These Ancient Mines Transformed Prehistoric Europe

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  • čas přidán 3. 06. 2024
  • There are many Bronze Age mines in the Old World that collectively produced thousands of tons of copper, enough to make millions of tools, weapons, and decorations for Europe and the Near East.
    This is the story of the origins of copper mining and its development through the Bronze Age.
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    Video Sources
    The Horse, the Wheel, and Language - David Anthony ➜ amzn.to/3aD3Rhu
    The Rise of Bronze Age Society - K. Kristiansen & T. B. Larsson ➜ amzn.to/3r0xkdU
    Prehistoric Copper Mining in Europe - William O'Brian ➜
    amzn.to/3vw0Omp
    A History of Metallurgy - RF Tylecote ➜ amzn.to/3s2Go1Y
    Metals Make the World Go Round: the Supply and Circulation of Metals in Bronze Age Europe - Ed. C.F.E. Pare ➜ amzn.to/3KtR9B4
    Arsenical Copper in Minoan Crete - Alessandra Giumlia-Mair and Fulvia Lo Schiavo
    Bronze Age Beginnings: a Scalar View from the Global Outskirts - H. Vandkilde (2019)
    Bronze Age Metallurgy in the Peloponnese - Maria Kayafa (1999)
    Chrysokamino in the History of Early Metallurgy - James D. Muhly (2006)
    Early Bronze Age Copper Smelting on Seriphos (Cyclades, Greece) - O. Philaniotou, Y. Bassiakos, and M. Georgakopoulou (2011)
    Early bronze age metal trade in the eastern Mediterranean. New compositional and lead isotope evidence from Cyprus - JM. Webb, D. Frankel, ZA Stos And N. Gale (2006)
    Further Evidence for Bronze Age Production of Copper From Ores in the Lavrion Ore District, Attica, Greece - Noel H Gale (2009)
    Shifting networks and mixing metals: Changing metal trade routes to Scandinavia correlate with Neolithic and Bronze Age transformations - HW Nørgaard, E. Pernicka, H Vandkilde (2021)
    Ösenringbarren and the Classical Ösenring Copper M. Junk, R. Krause and E. Pernicka (2001)
    (And many more)
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    Relevant Videos on the Old Copper Culture of North America
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    Video Chapters
    00:00 Neolithic Copper Mines
    02:31 Ancient Copper Mining on Cyprus
    04:25 Lead Isotope Analysis
    05:27 Copper Trade in the Amarna letters
    06:09 Oxhide Ingots
    06:31 Mycenaean Copper Use
    07:04 Copper mining on the Cycladic islands
    07:36 Early Metalworking on Crete
    07:57 Early Balkan mining and metallurgy
    09:44 Yamnaya culture steppe miners of the Volga
    11:18 Middle and Late Bronze Age European Mining
    11:47 Unetice culture miners
    13:33 Nordic Bronze Age Copper Imports
    15:37 Mining in Bronze Age Britain and Ireland
    16:28 Bronze Age Copper Mines of Europe

Komentáře • 956

  • @DanDavisHistory
    @DanDavisHistory  Před 2 lety +66

    If you enjoyed the video please hit "like", it really helps.
    Join us on Patreon for exclusive articles like this one on Bronze Age copper mining tools, methods, and dangers: www.patreon.com/posts/65805953
    Another great way to support the channel is by getting my novels on Amazon ➜ amzn.to/3xngwz5

    • @DanDavisHistory
      @DanDavisHistory  Před 2 lety +4

      @@hiqhduke I would love to do that, I've had it in mind for a while. It's an incredible story - lots of parallels with the Indo-European expansion. But I'll need to do lots of research first because I don't know much about African prehistory - so it'll take me a while before I can do it.

    • @gaslitworldf.melissab2897
      @gaslitworldf.melissab2897 Před 2 lety

      Excellent answer for a conspiracy. With any conspiracy, I always ask, "What would be gained by successfully hiding said truth?" If nothing stands to be gained, I am less likely to believe a given conspiracy.
      For instance, I _do_ believe that that the US military conducts unethical experiments and might benefit by having people believe that aliens or UFOs are behind strange occurrences, particularly those that make people sick or leave lasting physical problems. I can't prove it, but it is plausible.

    • @gaslitworldf.melissab2897
      @gaslitworldf.melissab2897 Před 2 lety

      @@hiqhduke - If your goal is to exonerate Europeans from their dominant colonial role in the region, that's pretty shady. Often, modern conflicts in Africa have an unknown source, someone behind it - stirring up latent hostilities, in other words, using the divide and conquer tactic. Never be surprised when that turns up in the history of indigenous people losing their land.
      The "Lost Boys" of Sudan (I think) for instance were chased out by Africans, but why? Turns out oil sat ready for extraction. And you can be certain that Africans weren't behind the extraction goal. That would have to be China or a western nation corporation.

    • @me_caveman2540
      @me_caveman2540 Před 2 lety

      What is that song from 2:16?

    • @aferalkid
      @aferalkid Před 2 lety

      its a big yes , there is plenty of archaeological evidence of trans atlantic trade route during antiquity , the only problem is that it disproves the out of Africa theory so its declared to be "Pseudo"

  • @MrAwsomenoob
    @MrAwsomenoob Před 2 lety +116

    "Bye honey I'm gonna make a trans Atlantic crossing in a dugout canoe with a ton of heavy metal."

    • @raclark2730
      @raclark2730 Před 2 lety +9

      Funny but the idea is that ships from the Mediterranean went there and back, not canoes. However that only holds water ( pun intended ) if there was a lack on copper, which of course there was not.

    • @ne0nmancer
      @ne0nmancer Před rokem +7

      @@raclark2730 And that would be implying that ships from the Mediterranean bronze age could have crossed the atlantic, since they were made for coastal navigation.

    • @raclark2730
      @raclark2730 Před rokem +7

      @@ne0nmancer I am sure they could handle bigger seas, and the Mediterranean gets rough as well. Also its now common knowledge that Vikings were in North America, very similar ship design to some more ancient ships. I don't see what the big deal is of at least some ships doing it.

    • @TheBreechie
      @TheBreechie Před rokem +4

      Be sure to bring back a few flying pigs as souvenirs

    • @fryertuck6496
      @fryertuck6496 Před 9 měsíci

      His Mrs would have said "Right! Who is she?"
      Best excuse for a side gig ever. 😂

  • @bryanguzik
    @bryanguzik Před 2 lety +465

    I appreciate this not being a 20min "proof" against the obvious. Get it out of the way, then onto something worthwhile. Really cool stuff as usual.

    • @etistone
      @etistone Před 2 lety +16

      Same here. When I saw the title and the image, I was like "nah". But I watch so eagerly the videos of this channel usually, so, here I am.

