Tag: america

  • 13 Questions About the Discovery of America

    13 Questions About the Discovery of America

    Where Did the Idea That America Exists Come From?

    Europeans did not immediately realize that the lands across the Atlantic, where they found themselves, were not Asia, but a new, unknown part of the world. However, this does not mean that by the time Columbus’s expedition was planned, Europeans had no concept of lands lying west of Europe, in the “Sea of Darkness.” On 13th to 15th-century maps, various islands were marked—some well-known, others mythical, like the Island of Saint Brendan, Antillia, and Brazil. The belief in their existence influenced Columbus’s decision to venture across the open ocean. But these were thought to be islands; it was only some time after Columbus returned from his first voyage that people began to talk about a new part of the world beyond the ocean.

    Columbus himself likely believed until his death that he had not discovered a new part of the world, but rather a new route to the countries of the East. During his last voyage (1502–1504), he sincerely believed that the distance from where he was (near the Isthmus of Panama) to the Ganges in India was only two weeks. But not everyone agreed with him. In 1499–1500, Spanish and Portuguese sailors like Alonso de Ojeda, Vicente Yáñez Pinzón, Pedro Álvares Cabral, and others discovered a continuous line of the eastern coast of South America—from the Isthmus of Panama almost to the Tropic of Capricorn. It was becoming increasingly clear that this land was not Asia, as it was known that all of Asia lay in the Northern Hemisphere.

    The first to declare the discovery of a new part of the world was the Italian Amerigo Vespucci (1454–1512), who participated in Spanish and Portuguese expeditions to the coasts of South America. Vespucci personally traced thousands of kilometers of the coastline. In 1503–1504, he described his voyages in two letters that gained enormous popularity and were reprinted many times. In these letters, he emphasized that he was speaking of a previously unknown part of the world—a “New World.”

    Vespucci may have only voiced the idea of a new part of the world; others may have surmised it earlier. For instance, such an idea could have easily occurred to the sailor and cartographer Juan de la Cosa, who participated in several voyages to the Americas. In 1500, by royal commission, he created a map that reflected the latest Spanish and Portuguese discoveries. This map aimed to define the boundaries of these countries’ territories under the Treaty of Tordesillas. It was the first to accurately depict the Greater and Lesser Antilles and a significant part of the western coastline of South, Central, and North America—contradicting contemporary understandings of Asia’s eastern coastline. De la Cosa likely realized this represented the outlines of a previously unknown part of the world, resonating with Vespucci’s letters. Thus, the idea that America existed—or more accurately, that newly discovered lands were a new, previously unknown part of the world—emerged around 1500–1503.

    In 1507, the cartographer Martin Waldseemüller from Lorraine suggested in his book “Introduction to Cosmography” that the new continent be named “America” in Vespucci’s honor. The name “America” first appeared on Waldseemüller’s map that same year, located in the southern part of South America. Gradually, it became established on maps of North America as well. Neither Vespucci nor Waldseemüller intended to deprive Columbus of his laurels as the discoverer. Initially, it was understood that Columbus and Vespucci had discovered lands in different locations and that the name “America” referred only to the lands Vespucci had discovered. It was later applied to the entire continent discovered by Columbus—without Vespucci’s knowledge and against Waldseemüller’s wishes.

    Who Discovered America and When?

    Landing of Columbus in America. Painting by John Vanderlin
    Landing of Columbus in America. Painting by John Vanderlin, 1846. Image: Architect of the Capitol

    Often, discovery is attributed to the first European visit to new lands, denying that status to those who arrived earlier, such as people from Asia who came to America via the Bering Strait. However, the situation with Europeans is not straightforward either. It is known that around the 10th–11th centuries, Vikings sailed to America, establishing settlements in Newfoundland and Greenland. However, they did not perceive the discovery of America as fundamentally different from discovering Iceland or the Faroe Islands.

    It did not have a significant impact on either the Native Americans or the Vikings themselves. Moreover, this information, apparently, did not extend beyond the Scandinavian world and was forgotten by the end of the 15th century. For historians, unlike geographers, what matters is not so much the first visitation to a territory, but the establishment of contacts—regular and significant for both parties—between the “discoverers” and the “discovered.”

    The discovery made by Columbus on October 12, 1492, quickly became a sensation across Europe, igniting a race for discoveries along the American coastlines. In the decade following Columbus’s return from his first voyage, at least twelve expeditions were undertaken by Spain, Portugal, and England. This event profoundly altered European life within a few decades. Thus, Columbus made the “true” discovery of America. However, he merely initiated the lengthy process of discovering and exploring various parts of America, involving hundreds of expeditions from many European countries.

    Were North and South America Discovered at Different Times?

    Yes, but there are nuances. First, the geographical distinction: unlike America as a continent, North and South America are separate landmasses, and Columbus’s discovery began with the Bahamas in the Caribbean, which does not belong to either North or South America. If we talk about the discovery of mainland territory, North America was discovered slightly earlier: an English expedition led by John Cabot, with his son Sebastian, seeking a northwest passage to the East, reached North America’s northeast coast in late May or early summer of 1498. During his third voyage, Columbus reached the mouth of the Orinoco River and discovered South America only in early August of that year.

    Second, we cannot be certain that modern researchers know about all the voyages of that time. It is possible (though unlikely) that information, even indirect, might emerge regarding the discovery of the mainland parts of North or South America before the summer of 1498. For example, there are theories that the Portuguese knew about Brazil even before Columbus’s first voyage and that is why they insisted on moving the demarcation line further west during the Treaty of Tordesillas negotiations. However, there is no documentary evidence to support this.

    What Were the First Colonists Like?

    Discovery of the Mississippi River by conquistador Hernando de Soto
    Discovery of the Mississippi River by conquistador Hernando de Soto in 1541. Painting by William Henry Powell, 1853. Image: Architect of the Capitol

    To better understand what the first colonists were like, it is important to consider, first, the differences between colonists from different countries. For example, settlers from Spain were quite different from the Portuguese, and even more so from the English or the French. Secondly, one must consider the conditions and circumstances they encountered in various parts of the New World. Emigration to Spanish and Portuguese colonies was strictly controlled by the authorities. For instance, for most of the three-century colonial period, one could only depart from Seville to the New World from Spain, and each colonist had to obtain an individual permit, with their name entered into a special list. However, it was very difficult to organize such control, and occasionally it was circumvented. The authorities were also very careful to ensure that only Catholics and subjects of the Spanish monarchs were allowed to settle in the colonies. Attempts by colonists from other countries to establish settlements in territories considered Spanish met with strong resistance.

    Once rumors of the riches of America were confirmed by the successes of the conquistadors in Mexico and Peru, the flow of settlers increased. Until about the mid-16th century, most of the emigrants were potential conquistadors—those who relied on their swords rather than on the plow (although farmers and artisans were also among the first colonists). Most of them were poor natives of the southwestern regions of Spain, Extremadura and Andalusia, who were migrating not out of prosperity. They were characterized by energy and persistence—others simply could not survive there. At the same time, their pragmatism was astonishingly combined with a naïve belief in miracles: they were convinced of the existence of giants and Amazons, golden cities, and a fountain of youth in the vastness of America.

    Few were lucky enough to participate in one of the few truly successful expeditions that enriched all survivors (such as the people of Francisco Pizarro, who captured the Sapa Inca Atahualpa and received a fantastic ransom for him). Even fewer among them were those who returned to Spain and lived luxuriously in palaces built from the captured treasures. The rest either quickly squandered their share or failed to amass a fortune and depended on the favors of the central government, including the grant of lands that were transferred along with the indigenous people living on them, known as encomiendas. Formally, the owners of encomiendas (encomenderos) were supposed to care for them, but in practice, they lived off the labor of the local population.

    Around the mid-16th century, when the Conquista was coming to an end, the richest silver deposits were discovered in the territory of present-day Mexico and Bolivia. From then on, their exploitation became the main goal of the Spanish crown, and agricultural development of the conquered lands receded into the background for a long time. It was at this time that the main characteristics of Spanish colonization and the Spanish colonist were finally formed: he lives near enormous riches and is significantly involved in their exploitation—organizing it, ensuring its protection, and what we would now call infrastructure; he is very dependent on the metropolis, under its constant control; survival is generally not an issue for him, and he is not always willing to earn a living through his own labor. This was also influenced by the widespread view in 16th-century Spain that manual labor was an unworthy and even despised occupation.

    Portuguese colonists were also seeking quick enrichment, but unlike the Spaniards, they did not find such deposits of silver in their territories. Later, they discovered gold and diamonds, but this occurred only at the end of the 17th and the first third of the 18th century. In the 16th century, their sources of wealth were the harvesting of valuable redwood, which was in demand in Europe, and the organization of the still technically imperfect but already profitable production of sugar from cane brought to Brazil from the Canary Islands. The idea that manual labor was ignoble also manifested itself here: the workforce in the artisanal industries, called engenhos, were dependent indigenous people and African slaves. The beginning of the mass importation of African slaves to Brazil is connected precisely with the expansion of plantation agriculture and sugar cane production, while the owners were referred to as “senhores” or “lords” of the engenhos.

    If the Spanish and Portuguese territories were an integral part of the Iberian monarchies and were all in the same legal standing relative to the metropolis, the British colonies were different from the very beginning. There were three types of colonies. Royal colonies belonged directly to the crown and were governed by officials appointed from London. In corporate colonies, the crown (or the parliament in 1649–1660) endowed a special joint-stock company with the right to govern. In proprietary colonies, these rights were given to a particular individual.

    Joint-stock companies or private individuals who received rights from the authorities to develop North American lands often concealed their real intentions on paper. For example, the Massachusetts Bay Company was founded in 1628. Its goal was to create an ideal world of Christian life in the New World in a Protestant-Calvinist interpretation (Calvinists in England were called Puritans)—a “City upon a Hill” from the Sermon on the Mount, as John Winthrop (1588–1649), the founder of Massachusetts, told the settlers before the ship departed. Six New England states in the northeastern United States emerged from Puritan colonization. The Pennsylvania colony was founded by William Penn (1644–1718) primarily for fellow Quakers, although the colony’s fundamental laws, drafted by him, stated that all settlers who believed in a single God were welcome in the new lands.

