We’ve Been Missing a HUGE Part of the Native Americans’ History

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  • čas přidán 19. 06. 2024
  • We’ve been missing a HUGE part of the Native Americans’ history. In this video, Dr. Nathaniel Jeanson offers seven suggestions for Native Americans to be able to gain more information on their remarkable history.
    00:00 Introduction
    07:35 The best path forward for DNA testing
    14:45 DNA testing can be done semi-privately
    17:16 Y chromosome testing has validated indigenous histories
    26:18 Y chromosome testing can fill in gaps
    31:19 Inter-tribal collaboration is crucial
    34:42 Recommendation
    37:35 Sooner than later?
    38:28 Conclusion
    To learn more about the human race, check out the Traced book here: AnswersInGenesis.org/store/pr...
    Lost History of North America playlist:
    • We Finally Discovered ...
    Red Record, for e-library check-out:
    archive.org/details/redrecord...
    Late 1800s era Red Record for free download:
    archive.org/details/lenptheir...
    Traced playlist:
    • Traced: DNA's Big Surp...
    New History of the Human Race playlist:
    • The New History of the...
    ========
    Answers in Genesis is an apologetics (Christianity-defending) ministry dedicated to enabling Christians to defend their faith and proclaim the good news of Jesus Christ effectively.
    On our CZcams channel, you’ll find answers to your most pressing questions about key issues like creation, evolution, science, the age of the earth, and social issues. We desire to train believers to develop a worldview based on the Bible and expose the bankruptcy of evolutionary ideas and their implications.
    You’ll hear from top teachers such as Ken Ham, Bryan Osborne, Dr. Georgia Purdom, Dr. Nathaniel Jeanson, Tim Chaffey, Bodie Hodge, Dr. Gabriela Haynes, Dr. Terry Mortenson, and more.
    Please help us continue to share the gospel around the world: AnswersinGenesis.org/give

Komentáře • 585

  • @bettertvreceptionwithfoilf7100
    @bettertvreceptionwithfoilf7100 Před 4 měsíci +57

    There is an entire lost kingdom right under our feet.

    • @buzzardist1659
      @buzzardist1659 Před 4 měsíci +8

      Many dozens and hundreds of lost kingdoms, really.

    • @tkstats2245
      @tkstats2245 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Yeah... the main one being the Hopewell

    • @lisabek72
      @lisabek72 Před 4 měsíci

      Yes

    • @petergeramin7195
      @petergeramin7195 Před měsícem

      ​@@tkstats2245what do you mean

    • @tkstats2245
      @tkstats2245 Před měsícem

      @@petergeramin7195 google the Hopewell... enjoy

  • @c.wilke7649
    @c.wilke7649 Před 4 měsíci +25

    AMEN Brother!!! I have cared about the Native American's for a very long time! thank uou

  • @granthornin3836
    @granthornin3836 Před 4 měsíci +45

    All human history is history and that matters to everyone.

    • @Pepsiguy
      @Pepsiguy Před měsícem +1

      We were told about them they just hid the cannibalism and human sacrifices.
      If they would’ve taught us about the savagery of the Comanche Indians, we probably would’ve thrown up right in class.

    • @Pepsiguy
      @Pepsiguy Před měsícem

      50-60 million inhabitants pre-Columbus. lol

    • @granthornin3836
      @granthornin3836 Před měsícem

      @Pepsiguy - Are you saying there were or weren't that many people? What's your basis?

    • @PatReid1775
      @PatReid1775 Před 14 dny

      ​@Pepsiguy you mean in North and South America

  • @guylelanglois6642
    @guylelanglois6642 Před 4 měsíci +44

    You are an inspiration to us all for all your hard work. You couldn't be with a better group of supporters than the answers in genesis team. Thank you, sir, for sharing with us.

    • @yosef6664
      @yosef6664 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Speak for yourself.

    • @MMA10mm
      @MMA10mm Před 2 měsíci

      @guylelanglois6642 - I could not agree more. Dr. Jeanson’s work is historically fascinating as well as scientifically compelling. This work has the potential of clarifying and correcting the history of the world. His current focus on Native Americans is equally exciting!

  • @shama9279
    @shama9279 Před 4 měsíci +52

    Thank you. I am choctaw from oklahoma. Always wondered.
    Sharing to my tribe.

    • @RealHooksy
      @RealHooksy Před 4 měsíci

      Please don’t take this man’s information as correct.
      It isn’t.
      It’s complete garbage and a misrepresentation of the truth.
      Be proud of your indigenous heritage and get your history from scientists who aren’t trying to push their religious agenda.

    • @hippielady123
      @hippielady123 Před 4 měsíci

      Are you related to any Raneys or Duggins?

    • @Posie1970
      @Posie1970 Před 4 měsíci

      My family on Father's side is Choctaw from Hugo. I have an interest in joining the tribe but it's difficult as I'm getting older. And I live far away.

    • @SmashinAdams
      @SmashinAdams Před 2 měsíci

      A Chahta sapia.

    • @Julie-wb9rl
      @Julie-wb9rl Před měsícem

      My daughter is Choctaw through the line of Hulsey

  • @Janer-52
    @Janer-52 Před 4 měsíci +17

    I read his book Traced when it first came out. Fascinating and makes a lot of sense.

    • @RealHooksy
      @RealHooksy Před 4 měsíci

      It’s all rubbish
      You wasted your money.
      Sorry to disappoint you.

    • @Rom3_29
      @Rom3_29 Před 4 měsíci +6

      @@RealHooksy- why? Did you read it ? Or are you just trolling and promoting your hatred ?

  • @devarionarias
    @devarionarias Před 3 měsíci +4

    Thank you for the update! I'm excited to see what comes next.

  • @kafkakaraoke
    @kafkakaraoke Před 3 měsíci +2

    Needed research; keep doing what you're doing. I'm still surprised by the channel you're on, but you're sticking to the facts and going about it the right way. So, kudos, I can't wait to follow more tribes, their history, migration, and origins.

  • @Dan-dl7tz
    @Dan-dl7tz Před 4 měsíci +12

    I am Native blood, from the Sioux tribe. Unfortunately I don’t know a lot about it. I will be contacting you very soon!

    • @LeonSemiPro
      @LeonSemiPro Před 4 měsíci +1

      Please contact a proper anthropological and historical association.

    • @RealHooksy
      @RealHooksy Před 4 měsíci +2

      Please don’t contact these people.
      They are not honest actors.

    • @Dan-dl7tz
      @Dan-dl7tz Před 4 měsíci +1

      Guys I appreciate the assistance but I have tried! Please elaborate and be more specific in your recommendations I will truly be grateful!

    • @LeonSemiPro
      @LeonSemiPro Před 4 měsíci +1

      @Dan-dl7tz I would contact a first nation organisation not a religious one.