    • @Jarlemoore1
      @Jarlemoore1 Před 2 lety +1

      No it's not obvious because there is a lot of evidence that copper did come from North America, it wasn't in the tonnage that was mined in let's say Crete and other places and copper was mined for a long time before that, it doesn't mean that some enterprising Minoans and others couldn't have went to great lengths and risks to become rich and powerful by traveling across the Atlantic and mining, smelting and bringing copper back home to sell or forge.
      To much evidence in many areas including chemical analyst on copper samples found in Crete and on a Phoenician ship wreck show that someone was indeed mining and smelting copper here in the Great Lakes region in the ancient past and shipping it to the Med.

    • @bryanguzik
      @bryanguzik Před 2 lety +6

      @@etistone I know what you're saying, sometimes I wonder @ the time wasted clicking-on "why the earth isn't flat". It certainly wasn't for research! There's just something about the channel, maybe a sense of depth that transcends simple interest in a topic? I don't know, just seems to have an easygoing command over the subject without a "lecture" feel. A unique presenter.

    • @bryanguzik
      @bryanguzik Před 2 lety

      @@Jarlemoore1 I wasn't sure to expect this, but I understand. I am 100% for questioning "concensus" views, which I don't offer as mere lip-service. But saying that does make for these uncomfortable moments. When I have to realize beforehand that engaging or ignoring all ends up at the same place. Nowhere. So let's just say I concede. Or if you prefer..."Really? I'll have to look into that"!

    • @goshawk4340
      @goshawk4340 Před 2 lety +7

      The art of honest click bait

  • @itsapittie
    @itsapittie Před 2 lety +279

    I think the real mystery is why widespread use of metals never took hold in the Americas. The people of North America used copper to some extent for a while and then apparently stopped using it. In South America, they apparently even smelted a limited amount of copper alloys but AFAIK it never got significant use for weapons or tools. I would think copper and bronze would confer the same advantages in the Americas as it did in Europe but apparently for some reason the Native Americans didn't think so.

    • @DanDavisHistory
      @DanDavisHistory  Před 2 lety +86

      It's a great question.

    • @j.f.fisher5318
      @j.f.fisher5318 Před 2 lety +70

      Jarred Diamonds take on the question is imo flawed but does make some very strong arguments.
      Basically, Eurasia has a lot of places within trading distance of each other that have similar climates. This allowed agriculture to spread rapidly along the region between Spain and India, and the plains of China were large enough to be their own separate cultural center. Meanwhile the vast steppes and the Indian ocean and seasonally-reversing monsoon winds and east asian seas and island chains created lots of opportunities for less direct but still culturally significant trade.
      The Americas by contrast are more broken up into smaller climate regions so there is less opportunity for those kinds of extremely long distance exchange of ideas.
      Also, his point about nearly all the economically-useful herbivores in the Americas having been wiped out seems valid, as does African fauna being universally impossible to tame.
      What Diamond claims that I'm less convinced by is that there weren't enough useful agricultural plants in the Americas.

    • @itsapittie
      @itsapittie Před 2 lety +48

      @@j.f.fisher5318 I've read his books and I agree with your analysis, but that doesn't explain why people in the Michigan region who had a nascent copper culture abandoned it or why South Americans who were smelting and alloying bronze never used it more extensively.

    • @vanrensburgsgesicht4048
      @vanrensburgsgesicht4048 Před 2 lety +19

      Perhaps the blacksmith's craft in America, as in Europe, was a well-kept secret knowledge of specialists. The difference could be that in America the carriers of this knowledge were even fewer than here, and therefore mass production was not possible. Or the passing on of the knowledge was interrupted by war or natural disasters, because the knowers died.
      I don't think it is completely impossible that sporadic Europeans (for Phoenicians exotic trade routes and maps were certainly secret knowledge too) discovered America and brought this knowledge with them. This could explain a small group of initiates (of course speculative).

    • @MrBottlecapBill
      @MrBottlecapBill Před 2 lety +60

      @@vanrensburgsgesicht4048 Well for starters, the natives never did stop using it. Most of the modern copper mines in my area were well documented by European explorers and discovered because the native peoples were already mining it though is smaller amounts as their access to plentiful supplies was probably dwindling. One thing to understand is that when the most copper in the americas was being used.........they had the least developed trade routes established and there were a lot less people. You'll also see that the areas where copper is used most heavily, there isn't quality stone to use for tools, or at least not in the same volumes. My theory is that the peoples living in the great lakes area had plenty of copper but very little flint, chert etc..........so they were forced to use the copper which was fairly plentiful. That doesn't sound like a bad deal on the surface until you try to actually work some of this copper without being able to melt it. It's a HELL of a lot of work to make one simple knife blade as compared to a stone blade. More like forging iron without being able to heat it up enough. High labour, long process and probably very valuable as a result since there were less people to work it. As trade routes became more plentiful and developed, possibly due to the availability of the copper goods themselves, cheaper and easier to work imported stone became more readily available and the common people(growing in number) could then better afford stone which was easily worked and almost as effective as a tool. The demand for the copper diminished over time and it became a luxury good only. Mostly used for ornamental purposes rather than day to day items. Without furnace technology to melt the copper is was just too labour intensive to use once the smaller float copper(nugget) sources were dug out. Sure they had huge veins of solid copper which still exist today but breaking those down into useable pieces and then making items out of them is a monumental task. Much like the modern world, the price of labour can kill a product line. That's my theory.........based on very little evidence other than youtube videos lol.

  • @pectenmaximus231
    @pectenmaximus231 Před 2 lety +59

    If there was copper being hauled across the ocean (deeply uneconomical since copper was all over Europe and Near East and plenty of evidence of its mining etc) then 1) it would have generated plenty of material evidence such as pottery shards, settlements, metal tools, stone tablets, and; 2) there would be evidence of agricultural and livestock transfer, as well as other species such as rats or seeds having been inadvertently carried. There’d also be genetic evidence from these transatlantic traders mixing with local populations.

    • @ThatOliveMrT
      @ThatOliveMrT Před 2 lety

      Great points. Maybe only a boat made it every 50 years or something. That's like 5 voyages tops before the Minoans get wrecked. So many less than 1% of copper is unaccounted for. Probably came from Ireland

    • @chubbymoth5810
      @chubbymoth5810 Před rokem +3

      Who needs evidence for a good story and gullible people?