    The royal colonies were mainly populated by the poor who hoped for a better life and their own land allotment in the New World. Most of them could not pay for the trip themselves and then worked off this “loan” for 4–7 years. Therefore, they were called indentured servants. Upon completion, they received land, sometimes with agricultural tools for its cultivation. Of the roughly 75,000 people who moved to Virginia and Maryland between 1630 and 1680, two-thirds arrived as indentured servants.

    The first British settlers in North America found themselves in a completely different position compared to the Spaniards in Central and South America. Firstly, there was no gold, silver, or other wealth that attracted people with the temptation of easy profit. Although theoretical justifications for colonization soon appeared, emphasizing that the English could earn as much in these places from fishing and logging as the Spaniards did from gold and silver.

    Secondly, the natural and climatic conditions were harsh for Europeans, and aid from the metropolis was minimal. Survival was only possible through daily hard work and strict discipline. In the very first permanent colony (Jamestown, Virginia), founded in 1607, only a few dozen of the 150 colonists survived the winter and spring of 1608, and such numbers were not uncommon.

    Thirdly, relations with the Native Americans were different, and the Native Americans themselves were different. There were no highly developed civilizations here that had accumulated reserves of precious metals, as in Mexico or Peru, and there was nothing for the Europeans to take from the Native Americans except land. In the early years, contacts between colonists and Native Americans varied: from frequent bloody clashes (in the spring of 1622, Algonquin Indians killed 347 colonists—at least a quarter of Virginia’s population) to mutual assistance.

    For example, in New Plymouth in New England, the Wampanoag Indians helped the colonists survive the first winter, and in gratitude, the colonists celebrated the first harvest together with the Native Americans. This is how Thanksgiving Day came about. At the same time, the density of the Native American population in the territory of the United States and Canada was much lower than in the Aztec or Inca states, and the Native Americans quickly retreated from the coastal areas where the colonists settled.

    The first British colonists were generally hardworking and persistent, decisive, and able to stand up for themselves, deeply religious, and intolerant of religious dissent. Necessity taught them discipline. Compared to settlers from the Iberian countries, they were relatively less dependent on the metropolis and were used to relying on their own strength in everything.

    What Did They Eat and How Did They Survive?

    Hunger was a common companion for nearly all early settlers, especially in the first years. The colonists anticipated rapid wealth accumulation and support from their mother countries; plowing the land and raising livestock were often not part of their plans. Moreover, native food could be perceived as unworthy or weakening for the body. The settlers faced the dual challenge of a lack of familiar foods and an abundance of unknown ones. The diet was significantly different: while Europeans were accustomed to meat and dairy products, the indigenous people of South America (despite the variety of climate zones and economic systems in the region) relied primarily on plant-based foods, with protein coming not only from wild game and fish but also from insects. Furthermore, dairy products were unknown to the Indigenous peoples.

    Another major difference in attitudes toward food was the consumption of raw, uncooked foods. For those from the Old World, this was seen as savage and barbaric; they believed that only animals ate raw food. In addition to this, a major psychological barrier for Europeans was the absence in the New World of two crucial crops: wheat and grapevines. Since Christian worship required wheat bread and wine, local substitutes (such as corn, manioc, and fermented beverages made from them) were considered inadequate replacements.

    Initial attempts to practice European-style agriculture in the New World encountered serious difficulties: different levels of humidity and sunlight, different soil chemistry, a lack of natural pollinators, and opposite seasons in the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. There was also a shortage of labor: as mentioned earlier, Spanish and Portuguese colonists brought with them the notion that manual labor was not a noble activity, and the recruitment (often forced) of Indigenous people did not always meet all their needs.

    Moreover, the Indigenous people of tropical regions, who survived through hunting, fishing, and gathering, had a completely different attitude toward work for sustenance. They did not have the drive to collect (catch or hunt) more than they would eat or to work day after day to create reserves. At the same time, colonists in both Spanish and Portuguese America wanted to extract more and more products from them. Reports sent to the Portuguese crown in the first half of the 16th century contained numerous accounts of hunger among settlers. This was due to the organization of food supply and a prejudiced attitude toward local products, not a lack of resources.

    Nevertheless, crops such as manioc, corn, and potatoes did eventually make their way into the settlers’ diets, although they were initially intended for the Indigenous peoples. In some regions of Spanish America, these products were used as a form of tax collected from the local population. Later, they continued to be consumed alongside imported wheat, rice, and certain types of legumes. As for wine, it was imported for a long time and became a luxury item. By regulating its supply, the mother countries aimed to increase the colonies’ dependence and tie them more closely to the metropolis. However, by the second half of the 16th century, grapevines began to be cultivated in Spanish territories in what is now Peru, followed by Paraguay, Argentina, and Chile. The inhabitants of Portuguese America, with its specific climate conditions, relied more on imported wine, and large-scale production began only in the 19th century.

    The first agricultural animals brought by the Spanish were pigs and cattle. These were not only kept near settlements but were also deliberately released on uninhabited Caribbean islands as a backup food source for sailors who might go off course or be shipwrecked. After being introduced to the Antilles, they were also brought to other regions of Spanish America. European pigs quickly adapted to the new environment and began feeding on tropical vegetation. Pietro Martire d’Anghiera and Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo y Valdés noted with satisfaction how the new diet improved the taste of these pigs’ meat.

    Globally, the new food base for pigs and cattle allowed them to reproduce quickly, and due to the lack of natural predators, they significantly altered the ecological balance of certain regions (such as the Caribbean islands). However, European colonizers did not think in these terms: they sought to provide familiar meat-based food for themselves, the fleets arriving from the mother countries, and the conquest expeditions of Hernán Cortés, Francisco Pizarro, Hernando de Soto, and others. In addition, cattle were needed by the colonists as draft animals on plantations and in mines.

    Where Did Native Americans Come From — Have They Always Been in America or Did They Arrive from Somewhere Else?

    Four colorized engravings of Indians of various tribes
    Four colorized engravings of Indians of various tribes from James Coles Pritchard’s book The natural history of man : comprising inquiries into the modifying influence of physical and moral agencies on the different tribes of the human family. London, 1845. Image: Heritage Auctions

    North and South America were settled relatively late in human history. At the end of the Ice Age, Upper Paleolithic Siberian tribes crossed into America via the Bering land bridge (now the Bering Strait) and spread throughout both continents in about 1,000 years. Genetic analysis has shown that all Native Americans — from Aleuts and Eskimos to various tribes of Tierra del Fuego — are closely related. For a long time, the oldest archaeological culture in the New World was considered to be the Clovis culture, discovered in the 1920s and 1930s, in what is now New Mexico.

    This culture emerged around 15,000 years ago. Over the past two to three decades, the discovery of several pre-Clovis sites (most notably the Monte Verde culture in southern modern-day Chile) has shifted the date of settlement of the New World back by 2,000–3,000 years — it is now believed to have occurred around 15,000–16,000 years ago. Earlier datings (up to 31,000–26,000 BC) are disputed and, although not yet rejected by the scientific community, are not widely accepted by most researchers.

    How Many Were There, How Did Different Tribes Live, and What Do We Know About Them?

    European conquerors encountered a variety of complex societies in the New World, ranging from semi-nomadic tribes of hunters, fishers, and gatherers to powerful state entities like the Aztec and Inca empires. Over a thousand Native American languages are known, forming hundreds of diverse language families. Attempts to reconstruct a Proto-Indian language, spoken by the first settlers who crossed the Bering Strait, have not been successful so far.

    Native Americans were unable to put up significant resistance to Europeans. Despite their remarkable achievements in certain areas (such as astronomy), even the most advanced societies did not have knowledge of the wheel, gunpowder, or iron (occasional iron finds do not change the overall picture). Native Americans used bronze for making ornaments and ceremonial objects but not for weapons. This imbalance in technological development is due to the isolation of the New World from the rest of the world.

    The question of the native population’s size at the time of America’s discovery is highly ideological and tied to debates about genocide. Estimates vary widely, ranging from 8 million to more than 100 million people. Venezuelan researcher Ángel Rosenblat (1902–1984) estimated the indigenous population of the New World at the time of conquest to be around 13.3 million, and by 1650, around 10 million. In textbooks, you may often see the figure of 55 million; this data is provided by North American geographer William Denevan. In his later works from the early 1990s, he refined this estimate to 53.9 million ± 20%.

    How Did the Genocide of Indigenous Peoples Occur and Why?

    South America

    To address this complex issue, it’s essential to start with definitions. The 1948 UN Convention defines genocide as acts committed with the intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group. Clearly, this definition was shaped by the tragic events of the 20th century and cannot be automatically applied to earlier historical periods. At first glance, there seem to be numerous grounds for discussing the genocide of the Indigenous populations of Latin America: the fall of pre-Columbian civilizations after encountering the conquistadors; the complete disappearance of the native population in Cuba and almost complete disappearance in Argentina and Uruguay; significant losses among Indigenous peoples in the tropical and coastal zones of South America; and the massive mortality caused by diseases introduced by Europeans and by forced labor in mines and plantations.

    On the other hand, European contacts with Indigenous peoples were varied, the policies of colonial authorities were inconsistent and often contradictory, and there were significant discrepancies between laws imposed from Europe and the local conditions. This diversity prevents us from reducing the entire picture to systematic and methodical genocide. However, the tradition of attributing solely atrocities and bloodshed to the Spanish is not new and has persisted for several centuries. This is also influenced by the so-called “Black Legend”—a strongly anti-Spanish narrative spread by opponents of the Habsburg dynasty in Europe as the Spanish Empire conquered more and more territories.

