The BIZARRE, 26,000 year old TRIPLE BURIAL of Dolní Věstonice

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  • čas přidán 22. 08. 2024
  • We take a look at the mysterious 26,000 year old triple burial from Dolní Věstonice. This discovery is not only bizarre, but it's also one of the oldest human burials ever found!
    Three teenagers were laid to rest in a common grave, near a village called Dolní Věstonice in the Czech province of Moravia. They were laid side by side and the Their bodies had been placed such that the individual on the right had been buried face down, while the individual on the left had his hand placed over the middle skeleton’s pelvic area, which in turn had been covered in red ochre.
    Go figure! We wouldn't dare - we're just the messengers! 😳
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Komentáře • 492

  • @mariellouise1
    @mariellouise1 Před rokem +194

    I’m never too startled to discover that certain peoples had lunar or star calendars. I believe that early peoples were as smart as some our smartest. With thousands of years to look up at the stars, no light pollution and such, the stars were the greatest display on hand!

    • @helenamcginty4920
      @helenamcginty4920 Před rokem +16

      Yup. they were as intelligent as us. They were our ancestors. They just didnt have the accumulation of 26,000years of knowledge that homo sapiens in total has today. Plus re stars i am old enough to recall being able to see the milky way and thousands of stars st night even from our town back garden. Now, even though I live 50k away from a small city the light pollution means I havent seen more than a few stars for years. It must have been even more wonderful back then looking up at the night sky.

    • @mawkernewek
      @mawkernewek Před rokem +17

      The odd thing is, 26000 years ago, it was one full cycle of the precession of the equinoxes in the past, so the stars they saw would be much the same as the ones we see now, with Polaris as the pole star.

    • @jessestreet2549
      @jessestreet2549 Před rokem +1

      Arguments are being made that civilization has stopped human evolution. As a species we no longer have to improve our survivability to ensure continuation of the species. Persons who at one time would be passed over as breeding partners are now procreating and passing possibly destructive genes into the future.

    • @williamrizzo8574
      @williamrizzo8574 Před rokem +9

      And literally nothing safe to do on dark nights. They looked up.

    • @PanglossDr
      @PanglossDr Před rokem +6

      As long as they lived in areas with significantly different seasons they needed to know the time of year, to stock up for the winter.
      Learning enough astronomy to do that is not actually very difficult.

  • @HANKTHEDANKEST
    @HANKTHEDANKEST Před rokem +83

    Maybe it's just me, but those 26,000 year-old winter coats look MIGHTY stylish and I want one!

    • @robertafierro5592
      @robertafierro5592 Před 4 měsíci +9

      It's incredible that the colors are still so vivid! I just started watching this very interesting video, and I'm hoping they will focus on the Beauty of the clothing..I see embroidery at first glance..

    • @davidbennett9691
      @davidbennett9691 Před 3 měsíci +9

      @@robertafierro5592 The colours are vivid because you're looking at the artist's rendering of what the burial might have looked like. Fabrics, animal hides, and human soft tissue rarely survive 2.6 years of burial, much less 26,000.

    • @davidgreenwood6029
      @davidgreenwood6029 Před 3 měsíci +5

      Wait long enough and everything eventually comes back into fashion right?

    • @user-un8tv1pp8m
      @user-un8tv1pp8m Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@davidbennett9691 Good callout.
      There has been proof of textile fabrics worn for at least 40k though.
      Actual fabrics in china and the levante have survived from only ca 6000BC - but we have found impressions of textile on baked clay in considerably older digging horizons.
      And body lice genetics hint at humans starting to wear clothing about 50-40k ago.

    • @kabivose
      @kabivose Před 3 měsíci +3

      ​@davidbennett9691 oh no! You mean it's not real? This click bait gets everywhere. :(

  • @HowardArnold-be9ly
    @HowardArnold-be9ly Před 6 měsíci +28

    They didnt say anything about the fired clay figurines were clay mixed with powdered bone. Almost 27,000 years ago. We still mix something with clay today to make a better product than just taking some clay and making a little dog, or something. I’m impressed.

  • @lazenbytim
    @lazenbytim Před rokem +97

    X-linked chondrodysplasia punctata 1 is a disorder of cartilage and bone development that occurs almost exclusively in males. Chondrodysplasia punctata is an abnormality that appears on x-rays as spots (stippling) near the ends of bones and in cartilage. In most infants with X-linked chondrodysplasia punctata 1, this stippling is seen in bones of the ankles, toes, and fingers; however, it can also appear in other bones. The stippling generally disappears in early childhood.
    Other characteristic features of X-linked chondrodysplasia punctata 1 include short stature and unusually short fingertips and ends of the toes. This condition is also associated with distinctive facial features, particularly a flattened-appearing nose with crescent-shaped nostrils and a flat nasal bridge.
    People with X-linked chondrodysplasia punctata 1 typically have normal intelligence and a normal life expectancy. However, some affected individuals have had serious or life-threatening complications including abnormal thickening (stenosis) of the cartilage that makes up the airways, which restricts breathing. Also, abnormalities of spinal bones in the neck can lead to pinching (compression) of the spinal cord, which can cause pain, numbness, and weakness. Other, less common features of X-linked chondrodysplasia punctata 1 include delayed development, hearing loss, vision abnormalities, and heart defects.

    • @mrmcg2575
      @mrmcg2575 Před rokem +32

      Thank you so much for taking the time to explain it!! I came to the comments looking for this. Much appreciated good sir!!

    • @highdesert-boy
      @highdesert-boy Před 3 měsíci +6

      Thanks for that detail!

  • @AmyBee4
    @AmyBee4 Před rokem +75

    Since it was indicated that the grave was on a slope, I wondered if the positions (hand over pelvis and face down) could have been an action of gravity and time.

