I was a kid who grew up to OPB, it was one of the few sources of critical thinking presented in my world for many years.
@kristinessTX8 ай бұрын
Luther Cressman is a national treasure. This is a great documentary. He is laughing in archeologist heaven and chasing after that Deed of the College saying I told you I was right. His drive to preserve native history saved a little bit of history in a time where people were trying to erase such for all time. From his legacy, we have learned that we should listen to our native people and the stories they still carry today. The have a rich and beautiful culture that anyone would be lucky to be a part of.
@garyfrancis-ns3kq10 ай бұрын
He is uncovering the facts in Native American creation stories! From my earliest recollection of stories passed down to me from my Grandma, 'The People ' she called us came out of the earth and it was flooding that caused it! We traveled along the Rockies to settle down! Hopi tribe has similar stories of living under the earth! They have different levels of depth in the Earth that they lived. Other tribes have similar stories of being here before emerging from under the earth!
@BlueBonnie76410 ай бұрын
@gary Francis -bs3kq Trust Gary & his Grandmother. Their history has been handed down for 1000's of years. 🪔🛖🛶🦴
@ShawnW-y7i9 ай бұрын
I don't know how you can say it's real history when he's saying that they are Native American Indians anyone who follows any kind of science knows that that is a false statement their DNA only goes back 14,000 years and that DNA shows that they are 65% Asian
@TerriAnnNiemeier-dy3no9 ай бұрын
Old Caveman dwellings nearby, taken over later by Natives who broke all the pots running away
@DonnaCsuti-ji2dd8 ай бұрын
Probably stories referred to the ice age period when in order to survive people lived in caves ( I suspect there must have been a huge reduction of the population during the ice age due the difficult circumstances . I wonder what triggered the ice age?? ( meteorite hit followed by triggered volcanic activity clouding and darkening the sky perhaps???).
@garyfrancis-ns3kq8 ай бұрын
@@ShawnW-y7i Archeology discoveries on this continent and South America go back beyond previous dates! You simply want to ignore history so you can repeat it often!
@greenman61418 ай бұрын
This was GREAT. What a documentary.
@CuttingEdgetools2 ай бұрын
Cressman’ was the greatest of all N American Archeologist’s. Miles above Those Dokes at the Smithsonian . Luther Lived it in the field. We are indebted to His great work. I picked up His Book Pre-History of the Great Basin nearly 4 decades ago. A great work!
@krakatoainc280910 ай бұрын
Very well edited and narrated. Fine work you have done here.
@razony8 ай бұрын
When i left Oregon in 2021 after 25 years. OPB was one of my favorite channels. Always something educational, entertaining and engaging with what OPB put on the screen. Even in my new home, I still subscribe to OPB. Wish Portland politics could do as well as OPB at operating/covering its state.
@randallthomas52079 ай бұрын
Please note: All of the settlers, who moved to rural eastern Oregon, in the late 1800s, did so in what is now known to be thee wettest two decades in the tree ring history. When they first got there, they could actually raise crops. But as things dried out they couldn’t and left. Also, many of them raised hay for livestock feed. And, when the society still ran literally on “horse power”, meadow hay was a good, readily salable commercial crop.
@mitchellkrouth5083 Жыл бұрын
Correct he was 100% roll model for all intelligent humans. And a hero.
@mercedessoberon8337 Жыл бұрын
Yes A man of integrity
@slappy89419 ай бұрын
*role model
@normgrayson65528 ай бұрын
One of the best archeology reports ever seen. Genuine evidence that humans were always living in Nth America and would have been decendants of cataclysm survivors.
@hollyodii5969 Жыл бұрын
Dr. Cressman was a true pioneer and hero for anthropology!
@doogalloonni Жыл бұрын
So heartwarming to see such a great man exhonorated! His work was so essential to our understanding of who we were and from where we came, and most importantly, when. Thank you to those who have picked up his torch.
@rhettlee Жыл бұрын
This is one of my favorite North American archeology documentaries ever.