    However, from a historical perspective, when the scale of the loss among the Indigenous population became apparent, one cannot help but think about the destruction of Indigenous peoples—even if it was involuntary and collateral, rather than conscious and intentional (for example, when the pretext was a war against pagans, idolaters, or those practicing human sacrifice). To call it genocide, it must be proven that the colonizers consciously intended to wipe out the Indigenous peoples rather than subjugate, pacify, or conduct a demonstrative act of intimidation, and so forth. There were instances when subjects of the Spanish king pursued policies that led to the destruction of Indigenous peoples, while the king himself condemned these “excesses” and declared that such actions contradicted service to him and God.

    Modern historians disagree on whether the term “genocide” applies to the events of the Conquista. Some remind us of a range of aggravating circumstances beyond direct massacres: the removal of leaders as a blow to communities and entire tribal alliances; the relocation of enslaved Indigenous peoples from “useless” areas to regions where labor was needed, resulting in enormous losses; ecocide, or the destruction of ecosystems in which traditional pre-state societies had been integrated for centuries; and sexual violence against women. Opponents of equating the Conquista with genocide argue that the Spaniards’ brutality was driven by the desire to subjugate and later exploit the Indigenous peoples, not to annihilate them entirely. Others emphasize that in the demographic catastrophe that befell the Indigenous population of Latin America, European-introduced infections were more to blame than the extermination by conquistadors. Finally, some point out that alongside the military actions of the conquistadors on the ground, extensive legislation was developed in Spain throughout the 16th century, declaring the protection of Indigenous peoples. Although the practice of the Conquista often involved the voluntary or involuntary extermination of Indigenous peoples, theoretically, something entirely different was proclaimed.

    Beyond the question of genocide during the Conquista, researchers address related issues: ecocide and ethnocide. The previously mentioned ecocide refers to the predatory exploitation of natural resources by Europeans in the pursuit of profit and the destruction of ecosystems in which the lives of hunter-gatherers in the Caribbean and continental tropical zones were embedded. It includes the colonization of the Caribbean islands, which led to the rapid (within a few decades) disappearance of the Taíno tribe and several others, as well as the significant reduction of Atlantic coastal forests in Brazil due to the cutting down of valuable redwood. A key element in the modern struggle for the rights of the Amazonian Indigenous peoples is the preservation of the natural environment in which they live.

    As for ethnocide, it is understood as the destruction of an ethnic group through the eradication of its culture and the prevention of the use, development, and transmission of its language and culture to subsequent generations (including religious beliefs). Indeed, it is undeniable that the Spaniards and Portuguese sought to convert the Indigenous populations of Latin America to their religion and impose a Christian way of life. None of the defenders of the Indigenous peoples in the 16th–17th centuries—be it Padre Bartolomé de las Casas or the Portuguese and Spanish Jesuits who saved the Tupi-Guarani from brutal slave hunters—questioned the superiority of Christianity over paganism and the impossibility of preserving the old rituals and way of life. They were driven by a sincere belief in the only possible salvation of the soul through the acceptance of the Catholic faith. The realities of the Conquista showed that the slogans of spreading Christianity for the good of the Indigenous peoples too often masked looting and ruthless exploitation. Nevertheless, contemporaries objected only to the methods of conversion, not to its overarching goals.

    Thus, based on the 1948 UN Convention, the actions of Europeans in South America during the Conquista and colonization were not genocide. The most comprehensive general formulation, which seems acceptable to both opponents and supporters of the idea of genocide, is as follows: a violent alteration of the destinies of peoples after the Old World discovered the New and subjugated it.

    North America

    In North America, the population density of both Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples during the colonial era was significantly lower. Nevertheless, European colonization also led to wars and the gradual displacement of Indigenous peoples deeper into the continent. The first encounters between Indigenous peoples and the Spanish and French in North America date back to the 16th century. Wars between white settlers and Algonquin Indigenous peoples began in Virginia (1622) and New England (1637, 1675–1676). Then came wars with the Iroquois, Muscogee, and Sioux (from 1675 onward). However, there were cases when European powers, on the contrary, sought to enlist the military support of the Indigenous peoples. For example, the Seven Years’ War (1754–1763) in British North America became known as the “French and Indian War.”

    In 1763, British authorities prohibited settlers from moving west of the Allegheny Mountains, explaining their decision as being in the interest of Indigenous peoples. However, this decision ultimately was not implemented—independence movements soon began.

    The true catastrophe for the Indigenous populations of the United States was linked to the rapid agricultural development of vast areas of the continent in the 19th century. In 1830, the U.S. Congress passed the “Indian Removal Act,” forcibly relocating Indigenous peoples from the Atlantic coast to lands west of the Mississippi River. A series of wars did not halt the federal government’s decision. In 1831, the U.S. Supreme Court recognized Indigenous tribes as “domestic dependent nations,” for which the U.S. government essentially bore guardianship responsibilities. Although the Supreme Court restored the tribes’ sovereignty in 1832, their relocation did not stop. The Cherokee, Creek, Seminole, Chickasaw, and Choctaw were sent along the “Trail of Tears” to what is now Oklahoma.

    The Dawes Act (1887) destroyed the rights of Indigenous communities—tribal self-government and their collective land ownership—leaving almost all of them, beyond the borders of the so-called Indian Territory, with individual plots of 160 acres (64.8 hectares), the same amount an ordinary settler could receive under the Homestead Act. This was a very large allotment for irrigated farming but did not allow for the continuation of traditional economies. Senator Henry Dawes (1816–1903) believed that his law would speed up the transformation of Indigenous hunters into progressive, prosperous farmers.

    The outcome was different. During the years the law was in effect (until 1934), Indigenous peoples lost nearly two-thirds of their lands. On December 28–29, 1890, U.S. troops crushed the Sioux uprising at Wounded Knee in South Dakota. This last armed conflict with the Indigenous population of the U.S. coincided with the end of the “moving frontier” era—the completion of the country’s internal rural colonization: vast expanses, where only recently one could encounter only Indigenous peoples, were plowed in just a few decades. If in 1800 the total Indigenous population in the U.S. was about 600,000, by 1900 it had reached the lowest point in North American statistical history—fewer than 240,000.

    The governments of not only the U.S. but also other New World countries sought to break up Indigenous communities and replace communal land ownership with private property. Their goal was to create a unified land market and eliminate “feudal remnants.” These measures were most consistently implemented in Mexico. The Lerdo Law (1856) prohibited corporate (i.e., non-individual) land ownership, which immediately dealt a powerful blow to Indigenous peoples who could not keep up with the re-registration of their land rights (another victim of the law was the Catholic Church). The Law on Colonization of “Vacant Lands” (1883), in particular, led to the direct seizure of Indigenous lands in Sonora and Yucatán. As a result, if in 1821 communal land ownership accounted for 40% of agricultural land, by 1910 it was no more than 5%. The situation of the Indigenous peoples became dire in Argentina, where, as in the U.S. and Canada, a powerful settler movement and effective market agriculture emerged in the last third of the 19th century.

    How Did Mexico, the USA, and Canada Come to Be?

    Hernán Cortés, Conquistador of the Aztec Empire.
    Hernán Cortés, Conquistador of the Aztec Empire

    Mexico

    All these modern countries are geographically part of North America, but historically and culturally they represent different regions. Mexico is part of Latin America; after the discovery of the New World, it became part of Spain’s colonial possessions. The USA emerged from British colonies, though some of its modern territories were once Spanish and even French colonies. Modern Canada includes lands that belonged to both the French and British crowns.

    Of all these countries, Mexico experienced the earliest systematic European colonization. As early as 1519–1521, the Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés (1485–1547) conquered the Aztec Empire, and in the 1540s, the Spanish subdued the Maya states. Gradually, a system of governance for Spanish America developed, and in 1535, the Viceroyalty of New Spain was established. It became the first of the viceroyalties into which Spanish possessions in America were divided. The significance of New Spain, which was one of the most densely populated and economically developed regions of the New World even before the conquest, increased with the discovery of silver mines in the 1540s.

    Like the other viceroyalties, New Spain lasted until the early 19th century. After Napoleon Bonaparte increasingly subjugated the Spanish monarchy, forcing King Charles IV of Bourbon and his heir to abdicate in favor of Napoleon’s brother Joseph in May 1808, juntas (representative bodies) began to emerge in Spain and its overseas territories. These initially ruled in the name of the rightful king, Ferdinand VII, son of Charles IV. In Mexico City, the capital of New Spain, such a junta appeared in August 1808. Unlike the viceroyalties of New Granada and Rio de la Plata, where the struggle for independence was initiated by the Creole elite—descendants of Spaniards who felt more American than European—in New Spain, the independence movement developed from below. On September 16, 1810, the priest Miguel Hidalgo from the village of Dolores in Guanajuato (central Mexico) called for a fight for freedom—known as the “Cry of Dolores.” This sparked a struggle for Mexican independence that divided the country.

    On February 24, 1821, the commander of Spanish forces in southern Mexico, Agustín de Iturbide, issued the “Plan of Iguala” (named after a town in southwestern Mexico) under the slogan “Religion, Unity, Independence.” It declared Mexico a constitutional monarchy, guaranteed the preservation of the Catholic Church’s privileges, and proclaimed equality for all Mexicans, regardless of race or origin. The “Plan of Iguala” became the historical compromise that united the forces of radicals and conservatives in the struggle against the authority of the metropole.

    On September 28, 1821, the Act of Independence of the Mexican Empire was proclaimed, but by March 1823, the republicans had overthrown Emperor Agustín I Iturbide. On October 4, 1824, the republican constitution of the United Mexican States was published.

    USA and Canada

    The first permanent British colony in the New World, Virginia, was founded in 1607. The War of Independence began in 1775 in 13 British colonies in North America—excluding Canada, which was incorporated into the British Empire only after the Seven Years’ War (1756–1763), and the island possessions in the Caribbean. The struggle concluded in 1783 with the signing of the Treaty of Paris, under which London recognized the independence of the new state—the United States of America.