    • @LeonSemiPro
      @LeonSemiPro Před 4 měsíci

      @Dan-dl7tz The sate libraries in traditional lands can often help with this type of research.

  • @zerosteel0123
    @zerosteel0123 Před 4 měsíci +11

    Such an interesting series! Please keep this going. I want to see how the story ends!

  • @danielshepherd7306
    @danielshepherd7306 Před 4 měsíci +9

    9:28 Instead of a clean 25/25/25/25 split from your grandparents, your parents may pass down 26/24, or similar, of DNA from your grandparents. There is 50/50 from each parent, but each parent may have passed on more from their mum or dad. So, the number of effective genetic (DNA) ancestors may decline even faster.

  • @sojourner1511
    @sojourner1511 Před 4 měsíci +10

    I was a short range missile crewman in the army, 80's. U.S. military named most of their helicopters after Native American Tribes. I had to study ours, planes and choppers, and the enemies. 16P/S Air Defense Artillery.

  • @klarag7059
    @klarag7059 Před 4 měsíci +16

    Meanwhile, as Australia Day comes to an end in the final corner of my homeland, I see a map of Australia over his right shoulder. 🥰🇦🇺

    • @DA-yd2ny
      @DA-yd2ny Před 4 měsíci

      Do you know how to make Australian Authorities aware of his work?

    • @RealHooksy
      @RealHooksy Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@DA-yd2nyI’d recommend calling the fraud squad

    • @klarag7059
      @klarag7059 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@DA-yd2ny not personally, no.

  • @indigenousamerican3148
    @indigenousamerican3148 Před 4 měsíci +29

    On Gedmatch i come out related to Kennewick man and Clovis boy. My fam is from Mexico City. According to Ancestry DNA testing i came out 94% Native American. My grandmother came out 100% Native American.

    • @hippielady123
      @hippielady123 Před 4 měsíci

      Wow, mine showed non and my dad is supposed to be half Indian

    • @SCPMstudios
      @SCPMstudios Před 4 měsíci +7

      Is your dad Elizabeth warren?

    • @PortmanRd
      @PortmanRd Před 4 měsíci

      Wow! No Middle Eastern Dna? 🤭

    • @indigenousamerican3148
      @indigenousamerican3148 Před 4 měsíci +3

      ​@SCPMstudios I highly doubt I'm related to her 😑. One thing is certain, I'm more Cherokee than her... and I'm not even from Cherokee territory 😂

    • @annemurphy9339
      @annemurphy9339 Před měsícem

      @@hippielady123. My mom is half Cherokee but it did show on her DNA results. I have heard that different tests will show different result percentages.

  • @isaiahwelch8066
    @isaiahwelch8066 Před 4 měsíci +4

    To begin with, I am an ethnically-mixed, genetically-diverse man born and bred in Michigan. My mother, to whom has done a lot of genealogical research, has uncovered a lot of previously unknown history, as well as confirmed genealogical rumor.
    My genealogy has me being 50% Irish, as my sperm donor's last name only comes from one place in the world: County Cork, Ireland. On my mother's side of my genealogy, my ancestry comes from Sweden, France, Germany, and the British Isles. Interestingly, my Continental genetic ties come from the German half of a province called Alsace Lorraine, which has been, up until after World War II, fought over by France and Germany. Today, Alsace Lorraine has been roughly divided in half between France and Germany.
    I also have some Native American in me, being related to Cherokee and Mohawk Indians that settled in Fulton County, Ohio. Today, what was once Wolfinger family land was given back to the Cherokee and Mohawk, and is today Secor Metropark located along US-20, west of Toledo, Ohio. The Cherokee part of my ancestry is that during the Trail of Tears, a number of my ancestors left the forced march to Oklahoma, and managed to escape through what is today Shawnee National Forest in southern Illinois. Had I known this when I lived there a decade ago, I would have done more to research possible places where my ancestors may have passed through on the way to Ohio.
    The furthest my mother has been able to confirm ancestry for me is a stone mason in Wales, who died in 925 AD.
    That all being said, a missing part of North American history relates to Hernando Cortés, the Spanish explorer who conquered the Aztecs.
    Some time between Cortés' conquest, and the prior voyage of Amerigo Vespucci, whom North and South America are named for, a smallpox plague wiped out over 90% of the existing Native American people on the continent. This number was extrapolated largely from the diaries of Vespucci, who wrote that when a ship he was on passed within ten or twelve miles of North America's coast, he could see smoke from fires up and down the coast. Historians then estimated that at the time of Vespucci's writings, 10 to 15 million Indians lived on the East Coast of the United States. That meant that there were probably at least 4 to 10 times as many Indians on the continent of North America prior to European exploration and conquest. It also means that tens of millions of Indians died in the smallpox plague unknowingly unleashed by Cortés, after his conquest of the Aztecs.
    Interestingly enough as well, it now appears that the Vikings actually not only made it to North America well before Columbus or Cortés, or even before Vespucci made his voyage, as there has been found in the Mississippi River a Viking longboat near Vicksburg, Mississippi. In that longboat were 30 Viking shortswords, a couple of Viking round shields, three Viking chainmail shirts, and roughly 10 pounds of food. It appears that those who crewed the longboat were ambushed by Native Americans on both sides of the river.
    This also may explain why there are many places in North America that match architecture and building methods in Ireland, such as burial mounds that are well-known Anglo-Saxon burial tombs.
    These are all things that were previously unknown, because in my opinion, they would have disrupted the accepted narrative in American society prior to the establishment of Fort St. Augustine, Florida, in 1565.

  • @wandawiebe1581
    @wandawiebe1581 Před 4 měsíci +18

    You mentioned the North Walkers were probably called walkers because they didn't have horses. Consider that even the wagon trains that crossed the USA usually had many people walking and went at a walking pace even though they had horses. I say this because I recently came across info (movie, websites, CZcamss) about Frank Kuntz and Nakota horses, which are those that descended from Sitting Bull's horses, and somewhere in all that I came across a reference that most Nakota horses are not considered to be of the "spanish type" but rather are of a more northern/plains type and a suggestion that these pre-existed the horses brought by the Spanish (though I couldn't quickly find that reference just now). That suggestion made me think of your comments about oral histories of the Native American peoples. Perhaps there were horses that came over with the Native American peoples that were previously dismissed by colonial historians. It would be interesting to learn if some of these oral histories you mention suggest they had horses prior to the Conquistadors.

    • @Ban_Helmers
      @Ban_Helmers Před 4 měsíci +5

      I wondered about that exact thing.

    • @AdrienneLohn
      @AdrienneLohn Před 2 měsíci +1

      Frances Drake's ship log describes large native communities and the herds of horses within the communities

  • @Rahel8811
    @Rahel8811 Před 4 měsíci +22

    This content is fascinating, I appreciate your work and shared with local indigenous news channel here in CZcams APTN in Canada 🇨🇦 God bless

  • @montegtaylor
    @montegtaylor Před 4 měsíci +2

    Great video. Always learning something.