@d.m.hubble2591 Жыл бұрын
Was blessed to spend last year (22) in Eastern Oregon and everyday was an adventure. Looks empty but is chock-full of knowledge and resources. Spent months between Condon & the Alvord and ended with a much longer list of things left to see than what I arrived with
@hiltonhillhomestead Жыл бұрын
I'm wanting to visit there so bad! I'm fascinated with it's beauty and would possibly consider moving there one day. I'm from Tennessee in the Smokey Mountains where it's also beautiful, but there's something about Oregon that has caught my eye. 🙌
@patricknoveski6409 Жыл бұрын
This interests me to no end. Just love the study of human populations in American history .
@carolutley6523 Жыл бұрын
Excellent! Give us more 👍
@SCHULTZEH9 ай бұрын
Awesome presentation. Love learning about the North American ancient ancestors.. Thank you
@pascalswager91008 ай бұрын
What a top bloke! Lest We forget.
@IntoTheMystery139 ай бұрын
Fantastic Documentary. I love Opb!
@wallacewarren6 ай бұрын
It is truly a joy to watch your channel. Thank you.
@spocksdaughter96418 ай бұрын
Seriously Homesick for the Malhure and Owhyee Desert of my families recreation. Sending from the UK 26 yrs! Give me dust and the smell of sagebrush!!
@BBQDad463 Жыл бұрын
This is absolutely fascinating. I am reminded of the research done at Meadowcroft Rockshelter in Pennsylvania. Finds there have been dated, not without controversy, to as much as 16,000 to 19,000 years ago. In either case, clearly, our Native American brethren have been here for quite a while longer than anyone previously guessed. Thank goodness for Cressman and others like him.
@karlgharst54209 ай бұрын
They were Caucasoid - well proven.
@robertspies4695 Жыл бұрын
Great documentary. I was pleasantly surprised to see Dr. Don Dumon in this. I knew him briefly in Alaska.
@kathyhepler3822 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video 📸📸. Informative!!!!
@BlueBonnie76410 ай бұрын
This doc kept calling to me, who is Luther Cressman? So glad I didn't 'pass' this time! Excellent 🪔🦴🛶🗿🛖
@AtsircEcarg Жыл бұрын
This is so cool! Born and raised in Oregon and I had no idea all this was here.
@ChingFong58 Жыл бұрын
Some of the pics shown that say are in Oregon are actually in Washington state.
@dmd_design Жыл бұрын
@@ChingFong58At the time the original people were there, there was no Oregon or Washington so I imagine the archeologists aren’t taking those borders into consideration either.
@jerrymcdaniel4539 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting video. I am impressed with this man and his work.
@videobob Жыл бұрын
Excellent video documentary
@pepejuan2924 Жыл бұрын
I’ve always liked this show and the opening is good to👍
@knolltop31410 ай бұрын
Wonderful presentation.
@audreyross72458 ай бұрын
Thankyou for this history.
@danrynazewski4151 Жыл бұрын
Above burns in the malheur national forest I use to hunt elk as a kid an old timer said one year back in 1940s he was stuck up hunting in the area and got stuck in snow he said he found a cave to take shelter and said when he got a fire started inside he saw cave art and said there were clay pots and arrows etc He had a knife obsidian blade he said when he left cave he took he said he hiked out .. Said for years he tried to find the cave again with no luck! He never told us what area cave was but I believed him!
@Cobbmtngirl9 ай бұрын
Fascinating stuff. Thank you so much!
9 ай бұрын
Maltyox tat Luther Cressman, jun nim etamanel pa USA. Uj katqatatab'ej chawe, tat Cressman. Vivimos en constante aprendizaje y tenemos un modelo de perseverancia y trabajo científico en el señor Cressman. Hemos disfrutado este documental. Thanks a lot for your valuable and informative documentary. From Guatemala, Central America.
@tonyjones69049 ай бұрын
This was a great documentary I was born and raised in Oregon I'm 62 years old
@DonnaCsuti-ji2dd8 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing this information most interesting . I'm sure he was right. Spent time there because my husband was a field Mammology guy . Makes sense people were there before the younger dryis period 😊
@michaelbryant2071 Жыл бұрын
In my lifetime during my college days, the view of the Clovis History was generally accepted as the focal point of where settlement of humans in North America began. In the period of time since there have been numerous discoveries that have predated it.