    The exploration of Canada began with the Italian John Cabot (Giovanni Caboto), who landed on the coast of Newfoundland in 1497, serving the English crown. He was followed in the early 16th century by French expeditions led by the Florentine Giovanni da Verrazzano and Jacques Cartier, whom the Indigenous people guided to Canada (meaning “village” in the Iroquois language). The actual colonization of Canada by the French began with Samuel de Champlain’s establishment of Quebec City in 1608. Following the Treaty of Utrecht, which ended the War of Spanish Succession in 1713, France lost Acadia, and by the Treaty of Paris in 1763, the British Empire acquired Quebec, bringing Canada entirely under its control.

    During the Revolutionary War -or American War of Independence- (1775–1783), both new British settlers and the French in Canada remained loyal to London. It was during this time, in 1774, that the Quebec Act was passed, securing the rights of French Catholics. In 1841, the English-speaking Upper Canada and the French-speaking Lower Canada, created in 1791, were unified. In 1867, the British North America Act created the Dominion of Canada, a self-governing possession of the British Empire. The legal concept of a “Dominion,” which existed until 1949, was initially developed for Canada and later extended to Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Ireland, and Newfoundland, which was incorporated into Canada only in 1949. Canada became fully independent in 1982 with the passage of the Canada Act, despite retaining membership in the British Commonwealth.

    What is the Oldest City in America?

    Declaration of Independence
    Declaration of Independence. Painting by John Trumbull. 1819 year. Image: Architect of the Capitol

    To answer this question, we must make some clarifications. Firstly, it’s essential to distinguish between cities founded by Europeans and those of ancient American civilizations, the oldest of which likely date back to the 1st millennium BCE. These did not survive the era of the Conquest in their original form, although some cities of Spanish colonists emerged on their ruins. The most prominent example is Mexico City on the ruins of Tenochtitlan.

    If we talk about cities founded in the New World by Europeans, the undisputed primacy belongs to Santo Domingo on the island of Hispaniola. It was established in 1496 by Bartolomeo Columbus, the brother of Christopher Columbus. If we look at the mainland, the uncontested oldest city in Central America is Nombre de Dios in Panama, founded by Diego de Nicuesa in 1510. In South America, the oldest existing city (again, with the caveat that we do not consider pre-Columbian cities) appears to be Santa Marta on the current territory of Colombia, founded by Rodrigo de Bastidas in 1525.

    Finally, in North America (excluding Central America, meaning in the territories of the USA and Canada), the oldest city is St. Augustine (Spanish name San Agustín), located in what is now the state of Florida, USA. In 1564, a French fort named Fort Caroline was established there, but the following year, the Spanish admiral Pedro Menéndez de Avilés destroyed the French colony and established Fort San Agustín in its place.

    How the Discovery of America Affected the European Economy

    View of Mexico City (formerly Tenochtitlan).
    View of Mexico City (formerly Tenochtitlan). Colorized engraving by Franz Hogenberg. 1564. Image: Hebrew University of Jerusalem

    The discovery of America had a profound impact on the socio-economic development of Europe. As major trade routes shifted from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic, some regions lost their former prominence (Italy, Southern Germany), while others gained significantly in strength (Spain and Portugal, later England and the Netherlands). The large-scale importation of American precious metals doubled the amount of gold and tripled the amount of silver circulating in Europe, contributing to a rapid increase in prices for essential goods (the so-called “Price Revolution”) across Europe

    A significant portion of the precious metals arriving in Europe was immediately exported to Asia, where they were used to purchase expensive Eastern goods. However, some silver remained in Europe. The increase in the money supply, along with the potential of colonies as sources of raw materials and markets for European goods, contributed to the development of the European economy. At the same time, the causes of the “Price Revolution” and other new socio-economic processes required explanation and stimulated the development of economic thought, particularly in Spain.

    As a result of the discovery of America, not only did trade contacts with Europe rapidly expand, but systemic connections also developed between Asia and America (embodied in the Manila galleons—huge ships that sailed between Manila in the Philippines and Acapulco in Mexico), as well as between America and Africa. In the Atlantic in the 16th and 17th centuries, a triangular trade route developed: ships carried European goods to Africa, transported enslaved people to the New World, and returned to Europe with cargoes of tobacco, sugar, and other goods. All of this indicated the formation of a global market.

    Paradoxically, the economies of the Iberian countries, which were the first to establish colonies in America, ultimately found themselves at a disadvantage. First, emigration to the colonies created huge demographic problems for Spain and especially for Portugal. Second, their economies could not meet the needs of their overseas possessions, forcing authorities to open the way to America for merchants from more developed countries, who in turn began to dominate the economies of the metropolises to some extent. “These kingdoms are becoming poorer every day and are turning into Indies for foreigners,” complained deputies of the Castilian Cortes in the mid-16th century.

    Along with the economy, politics also expanded onto the vast oceans. Competition for control over trade routes, the desire of European powers to acquire their own colonies, and the struggle for their redistribution became an integral part of international relations. Thanks to the wealth of the colonies, the metropolises significantly strengthened their positions in Europe.

    How Did It Change European Culture?

    The scientific revolution of the 16th and 17th centuries became possible in large part because the discovery of America, as a key component of the Age of Discovery, led to a dramatic expansion of Europeans’ understanding of the world. In America, new extensive materials were collected for the natural sciences, ethnography, history, and linguistics. Contacts with indigenous tribes, who had different social structures, stimulated the development of social thought. By gaining experience in interacting with bearers of different cultures and religions, Europeans became more aware of their own cultural and historical unity.

    At the same time, the most critically-minded among them realized that the world is diverse, that foreign cultures and religions may be no worse than their own, and that Europeans could learn much from the inhabitants of distant lands. It is no coincidence that the famous French humanist Michel de Montaigne (1533–1592) emphasized that in terms of morality, Native Americans were in no way inferior to Europeans, and Thomas More placed his ideal island of Utopia near the shores of South America. Alonso de Ercilla, in his epic poem “La Araucana,” describing the wars of the Spaniards with the Araucanian Indians, does not question Spain’s right to subdue them but effectively presents them in a heroic light as fighters for freedom, whose truth is equated with that of the Spaniards. Spanish humanists and clergy (Bartolomé de las Casas, Vasco de Quiroga, and others) attempted to implement utopian ideas in the New World that were born in Europe. Reflections on the Golden Age and the unspoiled faith of the inhabitants of America were organically woven into the intellectual world of the Renaissance and the Reformation.

    The discovery of America and the subsequent Conquista inspired literary works of various genres: Hernán Cortés’s “Letters,” Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca’s “Shipwrecked Survivor’s Report,” and others. Innovative compilations appeared that contained information about the geography and nature of the new lands, as well as the customs and history of their peoples: “Decades of the New World” by Pietro Martire d’Anghiera, “History of the Indies” by Las Casas, “General History of the Things of New Spain” by Bernardino de Sahagún, and others. Images of America from the Age of Discovery and Conquista can also be traced in European literature and art, particularly in the works of Shakespeare and Calderón.

    And the Food?

    Florida Indians sowing corn
    Florida Indians sowing corn. Illustration for a story by Jacques Lemoine from the second volume of Theodor de Bry’s Grand Voyages. First edition 1591. Image: Jacksonville Public Library Florida Collection

    Europeans were introduced to new types of poultry (turkeys), agricultural crops (potatoes, corn, tomatoes, beans, red chili peppers, pumpkins, cocoa), and fruits (pineapple, avocado). Although the introduction of new products was delayed due to the conservative mindset of most colonists, over time, they significantly changed the diet of Europeans, causing a sort of “food revolution.” Particularly important were potatoes and corn, which significantly reduced the threat of famine. The influence of crops brought to America by Europeans and actively cultivated there for export to the Old World (coffee, sugarcane, from which not only sugar but also rum was made) was also substantial.

    Tobacco deserves special mention: it is not an edible crop, but was initially valued by Europeans as a remedy for hunger; it was also used as medicine (recall that later Robinson Crusoe used tobacco tincture for treatment on his deserted island). Eventually, chewing, sniffing, and smoking tobacco became popular in the Old World for pleasure. Tobacco became the main crop in British Virginia and Maryland in the 17th and 18th centuries.

    The Spanish also introduced bananas to the island of Haiti, which are now considered an integral part of American flora. There are hypotheses that bananas were known in South America even before the arrival of Europeans; in any case, it was the Spanish who spread them widely throughout their territories.

    European colonists also contributed to the spread of American species of cultivated plants and domesticated animals beyond their original habitats. For example, they brought the Mexican-origin turkey to Peru. Over time, the mixing of indigenous and European food products and methods of preparation led to the creation of a unique cuisine on both sides of the Atlantic. Some dishes that became traditional on both sides of the Atlantic include imported ingredients, but their American or European origins have been forgotten (for example, the Spanish potato tortilla—not to be confused with the Mexican corn tortilla—or dishes based on rice and milk from Argentina).

  • Conquest of the West: History of the American Pioneers

    Conquest of the West: History of the American Pioneers

    After the purchase of Louisiana from France, the conquest of the West began in the early 19th century under Thomas Jefferson’s presidency. Following the Lewis and Clark expedition of 1804, it aimed to colonize the territories beyond the Mississippi River. This historical period in the United States also marks the beginning of the Indian Wars and the deportation of native peoples, starting in the 1830s after the adoption of the Indian Removal Act. The conquest of the West is also known for its numerous migratory movements, notably the gold rush and the race for land. The latter is the subject of a specific law: the Homestead Acts. Gradually, American settlers established themselves in the western states. The conquest of the West ended around 1890, by which time the United States had become a major industrial power on a global scale.

    When and How Did the West’s Conquest Begin?