    • @leegiddings6320
      @leegiddings6320 Před rokem

      @@ThatOliveMrT 6

    • @gunzoberelo9878
      @gunzoberelo9878 Před rokem

      Well U know how Americans think, don`t U? xD
      Before there was even big bang and Jesus the America was already there xD

  • @laktho
    @laktho Před 2 lety +41

    1. Thank you for this awesome video! I simply love ancient history very much.
    2. Fun facts about Cyprus from German documentary "Das Bronzekartell":
    - One mine in Cyprus ist active for about 7000 years until today
    - It's estimated that Cyprus produced about 200.000 tons of copper within the last 7000 years - mostly without any machinery
    - The cooper of the Uluburu shipwreck has been matched to a cypriotic cooper mine via radioisotopes (see Das Bronzekartell)
    - My fav one: Cyprus mines melted the cooper directly on the Cyprus, burning EVERY available tree on the island - at least 13!!! times

    • @fenrirgg
      @fenrirgg Před rokem +2

      Imagine if they discovered mineral charcoal and imported it from Europe, the trees could be saved 😞

  • @legiran9564
    @legiran9564 Před 2 lety +126

    If the theory went like "Tin had to be imported from America" it would have been more believable because Tin always was in relative short supply during the Bronze age.
    Copper was basically mined by every major Bronze Age Empire in their own back yard.
    So this theory is outright silly 🤣

    • @j.f.fisher5318
      @j.f.fisher5318 Před 2 lety +16

      that's exactly what I'd thought. Copper is common enough to waste on stuff like coins and decorations akin to economically useless metals like silver and gold. Despite its scarcity, nobody in the ancient world I've ever heard of made tin coins because it was too valuable. Copper coins were commonplace though.

    • @legiran9564
      @legiran9564 Před 2 lety +9

      @@j.f.fisher5318 The Bronze Age collapse in the Mediterranean came about because of the destruction of Tin trade and imports. With the arrival of the "Sea People" as chronicled by ancient Egypt we could assume that the trade of Tin was as good as dead by that time. Only two places were known to have large Tin mines at the time. Modern day Wales and Pakistan. Moving Tin from Pakistan to Egypt was an expensive affaire because it had to go through land and a few rivaling empires that can block the land trade as they see fit.
      The Tin that came from Wales was a longer route through the sea but was cheaper to move. When the "Sea People" appeared importing Tin from Wales became nigh impossible. And without Tin you can't forge Bronze weapons.

    • @Jarlemoore1
      @Jarlemoore1 Před 2 lety +4

      Even though there is tons of evidence showing that it was done, did you know that researchers have found at least two sites over here in Michigan where the copper that was mined was smelted and poured in the Oxhide ingots that were of common design in the Med and that the end of the settlements and mining came about at the same time the Minoan culture collapsed.
      So no it's not silly because they actually did so.

    • @legiran9564
      @legiran9564 Před 2 lety +22

      @@Jarlemoore1 Sauce pls.

    • @BFDT-4
      @BFDT-4 Před 2 lety +2

      Correct, it's so silly, it's silly-silly-silly-silly-silly-silly!!! Agreed!

  • @michiganscythian2445
    @michiganscythian2445 Před 11 měsíci +7

    Being from Michigan, I’m glad that you did this video. A series of (barely researched) books called Mystic Michigan is available at most souvenir shops and even gas stations in northern Michigan. More than one of these books talks about how Bronze Age cultures obtained their copper from Michigan. To add to that, they aren’t even edited with many such mistakes as the “Colossus of Rhoads” or Phenicians. I have a BA in history and this angers me to no end. Ok, yeah, these books also talk about haunted houses, Sasquatch sightings, etc but I hate that they’re trying to present this as historical fact when the theory is wrong but they also can’t be bothered to check how Rhodes is supposed to be spelled. Especially since there’s a small town in central Michigan called Rhodes

  • @erictaylor5462
    @erictaylor5462 Před rokem +9

    In the copper and bronze ages copper was plentiful throughout the Bronze age world. It was tin that was rare.

  • @QalOrt
    @QalOrt Před 2 lety +12

    The local history museum in the city I was born in has some of the copper that was mined in Lake Superior region. It was transported down from Michigan to Florida hundreds of years ago.

  • @bc7138
    @bc7138 Před 2 lety +39

    I was unfamiliar with the claim about copper being transported from North America to Europe in Prehistory. From a logistical standpoint it seems next to impossible for the time period.
    Thanks for the fascinating video. Bronze Age mining and economics tend to be ignored in favour of more enticing topics like warfare, but without understanding how technology was made and how it impacted society you can't really get the full picture with regards to war. The fact that the people of the Bronze Age steppe (the Yamnaya) were already capable of making an iron dagger centuries before the official start of the Iron Age is an interesting topic in of itself.

    • @DanDavisHistory
      @DanDavisHistory  Před 2 lety +9

      Thank you. Yes it can tell us a lot about these societies. The great thing is that the work to understand this social impact is still ongoing so there will be more research published in future.

    • @MarkVrem
      @MarkVrem Před 2 lety +7

      yeah, it's a dumb argument. Especially since Native Americans use river/lake type flat bottom vessels. So I guess their next logical assumption would be, "It must had been a European civilization, that used the natives as slave labor." As if European boats of the time weren't made for coastal hugging as well.

    • @christosvoskresye
      @christosvoskresye Před 2 lety +4

      @@MarkVrem Come on! OBVIOUSLY it was space aliens! You know, the same ones who taught the Egyptians how to make incandescent light bulbs and Apache helicopters -- just the kind of thing a civilization that can travel between stars would be sure to use.

    • @Ck-zk3we
      @Ck-zk3we Před 2 lety +2

      @@MarkVrem dumb is thinking it’s difficult to sail across the Atlantic

    • @JimmyBoombox
      @JimmyBoombox Před 2 lety

      Yeah, it's part of these fringe theories that Egypt, Minoans, Atlantians, etc discovered and set up colonies in the Americas.

  • @MARKSTRINGFELLOW1
    @MARKSTRINGFELLOW1 Před 2 lety +9

    One of the biggest prehistoric copper mines in Europe is at the Great Orme in North Wales It was only discovered in the 80,s

    • @paulashe61
      @paulashe61 Před 2 lety +1

      Cornwall tin has been found in African bronze

  • @tequilamockingbird758
    @tequilamockingbird758 Před 2 lety +6

    Never heard of this, thank god.

  • @kuriboh635
    @kuriboh635 Před rokem +6

    Great video. I was born and currently live in Michigan. It's not uncommon for me to hear some old timers tell me or other people about how most of the copper in the bronze age was from the UP. Definitely great video

  • @Rynewulf
    @Rynewulf Před 2 lety +43

    Boosting this for the algorithm. It's sad how what might seem like commonsense (you get what you need from it's nearest convenient source, not the other side of the planet) is ignored by lots ot people when it comes to our history

    • @cyberserk5614
      @cyberserk5614 Před 2 lety +6

      But...maybe the Olmekes of Central America could sell copper to a cheaper price by employing cheap labour from the Indus Valley?

  • @waltonsmith7210
    @waltonsmith7210 Před 2 lety +11

    This idea seems ridiculous on the face of it. It seems like Occam's Razor is heavily weighted against it, too. Why does it make sense that european copper was hauled across a big giant ocean, as opposed to more local sources? That just seems silly.

