
Native America
Extended Interview: Severin Fowles on Native Science
Show title: Native America
Video title: Extended Interview: Severin Fowles on Native Science
Video duration: 1m 25sVideo description: Archaeologist Severin Fowles re-imagines Native religion as Native science. So many of what have been traditionally described as “beliefs” are actually profound scientific methods for acting in the world.
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Extended Interview: G. Peter Jemison on the Longhouse
4m 41s
Seneca faithkeeper Pete Jemison speaks on how the longhouse was constructed and what it means to the Haudenosaunee people. The longhouse in which he is interviewed is a reconstruction based on an 17 or 18th century building that was excavated nearby. It is a home and also a place to house councils and ceremonial events.
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Extended Interview: Beau Dick on the Family of Mankind
2m 10s
Beau Dick, the late great Kwakwaka’wakw chief and artist reflects on the power of family. Through thousands of years of tradition and living on the land, and suffering through contact, the power to heal the world comes down to respect and responsibility.
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Traditional Wampum Belts
2m 47s
Marcus Hendricks continues the tradition of making Wampum beads by hand.
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Corn is King
2m 40s
A look at traditional Native American crops and agricultural practices and their impact on the world today.
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Episode 2 Preview | Nature to Nations
30s
Explore the rise of great American nations, from monarchies to democracies. Investigate lost cities in Mexico, a temple in Peru, a potlatch ceremony in the Pacific Northwest and a tapestry of shell beads in upstate New York whose story inspired our own democracy.
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Extended Interview: Leigh Kuwanwisiwma on Corn as Teacher
2m 30s
Hopi elder Leigh Kuwanwisiwma has learned many life lessons from corn. These lessons are so important that he believes it is the duty of every Hopi person to be a farmer.
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Season 1 Inside Look | Making Native America
2m
The producers and featured participants of Native America discuss making the series.
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Season 1 Official Trailer
30s
Native America explores the world created by America’s First Peoples. The four-part series reaches back 15,000 years to reveal massive cities aligned to the stars, unique systems of science and spirituality, and 100 million people connected by social networks spanning two continents.
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Extended Interview: The Importance of Names
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.
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Episode 1 Preview | From Caves to Cosmos
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.
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Extended Interview: The Earliest Cave Paintings in America
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.
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Extended Interview: David Carrasco on Shared Beliefs
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.
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Ancient Amazon Peoples
3m 3s
Ancient Amazon art suggests people have been in the Americas much longer than previously thought.
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The Best Time to Paddle
1m 29s
Southern California Chumash continue canoe paddling traditions to connect to their ancestors.
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Chaco Chocolate
2m 29s
Archaeology reveals long distance trade with Chaco, including chocolate and precious metals.
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Zuni Maps
2m 21s
Jim Enote of the Zuni uses ancient petroglyphs and contemporary art to create Zuni maps of the region.
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