    The conquest of the West occurred during a period of profound transformation for the United States. In addition to land purchases in Louisiana in 1803, the Lewis and Clark expedition of 1804 was one of the first notable explorations of the territories west of the Mississippi. Long before the gold rush of 1848, many explorers and adventurers ventured into the fur trade in these wild regions. Between 1846 and 1848, the United States acquired California and Oregon on the west coast. The American government then justified the colonization process with the concept of “manifest destiny,” the divine will to “civilize” the western territories.

    Which Territories Are Considered the American West?

    The American West is a general term that has evolved over the years according to historical events, conflicts, and political decisions. Notable acquisitions include Louisiana in 1803, Texas’ independence in 1845, and the war with Mexico in 1846. All states west of the Mississippi River are considered part of the American West, including the West Coast territories and the Louisiana territory ceded by France. These include California, and Oregon, the territories of Washington, New Mexico, and Utah.

    Who Were the Protagonists of the Conquest of the West?

    Throughout the 19th century, the conquest of the West involved many protagonists. The United States gradually colonized the territories of Native American peoples and various European immigrants. This westward expansion also involved certain religious groups seeking to escape persecution, such as the Mormons. During the gold rush, migratory flows were significant, including those from Asia. Many Chinese attempted the journey to seek fortune, participating in commercial activities dedicated to pioneers and gold prospectors. Slaves also likely participated in this event, as slavery was definitively abolished in the United States in 1865 after the Civil War (1861-1865).

    How Did Native Americans Experience the Conquest of the West?

    The conquest of the West led to numerous conflicts between Native Americans and the United States. The appropriation of territories, buffalo hunting, and massacres of local populations heightened tensions. This period saw numerous confrontations, including the Seminole Wars, Black Hawk War, Navajo War, and Apache Wars. Many Native Americans tried to resist the conquest of their territories, such as Black Hawk, Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse, and Geronimo. From the 1820s, the federal government addressed the “Indian question,” including creating the Bureau of Indian Affairs. In 1837, the implementation of the Indian Removal Act led to the deportation of Native Americans to “reservations,” often worthless lands where these semi-nomadic peoples were forced to stay confined. Under President Andrew Jackson, this forced migration became known as the “Trail of Tears,” causing thousands of deaths.

    How Did Settlers Live in the American West?

    At the end of the 18th century, there were barely more than 100,000 Americans in the western states. By 1840, various migrations contributed to a population explosion, with nearly 7 million inhabitants. The development of the railroad and the establishment of the Pony Express (the postal service of the time) enabled many families to settle. Immigrant populations retained their European roots, particularly in education, religion, and lifestyle. Economic activities flourished, notably cattle ranching. This period also saw the emergence of new criminality. Notable bandits of the time include the Dalton brothers, Jesse James, Butch Cassidy, and Sam Bass.

    How Were Lands Distributed During the Conquest of the West?

    To avoid conflicts in land distribution, Abraham Lincoln’s government implemented the Homestead Act. Effective May 20, 1862, it allowed any person or family to claim ownership of a plot of up to 160 acres. They had to justify occupying the land for at least five years. While the conquest of the West recalls the gold rush, it also evokes the “land runs” organized by some states to colonize certain territories more quickly. These were real races, where the first to arrive claimed a ready-to-allocate plot.

    What Were the Roles of Cowboys During the Conquest of the West?

    Cowboys worked on ranches or cattle farms. Frequently, he was a farm boy or an agricultural laborer assigned to subordinate tasks. His main role was to ensure the supply of beef to meet an exponential demand. The collective imagination often associates the cowboy with a symbol of independence and freedom. However, the reality involved a precarious, often dangerous, daily life with low pay.

    When and How Did the West End Conquest Take Place?

    The conquest of the West ended around 1890 when authorities no longer distinguished borders within the United States. In 1896, pioneers and adventurers turned to the Klondike, opening the episode of the Alaska gold rush. Buffalo Bill, a bison hunter, created the “Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show” in 1882, continuing to fascinate audiences with cowboy history. Some historians suggest the end of the conquest of the West was rather in the 1910s, with conflicts between Americans and Mexicans.

    What Films, Series, or Books Address the Conquest of the West?

    In popular culture, countless stories depict the conquest of the West. In cinema and television, the Western genre is very popular. Notable series include “Little House on the Prairie,” “The Wild Wild West,” “Deadwood,” and “Hell on Wheels.” On the big screen, there are numerous iconic Western films such as “How the West Was Won” (1962), “Far Horizons,” “Once Upon a Time in the West,” and “Dances with Wolves.” In literature, notable works include “The Hanging Tree,” “3:10 to Yuma,” and “Little Big Man.”

    Key Dates in the Conquest of the West

    May 14, 1804: The Departure of the Lewis and Clark Expedition

    In 1804, President Thomas Jefferson ordered the Lewis and Clark Expedition with a total budget of $2,500. The mission aimed to explore the territories west of the Mississippi River.

    1817: The Seminole War Against the Americans

    The Seminole Indians took up arms when Andrew Jackson invaded Florida with his army. This expedition was purportedly in retaliation for the thefts committed by the Seminoles on Georgia plantations and the assistance they provided to runaway slaves. The Seminoles could not compete. In 1819, a Spanish territory, Florida, was transferred to the United States. Early in the 1830s, the Seminoles signed a treaty to relocate west of the Mississippi. However, some revolted, leading to another war.

    May 28, 1830: The Indian Removal Act

    Under President Andrew Jackson, the United States enacted a law ordering the deportation of all Indian populations east of the Mississippi. Among these were the Cherokees and Seminoles, who categorically refused to part with their lands. However, the new law left them no choice. The following years, the American army gathered tens of thousands of Indians to lead them beyond the river.

    October 1838: The Cherokees on the Trail of Tears

    The United States forced thousands of Cherokees to abandon their territory east of the Mississippi and relocate to northeastern Oklahoma. On December 29, 1835, a minority of them signed the Treaty of New Echota with the United States, ceding these gold-rich lands to the country for $5 million. When the treaty expired, the American army evacuated the territory. A long and exhausting journey awaited them, and over 4,000 died en route from cold, fatigue, or disease.

    December 29, 1845: The Mexican-American War Begins

    Sam Houston, President of the Republic of Texas, requested to join the United States. The annexation was thus voted on by the American Congress in December 1845, and Texas became the twenty-eighth state. The United States also wanted to annex Mexican California, which displeased Mexico. Having lost Texas, Mexico declared war on the United States, beginning the Mexican-American War, which ended in 1848.

    January 5, 1846: Annexation of Oregon by the United States

    On January 5, 1846, the United States Congress voted to stop sharing the lands in the Oregon region with the United Kingdom. The Convention established between the two countries in 1818 had set the border at the 49th parallel from the Lake of the Woods to the Rockies. Thanks to this vote, the United States annexed Oregon. The Oregon Treaty slightly modified the boundary.

    February 26, 1846: Birth of Buffalo Bill

    Buffalo Bill, born William Frederick Cody, was a legendary figure in the West’s conquest. He fought in the Indian Wars and was also a bison hunter. In 1882, he led a theater troupe and organized shows dedicated to the Wild West. He died on January 10, 1917, at the age of 70.

    January 24, 1848: Mexico Cedes California

    The signing of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo marked the end of the Mexican-American War (1846–1848) between Mexicans and Americans. The Mexicans, defeated, had to cede Texas, California, and New Mexico. The United States acquired half of Mexico’s territory.

    January 24, 1848: Start of the Gold Rush and the Conquest of the West

    The discovery of a gold nugget in a Coloma sawmill triggered the “gold rush.” The rumor of gold at Sutter’s Mill spread quickly, and thousands of American settlers and European newcomers headed to California to become gold miners. Simultaneously, the conquest of the western territories of the United States began, leading to numerous conflicts and wars over the years.

    February 2, 1848: Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

    On February 2, 1848, the Mexican-American War came to an end with the signing of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. Mexico ceded California, Nevada, Utah, and parts of Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, and Wyoming to the United States. The United States paid $15 million for these territories. Mexico also had to recognize the annexation of the Republic of Texas by the United States and cede lands east of the Rio Grande.

    May 29, 1848: Wisconsin Becomes the Thirtieth American State

    The Frenchman Jean Nicolet discovered the territory of Wisconsin. On these lands, he founded the colony of Green Bay. Many Europeans from Germany, Scandinavia, and Switzerland then settled in the region. In 1763, Wisconsin became the United Kingdom’s property. After the American Revolution, the United States took possession of the territory managed by the British until 1812. In 1848, Congress accepted Wisconsin’s entry into the Union.

    December 1857: Start of the War Between Native Americans and Settlers in Minnesota

    Minnesota became the 32nd state of the American Union in February. During the procedures, the 6,500 Santee and Lakota Sioux, nearly a third of the total population, lost the vast majority of their territory to live on a strip of land in the southwest of the state. Tension escalated, and various incidents sparked a war between Native Americans and settlers, which ended in 1862 after a long series of trials.

    April 3, 1860: Creation of the Pony Express

    William H. Russell, Alexander Majors, and William B. Waddell founded the Pony Express rapid mail delivery service in the 19th century. It relied on the performance of isolated riders instead of stagecoaches, connecting the Atlantic coast of the United States to the Pacific coast (St. Joseph, Missouri, to Sacramento, California) in ten days instead of 26. Due to a lack of profitability, this service ceased ten months after its creation.

    December 20, 1860: South Carolina Secedes

    Against the abolition of slavery, South Carolina withdrew from the Union and opposed Abraham Lincoln’s government. Along with Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas, they formed the secessionist movement.

    February 8, 1861: Formation of the Confederate States of America

    The secessionist movement led to the creation of the Confederate States. This involved the promulgation of a new constitution and the appointment of a president: Jefferson Davis. This opposition with the Northern States marked the beginning of the Civil War.

