Тёмный
No video :(

Prehistoric California: Boats, Shell Money, and Acorns (Prehistoric North America) 

World Chronicles
Подписаться 12 тыс.
Просмотров 225 тыс.
50% 1

California today is the most populous state in the United States of America. Cities like San Francisco and Los Angeles are world famous and are major tourist attractions. Yet few can mention a single aspect of California’s Native American prehistory. This video gives a thorough overview of the activities of Native Americans across California’s vast and varied regions from the San Francisco Bay Area, to the Santa Barbara, Los Angeles and San Diego areas, to the Sacramento and San Joaquin Valleys (The Central Valley), to the Sierra Nevada Mountains and finally to the Mojave and Colorado Desert regions.
Towering mountains, deserts, sprawling river and lake systems and a long coastline all rounded out by a mild climate. This is California today and was once the California that many Native Americans experienced before the arrival of Europeans in Prehistoric North America. Perhaps due to California’s vast variety of landscapes prehistoric California had an enormous amount of cultural diversity. At the time of contact with Europeans there were 100 different groups of Native Americans. Incredibly despite many of these groups living across California’s multiple different environments many of them often relied upon one primary food source to fill their bellies - the acorn. This was made possible by the abundance of acorn bearing oak trees in California. It is because of this sheer abundance of food that some researchers think that prehistoric California may have been a “Garden of Eden” where there was no need for agriculture or other developments such as pottery. This characterization may however be far from reality. Though there indeed was an absence of agriculture and pottery, it was extremely labor intensive to turn acorns into food products. There also may have been frequent warfare between prehistoric Californians due to the many battered remains that have been found. The populations of the prehistoric Californian groups were large and managed by complex chiefdoms and sociopolitical organizations. Many of the economies of these groups used shell beads as currency. Trade networks were also vast and wide ranging. Prehistoric California was likely far from being a simple and carefree landscape.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Credits:
All music from the RU-vid Audio Library
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sources:
Sutton, Mark Q. A Prehistory of North America
denniscassinel...
www.thoughtco....

Опубликовано:

 

20 июн 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 571   
@AXALRZ
@AXALRZ Месяц назад
Thank you for this video! No one ever talks about California native americans.
@jackj5368
@jackj5368 Месяц назад
I've lived in California all my life and attended elementary school in the Cambrian Park section of San Jose. We learned all of this information in fourth grade, and we also learned U.S. history. Thank God the beautiful land now known as California became a part of the U.S.. May the USA prosper forevermore. :)
@UnlimitedEmeralds
@UnlimitedEmeralds Месяц назад
If you’re from California you definitely learned about this. All of 4th grade was history about California with an emphasis on Native American treatment and the Mission system. We even had a final project on a Mission of our choosing. Then I learned about it again in high school with more minority groups that were mistreated. Finally I took several classes in college that went even more in depth with far more graphic details.
@stephenskinner4857
@stephenskinner4857 Месяц назад
I have researched and engaged with historians and native people to realize that the California history is older and more developed than anywhere in the U.S. I hope to reveal this at the upcoming 2028 Olympics with a historical kiosk at the new Hollywood Entertainment District. This reveals more Natural climate opportunities than anywhere. We just need to rid of BAD humans running the government here.
@acuritis
@acuritis Месяц назад
@@UnlimitedEmeraldsbut the mission stuff was mostly about the Spanish and how they forcefully assimilated native peoples. We never hear stuff like this - a thriving community of cultures at their prime
@TOm-hr2mb
@TOm-hr2mb Месяц назад
Nobody talks about all Natives being from Asia.
@bjed21
@bjed21 Месяц назад
The catalina island shell mixer.
@huebdoo
@huebdoo Месяц назад
pow pow
@zalix512
@zalix512 Месяц назад
Lots ancient stuff on Catalina.
@bbfoto7248
@bbfoto7248 Месяц назад
@@zalix512 The Channel Islands have skeletal remains of Dwarf Wooley Mammoths.
@DNS-FRANK09
@DNS-FRANK09 Месяц назад
As a Californian I appreciate this video 😊
@WorldChronicles1
@WorldChronicles1 Месяц назад
That’s awesome! I hope more Californians see this
@jamesdoyle2769
@jamesdoyle2769 Месяц назад
@@WorldChronicles1 Here's another. And thank you!
@SearchIndex
@SearchIndex Месяц назад
@@WorldChronicles1 🤚
@WorldChronicles1
@WorldChronicles1 Месяц назад
@@jamesdoyle2769 You're welcome!
@julianortiz180
@julianortiz180 Месяц назад
​​@@WorldChronicles1As a California native from the Sierra Nevada foothills I appreciate this video #MonoNative #Nuem
@wendigo8118
@wendigo8118 Месяц назад
As a Miwuk that lives in California and grew up in near Yosemite. I appreciate this video. You should look into the Mariposa war.
@TheMasterOfEverything
@TheMasterOfEverything Месяц назад
Hello miwuk brother! Sonora resident here
@WorldChronicles1
@WorldChronicles1 16 дней назад
Glad you liked the video. I'll look into that topic
@austinwhitsitt1547
@austinwhitsitt1547 11 дней назад
My family is from Mariposa, I love being up there.
@sovereigncosmicwildman
@sovereigncosmicwildman 9 дней назад
I like your tribes teepee designs
@shogunloophole8816
@shogunloophole8816 Месяц назад
I’m Tataviam and Chumash from LA … thanks for shedding some light on the long history this land and our people .
@WorldChronicles1
@WorldChronicles1 16 дней назад
You are welcome!
@Lrj530
@Lrj530 Месяц назад
My dad said that when they first got here to Northern California from Texas in the mid 60’s. That when they would work the fields with the tractors that they would uncover those rocks they would use to grind the grains
@ben8405
@ben8405 Месяц назад
Yup!