  • @sherijobe9754
    @sherijobe9754 Před 4 měsíci +8

    I thank you for doing this as someone who has had a very hard time putting my families history on my native side. My grandmother left the rez and because of how they treated natives she didn't pass anything on. So thank again.

    • @hisnameisiam808
      @hisnameisiam808 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Same here. I pray we can find the truth, in Jesus'(Yeshua in Hebrew) name! Amen!

    • @hippielady123
      @hippielady123 Před 4 měsíci

      Mine is on my dad's side but ancestry says I have no Indian DNA

  • @sandicmxr
    @sandicmxr Před 4 měsíci +6

    I've been to Moundville.
    The dna discussion was really interesting and for me informative.

  • @stephenjeltema2323
    @stephenjeltema2323 Před 4 měsíci +16

    This is an awesome piece!

  • @dr.payneteaches2842
    @dr.payneteaches2842 Před 4 měsíci +13

    It is almost like we are all related … like our ancestors all came off the same boat … 😊

    • @rconger24
      @rconger24 Před měsícem +1

      Boat1 Book of Genesis 6
      Boat2 Book of 1 Nephi
      Boats3 Book of Ether

  • @leslieladyhawke
    @leslieladyhawke Před 4 měsíci +1

    Im excited for the new book!

  • @tinawelch3005
    @tinawelch3005 Před 4 měsíci +16

    i read this!! my heart broke as i heard the old man tell his life story. all nations have inflicted such incredible ruin.

  • @michaelrome3527
    @michaelrome3527 Před 4 měsíci +15

    It’s funny how I learned this concept in Sunday school growing up and finally science is now catching up.

    • @deborahharvey854
      @deborahharvey854 Před 4 měsíci +4

      Old cartoon
      Group of scientists climbing mountain following sign: 'meaning of life ahead'.
      Reach the top
      it is a mesa where a group of God's priests are eating a feast

    • @YouToobeism
      @YouToobeism Před 3 měsíci +1

      ​@@deborahharvey854 - The priests having just flow in aboard $65,000,000 private jets. Oh how the wicked prosper on this Earth.

    • @scottfoster3548
      @scottfoster3548 Před měsícem

      @@YouToobeism Purchased for 1$ from a broke rap person with 11 children from 12 different people who might be women who paid the unreasonable 65 million you quoted. SO DONT worry those with TRUE LOVE will beat the wicked every time.

  • @missryanswers
    @missryanswers Před 4 měsíci +6

    $$$: I think you should make an appointment with a LARGE Indian Casino that donates to A) proven non-profits B) not 1 individual person C) for funds THAT BENEFIT the American Indian to request perhaps that ALL the major such Casino's that represent various tribes, to fund together an independent private DNA lab.

  • @stanley1554
    @stanley1554 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I wish you the best of luck in your efforts to catalogue these things.

  • @deborahparr3451
    @deborahparr3451 Před 3 měsíci +19

    In 1973 my husband, two daughters and I visited relatives in England. Their boys, about 5 and 7, were shocked at meeting us. "You're not black," they exclaimed. They thought all Americans were black.

    • @Darrius996
      @Darrius996 Před 2 měsíci +7

      Imagine their surprise walking downtown London today

    • @annemurphy9339
      @annemurphy9339 Před měsícem

      @@Darrius996 😓

    • @ahh-2-ahh
      @ahh-2-ahh Před 21 dnem

      U mean "dark skinned"

    • @deborahparr3451
      @deborahparr3451 Před 19 dny

      ​@@ahh-2-ahh No, I don't mean dark-skinned. The young boys specifically said "black."

    • @almiller1371
      @almiller1371 Před 19 dny

      I used to think that all Brits were inbred to some degree..... oh wait.

  • @memyself8340
    @memyself8340 Před 4 měsíci +8

    An example about your comment about the math of our ancestors. During my genealogical research I found a common ancestor. At the end of the math, my mother, mother-in-law, and my father-in-law's father are all 6th cousins. Making me a 7th cousin to my wife and to my father-in-law. That also means that my children are 8th cousins to their mother. I am not native American. However, I love your research and am following it with enthusiasm.

    • @MistbornPrincess
      @MistbornPrincess Před 4 měsíci +1

      That's better than Queen Elizabeth II and her husband. They were 4th cousins.

  • @cristinakaminski8998
    @cristinakaminski8998 Před 16 dny +2

    I’m Canadian and a non-native . I am so interested in native history, not only Native Canadian, but North American native. It’s difficult to find their history through their experience as most of North American history is written by non- natives. I have subscribed to your channel as I find your research so interesting.

    • @ericcaledonai9700
      @ericcaledonai9700 Před 13 dny

      If you want to know specifics about Native History. Look at the Church then later operation Monarch by American and Canadian CIA and their collusion.
      Then see 1200 native children of the operation behind a Catholic Church in Canada. Buried in a mass grave.
      Native History has always been expended.
      They won’t even tell Americans their very Constitutional Rights were based on the Constitution of the Iroquois Confederation

  • @redwolf7227
    @redwolf7227 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Again outstanding work! God Bless!

  • @moxadurgin2508
    @moxadurgin2508 Před 19 dny

    Congratulations on attempting this awesome journey.Thank you

  • @obedyahujryahuah2454
    @obedyahujryahuah2454 Před 4 měsíci +5

    Please tie the food sources to the reason to migrate in certain directions.
    This is my 2nd of your videos on this topic (I’m 65 now & Choctaw), and am so amazed. I’m sending to all my relatives.
    My dad, his mom, her dad are my Choctaw blood line. German Snow White, red head, freckled mom created me.
    Lololol

  • @tartufo4870
    @tartufo4870 Před 4 měsíci +17

    I love this bc history is hidden chessboard that waits to be discover ✨️ 🥰

    • @ECLECTRIC_EDITS
      @ECLECTRIC_EDITS Před 4 měsíci +2

      ​@@Moist._Robot Its a chess jigsaw board with ping pong balls. 😊

    • @truthbebold4009
      @truthbebold4009 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@ECLECTRIC_EDITSI like Qwirkle 😌

  • @johnking6252
    @johnking6252 Před 3 měsíci +2

    The comparison between the development of the two different hemispheres on the planet is quite possibly the greatest story never told. IMO . Thanks for your presentation, there's so much more to be told , someday. ✌️🌎

  • @kenman200
    @kenman200 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Outstanding!
    Thank you.

  • @bonesb7686
    @bonesb7686 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Looking forward to the book.

  • @sorinankitt
    @sorinankitt Před 4 měsíci +9

    You may get a completely different response from the Indigenous in Canada. They call themselves the same as their American relatives, but they have a very different political agenda and outlook. You need to do research on their history as well but a little differently because although it is linked to the history in the US, it also has its own origins and facets.