  • @chrisball3778
    @chrisball3778 Před rokem +17

    For people who lived in relatively small groups, three young males dying at around the same time would presumably have been a rare occurrence. Assuming none of them were deliberately killed, it suggests an accident or a disease outbreak. The fact they were all related and presumably lived in close proximity, maybe sharing food or water sources, could mean they were all exposed to the same pathogen and died close together as a result. The strange pose might have been just because their community wanted to bury them quickly because they were worried about the contagion spreading.
    The weird position of the arm over the middle body might even be rigor mortis- if the three got sick and two died, the community might have dug the grave for two, then when the third died, added him in as well, without waiting for the rigor to pass, as they'd presumably not want the other bodies beginning to decompose or attract scavengers. It might also be that three deaths so close together were interpreted as having some superstitious significance that required a ritualistic burial or other special treatment of the dead.

    • @sararuiz6468
      @sararuiz6468 Před 2 měsíci +2

      That may explain the one face down !

    • @tribequest9
      @tribequest9 Před měsícem +2

      Love love love your analysis

  • @jackwardrop4994
    @jackwardrop4994 Před rokem +64

    Bodies were actually found in 1986. Also well maintained teeth as this is tens of thousands of years prior to agriculture and the downfall of our teeth.

    • @ms-jl6dl
      @ms-jl6dl Před rokem +4

      You need good weather for agriculture. Those people lived closer to Eskimos than Sumerians,but this doesn't prove that there was no agriculture somewhere warmer.

    • @TerryTerryTerry
      @TerryTerryTerry Před rokem +2

      The oldest was 20

    • @danielmorgan-heredia654
      @danielmorgan-heredia654 Před 7 měsíci

      Good weather would be a very wife range of weather depending kn the area. There is a lot of talk about agricultural practices that arent necessarily modern ways, like fields. It could be portions of forest or shrubs they throw seeds and vaguely maintain.​@ms-jl6dl

    • @tomgoff7887
      @tomgoff7887 Před 5 měsíci +1

      26 thousand years ago. Their teeth might have been good but they died young. Too much meat perhaps?

    • @jamiebriggs1249
      @jamiebriggs1249 Před 4 měsíci

      And no fluoride

  • @eirintowne
    @eirintowne Před rokem +34

    When I first read about this burial in Jean M Auel's "The Mammoth Hunters", I was very young and thought her explanation plausible. In the decades since, I learned more about the scientific process, and started to think of it as mostly a cute bit of fiction.
    By now I have reread the series so many times and compared it to newer science and my increased span of knowledge. It is almost coming full circle, that woman did some great research while writing!
    The events described in the book series are all plausibly described, but the likelihood of it all being related to one person seems slim.
    On the other hand, for customs to change an outside agent is often required. Learning to see what you grew up with through the eyes of a stranger teaches you to question habits and look for better solutions. People who travel get to compare customs in different places and show and tell about what people do in other places. Their brains connect synapses in a different way from people who don't travel, and over time they can adapt an ease of adapting to newness.
    And now I might have to find "The Clan of the Cave Bear" again, to start another series reread...

    • @ansfridaeyowulfsdottir8095
      @ansfridaeyowulfsdottir8095 Před rokem +4

      *_"When I first read about this burial in Jean M Auel's "The Mammoth Hunters"..."_*
      I don't recall that. But it's been a few decades. I read her first three or four books of the _Earth's Children_ series. At the time, I read all those that had been published. Clan of the Cave Bear, Mammoth Hunters, Valley of the Horses and I forget the other.
      {:o:O:}

    • @eirintowne
      @eirintowne Před rokem +3

      @@ansfridaeyowulfsdottir8095 I was incorrect about the book, it occurs in the beginning of "Plains of Passage", which is book four of the series.

    • @susansisson366
      @susansisson366 Před rokem +5

      My life long interest in prehistory began whilst reading and re-reading the entire series, and I've read the entire series of five books at least seven times. She was so ahead of her time!

    • @user-ds2cg1cg1m
      @user-ds2cg1cg1m Před 2 měsíci

      @erinstown:They "adapt an ease of adapting"? Wouldn't "develop" Be a better choice for the first adapt?

    • @eirintowne
      @eirintowne Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@user-ds2cg1cg1m Correct, but slightly less artistic. If I can, I write with a bit of flair and also make it possible for a reader to really ponder the meaning of the word "adapt"... It's my inner teacher, I guess, along with an antiauthoritarian streak, but still respecting the playful beauty of language.
      Think about it: adapting for adaptation. What does it imply? How can it be done? How can one develop a flexibility of thinking, an ease at understanding new concepts, and be open to respect and even enjoy the unknown? The first adaptation makes the next a tiny bit easier, thus making a third adaptation more plausible.

  • @rockinbobokkin7831
    @rockinbobokkin7831 Před rokem +61

    This is so good that I had to watch it twice.
    Now I have a different interpretation. Despite the obvious comedy value in the anthropological record here.....
    We have 3 closely related male hunter gatherers here. In my experience of living in a modern hunter gather group, I would guess these guys were hunting buddies. Even if this group were mammoth specialists, I think we can all agree that variety is the spice of life. A group of 3 might be after smaller game.
    The presence of an unrelated body nearby suggests there was a settlement here or close by.
    It might have been that the three young hunters were lost or succumbed to the elements during a cold time. They might have simply just been frozen in those positions and buried that way to keep them together, or make the funeral easier. Things we will never know. The one buried face down may be symbolic, but it's also possible he died face up and the vultures and foxes ate his face off.
    What we can tell is there was a ceremonious burial that had some degree of symbolic elements.
    I really want to know more about the ability of people so far in the past to master textile manufacturing. That's incredible and I wasn't aware of that before.

    • @matthall143
      @matthall143 Před rokem +10

      And that's why it's always good to read the replies.....you may have got somewhere close to the truth.

    • @rockinbobokkin7831
      @rockinbobokkin7831 Před rokem +19

      @@matthall143 I'm just making conjectures of things we will never know, but I lived in deep bush Alaska for awhile, and surprise storms can come up and take even the most hardened and experienced hunters.

