Contact Us FAQ Français
Home / Agriculture and Hunting (Episode 3): 1491 - The Untold Story of the Americas Before Columbus

Agriculture and Hunting (Episode 3): 1491 - The Untold Story of the Americas Before Columbus

Maple Leaf This item is only available for Canadian orders.
This title is a part of the series 1491: The Untold Story of the Americas Before Columbus


Catalogue Number:  149103
Producer:  1491 Productions Inc.
Producers:  Hager, Barbara
Directors:  Hager, Barbara
Producing Agencies:  1491 Productions Inc.
Subject:  Anthropology, Archaeology, Documentary, Family Studies/Home Economics, First Nations Studies, History, Indigenous Issues, Indigenous Peoples, Science, Social Studies
Language:  English
Grade Level:  6 - 8, 9 - 12, Post Secondary, Adult
Country Of Origin:  Canada
Copyright Year:  2018
Running Time:  44:41
Closed Captions:  Yes


Request Preview Access

The Neolithic era began more than 10,000 years ago in Mesoamerica with the cultivation of maize. Crops like sweet potatoes, beans and cacao were cultivated and spread throughout the Americas through trade networks. 

Program Three contains the following chapters:

  • Agriculture and Hunting
  • Maize
  • Potatoes
  • Agroforestry
  • Camas
  • Seal Hunting
  • Whaling
  • Buffalo Hunting
  • Salmon Run

2018 Leo Award - Best Music Composition in a Documentary Series (Russell Wallace)

2018 Leo Award - Best Screenwriting in a Documentary Series (Barbara Hager) 

2018 Leo Award - Best Documentary Series (Producers Barbara Hager, Pat Ferns, Desiree Single and Vanessa Loewen)



“1491: The Untold Story of the Americas Before Columbus is a crash-course in First Nations history that should be taught and broadcast in Canadian schools. I took history all through high school and didn’t learn anything close to what was revealed to me in the first hour of this new series. 1491 boasts 20 dramatic scenes and an Indigenous cast that provide context and blows away long-held theories that prior to European contact, Indigenous peoples were largely nomadic, did not alter the natural landscape and were not as advanced as other civilizations in the world at the time.” - TV, eh? What’s Up in Canadian Television

“The first episode of ‘1491’ is an incredible introduction to what is sure to be the most-watched series of the year...will become an important and integral learning resource for all North American educational organizations and the public at large. Congratulations on an incredibly informing, engaging, educational, enlightening and validating series!” - Lou-ann Neel, Kwakwaka’wakw artist, writer, arts administrator and advocate of authenticity in Indigneous art

“The series is produced, directed and written by Indigenous Canadians and features an Indigenous cast of actors and cultural leaders who provide context. Bolstered by input from historians, archeologists, cultural experts and scholars, most of whom have Indigenous ancestry, the series dispels long-held theories - for instance, that before contact with Europeans, Indigenous peoples were largely nomadic, and not as advanced as other civilizations at the time.” - Times Colonist



Related Titles

The Abenaki – People of the Dawn: The Water of Life Series

MacLeod 9 Productions 300151

Identity is often revealed in the most perilous situations. In The Abenaki - People of the Dawn, it...

First Contact (Beothuk)

MacLeod 9 Productions 300155

From the west, a Beothuk hunting party. From the east, an expedition of Norse Greenlanders looking...

The Hunt (Episode 7): The Medicine Line Series

Farpoint Films FAR028

In Neah Bay, Washington Cinematographer Dave Gaudet tries hitch a ride in a whale hunting ocean...

Todd Labrador: Mi'kmaq Canoe Builder Connected for Thousands of...

Paper Tiger PT0083

Todd Labrador is a respected and celebrated traditional Mi'kmaq canoe builder, in fact he's the...

Return to Manomin

Thunderstone Pictures TP0001

Guided by the spirit of her grandmother and the wisdom of her aging uncle, filmmaker Michelle...


Browse Our Collection By Subject

View All Subjects