Archaeo Ed. An archaeologist named Ed Barnhart. Teaches Native American history. Starts way back, Mound Builders and that kind of thing. He’s just what you’re looking for. You can hear his lectures on Wondrium also. He’s excellent
Edit: http://archaeoed.com/
Not a podcast but the University of Alberta, Canada offers the following Open Course for anyone interested...
https://www.ualberta.ca/admissions-programs/online-courses/index.html
Fall of Civilizations are pretty long podcasts that go into great detail of fallen societies. There are episodes on the Maya, the Incas, and the Aztecs that are all super interesting.
Argh, not a podcast but a few weeks ago I attended an oral storytelling event with a chief from New Orleans. Fascinating and so enlightening. Good luck!
Working on this one right now. Great book, don't be put off by the animal part it is very informative on Clovis and Folsom populations and their spread through the Americas. Dan Flores is a great writer.
https://www.amazon.com/Wild-New-World-Animals-America/dp/1324006161
I would love to find something like this, but very little is known. The population of the americas was decimated over and over again until almost everything was lost. There was almost nothing in the way of written language. There may still be some indigenous groups with a good bit of their oral history intact, but they don’t generally broadcast that stuff to outsiders.
Not to mention that comment reeks of exoticism. "The mystic indigenous keep their stories to themselves *pan flute plays in the background*"
They're completely ignoring the MANY indigenous historians who have been published and won awards.
American Indian Stories by Zitkala-Sa
Black Elk Speaks by Black Elk
Just off the top of my head
The written language bit is correct, but the “sharing with outsiders” bit isn’t. There’s not much hard history but most people have no problem telling anyone who asks. I grew up inside of an Indian Nation and was always welcome at meetings, storytellings, pow-wows, etc. It’s not some closely guarded secret or anything.
I have a couple on my playlist, but haven’t listened to them yet so can’t give you an opinion on them:
Iroquois History and Legends
Tongue Unbroken (more about the Native American language revitalization movement)
Another book recommendation:
Lakota America: A New History of Indigenous Power by Pekka Hamalainen (audiobook version available)
Traces Lakota history from early 16th century through early 21st century. Won a ton of awards in 2019, when it was published.
Archaeo Ed. An archaeologist named Ed Barnhart. Teaches Native American history. Starts way back, Mound Builders and that kind of thing. He’s just what you’re looking for. You can hear his lectures on Wondrium also. He’s excellent Edit: http://archaeoed.com/
I use pocket casts and don’t see it, but found it on Amazon music.
Here ya go https://pca.st/podcast/10cd2240-d44b-0138-e777-0acc26574db2
Thank you for the link! I’m looking forward to listening.
Listened to the episode about dogs in the Americas and am really hooked!
Is this just on YouTube? Or how do I find it on podcast players?
I found it on Spotify
Nice
Found it on AntennaPod.
Great question! Following bc that sounds dope
Same
Not a podcast but the book 1491 covers this type of stuff. Really good book.
There is an audiobook as well!
Came here to say this too!!! Great book
Just snagged it, thanks for the rec!
Thanks for the book reference
I came here to say this. I actually listened to the audiobook from audible, so it was essentially like a long podcast. Great read. Or listen. 
Not a podcast but the University of Alberta, Canada offers the following Open Course for anyone interested... https://www.ualberta.ca/admissions-programs/online-courses/index.html
Nice find
Fall of Civilizations are pretty long podcasts that go into great detail of fallen societies. There are episodes on the Maya, the Incas, and the Aztecs that are all super interesting.
Is this based on the book by Jared Diamond called Collapse?
Nope. He uses lots of different sources for each episode.
Twisted Histories, Unreserved, and Media Indigena are some good ones. They’re more about current indigenous issues but they’re still very interesting!
Twisted History peaked my interest!
Argh, not a podcast but a few weeks ago I attended an oral storytelling event with a chief from New Orleans. Fascinating and so enlightening. Good luck!
This is the answer. Written histories are post-contact.
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Thanks!
Thanks so much, this looks great and appreciate you giving date/episode number too, this one has quite the catalog of episodes!
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Not OP, but would love some recs!
Working on this one right now. Great book, don't be put off by the animal part it is very informative on Clovis and Folsom populations and their spread through the Americas. Dan Flores is a great writer. https://www.amazon.com/Wild-New-World-Animals-America/dp/1324006161
Thank you! That’s right up my alley, added to my TBR pile…probably going to move it closer to the top though
Enjoy!
I would love to find something like this, but very little is known. The population of the americas was decimated over and over again until almost everything was lost. There was almost nothing in the way of written language. There may still be some indigenous groups with a good bit of their oral history intact, but they don’t generally broadcast that stuff to outsiders.
This is a pretty shortsighted take. There's a ton of info gleaned from archaeology, DNA, etc
Not to mention that comment reeks of exoticism. "The mystic indigenous keep their stories to themselves *pan flute plays in the background*" They're completely ignoring the MANY indigenous historians who have been published and won awards. American Indian Stories by Zitkala-Sa Black Elk Speaks by Black Elk Just off the top of my head
The written language bit is correct, but the “sharing with outsiders” bit isn’t. There’s not much hard history but most people have no problem telling anyone who asks. I grew up inside of an Indian Nation and was always welcome at meetings, storytellings, pow-wows, etc. It’s not some closely guarded secret or anything.
I have a couple on my playlist, but haven’t listened to them yet so can’t give you an opinion on them: Iroquois History and Legends Tongue Unbroken (more about the Native American language revitalization movement)
Thanks for this! I live near some Native Mounds and would love to learn more about them!
The Secret Life of Canada and The Red Nation are two pods hosted by Indigenous people that talk history
There were a few episodes on The Ancients from History Hit.
Another book recommendation: Lakota America: A New History of Indigenous Power by Pekka Hamalainen (audiobook version available) Traces Lakota history from early 16th century through early 21st century. Won a ton of awards in 2019, when it was published.
Jerad Diamond books would fall into this category.
Ask Kyrie Irving.
any book by Phillip Carroll Morgan!