    • @alexandrasmith4393
      @alexandrasmith4393 Před rokem +5

      Utzi's arm was turned over at an odd angle too and frozen.

    • @rockinbobokkin7831
      @rockinbobokkin7831 Před rokem +6

      @@alexandrasmith4393 I imagine people fall and die in pretty bad poses a lot

    • @Fredmayve
      @Fredmayve Před rokem +3

      Painting and masking up for hunting is a thing.

  • @susannadzejachok1247
    @susannadzejachok1247 Před rokem +39

    Would have liked to have seen more closeups of the burial and pictures of the artifacts, not just you guys, not that you are bad looking.

    • @cattymajiv
      @cattymajiv Před 3 měsíci +5

      Yes. I like to have time to study the pictures without needing to pause the video many times.

  • @sebastianucero7535
    @sebastianucero7535 Před rokem +18

    26000yrs!!! amazing. Thank you for the video.
    Some times it boogles the mind that entire "towns and comunities" lived in areas that the last glaciation covered with ice a few 1000s years later.
    We as society, live without fear of nature. Without memory of our past.
    Climate will change and I don't think we are ready for it

    • @beachcomber1able
      @beachcomber1able Před rokem +1

      26000 years ago! How can that be 🤔 The world is only 6000 years young. 😄

    • @GhostScout42
      @GhostScout42 Před 2 měsíci +1

      its always changed, and much more than now

  • @eh1702
    @eh1702 Před rokem +28

    We’ve seen in the war in Ukraine how it is that people can end up buried face down: they get wrapped in blankets, mats, carpets etc after death, and there can be delay and ultimately two or three stages to transporting them, and sometimes reburial. In the process these packages of corpses often get turned and rolled over, when heaved in and out of vehicles, graves, coffins etc. There is no longer a clear back/face orientation and nobody wants to open the package and look.

    • @joanthewad7510
      @joanthewad7510 Před rokem +5

      You’re talking about mass graves though aren’t you? Only three here so surely they would have been able to determine front from back. Is there any evidence of wrapping in mats etc here? I doubt people of that era would be too squeamish to look and check if one was the wrong way round or not.

  • @telebubba5527
    @telebubba5527 Před rokem +39

    This site bears a starkling resemblance with the Kostenki - Borshevo, at the Don river in Russia, which is dated around the same time. It would be interesting to know if there was some kind of connection between the two. Is there any possibility that you guys could find out more on that?

  • @vondahartsock-oneil3343
    @vondahartsock-oneil3343 Před rokem +68

    Suddenly, all the "Tepe's" in Turkey, aren't that interesting! lol. What resonates with me about these burials is the amount of care put into it. It shows just how "human" they were. That someone loved them as deeply as we love our own. I think we tend to feel the people of that time were somehow diff. than us today. Less intelligent, with less emotion. I don't wanna write a book like I always do when I do comment. So much more I could say about the uniqueness of it all. I just wonder if the cause of death could be determined? Any broken bones, head trauma etc....? Killed during a hunt that went wrong or something like that? I know...go down the rabbit hole myself.
    Thanks Guys!

    • @Nobody-11B
      @Nobody-11B Před rokem +6

      Tepe's are still super cool.
      This is in par.

    • @cameronkrause4712
      @cameronkrause4712 Před rokem +10

      My feelings about Gobekli Tepe haven't waned because of this. Quite the opposite, this is another piece of the puzzle that makes everything else richer.

    • @PanglossDr
      @PanglossDr Před rokem +7

      We have been very human for well over 100,000 years.

    • @PaulStringini
      @PaulStringini Před rokem +4

      I don't see how this diminishes all the Tepe's in Turkey. And when I think about why someone might say that... I can't think of one good reason.

  • @perspectiveiseverything1694

    You too are a hoot! What a delightful conversation to share with us. Thank you 😊

  • @chegeny
    @chegeny Před rokem +33

    Thanks. Whatever compelling personal story from that grave must remain lost to time. But the careful attention to their burial is a poignant remembrance of their lives from so long ago. Gravettian life must've been amazing. If I could be a time-tourist, I'd visit their world first.

  • @kariannecrysler640
    @kariannecrysler640 Před rokem +22

    Wonderful site. 26000 year’s & quite accomplished. I am loving the advanced technologies we have so long assumed impossible, coming to light.

  • @kevinroche3334
    @kevinroche3334 Před rokem +18

    Vestonitse, not Vestniche. Pavlov is the next village to Dolni vestonice. Czech Republic, not Czechoslovakia, etc, etc.
    By the way, if you happen to be visiting the city of Brno in the Czech Republic, the burial, all nine of the venuses and the other objects shown here are all being displayed together for the very first time at the Anthropos museum. Well worth a visit.

    • @traviesoarcefan3063
      @traviesoarcefan3063 Před 2 měsíci

      You are correct Kevin. Your pronunciation sounds much better to my 21 years in CZ ears. 😅

  • @mommachupacabra
    @mommachupacabra Před rokem +19

    Looks to me the one in the middle was the beloved and "slow" whether only physical or both physical and developmental brother; the younger brother and half-brother/cousin were his protectors. I'd say that all three died of sickness, maybe drowning where the two died trying to rescue the older brother. (Which still happens to modern humans, where multiple drownings can happen.) The hand over the pelvis may have been originally an embrace across the chest where decay action may have caused the arm to move downward.

    • @cliffordjensen8725
      @cliffordjensen8725 Před rokem +4

      I was thinking it was some kind of human sacrifice, but I like your idea better.

    • @eh1702
      @eh1702 Před rokem +3

      Yes. And if they drowned, they may well have been carried to their grave rolled in mats or blankets. In Ukraine right now, burials are being disinterred where people have been buried face down just because once they are wrapped up, it becomes uncertain which way up they are. And in ad hoc burials, there may not be enough bearers, just a couple of people who have to use a heave-and-roll technique.

