The Spanish arrived in Yuma in 1521 the Quechan, Cocopah and other Yuman tribes welcomed them, allowed them to start a settlement, guided their surveyors, but never allowed them to control the Colorado River crossing, for over 250 until 1781 the tribes accused the Spaniards of stealing land , burned down the settlement and drove them out, the Spanish never returned over 50 years later the tribes signed a treaty with the US government
The amerindians from Tierra del Fuego and the paleoamericans from Lagoa Santa had more connections with Clovis Culture, particulary with individuals like Anzick-1 and findings on Spirit Cave.
Truth is at sandie go history-put the words together, plus a dot, then add the abbreviation for organization. Contains a 1965 scholarly writing by one James Moriarty. Yes, just like Sherlock’s nemesis. The title is The Discovery and Earliest Explorations of Baja California. The Spaniards did build ships and then sail from the west coast of Mexico. Some mentions of Indians, but nothing at all about painted Indians. Sorry for the cryptics, but the emperors of YT don’t accept the uncoded.
Although there’s some great information here, it is terribly Eurocentric and not at all anthropological in how it’s presented, and I don’t think that is proper for contemporary sociology. I do officially criticize the author for being too white
@@jamesdoyle2769 yes. but the film says they saw the Spanish SHIPS arrive. The Spanish could've arrive to Baja unless they sailed below S. America, which they didn't. They would've had to march overland FROM East to West.
@@frankhernandez6883 I see what you're saying. Remember, Cortez burnt his ships on the eastern coast of Mexico, so he would have had to build new ships anyway. I have to say though that that isn't all that plausible since it's not likely he had any people with those skills along on his venture.
@@jamesdoyle2769 right! i think he had the ships burn so NO ONE would betray him and leave him behind🤣 I doubt there were any Spanish ship coming from the Pacific side. Spain invaded the Phillipines in 1521, but I've heard of no Pacific side landings on America
@@frankhernandez6883 That's absolutely why he did it. My point is not why but what - after the ships were burnt, he had no ships on either coast, so he'd have to build new ones. And you're right, there were no Spanish ships coming from the Philippines, not until trade with Mexico started, later.
I am so tired of the term hunter-gatherer. The problem with it is that it describes a moment in the day of the life. That does not describe their lifestyles. Their lifestyles were generational efforts of local cultivation of abundance. Virtually everything we eat took hundreds or thousands of years of practice and science to develop. It wasn't what they did during the day that was important. It was the strategies with which they hunted and cultivated things that built the environment around them to serve them.
I agree! These people were not just "hunter-gatherers" - they were masters of their environments and built societies that lasted for centuries. In many cases they managed the ecosystem with fire and tended to wild trees as if they were orchards
@MysteriousOrigins1 The carrier pigeon was the largest mass of meat on the planet. It dominated North America and it was a cultivated population of birds. All over North America it was basically the law that you never killed adult carrier pigeons. If a successful one made it to adulthood that means it's out there making a hundred more. Free KFC all day
It would have been nice to learn what the people called themselves besides the Spanish name given them. Also their desimation was due to the Spanish, that waa not directly stated. People will tell you where they came from if you ask them. Every group of people has an origin story. Why was a male modern skull shown when he was talking about women? Anyhow thank you for sharing! First time hearing about this group of people. Would like to research more😊
Apparently the name they called themselves was never recorded. Only the Spanish name and what other tribes called them. Of course what the Spanish did is very white washed.
Thanks for the very nice and informative video. I have a friend that collects relics in that area and I plan to let him know about this video.
I'm guessing the "Pericu" may have been the residents of what the maps at the time show as California island and ruled by Queen Kalifa perhaps?
The Spanish arrived in Yuma in 1521 the Quechan, Cocopah and other Yuman tribes welcomed them, allowed them to start a settlement, guided their surveyors, but never allowed them to control the Colorado River crossing, for over 250 until 1781 the tribes accused the Spaniards of stealing land , burned down the settlement and drove them out, the Spanish never returned over 50 years later the tribes signed a treaty with the US government
Stupidest thing they ever did was welcome the invaders.
Thank you.
Thank You....👏👏👏💕💕💕💐🙏
The amerindians from Tierra del Fuego and the paleoamericans from Lagoa Santa had more connections with Clovis Culture, particulary with individuals like Anzick-1 and findings on Spirit Cave.
