De Quiénes Somos — Episode 2 Show Notes
Before Mexico Had a Name: The First People and the Ancient World They Entered
Long before Mexico existed. Before borders, before empires, before the identities we know today. Human beings entered and adapted to this land.
This episode explores the earliest migrations into the Americas, the archaeological evidence of early human presence in Mexico, and the gradual transformation from nomadic lifeways to permanent settlement. At the center of this transformation was one of the most important human innovations in history: maize.
These early peoples were not primitive. They were adaptive, observant, and resilient. Their survival and innovation laid the foundations for the civilizations that would later emerge across Mesoamerica—and ultimately, the identity of Mexico itself.
This is where the story begins.
Topics Covered in This Episode
• Ice Age conditions and the world of 20,000 years ago
• The Bering Land Bridge (Beringia) and human migration into the Americas
• Coastal migration theory and alternative migration routes
• Archaeological evidence of early humans in Mexico
• Hunter-gatherer lifeways and adaptation to diverse environments
• The domestication of maize from teosinte
• How agriculture enabled permanent settlement and cultural transformation
Key Locations Mentioned
• Beringia (land bridge between Siberia and Alaska)
• Pacific coastal migration corridor
• Tlapacoya archaeological site (Central Mexico)
• Basin of Mexico
• Balsas River Valley (origin region of maize domestication)
Historical Timeline Referenced
• ~20,000 years ago — Humans present in Beringia
• ~16,000 years ago — Humans spread into the Americas
• ~15,000 years ago — Humans reach South America
• ~9,000–7,000 years ago — Early maize domestication begins in southern Mexico
• ~5,000 years ago — Increasing transition toward sedentary settlements
Primary Sources and Recommended Reading
Migration into the Americas:
• Meltzer, David J. — First Peoples in a New World: Colonizing Ice Age America
• Mann, Charles C. — 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus
• Waters, Michael R. & Stafford, Thomas W. (2007) — “Redefining the Age of Clovis,” Science
Archaeology of Early Mexico:
• Evans, Susan Toby — Ancient Mexico and Central America: Archaeology and Culture History
• The Oxford Handbook of North American Archaeology
Maize Domestication:
• Blake, Michael — Maize for the Gods: Unearthing the 9,000-Year History of Corn
• Piperno, Dolores R. et al. (2009) — Early maize domestication evidence research
• Smith, Bruce D. — Agricultural origins research in the Americas
Research Institutions and Archaeological Resources
• Smithsonian Institution
• Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (INAH)
• American Museum of Natural History
• National Geographic Society
These institutions provide ongoing research into early human migration, Mesoamerican archaeology, and agricultural origins.
Why This Episode Matters
The civilizations that would later emerge in Mexico did not appear suddenly.
They were the result of thousands of years of human adaptation, experimentation, and survival.
Every city, every culture, every identity that exists today traces back to these first movements across an ancient and unfamiliar world.
Their story is not separate from ours.
It is the beginning of it.
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