@mosthated8190
@mosthated8190 Месяц назад
Nice info !
@stuckinthemud4352
@stuckinthemud4352 Месяц назад
I live near red bluff California they are all over around here to this day.
@thomasmorris134
@thomasmorris134 Месяц назад
im in the middle of the sacramento valley and have seen tons of the bolo rocks, havent found any of the ones for grinding grains yet unfortunately.
@Lrj530
@Lrj530 Месяц назад
@@thomasmorris134 my mom and dad still have a few of them by the fireplace
@johncrowe9562
@johncrowe9562 Месяц назад
No one mentions the millions of birds that show up every fall in the central valley. They must have been a major food source.
@Jo-vu1me
@Jo-vu1me Месяц назад
What kind of birds?
@AntonioPeralesdelHierro
@AntonioPeralesdelHierro Месяц назад
"The skies were dark with birds, the rivers boiled with fish, and grizzlies were everywhere" That how I saw California described when the Spanish came.
@jaimepatena7372
@jaimepatena7372 Месяц назад
@@Jo-vu1me Geese and ducks. I live on the San Joaquin Delta in Central California. They caught them with nets.
@_NEPO_
@_NEPO_ Месяц назад
​@@AntonioPeralesdelHierroa true garden of Eden
@Wizofawes
@Wizofawes Месяц назад
Pigeons could black out the sky for hours
@jaimepatena7372
@jaimepatena7372 Месяц назад
California was so rich in acorns, game, and fish that this is one of the few places in the world where hunter gatherers lived in permanent villages. There was no need to farm. And the only domesticated animals were dogs.
@elizabethgarcia171
@elizabethgarcia171 Месяц назад
it's called horticulture! that was the practice for most indigenous californians
@S.J.L
@S.J.L 17 дней назад
Chatel Hoyuk, in Anatolia, is another place like that, one of the world's first towns. They had a steady supply of shellfish, fish and pistachio trees.
@sovereigncosmicwildman
@sovereigncosmicwildman 9 дней назад
I wish to try some of that acorn bread
@hebedite4865
@hebedite4865 28 дней назад
Great video! It's so hard to find accessible information on the pre-contact native cultures of California for whatever reason. I grew up in the Mojave desert at the intersection of historic Kawaiisu, Kitanemuk, Serrano, and Tataviam peoples' homelands and was essentially a long established trading post of sorts. It's especially difficult to find information on the smaller tribes like the Tataviam. Thanks for shining a spotlight on a topic that is surprisingly not discussed as often as it should be.
@WorldChronicles1
@WorldChronicles1 16 дней назад
Thanks, glad you liked the video. And you are welcome!
@TripleVortex
@TripleVortex Месяц назад
You are mistaken, Tulare lake is gone, they drained it to make farmland. Occasionally comes back if theres a very wet winter.
@BreckTaxi
@BreckTaxi Месяц назад
Yes, I believe that the US Govt. sold the marshland for $1 per acre and for every acre turned into farmland they got a $1 rebate. So essentially free land if you converted to farmland.
@D9everything
@D9everything 14 дней назад
We also pronounce it "Too - Larry" 😀
@elipiper342
@elipiper342 7 дней назад
Cotton for Levies
@luongo7886
@luongo7886 Месяц назад
One of my best friends is from the Chumash Tribe. I really enjoyed your fascinating documentary. Thank you.
@WorldChronicles1
@WorldChronicles1 Месяц назад
You're welcome, glad you enjoyed it
@danielruiz3443
@danielruiz3443 13 дней назад
I learned that I am 19% Chumash on my grandmothers side.
@luongo7886
@luongo7886 13 дней назад
@@WorldChronicles1 I really enjoy your videos. We need to explore more about the New World since it is not so “new.” 😆🥹🤣
@luongo7886
@luongo7886 13 дней назад
@@danielruiz3443 Nice!!! And you live in California?
@ipwee
@ipwee Месяц назад
I've lived in California for 60 years. I had no idea there were so many native tribes. You hear about Miwok, Pomo, Mono, and Modoc. The other 96, not so much. Thank you for the video.
@savetrump9120
@savetrump9120 Месяц назад
The Patwin tribe lived in my area. I live Suisun City. Suisun is a Patwin word that means west wind.
@shogunloophole8816
@shogunloophole8816 Месяц назад
Sad but true : much of our history is glossed over and most of those hundred tribes remain unrecognized by the federal government and landless
@WorldChronicles1
@WorldChronicles1 16 дней назад
You are welcome!
@Earthkiid
@Earthkiid Месяц назад
Mammoth uncovered in Arroyo Grande. Dated 40,000 years ago. Has cut marks on it. I’ve held the femur with the cuts on it. Can clearly see them. It’s incredible, I have no idea why the find has not been shared.
@Kisseyhersh123
@Kisseyhersh123 Месяц назад
Fossil trade most likely.
@bbfoto7248
@bbfoto7248 Месяц назад
@@Kisseyhersh123 I believe these remains were found in situ.
@bbfoto7248
@bbfoto7248 Месяц назад
There are also the remains of dwarf wooley mammoths on the Channel Islands.
@glendabarton1914
@glendabarton1914 28 дней назад
On the Sonoma County coast, huge coastal rock out cropping show the smooth rubbed out sections where woolly mammoths rubbed against them to scratch their lice or fleas. A geologist figured that out, or rather the parks archaeologist. You can see the smoothed out rock up to twenty feet high. Showing how tall they were.
@taocffej
@taocffej 24 дня назад
How about the Cerutti Mastadon Site in San Diego? It’s dated… Are you ready? 130,000 years.
