Hi Frederica,
The article I'd referred to connects the Aztecs mound builders to Caananite mound builders escaping Joshua's genocide of the Caananites. It traces these peoples over time, through various peoples such as Thracians, Berbers, Tallegwi, etc, and suggests they became some of the NDN nations. The accounts of the Red Record supports the other information presented in the article.
I'm usually skeptical of such translations, especially from the 19th century - a lot of "scientific" hoaxes being perpetrated then. But, my understanding from reading an article at
http://lenapedelawarehistory.net/mirror/wallamolum.htm , is that the Delaware nation endorsed a translation of The Red Record in 1980. The account is given in the full article and seems consistent with that presented in the 'Aztec' article.
"In 1976, David McCutchen, a graduate of the University of California at Santa Barbara and the California Institute of the Arts, was hired to research the history of the Delaware Nation. It should be pointed out that the tribal name "Lenni-Lenape" meant the "Original People". In 1610, Captain Samuel Argall sailed up the Lenape River, and named both the river, and the people living on its banks, the "Delaware" in honor of his patron, Lord De La Warr. From that time on, these people were referred to by outsiders and Europeans as the "Delaware".
In his work, McCutchen came upon The Red Record, the history of its translation, some of the original wooden prayer sticks, and the original words which described the meanings of the carvings. He completed his study as far as he could, and then proceeded to go to the source. He took the results of his research, photographs of the original prayer sticks, and all materials the curators would allow, to Linda Poolaw, the Grand Chief of the Delaware Nation Grand Council of North America in Oklahoma. With Chief Poolaw's assistance, McCutchen was able to fill in the blanks, answer remaining questions and complete the final translation of The Red Record. In 1980, the tribal descendents of the Lenni-Lenape passed a resolution endorsing McCutchen's recreation of the entire Red Record as an accurate re-telling of the history of their people."
Thanks for the link to "The Problems of the Ohio Mounds" article, I've had a quick scan and look forward to reading it later this evening.
BTW, while I do believe in a Bering land bridge, I reckon it accounts for only portion of the populating of this continent. I think as many, if not more, sailed here.
- orville