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  • Broschiertes Buch

The creation and migration stories of the Native American and indigenous peoples that populate North and South America are broad-based stories of many places throughout the world. There were many indigenous people who entered North America from their emergent places in China via the Bering land bridge, those who came from the Scandinavian countries, some from the Pacific island of Mu, and those that entered from the lost continent of Atlantis. DNA samples indicate that some of these people are related by blood to the Asian continent, some that have the blond hair and blue eyes of Scandinavian…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The creation and migration stories of the Native American and indigenous peoples that populate North and South America are broad-based stories of many places throughout the world. There were many indigenous people who entered North America from their emergent places in China via the Bering land bridge, those who came from the Scandinavian countries, some from the Pacific island of Mu, and those that entered from the lost continent of Atlantis. DNA samples indicate that some of these people are related by blood to the Asian continent, some that have the blond hair and blue eyes of Scandinavian people, with others having DNA that ties them to the Mediterranean countries of Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel and Portugal, whose origins are from Atlantis. All of these are interesting stories, as, according to the legends and myths of the Cherokee, Iroquois, Sioux, and others. When the ice sheets melted in the Pacific area, the island of Mu was covered by water forcing the Aztec people to flee eastward by boats. At the same time, the Atlantic Ocean rose and covered Atlantis. The people were forced to leave, some going east and some going west. Thus, we have people in Canada called First Nations, the many red-skinned people of the United States areas populating North and South America, but not originating from here. The Great Lakes areas have the Chippewa, Menominee, Ojibwa, Oneida, Potawatomi, and other tribes living there. What brought them to where they live now? These legends and myths tell their stories from their own storytellers. That is why this book was written after When the Spirits Move, which told the story of the Hopi, Acoma, Pima, Papago, and Zuni, and others who profess to be Native Americans. Please enjoy reading the book as much as I enjoyed writing it.
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