    • @sararuiz6468
      @sararuiz6468 Před 2 měsíci

      I've also seen where the body retracks , leaving behind a layer of dry skin with the shape a few inches away . In my case it was a foot !

    • @martas9283
      @martas9283 Před 2 měsíci +1

      yes I saw it as a protective pose as well. I thought that the middle chap and his half-brother or cousin might have been holding hands, particularly logical if the older chap had trouble moving about in life and needed assistance

  • @emmagoff
    @emmagoff Před rokem +15

    Just to point out we still put "make up" on our dead today...

  • @scottyeomans801
    @scottyeomans801 Před rokem +35

    The strangest thing I find about this burial is that the one on the right was buried face down. Obviously so much care and attention was lavished on the burial, I can only assume that there was some significance to his position that I can only guess at.

    • @rose101dw
      @rose101dw Před rokem +9

      I agree, it seems demeaning being faced down

    • @samf137
      @samf137 Před rokem +12

      I find these burials emotionally moving, in a way that is very hard to explain. In a time when life was brutally cold a challenging, the investment in these unfortunate members, must have been a very emotional experience for this small group.

    • @jessestreet2549
      @jessestreet2549 Před rokem +10

      Three young men in a common grave arranged in this odd manner imply a powerful magical connection.
      Perhaps the burial is a sort of tribal talisman.

    • @FrikInCasualMode
      @FrikInCasualMode Před rokem +18

      Up until Middle Ages, in Poland executed criminals (especially murderers) were buried face down. It was done to stop them from raising from the grave as wraiths - because after turning into evil spirits they would try to burrow their way out, but instead would dig themselves only deeper. Was that boy buried with victims of his crime? We will never know.

    • @valerieprice1745
      @valerieprice1745 Před rokem +15

      It's just a guess, but maybe he was considered at fault for all three deaths somehow. It's a really sad grave.

  • @theeddorian
    @theeddorian Před rokem +12

    One critical fact is that "hunter-gatherers" are not a uniform technological and subsistence pattern. There is a range from very mobile social groups that essentially forage for necessities every day, to "complex hunter-gatherers" who often were no more mobile than their horticulturalist and agriculturalist descendants. Consider Göbekli Tepe for example, of as a far more contemporary example the Northwest Coast of North America where large wooden halls were built and monumental sculptures (totem poles) that would be every bit as awesome as Göbekli Tepe, were the structures and totem poles made of stone.

  • @dragonfox2.058
    @dragonfox2.058 Před rokem +5

    This also was about the time the cave paintings were made. some of the greatest art in the history of humanity. these peoples were not primitive!

  • @AmyBee4
    @AmyBee4 Před rokem +15

    So excited to see a new video! Can't wait to sink my teeth (eyeballs?) into it this evening. I'm in the western US, and I save these to watch undistracted at night.

  • @nodarkthings
    @nodarkthings Před rokem +7

    My head is now spinning with questions! Great video.

  • @jowest7020
    @jowest7020 Před rokem +19

    Have very recently discovered your site. Excellent. Am obsessively rewatching everything. Am learning so much. Thank you.

  • @rockinbobokkin7831
    @rockinbobokkin7831 Před rokem +12

    I want to see and know more about this site!!!

  • @maryblushes7189
    @maryblushes7189 Před rokem +9

    Red ochre had religous symbolism but it ALSO had medicinal properties! Antibacterial, etc. it was used in funerals, true, but covering a dead body would slow down putrefaction and stink😘 which explains why it, and flowers, were used in funerals, in my opinion.

    • @eh1702
      @eh1702 Před rokem +2

      Ochre is also still used in some places in leather-processing as a preservative.

    • @joanthewad7510
      @joanthewad7510 Před rokem

      Good luck with that working. You couldn’t have seen many dead things.

  • @janetmackinnon3411
    @janetmackinnon3411 Před rokem +11

    Thank you. Can anyone tell me the earlest proof of cloth-weaving? 26,000 years ago is already staggering....

    • @AmyBee4
      @AmyBee4 Před rokem +2

      One thing mentioned was that the imprints of woven fabric have been found in the soil.

    • @dragonfox2.058
      @dragonfox2.058 Před rokem +1

      @@AmyBee4 yes that boy in Africa called the first evidence of ritual burial was wrapped in a blanket

    • @GhostScout42
      @GhostScout42 Před 2 měsíci +1

      sure, when adam and eve ate of the tree of good and evil, they were ashamed to be naked in the presence of God. God clothed them. eve knew how to weave aince she was like 60

    • @marthamurphy7940
      @marthamurphy7940 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@GhostScout42 God always knew how to weave.

  • @geniexmay562
    @geniexmay562 Před rokem +9

    Intriguing and thought provoking!! Thank You Guys!!

  • @marymahaffa6513
    @marymahaffa6513 Před rokem +8

    How was the burial dated to 26,000 ago?

    • @GhostScout42
      @GhostScout42 Před 2 měsíci

      trust me bro. no but seriously, probably some of the first immigrants from babel

  • @michaelterry3885
    @michaelterry3885 Před rokem +9

    I wonder, if it's been considered that perhaps the young man and or even all of the young men were.. buried in an advanced stage of rigor mortis, or even possibly Frozen in part, or completely, prior to burial..? This might explain his peculiar position in the grave..? Seems to me just as likely an explanation as any other..? What do you think..? I would love to know... How off base I am..
    Thanks gentlemen..
    Love your Channel it's brilliant...

    • @sheilam4964
      @sheilam4964 Před rokem +3

      @Michael Terry - I never thought of that. It is totally possible and makes sense. Not proven going on the discussion in the video but definately a possibility.

    • @cathjj840
      @cathjj840 Před rokem

      I thought of those as possibilities, as did several others in the thread.

  • @vomact1052
    @vomact1052 Před rokem +7

    Thank you! Love these shorts👍👍

  • @terezacibulkova814
    @terezacibulkova814 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Thank you for covering this case, i remember learning about this in school, as I live in Czech Republic and the site is near my home. I was told the birth theory about this find. I'm so glad I got to hear this kinda update on it.

