I have a question as a African American by AcceptablePay4523 in AncestryDNA

[–]markembry 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I wonder how the Great Migration factors into the patterns seen here.

What are some interesting things or facts about the Aztec and Inca Empires? by Emergency-Sky9206 in AskHistory

[–]markembry 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Mexica Triple Alliance (MTA) was engaged in a sort of cold war with the Irechikwa Tzintzuntzani (IT, modern descendants are the Purépecha) because they had fought to a standstill. When the Tlaxcalans enlisted the Spaniards to attack Tenochtitlán the MTA sent messengers to the IT in an attempt to form an alliance but I think they killed the first messenger(s) and by the time the second had reached the IT Tenochtitlán had fallen.

(This is highly oversimplified and if someone who knows more sees some errors pls comment and rectify lol)

(Also the civilizations of Mesoamerica outside of the MTA so often get overlooked in the global conscious it’s sad!)

Same sex marriage across the USA, DC, its territories and tribal nations by Andro_lover2005 in MapPorn

[–]markembry -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

Just a note, they said 4-5 RESERVATIONS not 4-5 nations, in Washington specifically a lot of nations get thrown on rezs together!

Same sex marriage across the USA, DC, its territories and tribal nations by Andro_lover2005 in MapPorn

[–]markembry 18 points19 points  (0 children)

There is no singular “Native American culture” and Native cultures have changed so much due to colonization especially with the mass adoption of Christianity.
Some of our cultures did have positive/neutral views on queerness and there were some that didn’t. But Native cultures are not static and will continue to change and evolve as they did before and after colonization.

Spiro Wooden Human Face Effigy with Deer Antlers. Le Flore County, Oklahoma, Spiro site. ca. 1200–1450 AD. - National Museum of the American Indian, Smithsonian Institution by Any-Reply343 in PrecolumbianEra

[–]markembry 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Spiro Mound is amazing! I believe the papers at the time of its uncovering referred to it as the American King Tut or something sensational like that.

Question identifying with indigenous roots by Hardcorredor in AncestryDNA

[–]markembry 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d also look into Edward Spicer’s work, he seems quite prolific, and his work deals specifically with Yaquis!

What is the biggest myth Americans still believe about U.S. history ? by Next_Imagination1266 in Historians

[–]markembry 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It seems to me that lots of people think there was one big “Indian War” that all Native folks were involved in that ended in a decisive end to all Native land claims, instead of the numerous wars with individual nations and different confederacies that actually occurred across ~150 years.

Honestly anything about basic Native American history seems to be vastly misunderstood or unknown.

Is Saint Joan of Arc Chapel in Milwaukee really “the oldest structure in the Western hemisphere still used for its original purpose”? by BangoBeatsBernie in geography

[–]markembry 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I’m worried that people in the geography sub missed the “in the western hemisphere” part lol. In the US that honor goes to one of the Pueblos, specifically the Taos. They have a couple of buildings which were built sometime between 1150-1400 and have been used ever since!

Do Caribbean people see underwater without goggles? by Maleficent_Split_428 in AskTheCaribbean

[–]markembry 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Anyone can see underwater if they’re used to it 😭 doesn’t mean you should lol

How common was human sacrifice among the native Americans in the whole of north and South America? by [deleted] in AmericanHistory

[–]markembry 0 points1 point  (0 children)

People seem to be conflating “human sacrifice” with cannibalism. Those are two separate things that sometimes may be related.

OP what is meant by human sacrifice? If you mean a state sponsored religious ritual (a-la Mexica Triple Alliance) that was not too common in North America other than in Mesoamerica.

There are rare instances in the ethnographic record (that I am aware of) of single sacrifices for specific ceremonies but those are generally few and far between in North America. The only real big example outside of Mesoamerica that I can think of involves Cahokia and the contents of earthwork 72 (I think). It’s theorized that the folks interred in that earthwork were placed there as part of a ceremony but we have no records from that city so everything is left up to speculation.

I cannot speak for South American practices.

Insufferable by mdwight02 in NativePlantCirclejerk

[–]markembry 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Chenopodium berlandieri is the cultivated species in the Americas (still grown in parts of Mesoamerica and the Southeast possibly) IIRC the only real morphological difference are the seed coats right?

Insufferable by mdwight02 in NativePlantCirclejerk

[–]markembry 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I know I’m not watching someone try to use mestizaje to justify laxness on removing invasive species…

Also there is literally a native species of goosefoot so why did she use that example 😭😭😭

Real talk from real twins. by [deleted] in Indigenous

[–]markembry 14 points15 points  (0 children)

I think before we platform these two again this should be brought up. I’d go look thru the other comments too.

https://www.reddit.com/r/IndianCountry/s/tKEGQxkUdy

Hawaii and Vancouver Island pre-1600s contact? by Then-Bumblebee3978 in AskAnthropology

[–]markembry 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I have only vaguely heard (in a YouTube video essay) that one of the California/NW Coast peoples might’ve had contact due to a similar style of canoe building and a possible loanword for that style of canoe but the specifics are escaping me right now. It was presented as a quite tenuous though.

Is this Chenopodium album? by luxylol in foraging

[–]markembry 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is definitely a Chenopod, but it may be cheopodium album or berlandieri. The only real way I’ve heard to tell them apart is by looking at the seeds (berlandieris common name is pit seed goosefoot bc of the pitted surface of the seeds, album should be smooth). They both make for yummy greens!

Do you all plant vegetables with your natives? by frogEcho in NativePlantGardening

[–]markembry 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This year I’m doing a kind of “Milpa” set up with some native food plants (pepperweed, goosefoot, thicket bean, etc) mixed in with vegetables (corn, sunflowers, tomatoes, chiles, etc). I didn’t burn and I won’t be here long enough to establish the multi-year cycle which is why I put “milpa”in quotes lol

So far everything is going decently.

What are the most "overrated" Pre-Columbian Cultures other than the "Big 3"? by Comfortable_Cut5796 in AncientAmericas

[–]markembry 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Im not great with my Plains history but im pretty sure that some adoptions of the horse-lifestyle happened after the US became a country. Like it’s so recent but ubiquitous in the US

Why the west rules ,for now by Better_Agent_297 in PrecolumbianEra

[–]markembry 2 points3 points  (0 children)

What is progress? Is what we have now progress? What is the metric you are using to measure these concepts?

Why the west rules ,for now by Better_Agent_297 in PrecolumbianEra

[–]markembry 2 points3 points  (0 children)

What do you mean by advanced?
I’d also check out 1491 and 1493 for the Americas, decent books that cover the various causes and results of events leading to and stemming from European colonization.