    • @Calatriste54
      @Calatriste54 Před 4 měsíci

      Follow the Politics, follow the money..

  • @tinawelch3005
    @tinawelch3005 Před 4 měsíci

    also thank you for acknowledging much of what you present, because yours' is a work in progress, as "in my opinion".

  • @newcreationinchrist1423
    @newcreationinchrist1423 Před 4 měsíci +27

    Great video! Nice to see AIG on the forefront of such cutting edge scientific research! Hopefully the tribes will take ownership and help out more so we can all learn about the true history of America. God bless 🙂🙏✝️

    • @newcreationinchrist1423
      @newcreationinchrist1423 Před 4 měsíci +3

      ​@@Moist._Robot why don't you pick up the new book by Alfred music called 'Worship music song collection?' No? That's how interested I would be in reading any book from him. Lol 😅

    • @travisbicklepopsicle
      @travisbicklepopsicle Před 4 měsíci +2

      ​@@newcreationinchrist1423
      Biologist Herman Mayes has also written a rather in-depth critique of Jeanson's work. So have many other working scientists.
      See, he wrote a book, 'Traced', but he didn't publish his work in any of the scientific literature. He did not go through the proper scientific channels. He merely wrote a book, targeted to a specific audience. If anything in his book was actually groundbreaking, other geneticists from around the world would be all over it and he would be collaborating with them and doing more research and moving forward, but that will never happen.
      The book will soon be forgotten, as it contributes absolutely nothing to the science of genetics whatsoever. It seems 'sciencey' to people who don't know anything about genetics, and that's exactly why he wrote the book in the first place. To make people such as yourself and other young Earth creationists think that he actually knows what the heck he's talking about, and that the book is based on actual science.
      The book is pseudoscience. It really is as simple as that.

    • @newcreationinchrist1423
      @newcreationinchrist1423 Před 4 měsíci +2

      ​@@Moist._Robot prove it. How is he wrong?

    • @newcreationinchrist1423
      @newcreationinchrist1423 Před 4 měsíci +3

      ​@@Moist._Robot you haven't replied to my latest comment and I'd rather hear it from you. You said in the other thread that you are a geneticist. So, let's hear your take.

    • @newcreationinchrist1423
      @newcreationinchrist1423 Před 4 měsíci +3

      ​@@Moist._Robot try not quoting biologos (the last place I would go to for actual science) and state something yourself.

  • @snapula
    @snapula Před 4 měsíci +6

    The only people to blame are those who run the smithsonian institute

  • @gwapod9885
    @gwapod9885 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Not sure where you went to school. I remember studying Indian history in my school in Georgia in the 70s. Of course in public schools you never go to deep in many subjects other than math, science, and English. I feel I had a well rounded introduction to history and the library was where you go to get more information for what you are interested in.

  • @UnconventionalMetal
    @UnconventionalMetal Před 4 měsíci

    Love this whole series going back to 2020👌

  • @EONproductions
    @EONproductions Před 4 měsíci +2

    Northwestern (Chicago) has scholarships for those who want to do Native American Studies. The school is 90,000 a year, but if your parents make under 120,000 a year (or you emancipate and care for yourself) it drops to about 20,000 before scholarships.

  • @kellyjohns6612
    @kellyjohns6612 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Oh, one of my favorite topics these days. The people and the landscape of South Dakota are beautiful in my eyes.
    I find Mt Rushmore an eyesore and an insult to the Dakota people. The Americans knew that mountain is sacred to the people who belong to that land. So as a slap in the face, they carved it up.

    • @TJD6419
      @TJD6419 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Get real!!!! I love mt Rushmore it’s beautiful the whole state is great

  • @EONproductions
    @EONproductions Před 4 měsíci +1

    This video is so well done. I only wish you had better lighting in your office, such as a bigger ring light or even you standing next to a blank wall with natural light from a window.

  • @legoforestmen3234
    @legoforestmen3234 Před 4 měsíci +57

    Yes, we're all one race: the human race. We want American Indians to be saved the same way we want anyone of any race to know the love that Jesus Christ has for them. ❤✝️
    We should witness to them as we would anyone else, as we are to go into all the world and preach the Gospel. ✝️

    • @user-yr9lt7dz8k
      @user-yr9lt7dz8k Před 4 měsíci

      Book of Mormon
      The Book of Mormon is another witness of Jesus Christ and confirms the truths found in the Holy Bible. Far from undermining the Bible, the Book of Mormon supports its testimony of Jesus Christ. One passage says that the Book of Mormon “shall establish the truth” of the Bible “and shall make known to all kindreds, tongues, and people, that the Lamb of God is the Son of the Eternal Father, and the Savior of the world; and that all men must come unto him, or they cannot be saved.” In its more than 6,000 verses, the Book of Mormon refers to Jesus Christ almost 4,000 times and by 100 different names: “Jehovah,” “Immanuel,” “Holy Messiah,” “Lamb of God,” “Redeemer of Israel,” and so on. Both volumes of scripture are a compilation of teachings as recorded by ancient prophets. While the Bible details events in the Eastern Hemisphere, the Book of Mormon documents the lives of the inhabitants of the ancient Americas. The book was written by many ancient prophets by the spirit of prophecy and revelation. “Their words, written on gold plates, were quoted and abridged by a prophet-historian named Mormon. … “The crowning event recorded in the Book of Mormon is the personal ministry of the Lord Jesus Christ among the Nephites soon after His resurrection. It puts forth the doctrines of the gospel, outlines the plan of salvation, and tells men what they must do to gain peace in this life and eternal salvation in the life to come. … “In due course the plates were delivered to Joseph Smith, who translated them by the gift and power of God. The record is now published in many languages as a new and additional witness that Jesus Christ is the Son of the living God and that all who will come unto Him and obey the laws and ordinances of His gospel may be saved. … “We invite all men everywhere to read the Book of Mormon, to ponder in their hearts the message it contains, and then to ask God, the Eternal Father, in the name of Christ if the book is true. Those who pursue this course and ask in faith will gain a testimony of its truth and divinity by the power of the Holy Ghost. “Those who gain this divine witness from the Holy Spirit will also come to know by the same power that Jesus Christ is the Savior of the world, that Joseph Smith is His revelator and prophet in these last days, and that The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is the Lord’s kingdom once again established on the earth, preparatory to the Second Coming of the Messiah.”

    • @Z3nHolEminD
      @Z3nHolEminD Před 4 měsíci +4

      This “ save “ your touting is the definition of “ One World God “ ,,

    • @Nopety-Nope
      @Nopety-Nope Před 4 měsíci +6

      ​@@Z3nHolEminDSo they said all good things about people and hoped the best for people, and you gotta come in and be mad about God. I'm happy when my witch friends wishes me well, and I'm Christian. Who cares? We have freedom of religion for a reason. Besides, what do you hope to achieve when you attack a person for their faith?