    September 18, 1862: The Sioux Lay Down Their Arms

    General Sibley defeated the Santee Sioux at Wood Lake. Since summer, the Minnesota Santee Sioux have launched a relentless war against the Americans. Under the command of Chief Little Crow, they perpetrated numerous massacres of soldiers and civilians. In total, several hundred of them, including women and children, perished under Sioux weapons.

    November 29, 1864: Sand Creek Massacre

    The Colorado Territory militia attacked a village inhabited by the Cheyennes and Arapahos east of the Rockies during the Indian Wars. Over two days, Colonel John Chivington’s forces killed nearly 270 Indians, including men, women, and children. This episode sparked controversy, leading to questions about the policy of exterminating Native Americans.

    April 9, 1865: Defeat of the Southerners at Appomattox

    After General Robert E. Lee’s defeat at Appomattox, the Southern troops gradually ceased hostilities in May. This marked the restoration of the Union and the abolition of slavery.

    March 1, 1867: Nebraska Joins the American Union

    After siding with the Northern camp during the Civil War (1861-5), Nebraska became the 37th state to join the Union. Native American tribes such as the Sioux, Cheyennes, and Pawnees originally populated this wild region in the central United States. The Spanish and then the French successively colonized it, exploring and delineating its first borders before ceding it, along with French Louisiana, to the Americans in 1803. Nebraska became a territory in 1854.

    November 27, 1868: Custer and the Washita River

    American Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer, leading the 7th Cavalry with 800 men, attacked Black Kettle’s Cheyenne camp of 51 tipis in the Battle of the Washita River (Oklahoma Plains). They killed 123 Indian warriors and civilians, including their chief and his wife. The initial assault concluded in less than 20 minutes, but the fighting persisted for several hours. The exact role of Custer and the actual course of events—was it a massacre?—remain subjects of controversy and discussion among historians and specialists.

    November 29, 1872: Start of the Modoc Indian War

    Under pressure from settlers, the American army intervened in the Modoc camp. The influx of emigrants to the fertile lands of Oregon and California (late 1840s) prompted the administration to expel the Modoc Indians and regroup them on the neighboring Klamath reservation, which they refused. After seven months of fierce resistance, the “Modoc War” ended with the hanging of its leaders, including their chief Kienptoos, Captain Jack, and the rest of the tribe being “directed” to Oklahoma reserves.

    June 27, 1874: Beginnings of the “Red River War”

    The second Battle of the Adobe Walls (Texas) marked a new phase in the Indian wars. According to legend, after being attacked by 300 Indian warriors, including Comanches, Kiowas, Cheyennes, and Arapahos, led by Quanah Parker, twenty-eight hunters took refuge in a trading post run by James C. Hanrahan. The American army subsequently intervened, sending five regiments against the rebellious tribes. The American army drove these out of the Southern Plains to the Oklahoma reserves, thereby ending Indian resistance.

    June 25, 1876: The Little Bighorn Massacre

    The Cheyenne, Sioux, and Arapaho killed a detachment of the 7th Cavalry, led by Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer, during the Battle of Little Bighorn (Montana). Against 3,500 Indian warriors led by Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse, the general and his 275 soldiers couldn’t hold out for long.

    October 1877: Chief Joseph Surrenders

    After leading his Nez Perce tribe on a 2,000-kilometer escape route through the Rocky Mountains, Chief Joseph surrendered to the American army in Montana. While his attempt to avoid internment on the Idaho reservation initially succeeded, he eventually fell into the hands of the cavalry of General Nelson Miles. General Nelson Miles imprisoned him in Fort Leavenworth for eight months before transferring him to the Indian Territory.

    October 6, 1879: Anglo-American “Pacific War”

    The War of the Pacific pitted Chile against Peru and Bolivia. The cause: the Bolivian nitrate tax imposed on the Chilean company “Compañía de Salitres y Ferrocarril de Antofagasta” in Antofagasta (formerly a part of Bolivia). Bolivia’s breach of the free-trade treaty led Chile to occupy the city in February 1879, prompting Bolivia to declare war in March, followed by Peru, honoring its military alliance. The Chileans emerged victorious in 1884, annexing Atacama, Antofagasta, and part of Peru (Tarapacá and Arica).

    May 2, 1885: The “Red River War” Ends

    Ending on June 6, 1877, the so-called “Red River War” was a series of military campaigns by the United States Army against the Southern Plains Indians (Comanche, Kiowa, Southern Cheyenne, and Arapaho) in Texas. General Philip Sheridan dispatched five regiments against the rebellious tribes, ultimately subduing them to the Oklahoma reserves.

    April 22, 1889: Land Rush in Oklahoma

    On April 22, 1889, the American government officially opened Oklahoma Territory to settlers through the Land Rush. About 50,000 settlers (“Boomers”) participated, competing to claim the best lands.

    December 29, 1890: Wounded Knee Massacre

    The last confrontation of the Indian Wars took place in Wounded Knee (South Dakota). The American army attacked a Sioux camp, resulting in the deaths of 153 Indians, including women and children. This massacre marked the definitive end of the Indian resistance and symbolized the conquest of the West.

    July 7, 1898: Annexation of Hawaii

    In the late 19th century, the Kingdom of Hawaii found itself increasingly under American influence due to the economic importance of its sugar plantations. In 1893, a group of American settlers and businessmen orchestrated a coup against Queen Lili’uokalani, leading to the establishment of a provisional government. Following the coup, the United States initially hesitated to annex Hawaii, but with the outbreak of the Spanish-American War in 1898, the strategic value of the islands became clear. On July 7, 1898, the United States officially annexed Hawaii through the Newlands Resolution, and it became a U.S. territory in 1900. This event marked a significant expansion of American influence in the Pacific.

    These events outline the relentless expansion of the United States across the continent, often at the expense of Native American populations, through wars, treaties, and migrations. Violence, displacement, and significant changes in the American landscape and society marked the conquest of the West.

  • Christmas in America: Traditions, Celebrations, and History

    Christmas in America: Traditions, Celebrations, and History

    People from many different cultures come together around Christmas in the United States of America. Thanksgiving is on November 4th, and the festivities continue all the way into the new year. On December 25th, we celebrate Christmas Day with a large family meal that consists of roast turkey, mashed potatoes, and meat pies. Houses are lit up with lights, stockings are hung by the fireplace, and Christmas trees are decorated. Ham, tamales, roast goose, and seafood salad are possibilities for the traditional Christmas dinner in America, which differs from one location to another. On Christmas Eve, many Americans also go to church, and some even partake in strange traditions like the Christmas Pickle or the Feast of the Seven Fishes.

    Christmas Traditions in America

    christmas decoration usa

    Today, around 63 percent of the entire United States’ population (332 million) is Christian (210 million). Presently, 55 percent of individuals in the US report that Christmas is observed as a religious holiday.

    Picking Out a Christmas Tree

    One aspect of American Christmas is the practice of choosing a Christmas tree. The first step is taking a trip to a tree lot or a Christmas tree farm as a family to pick out the ideal tree. German immigrants first introduced the habit of adorning fir trees with candles and decorations to the United States. Today, homes begin their Christmas festivities with this ritual. Lights, tinsel, decorations, and a star or angel atop the tree are added after it is in the house. Festive decorations adorn houses, and more importantly, this ritual brings families together, making memories that will last a lifetime.

    Tree Lighting Ceremony

    In 1923, President Calvin Coolidge presided over the first National Tree Lighting Ceremony to mark the beginning of a beloved American tradition. As the formal beginning of the Christmas season, this event is hosted by the National Park Service and the National Park Foundation. It includes musical performances and the lighting of the National Christmas Tree. Not only does the White House now have tree lighting events, but so do towns and communities. The annual Rockefeller Center tree lighting is among the most famous.

    Christmas Lights Everywhere

    Christmas lights

    Yard decorations including Santa’s sleigh, illuminated reindeer, and inflatable snowmen have been immensely popular in American homes and yards this holiday season. It may be anything from understated, elegant displays to extravagant light shows, but either way, it’s a great way to share the holiday mood in America. Because of their extended lifespan and little effect on the environment, energy-efficient LEDs are often chosen. Some examples of decorations are pre-lit trees positioned in a way that casts a warm, welcoming light, lighting garlands wrapped over entrances, and big, warm lights scattered along rooflines.

    Christmas Lights in Florida
    Christmas Lights in Florida. (Chad Sparkes, cc by sa 2.0)

    Secret Santa

    In the United States, people enjoy Christmas by participating in the Secret Santa. Members of a community or group are assigned a gift-giver at random under this practice. People do not divulge to identify the kind gift-giver. To decide on a present recipient, it is common practice to have people pull names from a hat. Many people take pleasure in trying to identify the identity of their Secret Santa only once they have opened their presents. It is believed that philanthropist Larry Dean Stewart (1948–2007) began this custom but it has roots in Scandinavia.

    Black Friday

    In the United States, the Christmas season is generally considered to begin the day after Thanksgiving (November 23). Since Black Friday is on November 24, it is considered to be the earliest “holy feast” of the Christmas season. The United States begins its Christmas shopping season on Black Friday.

    Elfapalooza Gathering

    In Mobile, Alabama, hundreds of people wear elf costumes for Elfapalooza, a one-of-a-kind Christmas festival. This event originally sought to surpass the record from 2014 in Bangkok, when 1,762 elves gathered for the Guinness World Record for the greatest assembly of Santa’s elves. Over a thousand elves still congregate every December in Mobile’s heritage Bienville Square. Local artists, arts groups, and businesses provide live programming, offer prizes, and more during the city’s Artwalk after the official count.

    Russian Orthodox Christmas in Alaska

    The observance of Russian Orthodox Christmas, which falls on January 7th, has significance in Alaskan Christmas, especially in towns that have a Russian heritage. There is a ritual called “starring,” in which vocal ensembles go house to house, singing folk and religious songs and spinning big, glittering stars that look like pinwheels. It is said that a homesick priest from Ukraine brought this practice to the towns of Alaska. An enormous Russian Orthodox Christmas celebration takes place every year at the Alaska Native Medical Center in Anchorage. This custom is strong in Alaska, and it helps keep the Christmas spirit alive even while American society is becoming more secular. Observing Christmas on the “new” Gregorian calendar is a tradition among Orthodox Christians in Alaska that is a tribute to their background.

