Among the most notable voters who abandoned Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren on Super Tuesday were Native Americans.

Warren spent decades claiming she was “part Cherokee and part Delaware” — even taking a disastrous DNA test to try to prove it. She was ultimately forced to apologize and admit the claim was bogus, as President Trump mocked her as “Pocahontas.”

“I think that her claim and digging in her heels and the [DNA test] did hurt her,” Simon Moya-Smith, a 36-year-old Native American activist, told The Post. “That’s why I voted for Bernie on Super Tuesday, and I didn’t vote for her.”

A look at how counties with high Native American populations voted suggests Warren’s past pretensions took a toll.

Oklahoma, the Super Tuesday state with the largest population of American Indian voters, went strongly for Joe Biden, giving him 38.7% of the vote. Bernie Sanders was second with 25.4% while Michael Bloomberg took third with 13.9%. Warren came in fourth with 13.4%.

But it was worse for her in counties with large native populations. In Osage County — home to the Osage Indian reservation — Warren took 10% of the vote. Cherokee County, home of Warren’s “brethren” Cherokee Nation, she garnered 10.3% of the vote.

A similar story played out in Utah, where Warren once again placed a dismal fourth with 15.5%. But in the state’s San Juan County — where 50% of the population is Native American according to the U.S. census — Warren took just 8% of the vote.

“There was a level of distrust,” Moya-Smith said. “She didn’t address Indian country directly or native problems until she wanted to be president … It was just extremely disingenuous on its face.”