  • @logancaine9616
    @logancaine9616 Před 2 lety +13

    They somehow managed to get copper from a place they didn't know existed. The whole modern flat earth thing is no longer the most idiotic theory I've ever heard.

    • @tomtaylor5623
      @tomtaylor5623 Před 2 lety +1

      even if it is wrong, it's hardly the most outlandish theory... there's many evidences of some form of contact.

    • @Jarlemoore1
      @Jarlemoore1 Před 2 lety +2

      Actually the ancients knew all about the Western Hemisphere and traveled here many times, both the Egyptians and Hellenes knew the world wasn't flat and the many lands across the oceans and there are ancient maps showing the entire world and even a ice free Antarctica.

    • @penguindrum264
      @penguindrum264 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Jarlemoore1 sources?

  • @mikloslegrady965
    @mikloslegrady965 Před 2 lety +6

    The theory that copper was mined in North America and shipped to Europe for a thousand years? Not a single piece of writing mentions these sailors and copper from across the Atlantic. That silence speaks loudly, the answer is no.

    • @Jarlemoore1
      @Jarlemoore1 Před 2 lety

      Both Plutarch and Plato make mention of trips across the Sea of Cronos (The Atlantic) to the lands there in ancient times and that the ancients did know about the currents as well, do they specifically mention the copper trade, NO but the traveling yes.

  • @rachel_Cochran
    @rachel_Cochran Před 2 lety +5

    "They would've taken great care of their tools, just as we do now,"
    Omg you have definitely not met my husband lol

  • @k.schmidt2740
    @k.schmidt2740 Před 2 lety +4

    How nice to hear something as clear and decisive as, "But that is not true." For those statements alone it was worth watching the rest of the video! Thanks for the good work.

  • @AncientAmericas
    @AncientAmericas Před 2 lety +26

    Very well done! Loved all the details you packed in.

    • @DanDavisHistory
      @DanDavisHistory  Před 2 lety +10

      Thank you very much, I appreciate it. And if anyone reading this wants to know about the amazing Old Copper culture please see the link to the Ancient Americas video in the description.

    • @Bigfatfrog83
      @Bigfatfrog83 Před 2 lety +5

      I love your channel

  • @disenchantedwanderer9033
    @disenchantedwanderer9033 Před 2 lety +3

    Another excellent video, and I like how you went straight for the debunk straight away, and then the depth of research to show the European copper mines.
    You bring the bronze age to life.

  • @darrylw5851
    @darrylw5851 Před 2 lety +13

    Hi Dan, just want to add my thanks for another great video filled with facts from legitimate research. Much appreciated.

  • @jackbailey7037
    @jackbailey7037 Před 2 lety +2

    Thanks for making these vids! I appreciate the research that went into them.

  • @alaskabarb8089
    @alaskabarb8089 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Always interesting to watch Dan’s excellently researched and presented content.

  • @perceivedvelocity9914
    @perceivedvelocity9914 Před 2 lety +15

    This was very interesting. I don't know why anyone would jump to the conclusion that copper was being shipped to Europe? IMO a better question is why didn't the majority of native Americans use metal weapons and tools? Some groups had access to metal and continued to use stone tools. Were there any social taboos that would prevent it?

    • @NathanaelFosaaen
      @NathanaelFosaaen Před 2 lety +5

      Graham Hancock reasons mostly.

    • @DanDavisHistory
      @DanDavisHistory  Před 2 lety +8

      The idea of ancient transatlantic contact goes back to at least the late 19th century when multiple hoaxes and forgeries were being created and "discovered" in fields and backyards in America. A major influence on this aspect came from the work of Barry Fell in the 1970s and 80s. The mythology has grown since then with various articles and it was promoted to a huge audience by Graham Hancock and now by some very popular CZcams channels.

    • @NormBoyle
      @NormBoyle Před 2 lety +1

      Copper was basically too soft and didn't hold an edge as well as flint. But they could make copper axes that worked well.

    • @victorylane2377
      @victorylane2377 Před 2 lety +5

      Flint is easier to get and it can have a much sharper edge. As a tool to skin animals it is superior.

  • @grandmastersreaction1267
    @grandmastersreaction1267 Před 2 lety +5

    This was fantastic Dan! Great work

  • @randomcontent2205
    @randomcontent2205 Před 2 lety +2

    Getting so good at crafting videos now, music and images were on-point. Thanks.

  • @daneandorfer6187
    @daneandorfer6187 Před 2 lety +2

    Big fan of Bernard Cornwell, I haven't been this excited to jump into a series since I read an Archers Tale almost 20 years ago. Payday can't get here soon enough!

  • @steven_003
    @steven_003 Před 2 lety +8

    I only ever thought about these mines in the context of the Bronze Age, even then focusing more on tin mines and im-/exports. I never really thought about the scale of these operations this early in time. Besides the enormous qualities, it’s truly astounding what our forefathers managed to achieve with, from our perspective, so primitive yet ingenious tools. Thank you for the great insight!

  • @Original50
    @Original50 Před 2 lety +6

    The academic theory is that the majority of the copper in the Bronze Age was produced in Cyprus; named Kipris, because of the copper. It's postulated that the demise of the Eastern Mediterranean civilisations also involved the collapse of the Cypriot civilisation.

  • @billmiller4972
    @billmiller4972 Před 2 lety +7

    In my university years I analyzed copper slags from the Alpine Region. Excellent video (again).

    • @DanDavisHistory
      @DanDavisHistory  Před 2 lety +5

      Thank you very much. I was interested to find out there's no much in the way of copper smelting slag from Britain and Ireland because the ores were mostly malachite and azurite which leaves little to no slag. While the Alpine mines (and many other places) extracted most chalcoprite ore which does.

    • @billmiller4972
      @billmiller4972 Před 2 lety +2

      @@DanDavisHistory The copper ores used at that time and place indeed were mostly copper sulfides because the alpine glaciers had eroded away all (oxidized) copper sulfates so the miners had to develop the roasting process.
      But this is about 30 years ago and I have forgotten most of the results so be patient with me if I'm wrong.

    • @DanDavisHistory
      @DanDavisHistory  Před 2 lety +1

      Yes that's right. There's a great book on the subject of European copper mining by William O'Brien that covers the geology. The relationships between the geology, the wider environment, the people and their solutions in various places is incredibly interesting. The need for a steady supply of timber and transport of ores to smelting sites near or further away and so on speaks to the support the miners and smelters had from wider lowland communities.

    • @melrichardson7709
      @melrichardson7709 Před 2 lety +1

      @@DanDavisHistory I seem to remember that they did discover a smelting site on the Great Orme . But given that most of the area of the mines is covered with spoil from later mining, there may be other smelting areas yet to be discovered.
      There again there is a "hillfort" on the Orme which I don't recall ever being excavated. If you've got a valuable source of wealth then it would make sense to work it within some form of defensible area.

