Native America

From Caves to Cosmos

Combine ancient wisdom and modern science to answer a 15,000-year-old question: who were America’s First Peoples? The answer hides in Amazonian cave paintings, Mexican burial chambers, New Mexico’s Chaco Canyon and waves off California’s coast.

From Caves to Cosmos

53m 30s

Combine ancient wisdom and modern science to answer a 15,000-year-old question: who were America’s First Peoples? The answer hides in Amazonian cave paintings, Mexican burial chambers, New Mexico’s Chaco Canyon and waves off California’s coast.

Previews + Extras

  • Episode 1 Preview | From Caves to Cosmos: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Episode 1 Preview | From Caves to Cosmos

    S1 E1 - 30s

    Combine ancient wisdom and modern science to answer a 15,000-year-old question: who were America’s First Peoples? The answer hides in Amazonian cave paintings, Mexican burial chambers, New Mexico’s Chaco Canyon and waves off California’s coast.

  • Extended Interview: The Earliest Cave Paintings in America: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Extended Interview: The Earliest Cave Paintings in America

    S1 E1 - 2m 58s

    Archaeologist Anna Roosevelt dates the cave paintings in Brazil's Amazon jungle to 13,000 years ago. Her discovery rewrites the traditional history of the peopling of the America and who those people were - not just big game hunters but also artists and scientists.

  • Extended Interview: David Carrasco on Shared Beliefs: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Extended Interview: David Carrasco on Shared Beliefs

    S1 E1 - 4m 24s

    David Carrasco illuminates the similarities of the religious beliefs shared by indigenous peoples across the Americas. These similarities include sky worship including the sun and moon, the power of water, sacrality of trees, and human relationships to animal spirits.

  • Extended Interview: The Importance of Names: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Extended Interview: The Importance of Names

    S1 E1 - 2m 36s

    Zuni elder Jim Enote speaks on why knowing Native names is an important source of information. Native names often reflect information about a place that is based on thousands of years of observation.

  • Chaco Chocolate: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Chaco Chocolate

    S1 E1 - 2m 29s

    Archaeology reveals long distance trade with Chaco, including chocolate and precious metals.

  • Ancient Amazon Peoples: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Ancient Amazon Peoples

    S1 E1 - 3m 3s

    Ancient Amazon art suggests people have been in the Americas much longer than previously thought.

  • Zuni Maps: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Zuni Maps

    S1 E1 - 2m 21s

    Jim Enote of the Zuni uses ancient petroglyphs and contemporary art to create Zuni maps of the region.

  • The Best Time to Paddle: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    The Best Time to Paddle

    S1 E1 - 1m 29s

    Southern California Chumash continue canoe paddling traditions to connect to their ancestors.

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