Life In Paleolithic Europe (35,000 Years Ago)

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  • čas přidán 4. 05. 2024
  • Continuing my never ending tour of prehistory, I'm talking a look at the Aurignacian culture, that spanned Europe 35,000 years ago.
    So many people to thank in this video (remember any mistakes are mine alone, nothing to do with anyone else)!
    First and foremost, thanks to my patrons! You're the real lion men/women.
    / stefanmilo
    Thanks to Dr. James Dilley for his insight into prehistoric tools:
    Get his awesome accurate tools here! www.ancientcraft.co.uk
    His CZcams: / ancientcraftuk
    Thanks to Dr. Cosimo Post for agreeing to be interviewed about ancient DNA. Watch that here! • The DNA of Ice Age Eur...
    Thanks to The Histocrat for recording the quotes for me:
    / @thehistocrat
    Thanks to Barris for the French transaltions (don't blame him for ziti and zezette though):
    / thisisbarris
    Thanks to you for watching!
    Full list of sources can be found here *(anyone can view it, not only patrons):
    / 43024519
    Disclaimer: Use my videos as a rough guide to a topic. I am not an expert, I may get things wrong. This is why I always post my sources so you can critique my work and verify things for yourselves. Of course I aim to be as accurate as possible which is why you will only find reputable sources in my videos. Secondly, information is always subject to changes as new information is uncovered by archaeologists.
    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
    www.stefanmilo.com
    Historysmilo
    historysmilo

Komentáře • 2,5K

  • @StefanMilo
    @StefanMilo  Před 3 lety +315

    DNA Interview: czcams.com/video/v8tLPXUeMtc/video.html
    So many people to thank in this video (remember any mistakes are mine alone, nothing to do with anyone else)!
    First and foremost, thanks to my patrons! You're the real lion men/women.
    www.patreon.com/stefanmilo
    Thanks to Dr. James Dilley for his insight into prehistoric tools:
    Get his awesome accurate tools here! www.ancientcraft.co.uk
    His CZcams: czcams.com/users/ancientcraftUK
    Thanks to Dr. Cosimo Post for agreeing to be interviewed about ancient DNA. Watch that here! czcams.com/video/v8tLPXUeMtc/video.html
    Thanks to The Histocrat for recording the quotes for me:
    czcams.com/channels/SwFnHpDt-lZgR_7Sqisi6A.html
    Thanks to Barris for the French transaltions (don't blame him for ziti and zezette though):
    czcams.com/users/ThisisBarrisfeatured
    Thanks to you for watching!
    Full list of sources can be found here *(anyone can view it, not only patrons):
    www.patreon.com/posts/43024519

    • @wicketandfriendsparody8068
      @wicketandfriendsparody8068 Před 3 lety +4

      I think there’s still morbidly obese beasts roaming Europe and spread to America. :)

    • @wicketandfriendsparody8068
      @wicketandfriendsparody8068 Před 3 lety +5

      There may have been a giant war with Neanderthal and they didn’t have time to manufacture stone tips?¿ Especially when semi automatic spears involved:/

    • @wicketandfriendsparody8068
      @wicketandfriendsparody8068 Před 3 lety +4

      Ps on the map wasn’t the Black Sea land then mostly?

    • @wicketandfriendsparody8068
      @wicketandfriendsparody8068 Před 3 lety +4

      Somebody assumed the lionman’s gender:/

    • @aatypzbt6258
      @aatypzbt6258 Před 3 lety +6

      Please don't be mad at me but "Partie 1: arrivé" translates as "Partie 1: arrived". Is that what you meant to say? Or did you mean "arrival", then it would translate as "L'arrivée".

  • @coreywiley3981
    @coreywiley3981 Před 3 lety +1236

    Imagine that! One can take a 15,000 year chunk of time out of human history where people were doing a lot of the same things. Like imagine visiting Europe in 30,000 BCE, people who had been in Europe for 10-15,000 years already, and then time traveling ahead from that point 15,000 years to the future and it would still be hunter gatherers oblivious to the 30,000 year history behind them, and there'd still be an 11,000 year wait just to get to Otsi, and 17,000 year wait still ahead just to get to Augustus Caesar! When I think of the year 1000 AD it seems like such an incredibly long time ago when things were archaic and so much different, and yet when we discus Aurignacians, Gravettians, Magdalenians etc.. we are talking about tens of thousands of years and so many individual lives and generations of people! I can't believe how long that is in human terms, and yet it is just a fraction of a blink in geologic terms!