  • @marksadventures3889
    @marksadventures3889 Před rokem +4

    Where's Doggerlsnd on your map? It's missing, I'm sure it's supposed to be there for that time period.

  • @Watcher1852
    @Watcher1852 Před rokem +6

    Wow fascinating.. thank you for sharing

  • @robynmorris3772
    @robynmorris3772 Před rokem +3

    I wonder when I see the positions of the bodies in this burial, and considering their assumed age, whether or not they were part of a small group and someone younger / less physically strong was left to bury the bodies. I can imagine trying to move a deceased body would be difficult, and might require rolling them into the grave. It might explain the flung arms on the one body, and the face-down position of the other. Whoever buried them might simply have been unable to physically re-position them once in the grave.

  • @martykitson3442
    @martykitson3442 Před rokem +8

    my intro to Dolní Věstonice was of course Jean Auel's beautifully written "the Plains Of Passage" and I've always kept firmly in mind that is a work of fiction. nice to see some information about the burial that reflects just facts

    • @amazinggrace5692
      @amazinggrace5692 Před rokem +1

      Remember reading and rereading Clan of the Cave Bear, which I think was the first book.

    • @martykitson3442
      @martykitson3442 Před rokem +2

      @@amazinggrace5692 clan was in fact first of the 7 books plains was # 4 I find them enjoyable enough that I read them every few years

  • @lvdovicvs
    @lvdovicvs Před měsícem

    Absolutely fascinating! The additional context with inserted images, etc., adds depth that I appreciated.

  • @lindagates9150
    @lindagates9150 Před rokem +22

    I wonder if weaving was inspired by the webs that spiders made 😮😊or the nests that some birds make that look like they are weaving in materials or weaving their fingers or weaving plant materials to make sleeping pads. 😂well that’s all I can come up with .😅I wonder if any of these random thoughts could be the inspiration for the cloth that they made into clothes

    • @helenamcginty4920
      @helenamcginty4920 Před rokem +5

      I cant see the spiders webs but our ape cousins make nests of branches and maybe our ancestors did as well gradually getting better and better? Plus I can remember making daisy chains and plaiting grasses when I was little. It wouldnt take a huge leap for a bright ancient homo sapiens lady to work out she could just add more and more grass to make a cape maybe?

  • @myboloneyhasafirstname6764
    @myboloneyhasafirstname6764 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Great video. Thanks, Prehistory Guys.

  • @TacDyne
    @TacDyne Před rokem +1

    People are reading entirely too much into the placement of the bodies. The middle body was placed in while there was room to place a body. The other two bodies were placed in from above. They were pretty much rolled into place and were buried how they fell. There is absolutely nothing more to their placement than that. Not everything has lines between the lines.

  • @noeraldinkabam
    @noeraldinkabam Před rokem +5

    Is it without question they were all three buried at the same time?

  • @Angelica-cl4yr
    @Angelica-cl4yr Před rokem +2

    I know a family that lost 3 family members in an accident.
    A Father, his brother and his son.
    Maybe they were all buried together because they were related or they died together?

  • @chrisdjernaes9658
    @chrisdjernaes9658 Před rokem +2

    Thanks for opening another window into human evolution and ancient civilization.

  • @vladimircharvat7331
    @vladimircharvat7331 Před rokem +7

    Guys, you still misspronounce Dolní Věstonice :-) You make mistake just at the end of name. "ce" is not "tche" but "tze" in english pronounciation. Google translator may help you, it pronounce it nearly as czech or moravian would pronounce. But absolutelly thank you for this topic. Greetings from czech republic. :-)

  • @williamjonas5004
    @williamjonas5004 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I had a friend working as a pipefitter in a hot humid setting in the south. His foreman got a week off due to severe diaper rash. He asked the old hands at lunch how to avoid this problem. They each reached in their pockets and pull out little tobacco pouches of corn starch. They said dust with this son. Possibly ocher was used for this purpose. The younger males may have been caretakers for the handicapped one. The one facing down may have been looking out for threats from the underground. Bears come out of caves and hibernation tunnels. The old male burial with an ochre'd crotch may have very possibly been incontinent and needed a frequent ochre dusting. Gairika (Red Ochre) is supposed to be used to treat pustules. It may not be just the hematite or limonite but also a clay it is found with.
    The big question then is why do humans tend the handicap. Old people are our Gigabytes of storage...so before books etc they were certain very valuable. What about other less capable young disabled humans? Is there a competitive edge to what may be easily seen as a waste of resources? A child specialist once told me that if we cured autism silicon valley would fold. Also maybe we would have never decoded Mayan writings. Thus a unforeseen evolutionary edge for what some may think is an overly compassionate society. 'Nuf said?

  • @knowshet313
    @knowshet313 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Thank you, I find this subject, fascinating as many people do. It’s fairly apparent that there was some kind of civilized society with a global connection before recorded history. When you think of what we’ve accomplished in the last thousand years? it gives rise to the old saying there is nothing new under the sun.

  • @mariewolton7027
    @mariewolton7027 Před rokem +2

    A lot of this was the material that Jean Auel used for her Earthchildren books - fascinating!

  • @dieterschonefeld7428
    @dieterschonefeld7428 Před rokem +3

    I`ve heard about 3 rowed chains of carnivore teeth from somewhere else in very old graves or caves, but i can`t remember right now where that was. Will make contact when i find out.

  • @erlemartincarvalho1733
    @erlemartincarvalho1733 Před rokem +1

    Really enjoyed the talk. Very informative and interesting. Kudos.