@plakor6133
@plakor6133 Месяц назад
The oak tree at the beginning looks like it may have been coppiced when much smaller. Recommended book: "Tending the Wild", by Kat Anderson. Native people were active landscape shapers and managers for millennia. "There was no need for agriculture". The "agriculture" was there, just dispersed.
@slwrabbits
@slwrabbits Месяц назад
interesting!
@glendabarton1914
@glendabarton1914 28 дней назад
We are now applying some of those lessons from indigenous peoples to our parks and forest management like controlled burns for instance. Europeans thought California was a paradise. They didn't know it was largely due to sophisticated and careful managing of the land.
@michaelrowave
@michaelrowave 9 дней назад
Thank you for the recommendation. Foraging mushrooms, leafy greens, kelp, shellfish, fowl, berries and game in relatively close proximity meant low incentives to farm. I was told fire was used to manage hunting grounds. I have first hand sight petroglyphs at sea level in Tiburon and all the way to top of Sierras past Tahoe. They may not have left as much ceramics but their specialties included basket weaving and the processing of other foods as needed. The mountains may have reduced trade beyond coast which could explain less art sophistication or complexity by standards of Spanish Empire.
@Mojojojo.ex3
@Mojojojo.ex3 Месяц назад
As a Pomo, I'm glad California natives are getting some attention
@galerae947
@galerae947 Месяц назад
I believe Clear Lake in Lake County is considered the oldest natural lake in the northwest. 480,000 years old. Stands to reason it would have been inhabited very early. Estimates are approx 11,800 years ago for the Pomo.
@Callmedaddy1
@Callmedaddy1 Месяц назад
Lake Tulare is basically a mud pit most of the time
@SearchIndex
@SearchIndex Месяц назад
Yup 👍
@6j6666
@6j6666 Месяц назад
Lots of obsidian up there too
@livphobia
@livphobia Месяц назад
Mt. Konocti is so beautiful
@glendabarton1914
@glendabarton1914 28 дней назад
Clear Lake is the oldest lake on the continent. It has been inhabited for thousands of years. California has the biggest birds in the northern hemisphere, California Condors, the largest and tallest trees in the world, (Coast Redwoods and Sequoias) and the oldest (non-clonal bristlecone pines oldest in the world . This state is a remarkable place in diversity has the most diverse ecosystem probably in the world. It's a beautiful magical place.
@lemorab1
@lemorab1 Месяц назад
I was hoping this film would mention that the San Francisco Bay waters receded and rose about 7 times over the past 100,000 years. Until about 20,000 years ago, the Bay was a vast river valley with marshes, going all the way out to the Farallon Islands. I was hoping the narrator would talk about who lived there and there would be illustrations.
@WorldChronicles1
@WorldChronicles1 16 дней назад
I'm going to try to cover that in a future video. Thanks for bringing this to my attention
@D9everything
@D9everything 14 дней назад
I second this motion. It's actually why I clicked on the video.
@Mike-ik7dl
@Mike-ik7dl Месяц назад
The lake is pronounced Too-larry I live in this area and have found many native American artifacts over the years great video thanks
@Sea2overland
@Sea2overland Месяц назад
I happened across a huge sight in Monterrey. I found a massive abalone pile that was unearthed by our recent heavy rains. I was taken back bye it.
@hoboshoe
@hoboshoe Месяц назад
You should report that to like UC Berkeley
@bbfoto7248
@bbfoto7248 Месяц назад
Also look up the vast and expansive ancient "Berkeley Walls" or "East Bay Walls" of California. These are extremely long and low ancient stacked-rock walls that extend for miles, similar to the low outlining property and pasture stacked-rock walls of Ireland, Scotland, and Wales,.etc. However, the distinct type of construction and design of the Berkeley Walls matches most closely with those found in MONGOLIA !!! From the historical accounts and records of the early Spanish and European explorers and settlers who arrived on the Western American coastline, they were told by the indigenous native Indians of this California area that these rock walls were not theirs and were "already there" from a previous people and culture, and were not built by their immediate native American Indian ancestors.
@alexandercody-prentice9445
@alexandercody-prentice9445 27 дней назад
​@@bbfoto7248those were only recently built. My dad worked at Tilden park for a while, and he told me that for a long time they had thought it was made by Native Americans, and there was the myth that they had been built before the Native Americans were there. But they are actually just relatively recently built walls, to keep cows from leaving their pasture land. I believe if you check with Tilden park they will tell you the same
@jasonmckinney3730
@jasonmckinney3730 Месяц назад
Don't forget Arlington Springs Man found on Santa Rosa Island dating back to at least 13000 years ago. Maybe older.
@WorldChronicles1
@WorldChronicles1 Месяц назад
I covered those remains in my "Prehistoric Settlement of North America" video
@therealking6202
@therealking6202 Месяц назад
​@@WorldChronicles1Coming with receipts!
@bbfoto7248
@bbfoto7248 Месяц назад
@@WorldChronicles1 Have you chronicled the vast and expansive ancient "Berkeley Walls" or "East Bay Walls" of California? These are extremely long and low ancient stacked-rock walls that extend for miles, similar to the low outlining property and pasture stacked-rock walls of Ireland, Scotland, and Wales, etc. However, the distinct type of construction and design of the Berkeley Walls matches most closely with those found in MONGOLIA !!! From the historical accounts and records of the early Spanish and European explorers and settlers who arrived on the Western American coastline, they were told by the indigenous native Indians of this California area that these rock walls were not theirs and were "already there" from a previous people and culture, and were not built by their immediate native American Indian ancestors.
@MisterElement
@MisterElement Месяц назад
@@bbfoto7248fascinating! I’ll research that! Appreciate the information!