    • @Z3nHolEminD
      @Z3nHolEminD Před 4 měsíci

      @@Nopety-Nope we have it yet we are still crushed globally by that idolized sect

    • @IamDiamondDraco
      @IamDiamondDraco Před 4 měsíci

      Why "save" what doesn't need saving except from infiltration? The Nations don't need it. These religions need to check themselves and their own behavior before coming to Indian Country. We still have direct connections with The Creator. We don't need intervention. What we do need is well intentioned religions to back off and stop destroying our cultures.

  • @JohnDelong-qm9iv
    @JohnDelong-qm9iv Před 4 měsíci +4

    The flood and the tower are popular motif on natives blankets etc

  • @JesusLord4ever
    @JesusLord4ever Před 4 měsíci +1

    So awesome! Thank you and praise God

  • @valerieprice1745
    @valerieprice1745 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Excellent points.

  • @cody0126a
    @cody0126a Před 4 měsíci +4

    There’s mounds here in Louisiana that date back to 7,000 years ago.

  • @richardclingempeel6111
    @richardclingempeel6111 Před 4 měsíci +4

    My ex wife is Blackfoot Indian, my current brother in law is Apache Indian.

  • @theanc316ientone
    @theanc316ientone Před 4 měsíci +3

    I never considered that the DNA testing could only go back several generations just based off percentages from both parents, 50%, grand parents 25% and so and so forth....
    Awesome info.

  • @dennisfaulkner5470
    @dennisfaulkner5470 Před 4 měsíci +20

    Suggest tribes come together and apply for a GRANT to build their own heritage lab.!!😊

    • @hippielady123
      @hippielady123 Před 4 měsíci +5

      Great idea, they do have casino money

    • @cathyheffner8002
      @cathyheffner8002 Před 4 měsíci +7

      Better if you can keep the government out of it.

    • @lisabek72
      @lisabek72 Před 4 měsíci

      That won't ever be allowed....someone might learn the truth

    • @lisabek72
      @lisabek72 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@cathyheffner8002exactly

    • @annemurphy9339
      @annemurphy9339 Před měsícem

      @@lisabek72. We know the tribes we call Native Americans migrated from Asia. There are just many holes of information that need to be filled in. I’m 1/4 Cherokee (full blooded maternal granddad) and it isn’t like the tribes have no basic awareness of their origins.

  • @alanburton6368
    @alanburton6368 Před 4 měsíci +6

    Hey Nathaniel
    Can you point me to the Creeks / Seminoles and the Timucuan Indians. Yes, I live in Florida and my children may have Navajo ancestors. Good research

  • @rjfpac
    @rjfpac Před 17 dny

    Thank You for your diligence and integrity in this subject
    Im fascinated Di the math before snd found over a million ancestors in about ten ? Generations

  • @cherylanon5791
    @cherylanon5791 Před 4 měsíci +7

    thank you so much for what you're doing, i've got zero native "american" ancestry but want to know as much as possible about the natives' history, since my own ancestor's history has been marred and blurred by faulty records keeping. It's a little sad that only the "natives" matter; when actually there's many tribes and/or countries, worldwide, which have been subject to genocide, slavery, and forced marriages.... my own ancestors were captured during WW2 and made slaves to Nazis, but since they're not Jewish, nobody cares. There's been so much terror, world-wide, it is not unique to any one nationality, and for sure--we are all one race, the HUMAN race. Let's hope we continue, but I have my doubts when considering 28% of young people these days consider themselves GLBTQ thus doubtful for reproduction, and if they manage to reproduce, what morals will they teach their children? Maranatha!

  • @owlfethurz8377
    @owlfethurz8377 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Interesting video, but please increase the audio volume for your videos. Otherwise, thanks, I appreciate all the hard work!

  • @John-gu4rw
    @John-gu4rw Před 20 dny +1

    I did crm archeology is SE Texas for about 18 years. So many native American groups, especially around here, have been extinct since just after European contact. It would be interesting to know if they would be visible in existing dna. Groups like the Karankawa, Akokisa and Bidai slowly diminished until they were so small in number that they had to join with larger groups that lived nearby. We know of them from historical records and archeology.

  • @lizpatton6979
    @lizpatton6979 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Excellent!

  • @kaydi123
    @kaydi123 Před 4 měsíci +2

    This video was and is beyond beautiful. I have always felt the same way, see a pow wow or contact someone, somewhere! As appearing Caucasian ( whatsoever that means) I'm a pure mut, known with lots of documented history. Yet growing up where I did, I was drawn to the energies and guided to do some self edu.! Its amazing what we dont know. Starting with ourselves. Our Cells! We are all one! Its just the two wolf story, which one shall you choose to feed"! The loving kind one, the win win strive, or the opposite?
    Time to choose. Survival mode is old, a new norm is indeed & agreed needed. Yet, a way, the Wei, that allows us to truly remember. We are, and some fear that. Cycles still come and go, just as the tides, but We are all now in a time, to recall, remember, teach and learn now, as much as we can. Start however, yet our own backyards say a lot. However, its heart felt as having the same feeling, thank you again for sharing this video,
    Im excited to see othere!!
    Blessings to all!

  • @BlueKnight0007.
    @BlueKnight0007. Před 2 měsíci +1

    The Vikings are said to have visited North America circa early 11th century AD and they are believed to have encountered those living here at the time. So some of the tribes I think must have travelled towards the east coast a bit quicker than others.

  • @theanc316ientone
    @theanc316ientone Před 4 měsíci +1

    Wow. Pray God keeps you safe man.

  • @carlrasmussen3267
    @carlrasmussen3267 Před 4 měsíci +3

    This is all fascinating

  • @susangriffis1588
    @susangriffis1588 Před 4 měsíci +1

    good work Sir!😊

  • @JeffBromley
    @JeffBromley Před 4 měsíci +3

    Thanks!

  • @wolf452010
    @wolf452010 Před 4 měsíci +5

    Cree man from Canada

  • @raykarena4595
    @raykarena4595 Před 18 dny +1

    Interesting, I agree the euro centric education I was exposed to when I was a youngster does have gaping holes...