Why repeat many times the same information. It yes, very informative as never heard of these peoples
They had already built two resorts
The Tarahumara were the most enigmatic Native American tribe. This is just another bogus video.
Yeah. Click bait with machine scriptwriting and audio.
Them Pericu were badass!
1492 the Tainos of the Caribbean first to see and fight the Spanish. The Columbian exchange was ground zero of Native Americans and Europeans.
Truth is at sandie go history-put the words together, plus a dot, then add the abbreviation for organization. Contains a 1965 scholarly writing by one James Moriarty. Yes, just like Sherlock’s nemesis. The title is The Discovery and Earliest Explorations of Baja California. The Spaniards did build ships and then sail from the west coast of Mexico. Some mentions of Indians, but nothing at all about painted Indians. Sorry for the cryptics, but the emperors of YT don’t accept the uncoded.
alright, ok, you've persuaded me Pericu chicks rock ...is there a dating site where I can meet one?
Although there’s some great information here, it is terribly Eurocentric and not at all anthropological in how it’s presented, and I don’t think that is proper for contemporary sociology.
I do officially criticize the author for being too white
Actually this video as well as his/her other videos are color/afro-centric and anti-European ie anti-White, like many of the comments herecare.
Spain ❤😊
There are no native deer or antlered or large horned animals in Australia. Goes to credibility.
Thank you. Sources are problematical.
WAIT! If the natives lived in Baja, HOW could they see the Spainards coming from the EAST??? 🤔
Because the rest of Mexico, where the Spanish were, is to the east?
@@jamesdoyle2769 yes. but the film says they saw the Spanish SHIPS arrive. The Spanish could've arrive to Baja unless they sailed below S. America, which they didn't. They would've had to march overland FROM East to West.
@@frankhernandez6883 I see what you're saying. Remember, Cortez burnt his ships on the eastern coast of Mexico, so he would have had to build new ships anyway. I have to say though that that isn't all that plausible since it's not likely he had any people with those skills along on his venture.
@@jamesdoyle2769 right! i think he had the ships burn so NO ONE would betray him and leave him behind🤣
I doubt there were any Spanish ship coming from the Pacific side. Spain invaded the Phillipines in 1521, but I've heard of no Pacific side landings on America
@@frankhernandez6883 That's absolutely why he did it. My point is not why but what - after the ships were burnt, he had no ships on either coast, so he'd have to build new ones. And you're right, there were no Spanish ships coming from the Philippines, not until trade with Mexico started, later.
Conspiracy people will say they are part Ancient Aliens 👾, lol.
👽👽👽👽
I am so tired of the term hunter-gatherer. The problem with it is that it describes a moment in the day of the life. That does not describe their lifestyles. Their lifestyles were generational efforts of local cultivation of abundance. Virtually everything we eat took hundreds or thousands of years of practice and science to develop. It wasn't what they did during the day that was important. It was the strategies with which they hunted and cultivated things that built the environment around them to serve them.
I agree! These people were not just "hunter-gatherers" - they were masters of their environments and built societies that lasted for centuries. In many cases they managed the ecosystem with fire and tended to wild trees as if they were orchards
@MysteriousOrigins1 The carrier pigeon was the largest mass of meat on the planet. It dominated North America and it was a cultivated population of birds. All over North America it was basically the law that you never killed adult carrier pigeons. If a successful one made it to adulthood that means it's out there making a hundred more. Free KFC all day
In other words they had horsefaces
Ei sunt americani, ceilalți își zic americani dar sunt scursură englezească din secolul XV-lea
Good video and interesting. It would be improved if you did not switch pronunciation between PEricu and PeRIcu every few phrases.
It would have been nice to learn what the people called themselves besides the Spanish name given them. Also their desimation was due to the Spanish, that waa not directly stated.
People will tell you where they came from if you ask them. Every group of people has an origin story.
Why was a male modern skull shown when he was talking about women?
Anyhow thank you for sharing! First time hearing about this group of people. Would like to research more😊
Apparently the name they called themselves was never recorded. Only the Spanish name and what other tribes called them. Of course what the Spanish did is very white washed.
Very repetitive
Lost continent of mu , mayan proohecies , aztec , books better than videos
Peri co ....
research south tamil peoples and tribes.. you can find related dna or related people (Indian)