@glendabarton1914
@glendabarton1914 28 дней назад
Once a great continent lay to the West of and encroaching on California, Lemuria. Mt. Shasta, one of the 7 Sacred Mountains of the world and the root chakra, is considered to have had an underground civilization of Lemurians.
@Arthur-Silva
@Arthur-Silva Месяц назад
The same type mounds of shells are also found in Brazil, archaeologists there call them “Sambaquis”. It’s everywhere along the Brazilian coast.
@dubrc8577
@dubrc8577 29 дней назад
Some California Native people that I know are pulling ancient S. American DNA. Perhaps one day they make a connection? The migration was sometimes from south to north and not just over a land bridge. The ancient natives were a seafaring people.
@tokyo169nyc718
@tokyo169nyc718 18 дней назад
That's cool. They're everywhere in Japan too and we call them Kaizuka which transliteration is "shell mound". We learn about these prehistoric mounds found throughout Japan in middle school. Cool fact: In Ancient Japan there was a shell mound found far from any sort of seashore. Since geological changes in the landscape/sealine due to the post-ice age climate change weren't known at the time, the rationalization that was commonly accepted and integrated with the local folklore was that these shell mounds were used by the Giants that lived in the area that are able to cross long distances due to their size 😅 (FYI Oogushi Kaizuka/大串貝塚 is the modern name of that shell mound and the legend of Daidarabotchi ダイダラボッチ is the specific Giant folklore.)
@justintyme720
@justintyme720 Месяц назад
Anybody here ever been to Indian Meadows in northeastern California near the pit River it's a large large large meadow that housed anywhere between 50 to 300 individuals over 500 years after a rain you can walk around the field and find Arrowhead spear points you can't walk or take a step without stepping on obsidian shards all the boulders along the river have holes in the boulders for grinding acorns this is a very very special place that's why I won't tell you exactly where it is
@kimberlyperrotis8962
@kimberlyperrotis8962 Месяц назад
There was still a huge shell mound near the shore of San Francisco Bay when my late Mom was a child. This area has been been developed and is now Shell-mound Street in Alameda.
@shogunloophole8816
@shogunloophole8816 Месяц назад
Amazing how they always name a street or district after what they destroyed isn’t it ?
@glendabarton1914
@glendabarton1914 28 дней назад
Also on Emeryville and I believe Berkelry
@D9everything
@D9everything 14 дней назад
@@shogunloophole8816 Have you driven down "My Pride" Street yet? 😅
@elizabethjmanzano
@elizabethjmanzano Месяц назад
Ventura County Californian, here! Love love love this video so much! Growing up I always wondered about the people who lived here long before us. I have a small boulder with evidence of being used as a grinding stone that I pulled out of a local riverbed (was afraid that the homeless would spray paint or destroy it). This stone also has a spectacular cluster of fossilized gastropods on the surface. I imagine an old Chumash woman using her treasured fossil decorated grinding stone to process acorns. Must have washed down from the mountains during our seasonal flash floods.
@shogunloophole8816
@shogunloophole8816 Месяц назад
There is a Chumash cultural center in Thousand Oaks … you can take it there for preservation and display
@acd138
@acd138 Месяц назад
This is amazing! As a Californian and someone who’s been to many of the places you’ve talked about. I have even found a couple artifacts myself. I’ve actually learned so much watching this video even with the minimal amount of research I did I still could not find nearly any of the information that you provided in this video. Thank you!
@shogunloophole8816
@shogunloophole8816 Месяц назад
Please don’t move artifacts from where you find them . That’s one of the only ways we can identify our village sites and sacred places . If you want to to know more there are a few small museums who do great work : Chumash Indian museum in Thousand Oaks is a great resource in SoCal .
@lisamurphy5663
@lisamurphy5663 Месяц назад
Thank you! For hundreds of tribes over thousands of years amazingly little has been learned about the early people of California.👍
@ogathingo8885
@ogathingo8885 Месяц назад
Thanks you for this interesting video on ancient history of California. USA needs to teach pre- colonial history of America in the schools so that citizens have better understanding of North America. Such objective information as this videos shows us facts that ancient Americans had high civilization and were not primitive tribals as so many new literature make us believe…..
@L6FT
@L6FT Месяц назад
@@ogathingo8885 Studying the original peoples of old also gives insight into managing the land.
@breedersjourney
@breedersjourney Месяц назад
This is awesome, great info and well presented. I love seeing this side of the native californian lifestyle pre colonization. Too many people just want to focus on the genocide and gold rush era, thats like the most horrific and boring part. 99% of our history was beautiful and deserves remembering not just the bad parts.
@xiotati
@xiotati Месяц назад
I'm from Santa Cruz. on a construction site I unearthed a spear point or knife. we had the Olones here. Thanks for this video!
@goyoelburro
@goyoelburro Месяц назад
Really good! I was born in SF and am always interested in the Native American History of CA.
@shogunloophole8816
@shogunloophole8816 Месяц назад
Google Valentin Lopez : awesome tribal leader near you
@bobsmoot2392
@bobsmoot2392 6 дней назад
Excellent presentation. Thank you for the hard work it took to make this enlightened video.
@AryadutaToto
@AryadutaToto Месяц назад
It’s incredible to see such kindness and love. Thank you all!
@lostpony4885
@lostpony4885 Месяц назад
Lake Tulare is a cotton plantation. Its flooded right now but temporarily.
@_Peace_Keeper_
@_Peace_Keeper_ Месяц назад
You don't know anything imma yokut
@jamesdoyle2769
@jamesdoyle2769 Месяц назад
We'll see just how temporarily. Tulare Lake used to be the southernmost spawning area of chinook salmon, and was a very rich source of food - elk and other species. Isn't that worth more than some almonds or cotton grown for export?