@czgator9000 Жыл бұрын
And the controversy surrounding the research that the Clovis First theory was not correct was pretty heated not so long ago.
@d-railg43029 ай бұрын
Still a lot of people who will never admit they were wrong about Clovis. I live in Florida close to a site named Page-Ladson. Butchered mastodon remains including stone tools that predate Clovis by as much as two thousand years.
@figgiefigueroa73729 ай бұрын
Congratulations on vindication for this wise man! The same happen to the archeologist who discover the drawings in the Altamira Cave in Spain.The drawins were 10,000 years old. Theres a movie with Antonio Banderas.
@kayhansen92295 ай бұрын
Add lacrosse caves in France I'm not saying it right but they've been found to be 30 and 40,000 years old now they found more and deeper.
@ferengiprofiteer9145 Жыл бұрын
All right! Grumpy old man had it going on.
@khadijagwen Жыл бұрын
In the late 1950's I was pre-adolescent and accompanied my stepfather to The Dalles Oregon where he sifted for thousands of Native American arrowheads. This was the time that the Dam was being filled, so the blocking of the river lowered the downstream level. These days it illegal to do so, but he got away with it then. I don't know what became of his collection. Before he passed he moved to Canada, near Vancouver. Odd that years later, I find that I am Shawnee Indian.
@SunraeSkatimunggr Жыл бұрын
I live in Salem, Oregon, at the southwest end of that big flood, up next to a ridge that was created by that flood. My son lives on top of that ridge. I would suspect that much of his collection is buried somewhere of the University of Oregon's campus. I worked as a student in several various collections on campus, so I know they are large and not easily viewed by the public.
@bethbartlett569210 ай бұрын
@@SunraeSkatimunggr The habits of Academics, Universities, Museums, (particularly the Smithsonian), and Private Collectors, are apparent in their overwhelming resistance to allow for the "Greater Facts to emerge", and they breach the "Standards of Science and Research" by using their "19th Century Theory based Paradigm and Linear Timeline" as absolute, as if it were fact or even based on a foundation of fact. Dogmatic like behaviors routinely associated with Religions. Lab based Science, like DNA, easily repeatable outcome findings, are key to relieving the subject and returning Academia particularly Archaeologists to the "Standards of Science and Research" Authentic Academics adhere to these Standards. One must have Freedom of Thoughts to be free, certainly in Research and Discoveries. Beth Bartlett Sociologist/Behavioralist and Historian
@jamesraymond11589 ай бұрын
Excellent.
@erpthompsonqueen9130 Жыл бұрын
Thank you.
@uwusmolbean6 ай бұрын
Oregon for Oregonians 💯 🎉😊
@jerrymcdaniel4539 Жыл бұрын
I am going to add some of these books to my library.
@anitahood1969 ай бұрын
Jean M. Auel. Linda Lay Shuler, and Kathleen O'Neal tell great pre history stories.
@Andy_Babb Жыл бұрын
I live in MA, I wish we could get more of these docs from the local stations out west
@christaylor4477 Жыл бұрын
I'm in RI on the border. Wish there were more places to go metal detecting here
@estelleharrington3866 Жыл бұрын
TY TOTALLY FASCINATING!!! LOVED IT. 🤗👌💖
@karphin110 ай бұрын
Such a fascinating topic. I love France, it would be fantastic to go there to do archaeology! Been to Les Eyzies, and the copy of the Lascaux Cave. I would love to see more on those places and our ancient ancestors. I have 1.5 % Neanderthal genes and 1.4% Denisovan. (National geographic genetic test.)
@matthewrinearson4637 Жыл бұрын
Oregon Public Broadcasting hit this one out of the park. Please check out more of their documentaries.
@Dapper42211 ай бұрын
No they didn't. Everything is subjective and not fact.
@Oregontrailblazin2 жыл бұрын
I have recently bought my grandkids to this ...In Oregon
@Oregontrailblazin Жыл бұрын
Was there yesterday!