    Tumbleweed Christmas Tree

    Tumbleweed Christmas Tree in Chandler, Arizona.
    Tumbleweed Christmas Tree in Chandler, Arizona.

    The Tumbleweed Christmas Tree in Chandler, Arizona, is a unique Christmas tradition that has been celebrated since 1957. Constructed from a 35-foot-tall, 20-foot-wide frame made from chicken wire, the tree is filled with about 1,000 tumbleweeds collected by Chandler’s Park Operations Division each year. These tumbleweeds are painted white, adorned with about 80 pounds of glitter, and sprayed with flame retardant before being strung with more than 1,200 LED lights. The tree, which stands over 50 feet tall, is lit the first Saturday evening in December, drawing Christmas visitors from far and wide. This only-in-Arizona display actually represents the Grand Canyon State.

    Lights of the Ozarks in Arkansas

    Fayetteville, Arkansas, hosts the beloved Lights of the Ozarks every year during the holidays. Lighting Night, which usually falls around November 17th, is the beginning of this light festival. From then until January 1, the Historic Downtown Square in Fayetteville is illuminated nightly from 5:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. Every year since 1994, employees of Fayetteville Parks and Recreation have spent more than 3,300 hours putting up more than 400,000 sparkling lights for the event. This turns the area into a winter paradise, drawing in guests from all around.

    Boat Parades in California

    From San Diego all the way up to the northern part of the state, seaside communities celebrate the holidays with boat parades in the evening. A variety of boats, including yachts, sailboats, rowboats, and even canoes, decorated with lights and vibrant displays, participate in these parades. Viewing locations along the shoreline are prime locations for spectators, who may be joined by merchants selling hot chocolate, musicians, and even Santa himself on occasion. Some communities provide opportunities to go on a boat and cruise around while taking in the festively lit boats and waterfront mansions. These parades, which take place all through December, give Christmas a California flair.

    Places to Visit at Christmas in America

    Here are a few of the top American destinations to visit over Christmas:

    1. Solvang, California: This quaint Danish-style village hosts annual celebrations like Julefest and other holiday-themed activities.
    2. North Pole, Alaska: Visit North Pole, Alaska, sometimes nicknamed “America’s Christmas Hometown,” for a Christmas-themed fireworks show and Santa Claus Land of Lights, a drive-through light experience.
    3. Vail Colorado: Beautiful mountain beauty, exciting activities, and the Vail Christmas Adventure—a progressive dinner party on Christmas Eve—make Vail, Colorado, a popular ski destination.
    4. New York City: Famous landmarks in New York City include the Rockefeller Christmas Tree, the Christmas Spectacular, Macy’s Santaland, and the Saks Fifth Avenue light display.
    5. Bethlehem, Pennsylvania: In Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, a place that has earned the nickname “Christmas City USA,” visitors enjoy Christmas markets, a unique history, and the Live Advent Calendar.
    6. Frankenmuth, Michigan: This town is magical during the holiday season, thanks to its Old World Christmas Market and horse-drawn wagon excursions.
    7. Washington, DC: National Christmas Tree and the World War II Memorial Ice Rink are two of the holiday attractions in the nation’s capital.
    8. Chicago, Illinois: Maggie Daley Park in Chicago, Illinois is the site of a Christkindlmarket and other Christmas celebrations that provide visitors with a taste of German Christmas customs.
    9. Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota: The Minnesota Twin Cities are the site of several annual events, including SantaCon and Holidazzle, and the Governor’s Residence hosts holiday tours.
    10. New Orleans, Louisiana: Holiday customs like the Christmas Pickle and the Feast of the Seven Fishes are part of New Orleans, Louisiana’s cultural history.

    The Economic Significance of Christmas

    Christmas on the Isthmus - Keppler. 1903.
    Christmas on the Isthmus – Keppler. 1903.

    Various industries in the US feel the effects of Christmas. Sales skyrocketed across the board during this period, making it the biggest economic boost for many countries (the US included). Forecasts indicated that overall holiday retail sales in 2023 hit a record high of 957 billion USD. American shoppers were projected to spend over $1 trillion for Christmas, with about $150 billion going to internet shops. The “Christmas shopping season” begins as early as October.

    Every family spent close to $1,500 on party supplies, including food and drink. More people are able to find work in retail as a result of this expenditure, as sales grow to fulfill the increased demand. Even though many stores are doing well this Christmas season, some may be struggling financially because they can’t meet customer demand.

    The History of Christmas in America

    Christmas wasn’t even a recognized holiday in the early part of the nineteenth century, and there wasn’t a common practice for enjoying the season. Some celebrated Christmas as a serious religious holiday, remembering the birth of Jesus; others had parties, listened to music, drank, and feasted. But in the early 1800s, Americans started to reimagine Christmas.

    Washington Irving, a well-known American writer, had a major impact on how Americans celebrate Christmas. In 1819, he penned a collection of articles chronicling the story of a rich British landowner who hosts a Christmas party for his hired hands. The concept of people from all walks of life gathering together to celebrate a joyous holiday was something Irving lauded, as was the return to more traditional practices.

    Christians started celebrating Christmas in unique ways by the middle of the century, putting aside their theological disagreements over the holiday’s significance. The importance of spending Christmas Eve and Day together at home grew throughout time.

    Following the European custom of decorating Christmas trees and exchanging presents, an increasing number of Christian Americans also started to do the same. Immigrants from Germany carried with them the custom of decorating evergreen trees with lights, candy, and toys. Putting up a Christmas tree became a common practice for American households.

    On June 26, 1870, Christmas was officially declared a federal holiday in the US. Christians celebrate the birth of Jesus, whom they believe to be the divine son and global savior, around this time. On December 25, people throughout the globe celebrate Christmas, a religious and cultural phenomenon as well as a commercial one. It is characterized by religious and secular customs and traditions.

    Distinct American Christmas Decorations

    Gingerbread House, White House Christmas.
    Gingerbread House, White House Christmas.

    American Christmas decorations that are unusual include:

    • State Ornaments: Old World Christmas has a variety of decorations that honor the 50 states with their own special traditions.
    • Made in the USA Decorations: homespun soy candles, handmade ceramic stockings, or winter gnome brothers and Christmas truck glass ornaments are kinds of handmade American ornaments distinct to America.
    • Gingerbread Houses: During the Christmas season, American families enjoy the age-old custom of making and decorating gingerbread homes. These constructions made of food first appeared in Germany in the 1500s and 1700s. During the nineteenth century, the craze for gingerbread homes surely made its way to Britain.
    • Chile Wreaths: Wreaths constructed of dried chiles are a traditional Christmas ornament in New Mexico and make for a one-of-a-kind centerpiece.
    • Light Shows: Spectacular light displays illuminate the streets and waterfronts of many American towns and cities. One such event is the Louisiana holiday light show.

    Traditional Christmas Foods in America

    Various regions and cultures in the United States have different traditional Christmas dishes. Eggnog, roasted goose, mince pies, and Christmas pudding made in the British way are among New England‘s most beloved holiday traditions. Crab cakes, oysters, and ham are popular in the Mid-Atlantic states, but country ham, mac & cheese, and cornbread are more popular in the South. Mexican flavors, such as tamales, are prevalent throughout the Southwest. American Christmas meal staples include mashed potatoes, stuffing, gravy, cranberry sauce, and turkey. Popular sweets include fruitcake, pumpkin and pecan pies, cookies, and fruitcake.

  • How Did The Discovery of America Change The World?

    How Did The Discovery of America Change The World?

    How did Christopher Columbus discover America and change the world? Christopher Columbus transported the Europeans to the “New World” and died without understanding that the lands he discovered were not the coastlines he was seeking for. He lived only 55 years before dying in Spain, having been largely exhausted throughout his life. This brings us to the moment of the discovery of the “New World” by Columbus in 1492, which afterwards was renamed “America.”

    Christopher Columbus and the discovery of America

    The discovery of America
    With Columbus’ discovery of the new continent, the process of colonization through the slaughter of thousands of locals had begun.

    When Columbus returned to Europe in 1493, the news he brought caused tension between Portugal and Spain. Until that time, Portugal had been leading the opening of new trade routes to Africa. In 1481, the Papacy officially declared that all lands in the south of the Canary Islands belonged to Portugal, which meant a new source of income for the office of Pope.

    But now Spain was opposed to the north-south divide. Fernando and Isabel claimed that they had rights to all discoveries in the west and consulted with Pope Alexander VI for justice. In 1493, the Pope decided to draw a perpendicular line 370 miles west of the Azores; the lands to the east of it belonged to Portugal and those to the west to Spain.

    Portuguese King Joao opposed this decision because it cut off the favorable winds that carried the ships to the south. In 1494, the two ambassadors met at Tordesillas to solve the problem. The line would be shifted approximately 1,000 miles west so that their ships could go south and east without violating Spanish rights.

    What no one knew at that time was that the line cut the east coast of South America. A Portuguese sailor, Pedro Alvares Cabral, on his way to India in 1500, encountered a large piece of land east of the line and registered it on behalf of his country. For this reason, the lands we know today as Brazil belonged to Portugal.

    How the discovery of America affected the New World

    The discovery of America changed the world

    Until the beginning of the 15th century, Europe’s only relationship with Africa and the East was through the land, and it was a difficult and slow-moving relationship. However, after Christopher Columbus’ journeys, the seas meant new possibilities for connection, not obstacles.

    This development had disastrous consequences for the peoples of America, the first continent to fully experience the influence of Europeans. Until that day, many cultures had risen, fought, and collapsed in South and Central America. Some societies, such as the Aztecs and Incas, created great empires. Others, such as Peru’s Mochica and the Maya of Central America, created the finest examples of art that would be called the “pre-Columbian era.”