    • @fudgedogbannana
      @fudgedogbannana Před 3 lety +78

      Its all in the climate. In an ice age farming would have been very limited, so what are you left with? hunting and gathering. Notice what happens when climate stabilizes about 9,500 years ago, humans start to farm on a large scale. Now many humans are free to do many things and thus the beginning of civilization.

    • @covenawhite4855
      @covenawhite4855 Před 3 lety +22

      Stone tools got better over time though.

    • @charsback
      @charsback Před 3 lety +2

      @@fudgedogbannana By 2030 U will be a slave again...

    • @chasecharland1160
      @chasecharland1160 Před 3 lety +131

      Perhaps your aware that there are more ppl alive now then have ever existed previously combined. That is, back 40,000 years ago, there were not so many individuals after all! Imagine the stories, how important even a single life could be! A mother who successfully raised several children, a hunter who saved his tribe during a bad winter, a leader who steered his ppl from disaster such as disease or weather change. Any one of they ppl could have inadvertently saved the human race thousands of years of experience or maybe even saved our species as a whole!
      Now I go to Walmart and am pretty sure I will never have such a power impact on our world lol maybe even none of us today ever will again.

    • @coreywiley3981
      @coreywiley3981 Před 3 lety +38

      @Sf Ski You are right. There is no solid evidence to ascertain with absolute certainty whether they did or did not know of the history of humanity or from where their ancestors originated, or the geological history of their environment, but given that we in the 21st century with all of our archeology, science, writing and literature still have barely scratched the surface of the mystery of many things from even the relatively recent past (say past few millennia) it's a safe guess that aside from legends and some passed down memories and stories from recent generations, probably most paleolithic people had no idea what had gone on beyond a few hundred years in the past if even that. I admit I could be wrong, but I'm going to assume that aside from greatly distorted and fantastic legends or myths, most Magdalenians from 12,000 BP were clueless about Magdalenians from 13,000 BP, much less Magdalenians from 17,000 BP, and much much less about any Gravettians or Aurignacians who were much farther separated in time than we are from events that occurred ancient Egypt.

  • @theoli8407
    @theoli8407 Před 3 lety +396

    just two very intelligent blokes having a friendly chat about shafts

    • @miketacos9034
      @miketacos9034 Před 3 lety +44

      And comparing their hardness.

    • @lisarochwarg4707
      @lisarochwarg4707 Před 3 lety +37

      Only the tip counted.

    • @Kainis80
      @Kainis80 Před 2 lety +20

      It's really effective at 20 cm (8 inches) though.

    • @eduardobone8857
      @eduardobone8857 Před 2 lety +14

      Be careful not to get stuck

    • @yousefp3591
      @yousefp3591 Před 2 lety +14

      .. And one of them is a bushcraft master 🤔 how very 1970s of him

  • @rclaws1347
    @rclaws1347 Před 2 lety +410

    I live in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina and have been a traditional bowhunter of whitetailed deer since my youth. I have also made a few bows and arrows and am interested in information on that as well as other areas of pre-industrial life. As an old man now with physical problems I am no longer able to walk the mountains or even go on a simple hunt so I spend much of my time reading and watching videos about the things I love. I find this video informative and extremely interesting and if you have more videos I intend to watch them also. Thank you for a well done piece of work.

    • @kyrab7914
      @kyrab7914 Před rokem +13

      If you've not looked at them, Dr Dilley has some videos on how hunting may have gone. Most especially making ancient weapons & tools

    • @johnl5316
      @johnl5316 Před rokem +8

      an ancestor of mine was born around Asheville in the 1700's. Beautiful area

    • @johndicus123
      @johndicus123 Před rokem +5

      @@johnl5316 I've got fambly in Asheville. Some of them been there for centuries!

    • @johndicus123
      @johndicus123 Před rokem +9

      @@cordeliaadams4898 You don't need to have someone else hurt and kill animals for you to buy at the supermarket. You can eat beans and rice. And places that don't fence are best as the deer and animals can have beans and rice also! Everyone wins that way.