  • @StephiSensei26
    @StephiSensei26 Před rokem +3

    The mystery of being Human: "The more we change, the more we remain the same".
    26,000 years ago, these people were looking for a reason to their existence, and sending a "message in a bottle" into the future, for us to find. "We were here, this is who we were and what we did, for better or worse".
    Of course, it's virtually impossible to ascertain one way or the other, but one point I feel has been overlooked by the general archeological society and our narrators, is that it wasn't unusual for groups of people to have slaves from outside, and then treat the slave as one of their own. I'm thinking Egyptians, Alexander the Great, Romans, Vikings etc. And then the "beloved" slave would follow the master into death. Just an idea. These remains appear to have be chromesomelogically connected in some way, ...but...who knows?

    • @cathjj840
      @cathjj840 Před rokem +3

      My understanding is that slaves only came much later. You could take in an outsider if needed to complete the group but they would have normal status of others. But slaves (unwilling, forced), especially male ones, would be just too risky and expensive in resources to keep. Fights were to the death, or eventually until the enemy was sure to stay away from your affairs.

  • @MrToradragon
    @MrToradragon Před rokem +6

    I would not be surprised by the fact that those three were closely related, how big could ave the tribe be back then? 30 people? 50 people? Given the fact that there were at least 2-3 generations living a the same time, they all could be related to greater or lesser degree
    Now to the platform ad whole burial. I know that general area and I would not say that there is need to make grave for three on slope, however slopes are grate place to have camp, or place to spend night, so I would say that the site originally was something like dugout and not a grave. So ten what happened could be that they got caught in bad weather or in early onset of winter or for some other reason they were unable to continue and decided to spend some time there. Maybe it was sudden winter storm, whatever, they had ended in this dugout for some time and they either died of starvation or froze to death. That could as well explain one person lying face down and other two hugging.
    The mam lying face down perhaps died first and it was either too creepy to let him lie on his back or maybe, if they were all close together he died partially lying on men in the middle and to be frank nobody wants to sleep when dead lies on him, so he just got from underneath of his brother and the body would be left facing down. I would say that the placing of the hand could be result of many factors, from modern intimate explanations, to simple physics. But certainly I would not rule out that those two had some very intimate relationship. We do not know whether it was frowned upon or encouraged as it could have been a survival strategy for the tribe given the harsh conditions they lived in.
    Then they would be discovered after god knows how many days and decision would be taken to bury them on the spot as transport would not be possible (decay, terrain, snow...), practical or for some other reason. God knows, maybe they lowed that place and to me it makes complete sense to be buried somewhere you loved it (it is only modern society that denies us those things). So they would make all the rituals and then burn that whole thing down with them. I would say that such event would even put the whole tribe in danger as it has lost three young men in the same time.
    But I do not have explanation for red ochre and for the mask.

    • @cathjj840
      @cathjj840 Před rokem +1

      Someone else mentioned that the use of red ochre is very common around the world. Among its properties is it being anti-bacterial, so slowing down decay (and odors).

    • @margomoore4527
      @margomoore4527 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Ppl in an unheated society weren’t shy about sharing beds just for warmth.

  • @dennismacwilliams196
    @dennismacwilliams196 Před rokem +6

    I think pre history is much more interesting almost any other
    time in our history...
    Just my thought...

  • @sidilicious11
    @sidilicious11 Před rokem +7

    Ir’d be fascinating if someone did a remote viewing to see what they come up with.

  • @Sigr
    @Sigr Před rokem +5

    They have really good wine down there in south Moravia.

  • @rose101dw
    @rose101dw Před rokem +6

    I seem to see it as the middle older disabled brother had a protector in his half brother with the head dress on his left. What stumps me is the brother on the right that is faced down. Perhaps he defamed or set him up to be killed and the reason for the disgraced face down. Could the red ochre be an sign of trust and honor of a person

  • @BirthingBetterSkills
    @BirthingBetterSkills Před rokem +1

    Inaccurate about the disease: "X-linked chondrodysplasia punctata 1 is a disorder of cartilage and bone development that occurs almost exclusively in males. Chondrodysplasia punctata is an abnormality that appears on x-rays as spots (stippling) near the ends of bones and in cartilage. In most infants with X-linked chondrodysplasia punctata 1, this stippling is seen in bones of the ankles, toes, and fingers; however, it can also appear in other bones. The stippling generally disappears in early childhood.
    Other characteristic features of X-linked chondrodysplasia punctata 1 include short stature and unusually short fingertips and ends of the toes. This condition is also associated with distinctive facial features, particularly a flattened-appearing nose with crescent-shaped nostrils and a flat nasal bridge.
    People with X-linked chondrodysplasia punctata 1 typically have normal intelligence and a normal life expectancy. However, some affected individuals have had serious or life-threatening complications including abnormal thickening (stenosis) of the cartilage that makes up the airways, which restricts breathing. Also, abnormalities of spinal bones in the neck can lead to pinching (compression) of the spinal cord, which can cause pain, numbness, and weakness. Other, less common features of X-linked chondrodysplasia punctata 1 include delayed development, hearing loss, vision abnormalities, and heart defects."

  • @andrewlamb8055
    @andrewlamb8055 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Great video my friend Paul X ⚔️⚔️💫💫❤️❤️❤️

  • @imnotanalien7839
    @imnotanalien7839 Před rokem +3

    They must have all died at the same time, and it makes sense they were a family. And people cared about them. That was an interesting story.

  • @rebekahdavis5935
    @rebekahdavis5935 Před rokem +2

    The hand being over the pelvis doesn't necessarily mean something sexual. As you said towards the end of the video it was't uncommon for this group of people to adorn head and pelvis with red ochre and as for "zinging through the ages" well for the reason you said. They are more profoundly personal which gives us more info on them. Understanding who these people were. Understanding who our ancestors were 26,000 years ago IS INDEED THE PULL, the excitement. It's the human connection to ourselves. I think it's frustrating knowing there are traditions they held that we will NEVER be able to fully understand but being so close to the possibility of having a window into their life is REALLY enticing for many.