    With the arrival of the Europeans, these cultures were doomed to die. Europeans were supported by ships, weapons, and horses and proved to be invincible. On the other hand, the destructive effects of diseases to which Americans were not resistant brought death to the majority of the local people in the 100 years following the arrival of foreigners. All local cultures disappeared, from Mexico to Peru in the south and the Amazon in the east. Tons of handmade objects, especially golden ones, were stolen.

    Despite that, the shadow of pre-Columbian culture continued to exist. Blended with European influence in architecture, the visual arts, religion, language, and technology, these cultures became even more complicated with the arrival of African slaves, who introduced a completely different culture.

    The effects of the discovery of America on Europe

    The first things imported from the New World with the discovery of America were potato plants and hammocks.
    The first things imported from the New World were potato plants and hammocks.

    The discovery of America’s first impact on Europe was the precious metal mining influx. In the 50 years after the discovery of America, Spain seized around 180 tons of gold, largely artistic pieces, and practically melted all of it. This plunder is considered one of the greatest wealth transfers and art thefts of all time. Meanwhile, the Spaniards extracted 16,000 tons of silver from the mines and sent it to their home country.

    This action deprived the world of this unique artistic heritage forever, leading to controversial wastefulness in Europe. The transferred wealth was mostly spent on war, which caused prices to rise to excessive levels. On the other hand, the relationship with America had another surprising consequence. Many unknown plants were growing in Europe on the hills of the high Andes Mountains; potatoes, tomatoes, and corn were completely new tastes for the Old World. Tobacco was also unknown until the Spaniards saw the Indians smoking it for medical purposes and religious ceremonies.

    Over the centuries, thousands of medicines have been produced with the resources gathered from South America. For example, a curative plant—a poison that affected the nerves—used by the Amazon’s indigenous arrows was used as a muscle relaxant during surgeries.

    Who followed Colombus?

    Vasco da Gama sailed from Africa to India and opened a way to Asia, making Portugal the biggest power in the Indian Ocean.
    Vasco da Gama sailed from Africa to India and opened a way to Asia, making Portugal the biggest power in the Indian Ocean. “Vasco da Gama” (circa 1460-1524), oil on canvas, by Antonio Manuel da Fonseca, 1838

    While Spain was trying to provide capital through the achievements of Christopher Columbus, Portugal continued to travel to the south and east. In 1497, Vasco da Gama toured the Cape of Good Hope, discovered the coasts of East Africa, and then set out for India, intending to break the Arab monopoly in Indian trade. This was also an unfortunate journey, as he could not sell anything, and the scurvy outbreak turned his three-month return journey into hell. However, this road proved to be usable. In the next decade, Portugal would use da Gama’s success as a step both to improve its trade with India and to move toward the Spice Islands (Moluccas) in Southeast Asia. In 1509, a trade fleet arrived in Malaysia. From 1520 on, Portugal dominated the Southeast Asian trade.

    The Great Ocean was the last thing that needed to be completed. It was believed that America was a large piece of territory, and another ocean behind this continent was located in 1513 when Vasco Nunez de Balboa crossed the Panama Canal and set foot on the beaches of the Great Ocean. The first round-the-world voyage took place between 1519 and 1522, and thus the southern tip of the continent was fully discovered.

    Who coined the name “America”?

    Amerigo Vespucci
    Amerigo Vespucci knew that the new land was not the Far East that everyone initially thought, and so the continent was named after him.

    The continent was named “America” after the explorer Amerigo Vespucci, who descended from the east coast of South America to Patagonia between 1501 and 1502. Vespucci realized that this place could not be the Far East and concluded that this land had to be between Europe and China, whether it ended with a nose or reached the South Pole. Therefore, in 1504, he wrote that it would be more appropriate to call it the “New World.” German cartographer Martin Waldseemüller gave these lands the name of Vespucci, on an atlas he made in 1507. Amerigo Vespucci calculated the circumference of the Earth as only a minus 50 miles from its actual length. So, Waldseemüller named the continent after Vespucci.

    Vikings discovered America before Christopher Columbus

    In fact, Columbus had not “discovered” America. Millions of native Americans had been living there for tens of thousands of years. Columbus wasn’t the first visitor to reach the continent, either. Recent discoveries in Newfoundland point to a residential area where the Vikings seemed to lived for more than a generation. According to Icelandic epics, Bjarni Herjolfsson, a Greenland Viking, had gone off course on his ship in the 1000s when the winds of the North Atlantic were softer and had probably reached a temperate, forested land that is today’s Newfoundland coast.

    Bjarni spent a winter in that land and eventually left the area as a result of the attacks from the locals and the shortage of food. Another Viking, Leif Ericson, reached North America as well. The Vikings noted that they stayed in the land for a short time, which they called “Vinland” because of the abundance of vines.

    According to a Latin manuscript from the 10th century, Irish priest Saint Brendan VI, who lived in the 19th century, roamed the Atlantic Ocean in a leather boat stretched on a wooden frame. Although there are references to Iceland’s volcanoes and icebergs, there is no evidence that Brendan reached America.

    Christopher Columbus quotes

    • “You can never cross the ocean unless you have the courage to lose sight of the shore.”
    • “Gold is a treasure and he who possesses it does all he wishes to in this world.”
    • “Following the light of the sun, we left the Old World.”
    • “When there are such lands there should be profitable things without number.”
    • “Riches don’t make a man rich, they only make him busier.”

  • Humans May Have Settled in the Americas 36,000 Years Ago

    Humans May Have Settled in the Americas 36,000 Years Ago

    Contrary to popular belief, there may have been inhabitants of North America more than 36,000 years ago, or roughly 20,000 years earlier than previously believed. A massive battle site on the Colorado Plateau in New Mexico serves as proof of this. Researchers have found bones with impact marks, scrapes, and holes that suggest human processing there as well as the remnants of campfires.

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    This lends credence to the idea that people inhabited America prior to the conclusion of the previous ice age.

    The current theory is that the first people did not cross the Bering Strait, which separates Asia and North America, until the end of the last ice age, or around 15,000 years ago. According to the long-held theory, they were then able to go south along the coast and via a channel in the interior ice that opened up about 13,000 years ago.

    However, archaeologists have discovered evidence of a considerably older human presence all throughout the both American continents. These include scribe traces on animal bones from Alaska and Uruguay, 23,000-year-old footprints in the southern United States, and 30,000-year-old stone tools in Mexico, and scribe marks on stone tools found in Alaska.

    Broken Bones

    Two mammoths are represented by the dispersed collection of ribs, skull pieces, and other bone fragments. A massive battle site from 36,000 years ago. (Credit: Tim Rowe, the University of Texas at Austin)
    Two mammoths are represented by the dispersed collection of ribs, skull pieces, and other bone fragments. A massive battle site from 36,000 years ago.

    Timothy Rowe of the University of Texas at Austin and his colleagues have just found further evidence of early American colonization in the U.S. state of New Mexico. Rowe had by coincidence found the fossil bones of two Ice Age mammoths. Numerous pieces of these creatures’ bones were discovered in addition to a damaged cranium. Skeletons are not properly laid up; instead, the area is somewhat disorganized.

    But it was this finding that caught his attention.

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    The abundance of fractured and shattered bones and their haphazard placement indicates that the cadavers were disturbed later on, probably by early people. The location immediately identified itself as a potential battleground of the Clovis Culture. They used five distinct radiocarbon dating techniques to ascertain the age of the mammoth bones. They examined the collagen and other organic elements in the fossilized artifacts for this reason.

    The results show that, depending on the dating technique, the age of the mammoth bones ranges from 31,000 to 38,000 years old. While the most trustworthy date points to 36,000 to 38,000 years ago. This indicates that the bones were created at least 15,000 years before the Clovis people arrived on the continent.

    Drilled Holes By Human Hands

    Humans may have settled in America 36,000 years ago

    But why did people create these bone pieces? The researchers used a variety of high-tech methods to assess the findings, including chemical analysis, scanning electron microscopy, micro-computed tomography, and spectrometry. They discovered prominent circular holes in several bone pieces along the way, which at first look seemed to be caused by the predator’s teeth.

    Predator bite marks are biggest on the outside and narrow to a point on the inside, therefore the form didn’t fit. However, these holes grew inward were smallest towards the bone’s surface. These ridges are characteristic of the traces left by a pointed instrument that has been drilled into a bone and then rocked back and forth, for example, to remove the internal fat and marrow.

    Specific Bone Chips

    A disproportionately high incidence of bone knockdowns—flat pieces from the tough shell of limb bones—was also unexpected. These knockdowns have a peculiar pattern that neither geological phenomena nor animal eating can account for. This is due to the fact that about 80% of these bone pieces were precisely parallel to or perpendicular to the line of the bones when they were chipped. This orientation was also used for secondary blows.

    The scientists said that non-cultural bone findings had never shown such obvious consistency with the bone structure. Scavengers, trampling, and other nonhuman activities were taken into consideration, but it turned out to be quite improbable that the comprehensive, organized, and highly structured degradation of the bones was brought on by such factors. They believed that these bone pieces were created by humans to be used as tools, for instance.

    Burned Fish Scales and A Bonfire

    Microparticles from the site’s chemical analysis also revealed traces of human effect. Because they were discovered to be made of ash, charcoal, powdered bone, charred fish scales, bones, and other minute animal remnants. The location is around 230 feet (70 meters) away from the closest river, hence the fish artifacts are outstanding. They claimed that numerous prehistoric hearths often used bones and bone meal as fuel.

    The researchers believe that this indicates that humans may have built campfires in addition to killing mammoths at this location around 36,000 years ago. These discoveries established a new standard for the settlement of the Americas. According to the results, there must have been a larger immigrant population before the Ice Age’s conclusion and the emergence of the Clovis people.

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    However, it’s still unclear how, when, and from where they came to the continent.