@mikealellsbutchparks4345 Жыл бұрын
I live in Texarkana texas. And no one would belive the things I have found.
@TerriAnnNiemeier-dy3no10 ай бұрын
What did you find, make a you tube video
@bethbartlett569210 ай бұрын
I can only imagine, that is an area that offers amazing Geological Potentials and ... well far more. .Enjoy your Explorations and Discoveries. I love Arkansas, beautiful lands. Beth Bartlett Sociologist/Behavioralist and Historian
@Buffo-iw2gooh9 ай бұрын
I think I would believe you! I am studying an ancient race that passed that way. Would you be interested in sharing info?
@Buffo-iw2gooh9 ай бұрын
I would believe you! I am studying an ancient race that passed through that way. Would you care to share info?
@tarriegibson11939 ай бұрын
I've always been fascinated with pictographs. So amazing and being a decendant of the indigenous people here it makes you wonder if it was one of your ancestors who created it in the past. 😁 Love that stuff❤️😊
@RileyFrasier Жыл бұрын
Jenkins & Connolly had some big shoes to fill, and they’ve done Cressman well!
@sammythompson3694 Жыл бұрын
I drove a 18 wheeler going to Idaho and marveled at the rivers cutting straight walls through the ash black as midnight. Once there was an inland sea where the ash fell. To think of how much debris that must have been to cover a sea to become the land we walk on today.
@matildamarmaduke109610 ай бұрын
We walk on the remains of silica Trees
@tonymyers58232 ай бұрын
This study is so exciting. Thank you for this video.🤓
@kristinessTX8 ай бұрын
Cressman comes from a time period where his counterparts in the Middle East and Europe replied on gun powder. And then we flash to a scene with Cressman using his tiny paintbrush to excavate an artifact. He was a man before his time
@laurieedeburn24498 күн бұрын
Love his attitude and results
@ByronCleary-ok6sg9 ай бұрын
amazing information
@janinemcmahon218 Жыл бұрын
Back then. A female archaeologist lost her ability to dig because she found bones much older. They’re saying 30,000 years or more. When you date the Olmec heads, you’re dating them from the last time they were cleaned, maintained, by that civilization. History is still being written.
@J.DeLaPoer Жыл бұрын
Archeology isn't my field, just a passive interest, but as someone who spent several years in academia myself there's nothing harder than broaching new theories or introducing new data. _God forbid_ you contradict anything established or against any major figure in your field -- no matter how rock solid your data/conclusions are. You will be ridiculed, criticized to death, dismissed and even actively opposed if you threaten the established theories (ego) of the gatekeepers or alter anything that's considered mainstream.
@DanishGSM Жыл бұрын
Spot on my friend
@jclar721010 ай бұрын
National Geographic and it's bureaucracy and racist views only wants to believe that European prehistoric is older the Americas
@garysimon372510 ай бұрын
Virginia Steen-McIntyre…
@janinemcmahon21810 ай бұрын
@@garysimon3725thanks
@jackprier7727 Жыл бұрын
Several documentaries on KZbin (especially PBS Nova) about "White Sands Footprints" are mind-bending. I fished the oceans for years--of course people went along the coast and went ashore where ice-free. Food galore and water- Some died, some lived-
@DonnaCsuti-ji2dd8 ай бұрын
Why lined out sounds quite true and logical
@conniepritchardreinhardt99787 ай бұрын
Thank you for this. I enjoy it. I love history.
@BkB58708 ай бұрын
That date of 14,600 is interesting. They now date a solar event in tree rings to that exact time period. I read it was 10 times stronger than the Carrington event. Good reason to be living in a Cave.
@ironmanklm4578 Жыл бұрын
I have to applaud KZbin for showing a bit of comedy automatically after watching some truthful content
@wegapaul3616 Жыл бұрын
Simply fantastic mate. Tada
@zipperpillow9 ай бұрын
Bucking the status quo is always a trial. Fighting against ignorance is never-ending.
@Creekstain8 ай бұрын
Fantastic info!
@andrewmantle76279 ай бұрын
Oh, by the way, this was a great presentation.