  • @Shoshana-xh6hc
    @Shoshana-xh6hc Před 11 měsíci +1

    Superb production, thank you 🙏

  • @balazstorok9265
    @balazstorok9265 Před 2 lety +5

    I just discovered your channel yesterday, and it's hard to stop watching your content. The script, the amount of information and illustration in every video is really outstanding. And I really like, that you can keep these highly informative and we'll researched topics relatively short. Really well done videos!

    • @DanDavisHistory
      @DanDavisHistory  Před 2 lety

      Thank you very much, I'm glad you found the channel.

    • @kaptainkaos1202
      @kaptainkaos1202 Před 2 lety

      @@DanDavisHistory have you thought about doing a video on the “making of” one of your videos? What type of research do you conduct? How do you locate what I assume are royalty free videos/stills? How do you do what you do?

  • @AlexandruNicolin
    @AlexandruNicolin Před 2 lety +5

    It makes no sense. Copper was in many places so it wouldn't have made sense to go to America to mine or buy it even if there was possible to reach it with the sailing technology of the time, which is also highly unlikely. Only tin was scarce since it was only found in Iberia, Britain and Afghanistan.

  • @maromarcinko8632
    @maromarcinko8632 Před rokem +1

    Superb videos…I apsolutely enjoy them…congratulations and big thank you!!

  • @chriscodrington5464
    @chriscodrington5464 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for another exciting synopsis Dan! So much data responding to multi disciplinary and comparative analysis now...

  • @ariomannosyemo9090
    @ariomannosyemo9090 Před 2 lety +5

    Your video editing really is top quality.

  • @joelkurowski7129
    @joelkurowski7129 Před 2 lety +9

    I always thought that was a long way to go for something they already had in the first place.

    • @Jarlemoore1
      @Jarlemoore1 Před 2 lety

      You mean like how people traveled all the way from NY to Alaska or California for gold, back during the Copper and Bronze ages copper and tin were far more valued and people traveled far and wide for them so why couldn't people from the Med have traveled to North America for such.

    • @joelkurowski7129
      @joelkurowski7129 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Jarlemoore1 anybody dumb enough to travel to Alaska or California when, say, Connecticut had gold deserved all the dysentery and frostbite they got.
      That wasn't the case, however. But Mediterranean peoples that had copper all over their area? Why oh why would they ever travel for that? Cyprus, Anatolia, Sardinia and Spain had plenty. It was tin that needed traveling for, and the furthest they had to go for that was Afghanistan or the British Isles.

    • @melrichardson7709
      @melrichardson7709 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Jarlemoore1 As I've just pointed out to someone else, you really do need to study Bronze Age shipbuilding before believing that Egyptians, Minoans or Phoenicians travelled to North America.

    • @jamisojo
      @jamisojo Před 2 lety

      @@Jarlemoore1 1. Travel was easier for those gold rushes.
      2. Copper that was found everywhere was certainly not more valuable than gold at any time anywhere.

  • @daneandorfer6187
    @daneandorfer6187 Před 2 lety +1

    Great channel, can't wait to delve into the novels. Love the narration too.

  • @rogersledz6793
    @rogersledz6793 Před 2 lety

    Thank you so much for uploading this video. It is helping me get through the pandemic!

  • @michelleeden2272
    @michelleeden2272 Před 2 lety +47

    Did the ancient Egyptians invent Tic Toc?
    Did space aliens write the scripts for Alfred Hitchcock's movies?
    Can dirt be used to run your car?
    Did Bronze Age Europe get its Copper from America?
    No, they got it from Uranus.

    • @Sheepdog1314
      @Sheepdog1314 Před 2 lety

      stop smoking crack. Not good for ya.

    • @draxthewarlocktitan5217
      @draxthewarlocktitan5217 Před 2 lety +1

      Didn’t know primordial gods were just dishing out metals like that. Especially the personification of the sky itself!

    • @desperatelyseekingrealnews
      @desperatelyseekingrealnews Před 2 lety

      Talking crap again

    • @lagsmith
      @lagsmith Před 2 lety

      dude my uncle is yttoes a mesotpotamtapmatmian emperor come bacvk frum the dead and he needs moneyzz

  • @oldernu1250
    @oldernu1250 Před rokem +3

    Thanks, very informative. Did not know about early use of iron by the Yamnaya @ 2500 BC--or use of river side deposits rather than mountain sites. Also, the Balkans have not received sufficient attention in early bronze metalurgy.

  • @brinehound
    @brinehound Před 2 lety +1

    Cannot stop wayching this fantastic channel! I have been a fan of anchient human cultures and the early use of metals and this channel satisfies a hard to reach itch.
    Thank you Dan Davis!

  • @basilbrushbooshieboosh5302

    Great stuff Dan

  • @LudosErgoSum
    @LudosErgoSum Před 2 lety +5

    AMERICA: How much copper do you want?
    EUROPE: No.

  • @richern2717
    @richern2717 Před 2 lety +4

    Reading some of the comments I realised yet again that Patriotism beyond a certain point consumes rational thought....

    • @cruz7579
      @cruz7579 Před 2 lety

      congrats, youre a libtard idiot.

  • @DeeplyStill
    @DeeplyStill Před 2 lety +2

    Wow. What a brilliant documentary. Well done

  • @ariomannosyemo9090
    @ariomannosyemo9090 Před 2 lety +2

    Great video! Thank you for the research.

  • @memofromessex
    @memofromessex Před 2 lety +6

    Thanks for this.
    There is so much junk science and history on CZcams.
    I nearly clicked on this thinking it was one such video until I saw your/creators name.

  • @tpxchallenger
    @tpxchallenger Před 2 lety +4

    Very interesting. Love the way you added detail about the amount bronze tools on farmsteads in Northern Europe.
    Subscribed!

    • @DanDavisHistory
      @DanDavisHistory  Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you, welcome to the channel. I hope you like the other videos.

  • @AaronTelfordUK
    @AaronTelfordUK Před 2 lety +1

    This is a fantastic video, thank you 😀

  • @peterhodges6808
    @peterhodges6808 Před 2 lety +2

    Awesome. I look forward to a video on the Nordic Bronze Age!

  • @ryanb9749
    @ryanb9749 Před 2 lety +4

    I like how the thumbnail just says "no." 😆

  • @macgonzo
    @macgonzo Před 2 lety +3

    Great video! One of the things that annoys me, are the people that claim that there's no way the blocks that were used to build the pyramids could have been made using copper tools... 5 minutes googling would show that these copper tools had naturally occurring arsenic, making an alloy that was much harder than simply using pure copper.

    • @jamisojo
      @jamisojo Před 2 lety

      And they could just use the tools to rub around wet sand and cut through anything.