  • @edwardbrown7571
    @edwardbrown7571 Před 4 měsíci +17

    I asked a DNA company, why when my grandparents had tin-type old pictures of their past kin, their ancestry claims did not show up in the returned DNA answers... I was told that after four generations back, whether you are an American Indian, of Jewish decent, or if there are Black mixes in your White bloodline, which is a real possibility in my state, but no longer shows up after the fourth generation DNA tests. And they didn't in my tests, although the names would indicate otherwise, the pictures from the past, writings from the past, as well as the often questionable verbal histories that are often wrong... During the Inquisitional abuses of Europe back in 1300s, often half of the family of Jews splits off and refuses to convert and moves off to Iceland. However, the half of the family that stays behind and submits to forced conversions, will in three generations lividly and angrily swear that they were always Catholcs and never ever had anything to do with 'Jesus murderers'... Even if you can prove otherwise... This happened too with the Indian Nations under the 1800s initiation indoctrinating 'Indian Schools'... But... Or... However... By having my DNA done, I have found a lot of ancestry information that I never knew by checking back in laborious research that I would never have known if I had never done the test... And the 'Official' records are not always truthful either. In census records of people I knew personally to be black when I was a child has been written up as 'White'...The other thing you said was that someone other than you might get the information written and documented before you, right, wrong, or whether it is simply an unwitting error, but filed before you, is a serious problem. Because whoever writes the first history is later hard to correct, especially if it collaborates those 'locked stepped' globalist government's rewrite of fake history, which may be completely wrong... But accepted in the collegiate glomming on glad-handing of misinformation... Collegiate blind loyalty is often more powerful than real evidence even in all the other sciences... Or... Maybe I'm just wrong...

    • @Dan-dl7tz
      @Dan-dl7tz Před 4 měsíci +3

      Salute! You’re not wrong one bit. History is unfortunately written by the victors.

    • @RealHooksy
      @RealHooksy Před 4 měsíci +1

      You’re just wrong, sorry.

    • @lisabek72
      @lisabek72 Před 4 měsíci

      You are not wrong

    • @RNW11B94B
      @RNW11B94B Před měsícem

      that’s sort of like tracing my heritage with or without DNA percentage when at one time black people were counted as “Indians” when it came to land allotments during tribal relocation to Oklahoma then not counted as Natives later when it came to government assistance

    • @edwardbrown7571
      @edwardbrown7571 Před měsícem

      @@RNW11B94B Yep...

  • @letstacobout
    @letstacobout Před 4 měsíci +4

    Great video

  • @nildarodriguez3974
    @nildarodriguez3974 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Interesting, and being someone who likes connecting the dots especially these past three years, I've come to the conclusion the gov is interested in dna and blood type. It happens O positive is common in native Americans (both continents), but the study focused more on Central and South America where less blending has occured. O positive is like gold and a life saver. Hmmm, could that be the reason for a wall-less nation? Would love a video from you on this topic. Also, my doctor said it is costly to get tested for blood type, unless you donate...

  • @nancienordwick4169
    @nancienordwick4169 Před 4 měsíci +1

    It's also fascinating, the genetic relationship between cental Asia and northern native Americans

  • @user-hs1ly3mj8h
    @user-hs1ly3mj8h Před 4 měsíci +2

    Thank you

  • @TickedOffPriest
    @TickedOffPriest Před 4 měsíci

    Things that I never thought to think about.

  • @LoveRizz-kf5rt
    @LoveRizz-kf5rt Před 4 měsíci +2

    Olmec was here in the US ..
    Pyramids are here
    Hebrew is the main language east coast down through Mexico jump to Hawaii

  • @TgWags69
    @TgWags69 Před 4 měsíci

    Nebula genomics uses block chain privacy encryption. Also does 30x and 100x whole genome testing with access to your raw data with your membership. You may want to talk with them as well to see if they would work with you.

  • @shireecox122
    @shireecox122 Před 4 měsíci

    I can’t find where to buy the Red Record. Can you direct me to where I can get it?

  • @user-xw5ei1gh8d
    @user-xw5ei1gh8d Před 4 měsíci +4

    I’m not a member of the LDS church but a different branch… but it’s in the Book of Mormon whether you accept it or not if you’re truly a Genesis believer.

  • @45newsutah
    @45newsutah Před 4 měsíci +8

    This land was a violent place for a time before Columbus. War Arrowheads are the majority found in Utah, especially here in Southern Utah. The Aztec empire was at war with the invaders from Alaska and Canada, along with the fremont civilization. The comanche story is that a great sickness caused their bodies to stiffen up, arms and legs would snap, along with the infected individuals neck. Entire villages would die in one day! The chief told the survivors to scatter in all directions. Something really catastrophic happened here. The survivors, the paiute, ute, Shoshone, comanche, and the Mexican Aztec, had experienced a cataclysmic event that has not been documented for a reason! This wasn't 536 AD, or events that are documented as near extinction global events. This is much darker, a pure evil, that modern science is afraid of happening again. There are "beings" inside and outside of "the earth." A great evil, modern humans can not, or will not understand.

    • @billdanosky
      @billdanosky Před měsícem +1

      Or it was tetanus.

    • @shirleyallen1418
      @shirleyallen1418 Před měsícem

      Is that anthrax? There's a disease that makes your head snap back ,& violent convusions break your bones. Sounds horrible. Black plague people saw men in black cloaks & masks that stood on hill & sent a fog over the city according to writings from that time

    • @shirleyallen1418
      @shirleyallen1418 Před měsícem

      Oh rt. Is that the disease that makes your head snap backwards & bones break?

    • @billdanosky
      @billdanosky Před měsícem

      @@shirleyallen1418 Yeah. Advanced cases are really ugly.

    • @littleneedlesfarm6387
      @littleneedlesfarm6387 Před měsícem +2

      ​@@billdanoskymy mom is a nurse and she took care of a man with Tetanus about 4 decades ago and she said it was awful! The man was completely stiff as a board, they had a mouth guard in his mouth so he wouldn't break his own teeth, and when they rotated him in the hospital bed, she said his body was completely hard and rigid from the constant muscular contraction. Miraculously, he survived! The whole hospital was sure he was gonna die. It was a terribly painful sickness.

  • @tbccamera1
    @tbccamera1 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Read Traced in 2022. My paternal grandfather was Cherokee

  • @peterruiz6117
    @peterruiz6117 Před 4 měsíci +1

    My dad was a mystery in so many ways. He came from the mountains of Mexico, with a steeped in behavior ,mentality, and severe damage...I wonder really where his peoplwe really came from. It all ties in where I grew up in California. The gangsters looked just like me. Parents just like mine, but a violence that dumfounds me. Too much to write. History that never really goes away.

  • @MagnificoMaltese
    @MagnificoMaltese Před 4 měsíci +1

    I have a small amount of Native American DNA from my great, great grandmother on my father’s side. But I do not anything about Native A,Eric an history. Thank you for this!

  • @jimpowell9205
    @jimpowell9205 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I’m curious about the theory of multiple immigrations, across the Bering Sea Bridge. Do you have clues to this possibility?

  • @rhondadavison6602
    @rhondadavison6602 Před 16 dny +1

    Thanks from Gulfport Mississippi.👋🏾

    • @cheriemartin3737
      @cheriemartin3737 Před 8 dny +1

      Hey, @rhondadavison6602, I'm your immediate neighbor to the West just a stone's throw away in Long Beach, Mississippi!

