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Minnesota was home to Native American communities for thousands of years before white people committed genocidal acts and drove many tribes out of the state or onto reservations.
Jeffry Morehouse of Watertown wanted to know more about which Indian tribes inhabited Minnesota before whites arrived. He sought answers from Curious Minnesota, a Star Tribune community reporting project fueled by great questions about our state.
"Government agents cheated them out of stuff, and killed them too. And that isn't right," Morehouse said. "I have a lot of empathy for the Native Americans."
The earliest identifiable tribe in Minnesota based on archaeological evidence is the Dakota, who began living here around the year 1000 AD. This was followed by the arrival of the Ojibwe in the mid-1700s. But archaeologists and historians believe Indigenous people began living in Minnesota as far back as 13,000 years ago, when the glaciers started to recede.
"A lot of tribes have history tied to this place," says Kate Beane, director of Native American Initiatives for the Minnesota Historical Society.
Evidence of earliest residents
The oldest remains of a human who lived in Minnesota — and one of the oldest found anywhere in the United States — is known as Browns Valley Man. His skeleton was uncovered along with a stone tool in a western Minnesota gravel pit in 1933. He is believed to have lived about 10,000 years ago.