area is fascinating, and there was trade between these builders and S. America also, that seems to tie back to the Serpent Mounds in the Ohio River Valley area.
Thanks! Very helpful!
I'm from west Georgia just on the line with Ranburn Alabama. The first thing I thought was talladega also. I bet there is a connection.
Thanks to Harley the talladega area is now filled with iron cowboys lol. 🤠
…
My Grandpa was a famous historical figure so this study really hits home
@@danielwadding8642 Who is Hitler? For $1000 Alex.
Living in central MS near the Choctaw reservation, we have mounds everywhere. Their history isn’t really covered in school, even in MS history classes. We focus far more on things like the area of the state known as “Old West Florida” than we do on our native history.
we are not "your" natives. white man never cared to ask or look at our history until they came to an age where they felt guilty, and now try to dream up crap like this so they can feel like theyve been here just as long and are nearly as entitled to the lands weve been living on for 10s of thousands of years. just look into very well mapped mitochandrial dna
AIG, I want to thank you for allowing comments on your videos so people can post their thoughts and feelings about this subject and create an honest dialogue between the informed and the uninformed.
Dr. Jensen, love your work and am excited to see these DNA series, and feel very blessed to be able to have you as a brother in Christ! You are a blessing!😊❤
Finally! Someone is talking and connecting the Dots
I'm from the Ho-Chunk Nation in Wisconsin, we are off the Sioux. My sister is fluent in our Native tongue. This is very interesting. Good work!
I'm Osage from the Grayhorse reservation and all of us have always been here
Perhaps someone could collect and write your wonderful history? If it hasn't already been done. It would be a blessing to see your family heritage given from those who actually experienced it.
My husband is from this tribe along the Delaware. He always wanted to know his family but was kept quiet( hidden) bcuz they remained while others were forced to leave the area.
I have recently joined a tribe thru my research if you are interested in talking....but not in here of course
This is some great stuff! The theoretical methodology itself is exemplary!
So interesting! Thank you for sharing your research