    • @rhondadavison6602
      @rhondadavison6602 Před 7 dny

      @@cheriemartin3737 Hi neighbor.👋🏾

  • @terryrobinson1416
    @terryrobinson1416 Před 4 měsíci +3

    It is horrible that that book the red record costs 200 dollars. Id buy it but cant afford that much.

  • @nineteeneightyfour3680
    @nineteeneightyfour3680 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Married a Cherokee 35 years ago and she doesn’t know anything about her family history nor does my brothers Cherokee wife. In Oklahoma where we are a good part of the people have some Indian blood.

    • @annemurphy9339
      @annemurphy9339 Před měsícem +1

      My mom’s from Oklahoma around the Bartlesville area and is half Cherokee.

  • @christtheonlyhope4578
    @christtheonlyhope4578 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Thanks AIG

  • @chamberlainmiller2991
    @chamberlainmiller2991 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Your voice sounds different, like clearer and more confident? Just something I noticed.

  • @garrettwastlund9298
    @garrettwastlund9298 Před 23 dny +1

    You should look into the book of Mormon. It tells the history of a people from 600 bc to 400 ad.

  • @BisquickTheNinja
    @BisquickTheNinja Před 3 měsíci +1

    I have huge respect for Native Americans. It is exciting that their family stories are being validated and their histories slowly being unearthed. That said, I would caution some who say, We've always been here." True or not, that kind of attitude will create division between EVERYONE... native or not. Also it to some extent discounts everyone else. It's doubtful that ANYONE has always been here. Think about it.

  • @efrenm8826
    @efrenm8826 Před 4 měsíci

    Hello Dr jeanson
    I finally got my dna test how can I get in contact with u?

  • @hippielady123
    @hippielady123 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I was told all life that I am Cherokee, my daddy was born in a TP in Oklahoma. So I tested my DNA through ancestry and there is no Indian in my DNA. Is it possible they are not testing for native American DNA?

    • @westho7314
      @westho7314 Před 3 měsíci

      "Cherokee' like the word "Indian", has become a generic term for those people of mixed , rumored, claimed to be in part indigenous heritages family history or mystery such as daddy or grandmother may gave told many of us about or hid the facts due to pride in, or discrimination and prejudice of a past identity for the times & people in question. Oklahoma became one huge reservation in past times, both a captivity prison & melting pot for both indigenous tribes & multi racial people who didn't fit the mold of entitlement in being pure white. in modern times many anglo people have claimed to be part "indian" or 'Cherokee' without a tribal connection hoping to receive federal benefits like free college, free land, & tax breaks, all the free stuff white people seem to feel entitled too.

  • @anatomicallymodernhuman5175
    @anatomicallymodernhuman5175 Před 3 měsíci

    Immigration from Central Asia 1-2ka ago helps make sense of the cultural changes during that era, as well as the fact that so many of those tribes have stories reminiscent of Genesis 1-9 in their oral histories. Of course, we know that there were people of some sort the Americas prior to that. I wonder whether the immigrants supplanted or intermarried? Or whether the flood marks a boundary between them?

  • @Becky_Davis
    @Becky_Davis Před 17 dny

    My grandmother told me all about my grandfather's mother. She was Blackfeet. Her name was Gracie Miller, born in Calhoun County Illinois. Her parents disowned her because she married a white man. All the kids must have been disowned then. Anyway, the granddaughter of my grandfather's youngest sister did a DNA test on her. It came back saying she had no Native American ancestry. How is that possible? I haven't had my Dad tested, because if my great grandmother's own daughter shows no heritage why would my Dad. My grandfather and one of his brother's that I've seen a photo of were definitely native American.
    What I've learned from other family members is she was definitely Native American as her parents were.
    Now, tentatively going back beyond Great Great Grandfather, I've traced them back to Europe. My Dad was able to verify family members were indeed family and then I heard from a guy (cousin), who was doing his tree. It turns out his grandfather or Great grandfather married Cora Miller who is one my of cousins and he was told she was Native American.
    The problem I keep coming back to is that I can find no Richard Miller or Elizabeth Johnson is any Indian Rolls.
    Now, in order for Blackfeet to be in the area, they would have been part of the Midwest band.
    My grandmother wrote journals every single day. After she passed, my Aunt Lois was supposed to have them and she said I could have them. She passed shortly after. I went through everything she had in the basement and no journals. I talked with her oldest daughter and she didn't know where else they might be. I will go back and look again. All I could find was her last journal and tons of photos from 1973 and up.
    My sister and are extremely frustrated with that Miller side of the family. Richard and Elizabeth are buried in the Bath IL cemetery as are many members of my family. In fact, almost everyone in that cemetery are related to me. 😊

  • @BethCurry-fc5zw
    @BethCurry-fc5zw Před měsícem +2

    2 Esdra 13:40"50 says Israel migrated to Arsereth (America)

  • @quadrasaurus-rex8809
    @quadrasaurus-rex8809 Před 4 měsíci +17

    The true history of the North Americas is also recorded in the occult history from the European Aristocracy. Rockefeller for example, built his summer home on Jekyll Island atop the human sacrifice altar of a tribe of tall white red headed natives. I’m not saying to go read a bunch of Manly P. Hall, but there are similarities to the way the natives recorded their history in story/allegory. It’s cool to see your genetics prove a lot of what I’ve speculated based on my knowledge of the Bible and the esoteric/occult. You may notice an increased interest in your work from Mormons, this is because they are a Masonic religion based off a mixing of occult principles and history.

    • @Kevin-ts7hf
      @Kevin-ts7hf Před 4 měsíci +2

      You’ll see interested LDS anywhere truth is revealed, bud.

    • @Kevin-ts7hf
      @Kevin-ts7hf Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@Onlyoneway. I used to agree with you my friend.

    • @RealHooksy
      @RealHooksy Před 4 měsíci +5

      I think you’ll find that any Mormon interest is based on financial gain and or keeping their obviously bogus religion alive.

    • @westho7314
      @westho7314 Před 3 měsíci

      Red headed people like albinos are rare but found in every major non mixed race on earth.

    • @annemurphy9339
      @annemurphy9339 Před měsícem +1

      @@Kevin-ts7hf. Not at all. Galatians 1:8-9 settles Mormonism as accursed.

  • @dirtykidtwospears
    @dirtykidtwospears Před 4 měsíci +4

    Thank you for trying to help still would like to know why Native Americans dont have a seat in the summit and they are a "Nation" why are they left out and really have no say at all what happens in the world today or ever sad really are they even a real "Nation"

    • @masada2828
      @masada2828 Před 4 měsíci +1

      No! They were tribal which warred against each other. I guess u need to be elected to be represented.
      The Australian indigenous call themselves a Nation (copy the Nth American indigenous), they were hunter & gatherers known as the closest tribes to Stone Age on earth with no history of their beginnings. They were tribal and fought amongst themselves. They can be white & still claim Aboriginality with no proof at all claiming all the benefits that white or Asian citizens cannot claim. A system only causing division & resentment.

