North Carolina's Hidden Past: Exploring 10,000-Years Of Native History

Published 2022-03-17
Join us as we look back at North Carolina's history from 10,000 years ago. See how the first people lived, used tools, and changed over time. Visit old places like Barber Creek and learn about the Cherokee and other tribes. Watch our video to learn about North Carolina's ancient past. Don't forget to like, share, and subscribe for more history stories.

This video is about North Carolina's Hidden Past: Exploring 10,000-Year Of Native History. But It also covers the following topics:

Ancient North Carolina Explained
Cherokee Ancient History
North Carolina's First Inhabitants

Video Title: North Carolina's Hidden Past: Exploring 10,000-Year Of Native History | Exploring Creation Vids

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All Comments (21)
  • I can relate to the old guy. Used to have wild strawberries Growing up Im watauga county NC. Still have a few here and there but growing up There was A bounty. As a kid If us kids were hungry Wed eat wild berries. Strawberries Black berries Huckle etc wild apples or whatever we grew. Those days are sadly gone now but I was lucky to have experienced it
  • @mark-ib7sz
    I had the pleasure of knowing Jerry Wolfe for about 20 years . What a amazing man , full of Cherokee knowledge . RIP Jerry.
  • @future_me_6067
    There were people living here way before 11k years ago. Check out the footprints found in Utah. Twice the age of what is thought to be the timeframe widely accepted.
  • @JonnoPlays
    This video is incredible. Please keep producing new content. The world needs this content.
  • @JamesJones-cx5pk
    I find arrowheads in a field above a creek with a mound and a river nearby in Mississippi. I know the ridges along the creek were covered with artifacts because there are millions of rock chips. đź‘Ť
  • Holy crap, this is making me miss my homestate so very much. I just absolutely loved walking through the woods. It's definitely been a different experience here in south Florida. It's beautiful in its own way. But NC is where my heart is.
  • @trailman20
    I love how he mentions that the majority of human civilization was spent in the stone age maybe civilization isnt the proper word to use but i like how he mentioned it because i know its true even if if reaches far back before actually civilization
  • @raymondalverez5999
    Awesome program My ancestors were of the California "Chumas-Tong-va people of Southern California. Hold onto your heritage! No government can certify your roots, they can only respect it...
  • @jimmoses6617
    All humans alive today are descendants of nomadic hunter-gatherer societies. No matter if you are from North/South America, Africa, Europe, Australia, etc. We all descended from small, band-level societies. We Europeans forget this, or rather, perhaps this part of our history is ignored, as if European culture began in early Greece. We had hundreds of thousands of years of social evolution living as Stoneage tribal societies, which is by far the vast majority of our social evolution. We are all related this way. We are all people of the same earth and same social evolution.
  • @negro722
    i didnt know popcorn sutton was a park ranger - cool
  • @whiskeymonk4085
    That guy's helmet hair is a modern marvel. Wish i had hair that perfect.
  • @terryfinley7760
    Good to see Steve Watts! He left here much too soon. RIP my friend.
  • Durn, its been few years since I last seen Bo. and here he is on youtube. good job. maybe someday we'll dance together in the circle again. Hoy yo!
  • My daddy taught me a lot about these old mountains! He sawmilled pulled galax picked beans cabbage! Mostly sawmilled he knew a lot about these mountains!
  • @samgibson684
    "everything is connected" The basis of biodynamics as coined by Rudolph Steiner in the 1920's
  • @frankedgar6694
    I went to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC. The Egyptian wing had stone implements on display. To my surprise, their stone tools were very much the same as American Indian tools. Baskets and ceramics? Same.