
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Before 1492, the Americas were far from “empty.” Cities like Cahokia, Tenochtitlán, and Pueblo towns thrived with advanced engineering, agriculture, and trade networks. This episode challenges the “virgin land” myth, tracing Indigenous innovation and diversity before European arrival. We dive into the causes of exploration, Columbus’s gamble, Cortés’s siege of Tenochtitlán, and Las Casas’s powerful critiques of Spanish brutality. We also unpack the Columbian Exchange—disease, crops, animals, and cultural blending—that reshaped both hemispheres. From monumental earthworks to world-shifting encounters, this episode reframes early American history and highlights stories too often left as footnotes.
By Zach Garrison, Riley Keltner, and Mike Hill5
2626 ratings
Before 1492, the Americas were far from “empty.” Cities like Cahokia, Tenochtitlán, and Pueblo towns thrived with advanced engineering, agriculture, and trade networks. This episode challenges the “virgin land” myth, tracing Indigenous innovation and diversity before European arrival. We dive into the causes of exploration, Columbus’s gamble, Cortés’s siege of Tenochtitlán, and Las Casas’s powerful critiques of Spanish brutality. We also unpack the Columbian Exchange—disease, crops, animals, and cultural blending—that reshaped both hemispheres. From monumental earthworks to world-shifting encounters, this episode reframes early American history and highlights stories too often left as footnotes.

91,012 Listeners

78,321 Listeners

229,106 Listeners

43,712 Listeners

38,096 Listeners

87,590 Listeners

112,758 Listeners

6,189 Listeners

47,735 Listeners

14,671 Listeners

16,042 Listeners

13 Listeners

26,630 Listeners

3 Listeners

1,637 Listeners