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Antiquity Origins Today, all tribes tell stories of their origins. There are as many creation stories as there are tribes, ... |
40,000–10,000 BC Homelands Contemporary Native peoples from many nations teach that they originated in their traditional lands. ... |
10,000–8000 BC Early North American lifestyles Ancestors of American Indians hunt large mammals, catch fish, and gather fruits and nuts. Archaeological ... |
8000 BC Glaciers retreat; climate changes; diets shift At the end of the Ice Age, many large mammals become extinct. Across the Americas, people shift away ... |
1000 BC–AD 1550 Urban gardeners build earthen mounds in Ohio River valley The Adena and Hopewell farming cultures build large earthwork mounds at the center of their cities and ... |
AD 1000 Viking ships land in Mi’kmaq homelands Viking ships visit the homelands of the Mi’kmaq people in areas now known as Maine, Prince Edward Island, ... |
AD 1520–24 Mid-Atlantic coast peoples meet foreign explorer On the Atlantic coast, Wampanoag, Narragansett, and Lenape (Delaware) peoples encounter Giovanni da Verrazano, ... |
AD 1620 English Pilgrims settle on Wampanoag land Pilgrims settle at what is now known as Plymouth, Massachusetts, on Cape Cod near the abandoned village ... |
AD 1621 Wampanoag people save Pilgrims The Wampanoag people, the “People of the First Light,” are responsible for saving the Pilgrims from starvation ... |
AD 1630 Puritans move farther onto Wampanoag land Thousands of English Puritans settle in what is now known as Massachusetts, moving inland and displacing ... |