  • @nancienordwick4169
    @nancienordwick4169 Před 4 měsíci +2

    It seems you haven't been to Montana, where native history education is legislated. Or the great American desert states where ancient civilization remnants are.

  • @smonline631
    @smonline631 Před 4 měsíci

    we in Soviet Union studied native american civilization along with Chinese and Indian one in school, hello from Kazakhstan , haplogroup C

  • @buzzardist1659
    @buzzardist1659 Před 4 měsíci +6

    Are you 25 percent of the DNA of each of your grandparents?
    On average, yes. You are definitely split 50-50 between your parents. However, which 50 percent of your mother's DNA came to you? Same for your father. As cells divide to form eggs and sperm, DNA strands split randomly. What your receive is a statistical spread. You could end up with DNA from mostly your grandfather on your mother's side, with comparatively little from your mother's mother. Or vice versa. Same for your father's parents. This variation is why one child will look more like one side of a family and why another will take after the other side of the family. After several generations, there could be a large portion of DNA from an individual great-great-great-great grandparent (perhaps as much as 7 or 8 percent) or virtually none at all (perhaps less than a tenth of a percent). It's almost never a perfect 25-25-25-25 split. These statistical variations of which DNA gets passed along make it even harder to track DNA profiles across generations when testing all of the DNA.
    This is also why some popular DNA family tree testing services are largely shams in their results. It's impossible to give meaningful percentages of an individual's heritage beyond a couple generations because the DNA becomes so scattered. Only the Y-chromosome in paternal lines and the mitochondrial DNA in maternal lines stay stable enough to track anything multi-generationally. DNA testing can definitely say that your father's father's father's father's father's father was of this one haplotype. Likewise, DNA can tell us about your mother's mother's mother's mother's mother's mother. Anyone else in that 7th generation back? We can't know genetically what or what percent you inherited from any one individual in that level of your family tree.

    • @DA-yd2ny
      @DA-yd2ny Před 4 měsíci

      Is it possible that there is a pattern repeating every 7th generation? Something like fractal.
      Or do these patterns change every 7th generation?
      Also, doesn’t the fact that intermarriages between races of indigenous people aren’t as common as between European races facilitate the research?

    • @buzzardist1659
      @buzzardist1659 Před 4 měsíci

      @@DA-yd2ny The 7th generation is not any magic number. It's merely an example far enough back that a general DNA test is useless. Is there repeating across generations? There is generally stability in the random mixing. Later generations don't gain new DNA that previous generations didn't pass to them. Does this form repeating patterns? What patterns could we expect to see?
      It's more like julienning 64 carrots. Chop them up as tiny as possible. Take half of the slices from one carrot and half the slices from another and put them in a bowl. Do this in 32 bowls, two unique carrots in every bowl. Mix each bowl thoroughly. Then take half the contents of one bowl and mix with half the contents of another bowl. Do this 16 times, two bowls combining into one. Mix, combine, mix, combine. Keep narrowing bowls until it's down to one. For original carrot #26, are there any pieces of that carrot in the final bowl? Maybe. Probably. Possibly quite a bit or possibly very little. Can we pick out any one piece from the final bowl and identify it as a piece of original carrot #26? No. This is especially impossible if we lost track of what the original 64 carrots were. If some other person chopped and mixed the first few bowls, and we only mixed the last bowl, which piece of carrot comes from which? We lack any means to solve this puzzle.
      Now, instead of 64 carrots, let's use about 10,000 carrots that we randomly select from a large pool of nearly a million carrots. Mix pairs in bowls and repeat the process of narrowing them down. Except this time, randomly, a few carrot pairs get used twice. Unless you label each carrot from the start and attach some marker that allows you to track each piece of that carrot as it moves through the generations of bowls, tracing the complete heritage of that final bowl is impossible. You only get to see the last three or four mixes and combinations of bowls. You're not even sure in the final bowl which specific pieces came from which parent bowl. Going back to that original approximately 10,000 carrots, how many pieces came from any one of those? No clue. For that matter, since we don't even know which the original 10,000 carrots were, will we have any good way to pick them out from the truckload of a million carrots? No. In our DNA, 22 and a half of our chromosomes are this way. DNA testing cannot tell us much of anything about who we came from, and shrinkingly less each successive generation back that we search.
      Y-chromosomes persist for dozens and even hundreds of generations because they pass unchanged from father to son with no intermixing from the mother. Other chromosomes undergo intense mixing in every generation. Outside of the Y-chromosome and mitochondrial DNA, it's virtually impossible to trace any genetic ancestry beyond about 3 or 4 generations. Was a great-great grandparent Native American, Gypsy, Jewish, or African? Unless that individual was your father's father's father's father or mother's mother's mother's mother's mother, it's virtually impossible to trace from a DNA test. DNA might give hints, but the unique markers of any one great-great grandparent are so scattered and jumbled that it's generally impossible to pick them out.
      Also, why assume that intermarriages between races didn't happen frequently among Native Americans? Were Native Americans one race? The evidence of migrations and language groupings say no. Many tribes were closely related. Others seem totally unrelated. There were distinct races. Related tribes often intermarried. Carrying away women as spoils of battle was common, too. Unrelated tribes sometimes intermarried, too. The default ought to be to assume that there was some intermarriage? How much? That's difficult to say. How much migration, war, trade, and slavery was there? The higher those factors were, the more that there was probably intermarriage.
      Intermarriages among Europeans are frequently less common in the past that we imagine today. The mixing of races in Europe since the latter half of the 20th century and in America since the 19th century is particular to our historical era. In my own family, I can trace my mother's ancestors, for example, to an extremely small geographic region in the Netherlands. From the late 1500s when we have reliable records up to the 1840s when they emigrated to America, every single person recorded in my mother's family tree was born, married, had children, and died within a tiny box on the map about 70 miles wide and 40 miles tall. There were no large movements of people in or out of the region. There were no intermarriages with outside peoples. Marrying someone from the next town over was common. Marrying someone from across the river was comparatively rare. Marrying someone outside of that tiny box on the map? There's zero evidence for it. Everyone in the family tree had lived in the region for as many generations as could be remembered and recorded. This kind of tight interaction among a small population is what forms the language, traditions, and genetic profile of a race. Race is simply another way of saying a mildly inbred subpopulation.
      Native Americans, to the extent that we have evidence of migrations by many groups, may have engaged in more intermarriages than many people in Europe did, at least at certain times. There were periods in Europe that saw a lot more movement of people, such as the era of the Roman Empire, the movements of the Goths and Vandals, invasions of Huns and Mongols, the expansion of the Vikings, etc. But, generally, European races formed out of long periods of relative stability where populations didn't move or intermarry all that much, as is true with races in every other part of the world.