In the imaginations of millions of Americans is the image of the 19th century Old West, with cowboys, covered wagons and log cabins. The whole story of the West begins hundreds of years before when Europeans came from Mexico and the eastern seaboard in the 15th century in search of gold, furs, souls and the land. The first explorers in America came from Spain, France and England.
But long long before the first explorers came to the Americas...the Indians lived in the land. So named "Indians" because Columbus thought he had found the "Indies". Even in the 1400s, these natives lived in substantial villages and tended well-kept fields. They had complex social societies and religious forms that suited their environment.But where did these "Indians" come from? Where the the first "American" originate from? The ancestors of the first Indian arrived from Siberia between 10,000 and 40,000 years ago. They were hunters who followed the migrations of the bison, mammoths, and mastadons across the Bering Strait during the last ice age.
From Alaska, they spanned out across North America, down to South America. They evolved from merely hunters to farmers. By 1400 AD at least 5 million of these first Americans lived in what is now the United States.
Next time...the evolution into tribes
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On This Day in Pioneer History: On July 15,1888, the Bandai volcano erupts on the Japanese island of Honshu, killing hundreds and burying many nearby villages in ash. Honshu, the main island of the Japanese archipelago.
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