    • @rclaws1347
      @rclaws1347 Před rokem +21

      @@cordeliaadams4898 Men have been hunting far longer than they have been growing crops or tending livestock. Anyone who goes to the trouble to build a bow and arrow then take it hunting to try and get something tasty for his/her family to eat is engaging in the most basic activity known to man.
      There are many kinds of hunters as well as game to hunt and tools to hunt with; all legal hunting is a challenge and it stirs something in us that was bred into our makeup at least tens of thousands of years ago. To deny that is about the same as denying life. By the way you explain it we live in a society where we can hire an assassin to kill our meat for us, but I confer upon you that the animals we kill by hunting go through far less trauma than the ones grown in a feed lot then trucked to a slaughter house.
      I suspect you live in a world where everything a man finds pleasure in that you don't understand should be stopped and therein lies the rub. You don't understand so it must be bad. Just like a cougar taking down an elk or a bobcat catching a squirrel man is a part of the food chain; we don't have the physical traits of the cougar, but we're more intelligent, we can make tools. I wish I was younger and able to stalk the hollows and ridges again, I wish I could take you hunting and familiarize you with a world you've only heard of. You would learn that it's nothing like you expected and depending on your tolerance of nature I think your life would be more contented afterward.

  • @aguy559
    @aguy559 Před 2 lety +676

    I was in Europe during that era, and I’d have to say, this is pretty accurate. 👍🏻

    • @tomfu6210
      @tomfu6210 Před 2 lety +24

      You were backpacking through western Europe?

    • @aguy559
      @aguy559 Před 2 lety +76

      @@tomfu6210 35,000 years ago.

    • @robertpearson8798
      @robertpearson8798 Před 2 lety +56

      @@aguy559 Thank you Keith Richards.

    • @adolfshitler
      @adolfshitler Před 2 lety +8

      Did they have Tofu back then? Must of been hell with out!

    • @LapasLamp
      @LapasLamp Před 2 lety +20

      Plot twist: this guy is a time traveler and actually went to Europe during that era

  • @MrAndymcginn
    @MrAndymcginn Před 3 lety +226

    "Life isn't all Reindeer Burgers and Flute Solos". I'll be sharing that one with my tearful grandkids for sure, mate.

    • @ESL-O.G.
      @ESL-O.G. Před 2 lety +1

      reindeer tastes better than cow

    • @backwashjoe7864
      @backwashjoe7864 Před 2 lety +1

      That needs to be on a throw pillow!

    • @suzbone
      @suzbone Před 2 lety +2

      As a carnivorous floutist that line gave me a sad

  • @OzzyMandias
    @OzzyMandias Před 3 lety +330

    I love your scientific approach, 'Bloody Cold' is an accurate description of the Ice Age!

    • @misanthropicservitorofmars2116
      @misanthropicservitorofmars2116 Před 3 lety +2

      Scientifically accurate descriptions

    • @swirvinbirds1971
      @swirvinbirds1971 Před 3 lety +5

      That is an English measurement...🤣

    • @harunmusa8693
      @harunmusa8693 Před rokem

      I'd die... 😭

    • @UnleashedTraining101
      @UnleashedTraining101 Před rokem +4

      And in the summer the correct term is “hot as balls”

    • @mikearmstrong8483
      @mikearmstrong8483 Před 6 měsíci

      Yeeaaahhhh........I'm gonna go out on a limb and guess that the reason it is called the Ice Age is because of ALL THE ICE!
      There is probably some pretty sound logic as to why it isn't called the Bikini Age or the Sitting In A Comfy Chair With A Warm Brandy Age.

  • @PapaOystein
    @PapaOystein Před 2 lety +138

    In 2005, a friend and I happened to drive by the Niaux cave in Southern France and spontaneously decided to go inside on a guided tour. The cave paintings there are a mere 13,000 years old, 1/3 the age of the Aurignacian and thus belong to the Magdalenian. They had a similar climate, but depict a somewhat different fauna (plenty of bison, no lion). Anyway: Going there unprepared, it was one of the most profound experiences of my life: At once, you feel an immediate kinship to these artists - and yet their meaning, their intentions and aspirations, remain shrouded behind layers of the darkest, unpenetrable mystery, for we share not a single verifiable symbol with them.

