I look forward to when we simply DNA every child upon birth. The Mega Stats will be well worth extensive mining in order to pin down origins and likely generational auras in the data.
We already know that movement existed. After all the waters involved are no move difficult than the Mediterranean with ample large islands along the way that naturally allow mostly short hops. The largest span which is the Gulf of Mexico can even be skirted if deemed too late in the season.
As always defeated communities did take sail to escape their enemies and head out for fertile under populated areas elsewhere known by traders.
Add in the mining in Georgia and you even have a natural magnet that surely brought everyone sooner or later....
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Why would there be Peruvian DNA in Towns County, Georgia?
https://peopleofonefire.com/why-would-there-be-peruvian-dna-in-towns-county-georgia.html
A realtor in Hiawassee, GA,
who I befriended while living for a year in nearby Union County,
called me last night with that question. She is partially descended
from the Town County Indians, who lived along Hightower Creek in the
eastern part of the county. She was aware that outsiders called her
people “Cherokees,” but in their family tradition, knew that their
heritage was different and much older . . . but they could not figure
out who they really were. She said that they also could not figure out
why they were not forced to go on the Trail of Tears. Until after
World War II there were several families in the county, who were full
bloods or at least looked full blooded Native American. There still
might be some full bloods living in remote mountain coves.
To answer her question
without qualifications one would have to own a time machine. However,
it is possible to interpolate the observations of Georgia archaeologists
with what the People of One Fire knows about the ethnological history
of the Lower Southeast to come up with some fairly reasonable theories.
During 2011, before I stumbled upon the
Track Rock Terrace Complex, I talked with some young men and women at
the KFC restaurant in Murphy, NC . They were card-carrying Cherokees,
living just across the state line from Georgia, who looked just like
Itsate Creeks and in fact, call themselves the Tamatly or Tomatly
Cherokees. They were shocked when I told them that Tama-tli was a
Chontal Maya word, which means “Trade – Place of.” It combines the
Totonac word for trade with the Nahuatl (Mexica) word for “place of.”
Most also looked at me like I was some crazy outlander. However, sure
enough, in late 2012 several Tamatly Cherokees sent me emails that
their DNA tests had showed them to be part Maya. There is a long low
mound in the community of Tamatla, NC northeast of Murphy, which
apparently marks their mother town.
Maya DNA does not show up in Qualla
Cherokee DNA tests. Qualla Cherokees typically have more Middle
Eastern, North African and Iberian DNA than Asiatic DNA.
We will answer the second question first.
How did the Towns County Indians avoid the Trail of Tears?
Part of the answer comes from
geographical place names in the area. “Hightower” is the Anglicization
of Etalwa, the Muskogee-Creek word for a principal town. This lady’s
ancestors considered themselves to be Creek Indians. Downstream a bit
was a town named Itsa-yi, which in Cherokee means “Itza Maya – Place
of.” Between Itsayi and Etalwa was an ancient town named Quanasee in
Cherokee, which would be Konasi in Creek. The ruins of a large mound
builder town is located south of where the Cherokee village of Quanasee
is situated.
Konasi means Konas – descendants of.
Konas was a important city and province in Peru before the rise of the
Moche Empire around 100 AD. The Konibo People were driven eastward
from Konas. Apparently, some also migrated northward until they reached
what is now Georgia.
The young people in the Murphy KFC
restaurant told me that their ancestors had hid out in the remote parts
of the Georgia Mountains to the east of the boundary of the Cherokee
Nation. In fact, several thought that they were actually from Georgia.
Whatever the case, their ancestors had slipped into North Carolina
several years after the Trail of Tears because there were very few
whites in western North Carolina then and they didn’t bother the
Indians.
Towns County is immediately north of
the Nacoochee Valley. In an earlier POOF article, we discussed how the
handful of Native Americans in the Nacoochee Valley sold their land to a
real estate speculator from Burke County, NC in 1821 without seeking
the approval of the Cherokee Tribal Council then moved to the Creek
Nation in Alabama.
Like the Nacoochee Valley, Towns
County in the 1800s was on the extreme eastern edge of the Cherokee
Nation. As far as ethnic Cherokees from Tennessee, but now living in
northwest Georgia, were concerned, these people on the eastern edge of
their territory didn’t exist. They certainly had no role in tribal
government.