@BackRoadsWine
@BackRoadsWine Месяц назад
Farmers drained the lake. Pistachio trees have been planted. They will fight like hell to stop the lake. It's sad.
@vincemartinez1436
@vincemartinez1436 Месяц назад
Well done. First video I've found covering this subject in depth - well done! Thank you.
@WorldChronicles1
@WorldChronicles1 16 дней назад
Thanks, and you are welcome
@sideeggunnecessary
@sideeggunnecessary Месяц назад
No way these guys just waited for whales to beach themselves, they must have hunted them
@panatypical
@panatypical Месяц назад
We need to stop hunting all animals!
@triangleman9997
@triangleman9997 Месяц назад
@@panatypicalmove into the wild and do it
@chiccngeorge3058
@chiccngeorge3058 Месяц назад
@@panatypicalhow does that make sense? We are biologically engineered to hunt animals, knock it off goofy.
@mosesolsonmd4063
@mosesolsonmd4063 Месяц назад
Agreed. Gray Whales travel closer to the shores of CA during their migration north, along with their calfs, hiding from killer whales. I can totally see then hunting the baby whales
@ERROR204.
@ERROR204. Месяц назад
​@@panatypical why
@lensperspective9753
@lensperspective9753 Месяц назад
Kumeyaay Native here!
@thesmokinsalmon
@thesmokinsalmon Месяц назад
I love my home California
@christopherdouglass7143
@christopherdouglass7143 Месяц назад
Uhm, lake Tulare is considered a dead lake. It came back for the first time in over 100 years 2 years ago but it’s dried up again
@terrymoran3705
@terrymoran3705 Месяц назад
Loved the vid!Always interested in California prehistory. Would love to see this presentation done in terms of a time line, on a map. ie, all sites at 9k BP and their duration. Then 8k BP and so on, while removing those no longer inhabited. Would be interesting to see the demographics, with population and location changes. Thanx!
@WorldChronicles1
@WorldChronicles1 Месяц назад
Glad you liked the video! And that sounds like an excellent idea. I’ll be sure to look into doing that for the prehistory of California and perhaps for other regions of North America as well
@terrymoran3705
@terrymoran3705 Месяц назад
@WorldChronicles1 Thanks for the mention! Growing up in California, we have very little, publicized history of it. So it's nice to hear.!
@danserpourlavie7649
@danserpourlavie7649 Месяц назад
Awesome video, I enjoy watching your videos. Thank you for sharing! 👍👍👏👏
@craigsawyer6453
@craigsawyer6453 26 дней назад
My father, now in his 90's, lived in Hughson CA as he grew up. When he was plowing he said that native pots would get stuck on to the tip of the plow. He would get frustrated, need to stop working, and remove them. Makes one wonder how much history was erased by "modern" farming practices.
@Lazyviking82
@Lazyviking82 Месяц назад
This was a really cool video, especially from such a small channel. Deserving of a like and follow.
@WorldChronicles1
@WorldChronicles1 16 дней назад
Thanks!
@andrewjones9991
@andrewjones9991 Месяц назад
Thank you for this! I am from Tennessee and living in California now. In Tennessee we know so much about the Cherokee culture and many names, including Tennessee itself are Cherokee names. I have been wondering who was in CA before Europeans. It's like they never existed here.
@jamesdoyle2769
@jamesdoyle2769 Месяц назад
There were 120 separate languages spoken in California, many completely unrelated, and a similar variety of ethnicities. The population was huge but so complex that it's not easy to package into a simple narrative. So it gets ignored.
@andrewjones9991
@andrewjones9991 Месяц назад
@@jamesdoyle2769 That makes sense but it's weird the lack of anything even named an indigenous name until you get to Mexico or Arizona. It's not talked about here but I know the Big Sur region had a lot of grisly bears. I wonder if that kept people away.
@jamesdoyle2769
@jamesdoyle2769 Месяц назад
@@andrewjones9991 There are indigenous place names all over the US and California is no exception, though often they come through Spanish pretty mangles. Grizzlies - there were so many grizzlies in the flat area where Monterey is now that when the Spanish got there, no none could live there. Big Sur probably couldn't support a very large population of grizzlies. What it did have was a small population of Esselen people who had once been more numerous and widespread, until the area was settled four or five thousand years ago by speakers of Utian languages, the Mutsun and Rumsen and so on. (Unrelated to the Esselen)
@andrewjones9991
@andrewjones9991 Месяц назад
@@jamesdoyle2769 Duly noted. In comparison to Tennessee I don't see a lot. Maybe I'm just not recognizing the indigenous names because they're mangled as you put it. I'm still learning. I admit my ignorance about California pre-Europeans settling it. That's why I'm watching this.Thanks for the info!
@ibestrokin
@ibestrokin Месяц назад
​@@andrewjones9991there's many Native named places in California, just gets overlooked. Just to name a few here in the LA area: Topanga, Azuza, Tujunga, Cahuenga, Pacoima, Castaic and the more recognizable like Malibu, Pismo Beach (SLO county) and Temecula (IE). There's also many counties and cities with names of Native origin.
Месяц назад
There are many underwater sites in California which can go date back to 11,000 years
@shogunloophole8816
@shogunloophole8816 Месяц назад
The dates will continue to be pushed back !
@11BlackLamb
@11BlackLamb Месяц назад
New Pre-Clovis site in Chula Vista San Diego by Fwy- 120k years dated, being hushed as usual
@wbaldwin666
@wbaldwin666 Месяц назад
Don't forget the mammoth remains with tool marks
@Apradavra
@Apradavra Месяц назад
The data on this continues to be disputed. A majority of archeologists feel those bones became damaged by sediment compaction and weight or damage from construction equipment.