  • @Leedz13th
    @Leedz13th Před rokem +1

    I was going to say, visited the pine Barrens for a school camping trip as a kid. And we went for a hike and there was a plethora of iron ore just laying on the ground. They said to leave it alone. Hollar at your boy for getting home with some of that sweet sweet ore, the same ore used in the high quality for the time weapons built with that ore used in the revolutionary war. Shout out to Camp Ockanickon.

  • @kidlast4154
    @kidlast4154 Před rokem +1

    Really cool info, thanks! need one about tin

  • @tigergaminggr8079
    @tigergaminggr8079 Před 2 lety +7

    Bronze age European ships couldn't sail across the Atlantic. Even when traveling across the Mediterranean they stayed close to the coast. They also couldn't hold many supplies for the crew (another reason for staying close to land) so even if they somehow reached America they wouldn't be able to fill the ships with both copper and enough food for the journey back

    • @melrichardson7709
      @melrichardson7709 Před 2 lety +2

      Tiger GamingGR. Yes, you are perfectly correct on that. I recently had to email Professor Pulak, who conducted the excavation on the Late Bronze Age Uluburun shipwreck, to fact check something I'd found in one of these pseudo archaeology books claiming that the Minoans sailed to America. He also pointed out that while it may have been possible on a reasonably calm day, the fact that the Uluburun ship had only a keel plank as opposed to a fully developed keel, along with a sail that would not have allowed the ship to sail into the wind, makes the idea a non starter.
      As for the two "reconstructions" that have been made and sailed, and rowed, around the Mediterranean, well let's put it this way, the reconstruction of one of the (Minoan), Thera ships from the frescos (circa 1600 BC), is based solely on the image and then designed on a computer. That's bad enough, but then they have it being made to use oars. The fresco shows the occupants paddling! Anyone want to try paddling across the North Atlantic?
      The other "reconstruction" was of the Uluburun ship (circa 1320 BC). This is not a Minoan ship as the Mycenaeans had taken over the Minoan sea trade by then. The amount of actual ships hull timbers still remaining was approx 3 %. They then based their reconstruction on an image of one of the Egyptian ships used in the Red Sea to travel to Punt. So yet again, it's not going to be accurate.
      The idea of people traveling from the Mediterranean to the Great Lakes is simply a non starter, no matter how much people want to believe otherwise.

    • @obsidianjane4413
      @obsidianjane4413 Před rokem +2

      Even if they could, and they were known (which they weren't) it wouldn't have been economically rational to do so because there were sources closer at hand that could be extracted or traded for at far lower cost.

    • @adambane1719
      @adambane1719 Před rokem

      @@melrichardson7709 People that use the word "pseudo" in their arguments are always entirely wrong.

    • @melrichardson7709
      @melrichardson7709 Před rokem

      @@adambane1719 Interesting comment Adam. Would you like to expand on it further.😊
      From the Oxford Dictionary, " supposed or purporting to be but not really so; false; not genuine," also " resembling or imitating (pseudo-language; pseudo-science)."

    • @adambane1719
      @adambane1719 Před rokem

      @@melrichardson7709 The dictionary meaning is "your head is soooo far up your own arsehole, that you are the solo explorer of a 'hole' new world"

  • @V.Hansen.
    @V.Hansen. Před 2 lety +3

    Dang. I wish time team would go excavate some of these sites. I’d love to see what they found. Very interesting topic. I had no idea Cyprus was a mining site. I only ever thought of their trees

  • @SB-qm5wg
    @SB-qm5wg Před 2 lety +1

    Great video. TY.

  • @louiscervantez1639
    @louiscervantez1639 Před rokem

    Thank you - very informative

  • @baarbacoa
    @baarbacoa Před 2 lety +10

    Nice work. On the subject of copper, Ötzi the Iceman, who was apparently involved in copper production or trade, would be good subject.

    • @DanDavisHistory
      @DanDavisHistory  Před 2 lety +7

      Yes that's a good idea I might do that next.

    • @markharris6171
      @markharris6171 Před 2 lety

      I was thinking maybe he was prospecting. I have seen that he might have been murdered. Maybe got into someone else's "claim". ?

    • @Jarlemoore1
      @Jarlemoore1 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes the Iceman pushed back the Copper age dating by 600 years with his copper axe.

    • @baarbacoa
      @baarbacoa Před 2 lety

      @@markharris6171 He had arsenic and copper in his hair, which would indicate to me, proximity to a smelter. He was thought to beat man of means, but living rough. Ultimately, guys occupation is subject to debate.

    • @baarbacoa
      @baarbacoa Před 2 lety

      @@markharris6171 I have my own speculations, but I'll save that for commenting after Dan's video

  • @LudosErgoSum
    @LudosErgoSum Před 2 lety +17

    Imagine if the Bronze Age Europeans had instead discovered and traded with the Amazon in South America.
    Then the copper would have been just one click away.

    • @Ck-zk3we
      @Ck-zk3we Před 2 lety

      Pretty easy trip. Its impossible that they were colonizing west Africa but never made it to South America

    • @jamisojo
      @jamisojo Před 2 lety +1

      @@Ck-zk3we Umm.... Except that Africa was much much closer than South America.
      I mean.... other than that. Maybe you need to check out a map.

  • @1959Berre
    @1959Berre Před rokem +1

    Great video.

  • @MilledSteel
    @MilledSteel Před 2 lety +1

    Great episode 👍

  • @dreamok732
    @dreamok732 Před 2 lety +20

    Yes, the fact that we can identify the sites where the ore for bronze age artifacts was quarried completely puts the kaboosh on the idea that copper was brought over the Atlantic.
    Now! If you want a much more fun alternative history theory check out the idea that Troy was in Britain. Argued for most recently in "Where Troy Once Stood" by Wilkens and suggested by various others before that.

    • @Boric78
      @Boric78 Před 2 lety +18

      Actually Troy was in Wales. Caernarfon to be exact. We know this because of all the red hair and the thin haired cats that live locally. Plus the word Caernarfon is a celtic translation of Brad Pitt. North Wales the true Turks.

    • @TwistedAlphonso1
      @TwistedAlphonso1 Před 2 lety +1

      Actually Troy was is Egypt

    • @TwistedAlphonso1
      @TwistedAlphonso1 Před 2 lety +2

      Troy was Atlantis

    • @Boric78
      @Boric78 Před 2 lety

      @@TwistedAlphonso1 Atantis is Egypt. As I said small haired cats and men with chin beards are give aways. Its to do with the Giants. This you already know.

    • @dreamok732
      @dreamok732 Před 2 lety +4

      So we are all agreed, Troy was not in Troy, lol.