    • @johnakajon3563
      @johnakajon3563 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Thank you. Well thought out and well stated. I stumbled on this video years after it was published, posted. The video left me wondering if this particular burial was very different from others found at this site. Was the face down position of the guy on the right unique to this particular burial? Were other burial sites cut into a slope? Were all of the other graves found with only one body?
      The narrators created a wonderful presentation that contains lots of fascinating details. Clearly there were some notes used, but to me they appeared to do the video pretty much off the cuff. Their passion for the subject and their depth of knowledge really hooked me. After listening to this I was left wishing for a video twice as long. They did mention that the site is quite large and it their discussion did mention other graves.
      I suppose if the video was twice as long the end result for me would be twice as many unanswered questions, maybe unanswerable. How amazing to find that these people, this culture existed 26,000 years ago. Clearly I’m no scholar, just a guy gathering fascinating information from CZcams. Wasn’t 26,000 years ago the time frame of the Younger Dryas?

  • @Albukhshi
    @Albukhshi Před rokem +1

    @ 22:10
    I notice that too. Some part of me thinks the burials were there to tell a story about the deceased, as much as it was to simply honor the dead.
    What I find more fascinating, though, are the portraits from a nearby structure; apparently, one was matched to a woman also found at the site (both had a banged-up left face). I remember reading somewhere that the figure was found with others within a structure, but that could be my memory failing me.
    The portraits--and the very creative burials--make me wonder if the burials weren't also memorials, where stories of the dead were told to younger generations? You see similar customs even into the 20th century.
    As to the three? Maybe they were very close in life, and when the guy in the middle died, the other two were killed (willingly or not), to help the middle one in the afterlife?

  • @samf137
    @samf137 Před rokem +91

    It’s sights such this, that makes me roll my eye when I hear Graham Hancock talk about Neolithic hunter gathers, as though they had just learned to walk and bang rocks together.

    • @geniexmay562
      @geniexmay562 Před rokem +11

      But No!! You've got him all wrong!! There were ancient LOST civilisations and levitating stones with vibrations!!

    • @cargilekm
      @cargilekm Před rokem +7

      Why doesn't Graham Hancock explain why none of the advanced technology ever gets put in as grave goods. Aren't these people of the same age as his lost civilizations. You would think their loved ones would want them to have the best in their journey to the afterlife. Cheers

    • @qwerty-tf1jg
      @qwerty-tf1jg Před rokem +14

      Pardon I don't think you are hearing him properly sir

    • @cargilekm
      @cargilekm Před rokem +1

      @@qwerty-tf1jg Hearing who?

    • @speakupriseup4549
      @speakupriseup4549 Před rokem +8

      I wouldn't worry too much about Graham Hancock, absolutely nobody with any real understanding of human history takes him or his ridiculous "theories" seriously.

  • @graceygrumble
    @graceygrumble Před 18 dny +1

    Much has been discovered and much has been lost. Our civilisation and mere existence hang by the finest of threads. Fascinating and all rather scary.
    Good luck, everyone!

  • @gloriagarza6823
    @gloriagarza6823 Před rokem +1

    Peace. Interesting. Mishap while all three were joyrneying through the woods together? They seemingly perished, essentially, at same time? My heart goes out to their mother(s) and father(s). What a great loss. Peace.

  • @Crecganford
    @Crecganford Před rokem

    Thoroughly enjoyed this one, thank you.

  • @zeideerskine3462
    @zeideerskine3462 Před rokem +6

    The fringe of drilled teeth sounds very reminiscent of the Bad Dürrenberg shamma (female shaman). However, she was much later, I think.

    • @richardkelly9156
      @richardkelly9156 Před rokem

      Maliciously named

    • @nodarkthings
      @nodarkthings Před rokem +3

      Your comment made me think of the enigmatic "sorcerer" in the cave of Lascaux and the similarity with a drawing made in 1692 by Nicolaes Witsen of a Siberian shaman titled "Tungus Shaman; or, Priest of the Devil"

    • @zeideerskine3462
      @zeideerskine3462 Před rokem +3

      @@nodarkthings indeed. There is a German New Age music group called Heilung (Healing) that used traditional German shaman garb and ceremonial songs. They look like that, too.

    • @nodarkthings
      @nodarkthings Před rokem +2

      @@henchy3rd Certainly would have been. Sad really. This attitude goes back centuries and destroyed so much of our culture.

    • @katipohl2431
      @katipohl2431 Před rokem +5

      The shaman lady of Bad Dürrheim was buried 9.000 years ago.

  • @skeptigal4626
    @skeptigal4626 Před rokem +1

    26K years ago is simply incomprehensible to me.

  • @eh1702
    @eh1702 Před rokem +1

    There are still some people on the planet who use ochre in hide processing as a preservative, to discourage microbes. The “adornment” might have been just leather headband and loincloth/apron.

  • @josephlloyd9636
    @josephlloyd9636 Před rokem

    Fascinating!! Such an incredible glimpse into our world history. 💯🏆 Thank you.

  • @jaynehorn151
    @jaynehorn151 Před rokem

    Fascinating grave. Great video.

  • @CalvinKlown
    @CalvinKlown Před rokem +7

    Weren't the Pavlovians the first to domesticate dogs through the use of bells?

    • @MH-ln6pv
      @MH-ln6pv Před rokem +13

      No. They invented meringue desserts.

    • @CalvinKlown
      @CalvinKlown Před rokem +4

      @@MH-ln6pv Did you just make a Pavlovian response?

    • @Handyandy747
      @Handyandy747 Před rokem +2

      Ding ding

    • @MrToradragon
      @MrToradragon Před rokem +2

      @@Handyandy747 I must feed my dogs! :D

  • @markc8626
    @markc8626 Před 6 měsíci +1

    what they're wearing looks warmer than what I'm wearing.... 20,000 years on

  • @anastasiarose9003
    @anastasiarose9003 Před 3 měsíci

    This was really interesting to me. I love ancient history brought into the present and read a lot of archaeological magazines and just articles online. You made me want to go research this I won't be able to get to Europe and go there but I will look into it and try to find out more. I have I have subscribed to your podcasts and I look forward to learning more this is really cool, thank you!