@shogunloophole8816
@shogunloophole8816 Месяц назад
The dates will continue to be pushed back
@jaimepatena7372
@jaimepatena7372 Месяц назад
California was so rich in resources that it had the highest population density of Native Americans any place north of Mexico before Columbus.
@cato451
@cato451 Месяц назад
I live in Carpinteria which was basically a Native American canoe repair shop due to the abundance of natural tar and oil.
@shogunloophole8816
@shogunloophole8816 Месяц назад
Hence the Spanish title : carpenteria
@kimberlyperrotis8962
@kimberlyperrotis8962 Месяц назад
We use to own wilderness land in Mendocino County just east of the Covelo, Pomo, reservation. We were thrilled when we found a chert/flint arrowhead there once, it’s a treasure that will go to a local museum eventually.
@sideeggunnecessary
@sideeggunnecessary Месяц назад
Yoo your vids are the best
@kabuti2839
@kabuti2839 Месяц назад
There are rock paintings around, & squirrells bring artefacts/burials to the surface. my horse loves acorns. the hills & mountains are pocked with grinding rocks everywhere.
@anbthree786
@anbthree786 29 дней назад
i always remember as a kid thinking the valleys were once underwater, you can tell by their strange formations, hiking trails you can see many of the acorn trees mentioned in the video. it’s amazing how they were able to thrive in such a dramatically changing environment.
@glendabarton1914
@glendabarton1914 28 дней назад
Many once were probably. The whole terraced forest in Mendocino marches up from the ocean on shelves of what were once ocean bottom and beaches.
@madelineharoldsen9899
@madelineharoldsen9899 17 дней назад
This content is so helpful and informative, thank you!!!!
@WorldChronicles1
@WorldChronicles1 16 дней назад
You are welcome!
@BloodFangRogue1
@BloodFangRogue1 Месяц назад
Blue oaks, valley oaks, coastal live oaks, canyon live oaks, interior live oaks, oracle oaks, jolan oaks, black oaks, Oregon white oaks, red oaks, northern pin oaks, scrub oaks, Holly oaks, and tannoaks(which aren't true oaks) are some of the oak species I've seen
@jeffolms1041
@jeffolms1041 Месяц назад
Great video. We find buried shell piles all over Monterey Bay area. It was something all of the coastal natives did, seemingly world wide never heard a good explanation why. Not to pick knits but Tulare is pronounced like it ends with a y. Too lare y.
@ibestrokin
@ibestrokin Месяц назад
He also slaughtered Cahuilla 😂😂😂
@shikawgoh
@shikawgoh Месяц назад
You really know how to pack a wealth of knowledge into a 30 minute video. Well done.
@WorldChronicles1
@WorldChronicles1 Месяц назад
Thanks!
@emydonavan6254
@emydonavan6254 21 день назад
I grew up in California, and we were taught CA history. I don’t remember every thing, but I remember how hard it was to get nutrition out of acorns - chopping and rinsing and rinsing and rinsing, then more crushing and rinsing.
@robertjohannnewton7489
@robertjohannnewton7489 Месяц назад
Tulare (Too-larry) Lake.
@TopHotDog
@TopHotDog Месяц назад
This guy is ready some prepared text. Probably a.i.
@rudylovato2759
@rudylovato2759 Месяц назад
Two larrys and a moe.
@therealking6202
@therealking6202 Месяц назад
I've always pronounced it Too-lare, like too-bare.
@daltonsband
@daltonsband Месяц назад
Came here to say this too Too lair ee Lol
@rudylovato2759
@rudylovato2759 Месяц назад
@@daltonsband Tillary von shonud
@11BlackLamb
@11BlackLamb Месяц назад
Chumash plank canoes and plank surfboards for Humalewu Malibu= where the surf sounds loudly
@vasil12361
@vasil12361 Месяц назад
Humaliwo. No 'an kał 'aliwałyam loka ikmen, no 'an kałnuna mitsqanaqan.
@Jo-vu1me
@Jo-vu1me Месяц назад
Does anyone know if the chukansi tribe in madera inhabited the madera ranchos? My grandparents ranch has a hudge rock with a few bowls pitted in them. No other rock near it has that. I’ve always wondered if they may have been used by natives.
@TopazZeus
@TopazZeus Месяц назад
Central coast mentioned 💪
@sunnyinvladivostok
@sunnyinvladivostok 22 дня назад
I lived for a while in Pisco, Peru. I recall hearing that the Chincha empire, which is from that area, were excellent seafarers, and there was hard evidence they traded with peoples as far away as modern-day Mexico. Makes me wonder if they made it a little farther north, to what we call California. edit: probably not so? Seems like if there were trade, you'd oak trees pop up near the coast. I just looked up oak tree distribution, looks like there is only one specie in South America, but in Colombia, and it has very different growing conditions. The species Quercus humboldtii. It's pretty amazing how Alexander Von Humboldt's name shows up everywhere.
@coraltown1
@coraltown1 28 дней назад
Years ago I used to hike around Cuyamaca and Palomar in SD county; would find acorn mortor bowls carved into the rock outcrops. It really gave a new perspective to who was there before and how they lived.
@Kawitamamayi
@Kawitamamayi Месяц назад
Cerutti Mastodon site in San Diego: 1n 1992 I had lived in SD for 5 years. I remember the news of this find. Over 5-6 months Dr. Richard Cerutti (and others) excavated a mammoth skeleton found during machine excavation for a road construction site. There are clear evidence of stone tool use alongside numerous anvil and hammer stones. In 2014 Uranium-Thorium dating places the date at 130,000 before present. What was the climate like at that time? How far away was the pacific shore line?