  • @ChrisVillagomez
    @ChrisVillagomez Před 2 lety +6

    Really cool to hear Michigan mentioned in one of your videos, I live there! Obviously copper is spread all throughout Michigan but a lot of it is in the Upper Peninsula. The Native Americans in the area called the Upper Peninsula something like, "Land of Trees" because all that was there to them was forests. It wasn't until the 1800's that a geologist from the US was sent up north to survey the land and he found so much copper and iron that some was open to the air when he saw it.

  • @edwardcarrington3531
    @edwardcarrington3531 Před 2 lety +1

    Dan its nice that you like your viewers comments. Also awesome vid. This was the first vid of yours Ive seen.

    • @DanDavisHistory
      @DanDavisHistory  Před 2 lety

      Thank you, welcome to the channel. I hope you enjoy the other videos too.

  • @Korzhinho
    @Korzhinho Před rokem +1

    Killer combo of thorough scientific research and engaging storytelling

  • @terrayjos
    @terrayjos Před 2 lety +3

    some people just can't stand admitting they are wrong so they keep up with the lie.

  • @philvanderlaan5942
    @philvanderlaan5942 Před 2 lety +3

    Mediterranean copper coming from the Great Lakes? I feel brain cells committing suicide just hearing that string of words is it possible? Welll yes about as possible as me becoming a multiple millionaire simply by buying one lottery ticket each week .

  • @mikepette4422
    @mikepette4422 Před 2 lety +1

    great stuff. Yeah I know alot of this already but everytime someone does a video or a article about the copper/tin mining or bronze smelting in ancient times I'm hooked and learn something new.

    • @melrichardson7709
      @melrichardson7709 Před 2 lety

      mikepette. The Great Orme copper mines have a website that you should find interesting. There are quite a few articles written about copper mining etc. There are academic sites on the internet that if you register with them you'll be able to either read or down load the the articles for free. Look for articles by Noel Gale, or Andres Hauptmann on the isotope analysis of the copper from the Uluburun shipwreck. For copper smelting in the UK, particularly in Wales, look for articles by Simon Timberlake.
      There's also an excellent book on, Prehistoric copper mining in Europe 5500 - 500 BC written by William O'Brien.
      For an excellent introduction to Bronze Age Europe then try The Oxford Handbook of the European Bronze Age.
      You might also want to look at the remains of the Bronze Age wreck sites off Salcombe in Devon, England and study the type of coastal sewn plank boats found in Britain.
      One other thing to consider is that the Uluburun ship was not Minoan, as by circa 1327 BC the Mycenaean Greeks had taken over the Minoan maritime trade. Most probably it was either Mycenaean or Phoenician. 👍

  • @dcpack
    @dcpack Před 2 lety +1

    Had a good chuckle over that one person using a file tang as a chisel/drill.

  • @all4one5
    @all4one5 Před 2 lety +4

    Is the copper from Transcarpathia related to where the earliest transport wheel was found in Slovenia? Would correspond with the need to transport heavy ores long distances, perhaps to the Adriatic.

    • @DanDavisHistory
      @DanDavisHistory  Před 2 lety +2

      While there was transfer of goods between the Adriatic and the other side of the Alps, the Slovenian wheel was probably more suitable for a two wheeled handcart to move things around the village - bringing firewood back from the woods, that kind of thing.
      Most long distance ore transport would have been done by river and only that last little bit from the river or coast to the village would be done by animal, human, or (after they were invented) wagon.

    • @all4one5
      @all4one5 Před 2 lety +4

      @@DanDavisHistory Amazing response, thank you for clarifying that. So smelting was usually done on site or close nearby I'm assuming, ingots being somewhat more transferable.

    • @DanDavisHistory
      @DanDavisHistory  Před 2 lety +4

      Yes pretty much as close as possible. But they needed a lot of fuel for the smelting process so it was important to site the furnaces somewhere with long term access to wood / charcoal.
      Surprisingly on some of the Aegean islands they might, perhaps, have brought ore from mines on nearby islands to the furnaces on another island. This is because the local geography meant prevailing winds rising up the steep slopes blasted air in to the furnaces. And they could only achieve this on one or two islands with steep slopes facing the prevailing wind.
      And they can tell this because testing the slag at these sites gives results from more than one nearby island.
      So yes the smelting was done as near as possible to the ore extraction but there were other factors to consider.

  • @MrMaltasar
    @MrMaltasar Před 2 lety +4

    There is a strange tendency to want to believe conspiratorial theories rather than actually doing the work of reading real research and the real debates that exist between scholars of a subject.
    Wait... Maybe not that strange, it's just laziness.

  • @elbuggo
    @elbuggo Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for this.

  • @marius1004
    @marius1004 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you sir; that was most enjoyable. I have to now recalibrate my notions of Neolithic metal development. It seems the Balkans were an interesting place in the day. Thanks from Bucks County, Pennsylvania.

  • @jimcurtis569
    @jimcurtis569 Před 2 lety +13

    I live on the Keweenaw Peninsula of Michigan, USA,, aka The Copper Country. Although copper is not currently mined here, there is a well documented history of modern and ancient copper mining. The great majority of copper deposits here are native copper - almost pure copper.
    As a historian and tour guide I have heard many people talk about this theory that our copper went to Europe. Especially that it was Europeans who mined it. No evidence to support it. Zero.
    A lot of the unsupported thinking comes from some calculations done decades ago by some investigators. They counted the known ancient mining pits and multiplied that number by "their" estimate of how much copper could have been removed from the average pit. This resulted in a huge amount of copper - many millions of pounds. Proponents of the North America export across the Atlantic theories compare that huge amount of copper to the amount found so far in ancient North American sites - a much lower figure. So, there is *Missing Copper*! This seems to be the main "evidence" that NA copper went to people on other continents.

    • @DanDavisHistory
      @DanDavisHistory  Před 2 lety +5

      Thank you, Jim. Yes that about sums it up. There is also a history of archeological hoaxes and forgeries dating back to at least the late 19th century and reinvigorated in the 1970s arguing for prehistoric transatlantic contact and this is layered on top of the ancient copper mining misunderstandings.

  • @book3100
    @book3100 Před 2 lety +5

    Nibiru people took most of the metal from Earth for the Anunaki to use in repairing there spaceships.
    They'll be along next week to pick up the rent.
    Honestly though, sometimes I get a kick out of these weird ideas.

  • @lmccampbell
    @lmccampbell Před 2 lety +2

    You should do a video on flint and stone swords that were being made as bronze and copper tools a weapons tech spread. There are amazing stone weapons that look like their metal counterparts.

  • @SamtheIrishexan
    @SamtheIrishexan Před 2 lety +1

    Great job. I guess I took for granted that I always knew there was plenty of copper. Now the tin, that was the good stuff.

  • @NoHairMan
    @NoHairMan Před 2 lety +3

    Could you name/link the music used? Would love to know! Thank you for making these videos.