  • @maxiculture
    @maxiculture Před rokem +2

    I often wonder why European archaeology relating to stone age hunter-gatherers makes so little reference to Australian anthropology. Ochre and rows of perforated animal teeth would easily be interpreted as personal adornment, here. Headbands and belts of spun human hair were heavily smeared with ochre as was the body and implements used in life. Headbands could include teeth of suitable size and shape. Certain forms of ochre were highly prized here and were transported far from source to be worn/displayed on the person. Assumptions about burial ritual are just that.

    • @joanthewad7510
      @joanthewad7510 Před rokem

      What does the Aboriginal culture have to do with this? Apart from the fact they were Stone Age societies. These people are already way more sophisticated and technologically advanced than Aboriginals ever became. Vastly different climate too.

  • @ltlwlwl5057
    @ltlwlwl5057 Před rokem +5

    I'm more interested in the fact one boy was buried face down. Why? Did he cause their death? Was he a loved member of the group but was disobedient and encouraged dangerous behavior? Boys will be boys!

  • @alexandrasmith4393
    @alexandrasmith4393 Před rokem +4

    Wouldn't there be something down the centuries which fed through about certain practices? So many things are celebrated or are part of a practice which we don't understand today. The community obviously had connections with the Mediterranean.

    • @tomsitzman3952
      @tomsitzman3952 Před rokem +2

      Trade between the Mediterranean and Central Europe does not surprise me. Young me through history have gone on their walk about. In North America at a much later date trade goods from have been found at sites thousand miles away from there production. I am intrigued by the clothing depicted. The clothing was very practical and designed for the riggers of the climate.

  • @k8eekatt
    @k8eekatt Před rokem +2

    Modern occurrence of chondrodysplasia punctata occurs in about 1 in 100,000 people. It often causes delayed development and most don't live past 10 years old.

  • @beatricepetronelli3042
    @beatricepetronelli3042 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Speculation is ALL we have really. I think everyone should tell a story about this burial. Let your imagination fly.❤ loved this discussion. Thanks

  • @donaldduck7628
    @donaldduck7628 Před rokem +1

    If beating around the bush was a thing, consider the bush quite dead. The calendar is probably an April fools joke.

  • @ironcladranchandforge7292

    I think too much is being made about the arm over the pelvis stuff. It seems people let their imagination run amuck. What I see is a family tragedy. Three family members tragically dying at the same time, and so young at that. Really sad.

  • @kalrandom7387
    @kalrandom7387 Před rokem +2

    Decent on the information, but really wish you would shown close up pictures of the items you were talking about and actual photographs not artist Renditions. I didn't care as much about the poses of the people, but of the clothing design and fabrics that were found not to mention the tools they had with them and the adornments, that's where the real information lies. By the way this is the first video I've seen from you

  • @GregoryGodfear
    @GregoryGodfear Před rokem +2

    The artist rendition, reminds me of our sami or Inuit people from the North.. quite interesting Indeed

  • @hamnose
    @hamnose Před rokem

    "Go figure! We wouldn't dare - we're just the messengers!" l love that.

  • @yvonnesmith6152
    @yvonnesmith6152 Před rokem +2

    Reminiscent of the “tender lovers” burials, especially of the Bronze Age Vysotskaya culture, where one of the buried was placed into the grave alive. The way the body is arranged in some of these graves suggest this to have happened before rigor mortis to have set in.

    • @NullHand
      @NullHand Před rokem +1

      Rigor mortis is temporary.
      Lasts from about 12 to 36 hrs post mortem in human corpses.

  • @kjbuchanan63
    @kjbuchanan63 Před rokem +2

    Our longing to look into the faces of our ancestors

  • @Crowhillgal
    @Crowhillgal Před rokem +1

    very interesting! thank you

  • @ericschmuecker348
    @ericschmuecker348 Před rokem +7

    Red ochre to add a life like color to the skin.

  • @galghaidhil
    @galghaidhil Před rokem +1

    Excellent!

  • @ericashmusic8889
    @ericashmusic8889 Před 2 měsíci +1

    If their heads/faces were covered in red ochre, then surely when the tissue rotted away, their skulls would have been ivory coloured ? what explanation do the finders give for that ?

  • @ellenmendoza7246
    @ellenmendoza7246 Před rokem

    Thank you. really enjoy listening to you to talk . Very cool

  • @TheJoan48
    @TheJoan48 Před 3 měsíci +1

    First ten minutes wasn’t even the burial. Had trouble hanging in.

  • @marymagnuson5191
    @marymagnuson5191 Před rokem +1

    Animals could have moved some of the bones around over the thousands of years. They may not have been found in their original positions when buried.

  • @alihunter84
    @alihunter84 Před rokem +5

    Red ochre again and again?! you mean there was a MUD AGE before the stone age?! makes sense tbh...seems legit

  • @seanwelch71
    @seanwelch71 Před rokem +3

    Could their cult determine their burial arrangements? Sky God versus Earth Mother? Perhaps the congenital disorder was considered sacred in some way?

  • @reubenaberlin
    @reubenaberlin Před rokem

    Great stuff!~ ty

  • @Unit8200-rl8ev
    @Unit8200-rl8ev Před 28 dny

    Another thing to contemplate is that the human migration into the Americas, which has recently been dated back to 20,000 or more years ago, would have been a culture on a par with that of the Dolni Venesti of 26,000 years ago.

  • @rodolfoayalajr.8589
    @rodolfoayalajr.8589 Před rokem

    Great 👍 video.

  • @mariabyrne1954
    @mariabyrne1954 Před rokem

    Love the prehistory guys

  • @HowardArnold-be9ly
    @HowardArnold-be9ly Před 6 měsíci +1

    Dolni Westeneetsa. According to a Czech friend.