@BakaMoto
@BakaMoto Месяц назад
Awesome video! Here in California’s Central Valley we pronounce Tulare “too-leh-ree” kinda like Too Larry
@Andy_Babb
@Andy_Babb Месяц назад
Love your content… please do a nice long video on the first humans in the Northeast/New England 😬 really though, great videos man!!
@WorldChronicles1
@WorldChronicles1 Месяц назад
Ok, I'll add that to my list of topics to cover!
@Andy_Babb
@Andy_Babb Месяц назад
@@WorldChronicles1 Thank you! I’ll definitely keep my eyes peeled! Thank you for the great content my friend.
@rhcp72188
@rhcp72188 Месяц назад
Cool vid man thanks
@gerardgearon4206
@gerardgearon4206 Месяц назад
Nice work thanks. 😀😀😀😀😀
@douglasfeldman4079
@douglasfeldman4079 Месяц назад
another great vid man
@therealking6202
@therealking6202 Месяц назад
Haven't watched the whole video yet, so before I forget, just wanted to point out the East Bay Rock Walls, or the walls at Ed Levin County Park. The origin of these man made stone walls are a mystery, dating back ~200 years. Just wanted to point out something local that's not super well known.
@monicacollins8289
@monicacollins8289 25 дней назад
I would have enjoyed more discussion about Clear Lake in Lake County, the first of the two earliest sites of human habitation, the second being Tulare Lake.
@markpalmer7832
@markpalmer7832 Месяц назад
Cool video, I lived in Butte County for 20 years.
@bali-b292
@bali-b292 Месяц назад
Nice video👍👍 crazy how i been living CA all my life and I’m barely seeing this lol
@shogunloophole8816
@shogunloophole8816 Месяц назад
Yea most people just think it was a part of Mexico sadly … check out the Chumash Indian museum if you’re in LA area
@robertsarmiento4668
@robertsarmiento4668 Месяц назад
I think more is missing here. I have found a lot of stone point Productions areas along highway 395 in the Southern end of the sierras.
@shogunloophole8816
@shogunloophole8816 Месяц назад
Piute possibly Serrano/tataviam … 395 is built on old trade routes
@lara8326
@lara8326 Месяц назад
Salinan native💯
@michaelphelan106
@michaelphelan106 Месяц назад
There are also shell middens in the Pismo Dunes. Gee, I wonder what they were eating there?
@jamesdoyle2769
@jamesdoyle2769 Месяц назад
Pismo clams...?
@shogunloophole8816
@shogunloophole8816 Месяц назад
Pismu is Chumash for clam which where it gets the name
@kimberlyperrotis8962
@kimberlyperrotis8962 Месяц назад
The “Central Valley” is really named the Great Valley (of California), but it’s ok, many now follow your usage.
@SAsh-zg6ln
@SAsh-zg6ln Месяц назад
It’s certainly not known for its fun haha. I grew up in bako and it was boring. Been living in LA for 15 years and it’s much better
@sjTHEfirst
@sjTHEfirst Месяц назад
I tried to pay my California taxes using seashells but sadly they didn’t accept them.
@SAsh-zg6ln
@SAsh-zg6ln Месяц назад
Lol. Only accepting gold bars now
@tangovang8699
@tangovang8699 Месяц назад
In south stockton off on highway 99, there is a big mound and I always wondered if the area was onced a home to the indigenous. I always wonder what is under it.
@happymisterbad
@happymisterbad Месяц назад
Love the video! Side note: Tulare is pronounced Tuh-lair-ee
@jdscarecrow2112
@jdscarecrow2112 Месяц назад
Some of the coolest things are in California people. I was so lucky to get to live and camp all over for 4 years.
@pfkmsandiego
@pfkmsandiego Месяц назад
thanks!
@GaiaCarney
@GaiaCarney Месяц назад
Thank You 🙏🏾
@WorldChronicles1
@WorldChronicles1 16 дней назад
You are welcome!
@pyrotechnick420
@pyrotechnick420 Месяц назад
0:19 I just recognized the name Chumash from GTA 5, it was supposed to be Los Santos' version of Malibu
@shogunloophole8816
@shogunloophole8816 Месяц назад
Tataviam hills also !
@310Erbs
@310Erbs Месяц назад
Great Video. Very informative. How to solve this water crisis though?
@ufa621
@ufa621 Месяц назад
Polynesians taught the chumash how to make canoes 🤙🏾
@ibestrokin
@ibestrokin Месяц назад
Shout out to our Pacific relatives
@ufa621
@ufa621 Месяц назад
@ibestrokin Among all tribes on turtle island in places like Santa cruz, Santa rosa and San miguel the chumash, tongva and Gabrielino were the only tribes that built sewn plank style canoes which us Polynesians did we call them Wa'a. All other tribes regardless where on turtle island built dug out style canoes and these specific types of canoes could not handle deep rough waters like Polynesian style Wa'a. Dug out style canoes could only handle lakes and rivers as opposed to big bodies of oceans like the pacific. The chumash were the only tribes who ventured and could handle deep sea fishing like us Polynesians. Even the pottery and fish hook styles are dead ringers to be of Polynesian. If I'm not mistaken some tribes from the PNW have some Polynesian influence also still doing research on this. To our brothers and sisters from turtle island us peoples of the Moananuiākea from a half hawaiian half samoan brother we see you one ocean one people's luv ✊🏾
@ibestrokin
@ibestrokin Месяц назад
@@ufa621 I'm glad you know the connection between the people. Most of my homies from the islands dont know these facts. I know some tribes in SoCal have stories of those they call "the big men" who come from the ocean, as they point west to what we now know as Polynesia.
@Frank-uw5xq
@Frank-uw5xq Месяц назад
Ya we know we were on Rapa Nui (Easter Island)..not far off Chile coast, relatively... I'm Hawaiian so it's interesting, plus the Totems up North have Poly similarities, & Polynesian chicken bones were found on the Pacific coast... small explorer parties probing around probly..