    • @DanDavisHistory
      @DanDavisHistory  Před 2 lety +2

      Yes I intended to do so, I will add them to the description when I can.

    • @NoHairMan
      @NoHairMan Před 2 lety +1

      @@DanDavisHistory awesome, thank you!

    • @DanDavisHistory
      @DanDavisHistory  Před 2 lety

      @@NoHairMan the music is now listed in the video description.

    • @NoHairMan
      @NoHairMan Před 2 lety

      @@DanDavisHistory You are awesome tyvm!

  • @AdaKitten
    @AdaKitten Před 2 lety +8

    I can't decide if people who claim things like this (copper from the Americas), and flat earthers, are just trolling on such a high level that they never give away the joke, or if they are actually that silly.

    • @Jarlemoore1
      @Jarlemoore1 Před 2 lety

      Unlike the flat earthers there is actually evidence of copper coming from America to the Med.

    • @AdaKitten
      @AdaKitten Před 2 lety +4

      @@Jarlemoore1 Oh, where? Scientific evidence? Edit: I am fine with being corrected, so have at it :)

    • @jabberwoke1
      @jabberwoke1 Před 2 lety +2

      They're either gods of gods of trolling or idiots. My money is on the latter.

    • @Ck-zk3we
      @Ck-zk3we Před 2 lety

      Only an idiot would think that it’s difficult to sail from Europe to America.

    • @jabberwoke1
      @jabberwoke1 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Ck-zk3we Thanks for making it so incredibly easy to discount what you and your side are putting forth as an intelligent argument. Good lord what a statement. Just wow.

  • @postictal7846
    @postictal7846 Před 2 lety +2

    Wow, you guys with your facts and science. 🤞

  • @Ukepa
    @Ukepa Před 2 lety +1

    good video! interesting that iron was used during the bronze age

  • @josephd.5524
    @josephd.5524 Před 2 lety +3

    They got it from Ea-Nasir, duh.
    It was incredibly shitty copper.

  • @deceptivepanther
    @deceptivepanther Před 2 lety +5

    You really made a silk purse out of a sow's ear with this excellent video. Jeepers, there are some awful weirdos on the internet. Everybody knows my auntie Edith von Däniken built the pyramids on her day off. Fact.

    • @DanDavisHistory
      @DanDavisHistory  Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you.

    • @Jarlemoore1
      @Jarlemoore1 Před 2 lety

      You evidently haven't seen all the evidence which shows this to be true, just because academics have their heads in their assess and follow a certain path of ignorance doesn't mean that history is always what we they want us to think it is.

    • @jamisojo
      @jamisojo Před 2 lety

      @@Jarlemoore1 "have their heads in there asses".
      You must be a real archeological professional. Is that how you write in the journal articles you publish?

    • @juneroberts5305
      @juneroberts5305 Před rokem +1

      Edith is ignored by historians because she is a woman. Fact. 🤨

  • @GriffinParke
    @GriffinParke Před 3 měsíci

    Great video, it really does boggle the mind how extensively these trade networks were. The presence of R1b-L21, normally a British Bell Beaker Y-DNA haplogroup in southern Scandinavia could potentially be explained by the Bronze Age trade network.

  • @seanwhelan879
    @seanwhelan879 Před 2 lety +1

    Brilliant again Dan. Very very enjoyable. Peace all 🇮🇪

  • @dewayneweaver5782
    @dewayneweaver5782 Před 2 lety +5

    Exactly how accurate is the trace metal fingerprint (signature)? Can two mines geographically separated still produce similar signatures? Could you display side by side graphs to demonstrate the difference between Great Lakes copper ore and Welch copper ore?

    • @NathanaelFosaaen
      @NathanaelFosaaen Před 2 lety +6

      so the reason that isotopic signatures for various sources differ from eachother is that some of those isotopes (lead for instance) are subject to radioactive decay, which means that not only will the original ratios be different from outcrop to outcrop when they're first formed geologically, but the older ones will have had longer for certain elements to have decayed into other elemental isotopes. Equifinality is basically impossible because of that, especially if you're using multiple isotopic signatures.

    • @evastapaard2462
      @evastapaard2462 Před rokem

      yes lol

  • @NathanaelFosaaen
    @NathanaelFosaaen Před 2 lety +4

    Get ready for the angry tinfoil hat crowd! and thanks for the shout out!

    • @DanDavisHistory
      @DanDavisHistory  Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you for your videos. It's great to see a professional explaining their work and archaeology generally.

    • @NathanaelFosaaen
      @NathanaelFosaaen Před 2 lety +2

      @@DanDavisHistory much appreciated. I'm hoping to have time to get back to that once this damn thesis gets submitted.

  • @josephmalenab5637
    @josephmalenab5637 Před 2 lety +1

    Cheers again and thank you

  • @svenonnerstad1494
    @svenonnerstad1494 Před rokem +1

    Thank you for a really informative and educational response to these claims from outer space. 🙏👍

  • @georgiannacook8874
    @georgiannacook8874 Před rokem +3

    We visited the Kewanaw area and got a book entitled prehistoric copper miners. They found large pieces on wooden logs for transportation. We now live near an area of copper worked by the Dutch in the 1600s. We actually live on a road the Dutch used to go to the mines.

  • @iankiller1
    @iankiller1 Před 2 lety +6

    Sad to see outlandish theories like this get touted around even in the age of the internet. A quick google search would tell you very quickly why anyone in eurasia would have no need for copper from another continent. Even the much rarer tin wasn't rare enough to warrant the search that far out. I can't stress enough how sad it is to see people not using the greatest library in the world being used for the most unimportant reasons.

  • @brictator
    @brictator Před 2 lety +1

    such a good video and info. they have applied similar analysis to ancient silver coins and the copper and lead traces in them. They try to figure out what mines the metal for the coins came from. Some stuff about 2nd punic war era coins.

  • @TCCTCCTCC
    @TCCTCCTCC Před 2 lety +1

    Great information and knowledge, underrated channel for sure!

  • @matthewm2528
    @matthewm2528 Před 2 lety +13

    Thank you, Dan! We need more fake history debunking these days!

  • @genekelly8467
    @genekelly8467 Před 2 lety +1

    One interesting fact-in a remote part of Bolivia, the ruins of Puma Punku have diorite blocks clamped together using arsenical bronze. This is the only place in South America where such construction has ever been found.

  • @mihaeladesaga2518
    @mihaeladesaga2518 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Thanks!

    • @DanDavisHistory
      @DanDavisHistory  Před 5 měsíci

      Thank you very much!

    • @mihaeladesaga2518
      @mihaeladesaga2518 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @DanDavisHistory I love your videos! So well made and full of accurate information! Dan DavisHistory is one of my favourite History channels that I prefer to watch either to gain more information on our ancestors or to relax. I also love the music bits, the visual, picture representatios of daily life, etc. Thank you for your work on your channel!❤️