@billjenkins5693 Жыл бұрын
Thank you
@lisizecha9759 Жыл бұрын
@44:50 The U.S., with their tendency to over-sell pretty much everything, have in their possesion the oldest, most intimate treasure of human history in little museum in Oregon and let this delightful young man tell us about it. Wonderful
@johnjohnston6306Ай бұрын
Very nice. Thank you.
7 ай бұрын
Married to Margaret Meade “Maggie.” You got my attention!
@ChingFong58 Жыл бұрын
At 21:57 you mention a pictograph that you say is in Oregon. " Tsagalall, ( She Who Watches ) is actually in Washington.
@brandyjean7015 Жыл бұрын
Being cantankerous, when you know you are right, works for me!
@stevecolley7833 Жыл бұрын
That was certainly eye opening! Ha.... why did you wait so long dave. One of the regrets I have is that I bought Missing 411 The UFO connection online... and did not get those extra interviews that the dvd has.
@chrissansone30129 ай бұрын
Cool story bro!
@J.DeLaPoer Жыл бұрын
Archeology isn't my field, but as someone who spent several years in academia myself, there's nothing harder than broaching new theories or introducing new data. _God forbid_ you contradict anything established or against any major figure in your field -- no matter how rock solid your data/conclusions are. You *will* be ridiculed, criticized to death, dismissed and even actively opposed if you threaten the established theories (ego) of anyone "famous" or alter anything that's considered mainstream. It's incredibly frustrating; and for all the bloviating and gatekeeping of most of academia on their supposed scientific rigour, I've become rather disillusioned... not to say enraged at the glacial advancement of knowledge due to idiotic egotism and willful resistance to change.
@charleshash4919 Жыл бұрын
Science progresses when those that have been most vigorously defending the standard dogma in a particular field of research retire or pass on.
@quixote5844 Жыл бұрын
See TS Kuhn, “The Structure of Scientific Revolution” for an understanding of why change comes so slowly.
@Shadoweknows76 Жыл бұрын
Yup
@SunraeSkatimunggr Жыл бұрын
One of my professors at Oregon State University worked under him. I find this interesting, being Native American myself, because we always knew we had been here much longer. My people say the originally live far to the south (during the ice age), the gradually move north to the Great Lakes, then south and east to the Carolinas, where they were when the white settlers started running them off.
@bjellison905 Жыл бұрын
What tribe? Around when do they say they ran into white men? Im in appalachia and alot of the native history here shows they encountered white man way before mainstream education shows.
@SunraeSkatimunggr Жыл бұрын
@@bjellison905 I am Cherokee and Delaware. I am sure there were Nordic people here in the USA (and Canada) long before the Spanish supposedly discovered us from the south. But, I was talking about long before any of that.
@studdruppo Жыл бұрын
Have you ever watched Joe Rogan's interview of Randall Carlson podcast #606? He talks about the great flood up in the Northwest. It wiped out the megafauna.
@bettyhouk8727 Жыл бұрын
@@bjellison905 of course some humans are always climbing mountains 🏔️ to see what’s on the other side ! Same with our FIRST NATIONS FOLKS ! My GREAT MOTHER was1/2 Choctaw according to my GREAT GRAND MOTHER HERSELF ! Very likely as in those days white women were not in abundance! So White men who were pioneers married the lovely “Indian “ Maids ! And that is the way with humans WE ARE ALL ONE PEOPLE ! Even if our parents are from different cultures! We just move around this planet 🌎🌍🌏 and change in order to be able to live in different areas and environments! Under the skin we are ALL THE SAME ! Even wars mix our ancestors! It’s the HORMONES FOLKS JUST HORMONES
@Dapper42211 ай бұрын
Sorry bud, the people here before clovis have different DNA than native Americans. Research your genealogy, you'll be surprised at where your DNA originated from.