@anthonyt6571
@anthonyt6571 Месяц назад
I think the Tongva also had plank canoes too and called them “tomolo’o” which sounds very Polynesian. Whats also interesting is that the women have chin tattoos that look a lot like the ones the Māori women have. Even Tongva sounds like Tonga /Rarotonga etc
@dereksedgwick2949
@dereksedgwick2949 Месяц назад
dude where did you get these amazing map graphics??
@christiandefehr6358
@christiandefehr6358 Месяц назад
Clovis first has been debunked and superceded. Otherwuse, great video!
@FRANKRICECOLD209
@FRANKRICECOLD209 Месяц назад
Great video
@b-m605
@b-m605 17 дней назад
thank you.
@WorldChronicles1
@WorldChronicles1 16 дней назад
You're welcome!
@jeremiahjoseph3973
@jeremiahjoseph3973 Месяц назад
I mean here in Payahuunadü (land where water flows continually… also known as the owens valley) it is a place that all nations knew of, for the resources and life sustaining forces here… and yes beads were the biggest item that we can refer as money, because all other needs were available, beads were sought after because they made the best gifts. And yes the water still flows continuously, all the way to LA to this current day
@johningle1
@johningle1 Месяц назад
Giants on Catalina island.
@sovereigncosmicwildman
@sovereigncosmicwildman 9 дней назад
Giants found on all the Channel Islands but highly covered up
@nativeamericandiscoveries
@nativeamericandiscoveries 27 дней назад
very interesting video but there a couple of things that you might not know the acorn processing you missed a couple steps like how did the boil water then what pots did the pour it into and they would crack,bust,boil,grind,roast,then ground into flour. the grinding rock site in pioneer Ca is a good place to find out all the steps there thousands of grinding rocks holes in the bed rock there for boiling acorns and the natives were masters of where they lived for example they only let oak trees grow on steep hills so when the acorns fell they would fall then roll to the bottom of the hill to be gathered all at ounce so they didnt have to go up the hills to get the acorns and so so much more and they didnt need pottery where there were trees and stone they had to show they were gods that can do anything nature can do but better like make stone ....like pottery
@abraxasjinx5207
@abraxasjinx5207 Месяц назад
The fact that acorns are so abundant in California may explain why Cali squirrels are such huge burley chonkers compared to their east coast brethren.
@QuesQueriosityQuabinet
@QuesQueriosityQuabinet Месяц назад
The desert in southeastern California is almost all the Mojave Desert, some of which is high in elevation and some of which is low, very low. Plutonic rocks dominate the Mojave. The Colorado Desert is a sedimentary complex that barely touches California. Most of The Colorado Plateau also has significant elevation and tips downward to the west. The Basin & Range is another desert system, mostly in Nevada, that touches on the other two deserts, Colorado and Mojave. The land formations of the Basin & Range are thought to be the product of tectonic activity stretching out the North American plate or, in other words, of California's descent into the sea.
@tlst94
@tlst94 27 дней назад
What if all of CA was flat, cooler, wet, and lush-green? With temperatures ranging from 32 to 78 degrees farenheit. How'd the state have looked like throughout history?
@QuesQueriosityQuabinet
@QuesQueriosityQuabinet 27 дней назад
@@tlst94 Theoretically, California was cooler, wetter, and flatter at one time. The dramatic elevation changes come from it being on a major plate boundary. These elevation changes create deserts via something called the "rain shadow" effect. Otherwise, and maybe in the future, California would look like Ireland.
@thetruth1862
@thetruth1862 Месяц назад
Coastal Natives most certainly hunted on the water for whales and many other animals, not just beached whales
@cloudmidas9262
@cloudmidas9262 19 дней назад
What was California called?? There was an ad where a tribe called it Olioli or something, but I didnt find any sources to it. So idk if they were faking it for Prop # or just to be in the ad.
@maryhuckaby2239
@maryhuckaby2239 15 дней назад
You didn't mention the astonishing Pomo baskets. Big oversight, as to native (female) skill and why they didn't need pottery.
@ehnohuhu
@ehnohuhu Месяц назад
Great content … more focus on proper pronunciation of tribal and place names would be good in the future.
@sovereigncosmicwildman
@sovereigncosmicwildman 9 дней назад
California has the most native tribes out of any state in the USA. I really want to try that acorn bread, hard to find anyone that can make it like they used to. Have not found a powwow that features acorn bread... someone please resurrect this lost art
@Skystone123
@Skystone123 Месяц назад
Many tools found here on the beach of Cayucos are flaked into the shape of Morro Rock.
@ricklanser4689
@ricklanser4689 Месяц назад
I know what beach your talkin about. Out by the pier
@catbangs276
@catbangs276 29 дней назад
You can come across several acorn pits on hiking trails just 15 minutes from downtown San Diego. Acorns are rich in unsaturated fatty acids and fiber, vitamin E, chlorophylls, carotenoids, phenolic compounds, and antioxidant properties. It is also a natural ingredient for gluten free bread. Source: National Library of Medicine (US gov)
Далее
THE HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA - in 13 Minutes
13:24
Просмотров 1 млн
아이스크림으로 진짜 친구 구별하는법
00:17
The Appalachian Rainforest
19:19
Просмотров 983 тыс.
What's Hidden Under the Ice of Antarctica?
37:54
Просмотров 3,9 млн
The Crazy Engineering of Venice
9:28
Просмотров 2,9 млн
The Settlement of the Americas: New Discoveries
37:31
Просмотров 427 тыс.
8. The Sumerians - Fall of the First Cities
2:27:49
Просмотров 33 млн