Hi All - This "asynchronous" lesson introduces themes of migration through exploring recent discoveries in indigenous peoples' history. We will explore...
(1) What a recent breakthrough in archeology tells us about the earliest waves of migration into North America.
(2) What the relationship between different languages tells us about migrations before contact with Europeans & their descendents.
This is just an introduction. There will be another asynchronous lesson in Native American migrations, incorporating their experience, available next week.

According to the headline, what is the first discovery by archeologists?

Older theories say that people crossed to Alaska on the "Berring Land Bridge" from Siberia, then migrated through Alaska and Canada after massive Ice Age glaciers melted. Were you ever taught this? How?
The Cooper Ferry site existed there BEFORE the glacier ice melted. What do the archeologists think that meant?

The artifacts at the Cooper's Ferry site strongly resemble those from _______. This suggests that the people who migrated up the Columbia River were part of a massive series of seafaring migrations spanning thousands of miles, up the Asian Coast and down the North American Coast, perhaps all the way to South America!
If your mic doesn't work, or if you prefer, answer the question above here by typing: What new facts and theories do you want to remember from this article?
How much does this article on archeological discoveries make you want to know more about archeology?

A relationship between the languages of the Rogue River communities and the Navajo Nation suggest.

If your mic didn't work, type your answer here: What does the study of Native American languages tell us about migrations before European contract?
How much does this article on archeological discoveries make you want to know more about archeology?
What kind of evidence shows that the first Americans were here at least a thousand years before we thought?
What did the Columbia River present to the earliest Americans?