The Town County Indians considered
themselves to be Creeks and therefore felt no cultural obligation to
accompany Cherokees on the Trail of Tears. The Upper Creeks, living in
present day Union and Fannin Counties, Georgia had that same attitude.
They hid in the Coosa and Cohutta Mountains until the soldiers were
gone.
So, it is likely that being virtually
invisible, the Towns County Indians were able to take refuge in the
rugged mountains to the east . . . outside the boundaries of the
Cherokee Nation . . . and remain hidden from soldiers patrolling within
its boundaries. That strategy didn’t work for some refugees though.
The famous Cherokee hero, Tsali, lived in Rabun County, GA among
whites. Nevertheless, soldiers came to arrest and deport him. Legally,
he was a citizen of Georgia and the soldiers were wrong in evicting his
family.
The Peruvian Connection
Swift Creek style pottery was being
made by the Conibo People of Peru long before it appeared in present day
Georgia. It seems to have originated with the Polynesian-style boards
used to apply tattoos being slapped against damp clay pottery. The
earliest known Swift Creek pottery appeared at the southern tip of
proto-Creek cultural territory around 100 AD at the Mandeville Site.
One of my mentors, Archaeologist Arthur Kelly, found that at first, it
representing a minuscule percentage of the pottery made at Mandeville
then the percentages steadily increased to be the predominant style
produced. It also began appearing at other proto-Creek towns in
Georgia. This suggests that the Panoans arrived from Peru in small
groups then the immigration swelled as the Moche city states began
ruthless military campaigns of conquests against the Panoan peoples of
Peru.
Around 539 AD, a catastrophic tsunami,
caused by an asteroid or comet hitting the ocean wiped out the Native
American peoples on the Georgia and Florida coasts then spread water far
inland. All of the Swift Creek villages in southeast Georgia below the
Fall Line were instantaneously abandoned. Archaeologists have found
that Swift Creek style pottery began appearing at increasingly northern
latitudes until some was also being made in present day western North
Carolina. Swift Creek pottery was being made in Towns and Union
Counties long after it disappeared from the remainder of Lower
Southeast. Thus, it appears that the hybrid Panoan-Muskogean peoples
arrived in Towns County around 540 AD.
A second wave of Peruvian style pottery
arrived in Georgia around 600 AD. It is called Napier Style pottery
and is identical to the art of two other Panoan peoples of Peru . . .
the Shipibo and Chiska. Of course, the Chiska were a fierce tribe of
northeastern Tennessee when Spanish explorers Hernando de Soto and Juan
Pardo explored the Southeast’s interior. The original name of the
Holston River in NE Tennessee was Shipi-sipi, which means “Shipibo
River.”
The original province of the Napier
pottery makers was located in a territory that stretched from the edge
of the Blue Ridge Mountains in Georgia down to the Macon Area. The
making of Napier pottery ceased around 800 AD with the arrival of
Woodstock Culture peoples. The appearance of the Woodstock Culture
coincides exactly with the eruption of a massive volcano, El Chichon,
in Chiapas. The Itza capital of Palenque was incinerated by the falling
ashes from this eruption.
The Natives of Union and Towns County
ceased making Swift Creek pottery around 1000 AD. The date 1000 AD is
highly significant. About that time Mayapan conquered Chichen Itza.
Until that time, the suburbs of Chichen Itza, where the commoners lived,
was filled with an unusual style of corner door house. After 1000 AD,
these corner door houses began appearing in large numbers at such
locations as the Ocmulgee River near Macon, GA, Etowah Mounds near
Cartersville, GA, the Nacoochee Valley of Northeast Georgia and slightly
later the Upper Hiwassee River in Towns County, GA, Clay County, NC and
Cherokee County, NC. Right now, the earliest radiocarbon date for an
agricultural terrace at Track Rock Gap is 1018 AD.
Apparently, the Itza immigrants either
became the elite along the Upper Hiwassee River or else they and the
Konasi People lived in separate villages. The latter theory would
explain why even in the 1700s, there were villages in Rabun, Towns,
Union, and Fannin Counties in Georgia and villages in Clay, Cherokee and
Graham Counties, North Carolina representing several ethnic groups . . .
most of them being branches of the Creek Indians. Much archaeological
work needs to be done along the Upper Hiwassee River before these
theories can become facts.
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