By: Ace A. Ivy

Scholars have tenaciously held that Native Americans came from Asia to North America via the Great Bering Strait. Though I do believe the Indians such as the Eskimos may have came through this route, it's my strong opinion after all my years of studying ancient texts and writings that the Native American's bloodline came from the ancient near eastern region known as Mesopotamia and western Asia between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers: now part of Iraq.

Native Americans came from the Sumerians and the line of Ka-in. They came to be in South America where the great civilization of Peru began with Andean history. In A.D. 200 to 800 the Moche civilization creates one of the earliest states in what is now Peru. In A.D. 750 to 1375 the Sican empire ruled and reached it's cultural and political zenith from 900 to 1100. After this time period, climate change, political upheaval and religious upheaval pushed the culture into decline.

By A.D. 1470, the Incans absorbed the Chimu (and Sican) into their fast-growing empire. Four decades after Christopher Columbus (A.D. 1532) set foot in the New World, the Spanish conquered the Incan empire. Natives of South America migrated to middle America. The pre-Colombian civilizations included the Olmec (1500-600 B.C.), the Zapotec (500 B.C. - A.D. 700), the Teotihuacan (150 B.C. - A.D. 750), the Mayan (A.D. 300 - 900), the Toltec (A.D. 900 - 1100), and the Aztec (A.D. 1325 - 1520)'

The Olmec were of a black African origin who were wiped from the face of the earth by the Toltec tribes. Ancestors from these Ancient people then migrated into North America - what we now call the United States.

I believe some Native Americans came via the east coast Alantic Ocean and the west coast Pacific Ocean. There is a navigational device with multiple geared wheels within it that came from an ancient shipwreck that was found at the bottom of an ocean. It's now located in a museum in England. This artifact is solid proof that sea travel had occurred since ancient times.

The first identifiable American Indian people are called Clovis, after an archaeological site in New Mexico. They found mammoth kill sites dating from about 9500 B.C. to 9000 B.C. It was the Clovis people who left the earliest well-documented archaeological remains in America. Many modren archaeologists have begun to acknowledge, if sometimes only privately, that Native Americans could have arrived as early as 40,000 years ago.

Another leading Pre-Clovis candidate is the Monte Verde site in Southern Chile. The upper layers at Monte Verde contain evidence suggesting 13,000 years ago but deep layers have produced two radiocarbon dates of 33,000 years ago. With all the new DNA technology and science we have now, I'm sure we'll know before long and beyond doubt of the Native American's ancient heritage. We as a human race are only rediscovering what the ancient texts, writings and artifacts have claimed for some 6,000 years. I've come to believe there is nothing new under the sun.

You might be interested in reading The Native Americans - An Illustrated History; published by Turner Publishing Inc. It is packed with a vast amount of knowledge and history of the Native American peoples.


"It was subtle of God to learn Greek when he wished to become an author
- and not to learn it better"
Nietzsche, 1886

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