@animerlon8 ай бұрын
The sax in this is just so haunting & totally sets the mood. I think this might be the song that made me fall in love with the instrument. Guitarists & pianists are a dime a dozen give me a sexy sax player anytime! 😆 I think, between 'Turn the Page' & Jackson Brown's 'Load Out/Stay', the experience of touring is so succinctly expressed we get a true taste & the deep feeling of what it's like. Such great songs. 👌🏼
@connorfullerton2626 Жыл бұрын
The land bridge of Beringia was from the Aleutian Islands north!A pittance of the bridge is shown in this doc.
@jamesrussell77606 ай бұрын
Born & raised in Oregon and went to Univ of O. Odd that I never heard of Dr. Luther Cressman before. Thank you for this great documentary. Another oddity: You can still find it written that the first Native Americans came south through the Ice-Free Corridor as if it was gospel, even though Cressman's evidence shows those ancestors came south before the Corridor opened. Then how did they come south, you may ask? Had to have been along the coast.
@jerry-xi4gi6 ай бұрын
notice how they call moccasins...sandals..🤔..but, that was a really good docco, had me from start to finish !!
@jslevenson101 Жыл бұрын
They found a carved baby doll in a coal seam in Iowa that was dated to a million years ago.
@TarquinTheTall9 ай бұрын
The Clovis points are so beautiful.
@grammasgardenofideas5081 Жыл бұрын
fascinating. ty
@Gio19vMarauding8 ай бұрын
There was a mainstream movie "As above so below )the movie dealt with a group that went into the catacomben in Paris France and expierienced" strange"phenonom time distortion,supposedly based on TS ?
@davidjackson70518 ай бұрын
So given more digging we may discover man is much older than what has been found perhaps Africa I would think what 20,000 To 30,000 years ago more discoveries are surely to be awaited So existing
@Realcjs Жыл бұрын
I love how scientists are blinded by their own biases.
@tonyjones69049 ай бұрын
I can't help but think and smile that if he was still alive today he would get a big kick out of slamming all these newer findings about how long back everything went down the people's throats that doubted him😊
@lisawall3386 Жыл бұрын
Shoes and hats. I can almost feel the past when I hold really old hats.
@getonlygotonly Жыл бұрын
when it comes right down to it it in the future it just might be found out that humans were in America much , much longer than any current expert might want to believe.
@jackprier7727 Жыл бұрын
Watch PBS Nova documentary on KZbin about "White Sands Footprints". Already doubled the poop-dates-
@MrChristianbowman82 Жыл бұрын
😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅
@junestanich7888 Жыл бұрын
Dates are getting pushed back fast now, 16k years at this point
@hellloca4462 Жыл бұрын
The Chief! 👌💗
@biffteutsch3402 Жыл бұрын
Rail against the establishment and its lies at every walk of life!!!! Question EVERYTHING!!!!!
@dwightswears89665 ай бұрын
The tore a building downtown portland on fourth and burnside down And on the news, they said they had found some ancient artifacts underneath it where it stood.And then they built a big wall so you couldn't see in and then you never heard of it again. The newspaper said it predated the indigenous people.. And then it just went away
@karenabrams89863 ай бұрын
The men of academia are a rough crowd. Luther was a warrior. 👍
@TerriAnnNiemeier-dy3no9 ай бұрын
Watching your video will comment later. First People, Cavemen
@idealist4life Жыл бұрын
He was the first....other than all the Native American tribes who had many stories going back about the history long before them.
@songofseikilos8659 Жыл бұрын
absolutley
@aaronbaca9 ай бұрын
Okay now I believe you.
@bokane1963 Жыл бұрын
"How's your job studying coprolites?" "Same old shit"
@songofseikilos8659 Жыл бұрын
BAWAAAA HA HA HA 🤣
@songofseikilos8659 Жыл бұрын
its a shitty job but someone's gotta do it!🤣🤣🤣
@nospoon47998 ай бұрын
15000 yr old turd left the chat.
@alfreddaniels38177 ай бұрын
Makes me wonder if there is a psychology department at Oregon university
@rebeccayork8577 Жыл бұрын
Beyond the ice wall outside of Antarctica. There are old maps. Extra lands.
@southernwonder7024 Жыл бұрын
☺️ this is truly amazing stuff. Imagine that your one lasting legacy would be a turd.☺️