    • @iantrousdell8151
      @iantrousdell8151 Před rokem +9

      2015 - I did the same thing, same caves. It was also a deeply moving experience to glimpse the intimacy they must have had with nature, in their feelings and observations... So far inside the cave! With oil lamps.... mind boggling

    • @albertgaspa1670
      @albertgaspa1670 Před rokem +3

      Someday, someone will discover that magdaleninas where the first basques, that's my bet

    • @JMDinOKC
      @JMDinOKC Před rokem +2

      Impenetrable, not unpenetrable.

    • @Jack.A.S
      @Jack.A.S Před 11 měsíci +3

      Dots, circles, crosses, handprints, swirls, stickmen, serpentiform, zigzags, asterisks, crosshatches, etc., etc.

    • @dingusdingus2152
      @dingusdingus2152 Před 10 měsíci

      The guys who made the cave images were not artists. They were statisticians keeping records of winners of championship tournaments between sports teams. A sort of prehistoric football league. The images found inside the caves are logos, emblems of respective teams (the colts, the broncos, the lions, etc.)

  • @matuvarela3760
    @matuvarela3760 Před rokem +19

    Is amazing how they draw. As an amateur artist I've always been shocked by this drawings. Is incredible, if you look comic book history it took a few decades to start showing movement in one image overlaping the sequence of movement (sorry for my english). I mean when the flash run in the 40s theres just one drawing of the guy running with a few lines indicating movement, in the 60s when the flash run you can see like 6 guys in the same image indicating movement in the same image. But you have that revolutionary art strategy made 30.000 years ago by people who lived in caves! is incredible!!
    Also the gesture of the animals, gesture in art is like make something alive, is something basic in animation, showing movement and life with a few lines. And this people from the stone age were making it better than the artist of the middle ages. It blows my mind, they should have replics of their paintings in every art gallery.

  • @VoicesofthePast
    @VoicesofthePast Před 3 lety +315

    Double video party, great to see

    • @colbyferro8617
      @colbyferro8617 Před 3 lety +9

      I was recommended Stephan's channel after I listened to a bunch of you videos V.O.P. Both of your channels are awesome, thanks!

  • @Alex_Plante
    @Alex_Plante Před 3 lety +309

    I live in Quebec, and the Aurignacians remind me a bit of the Northern Cree and Inuit, who also traditionally lived off of hunting caribou. Caribou are essentially the North American version of reindeer. They live in huge herds, unlike the other Cervidae of Canada (deer, moose and wapiti). The thing about caribou, is that their population fluctuates wildly. They can experience rapid population increase for many years, then their population levels will crash. For example, the population of the George River herd in Northern Quebec grew from 3,500 in 1958 to 775,00 in 1993, then declined down to 5,800 by 2018, but their population has begun to increase since then. This is typical of many northern species, and is a result of the simplicity of the ecology. I expect the Aurignacians would have experienced the same thing in Ice-Age Europe.

    • @FromaTwistedMind
      @FromaTwistedMind Před 3 lety +1

      2 drinks!

    • @doublejazz
      @doublejazz Před 3 lety +22

      indeed caribou and reindeer are of the same species it's just a different regional name

    • @moocyfarus8549
      @moocyfarus8549 Před 3 lety +19

      @@doublejazz yes and no being in the Arctic and overhearing the hunters you will come to know there is a difference between caribou and reindeer the reindeer are ever so slightly smaller. Also in the northern Yukon they can legally hunt one but not the other and they routinely know if they catch the wrong one and they laugh and feed it to the dogs again you don't get these things and Google or on the Internet you have to actually travel to the end of the world and live to see these things

    • @doublejazz
      @doublejazz Před 3 lety +11

      @@moocyfarus8549 yes there are many different subspecies across asia europe and canada they're not all exactly the same but they're still considered the same species.

    • @fitzbarbel
      @fitzbarbel Před 3 lety +3

      No diff mate, the Simi herd them in the far North of Europe.

  • @zebdawson3687
    @zebdawson3687 Před 2 lety +94

    That interview was so insightful, tons of quality information. This channel is definitely underrated for the level of quality throughout!

  • @ChrisVillagomez
    @ChrisVillagomez Před rokem +42

    Probably my favorite thing about such beautiful cave paintings is the theory that the many depictions of multiple of the same animals' heads or whole bodies next to each other could have been so that when the flickering lights from things like campfires and basic torches flashed over them, it almost appeared like they were moving, probably the earliest form of drawn animation if that's true

    • @yvonneandreassen-vo3dt
      @yvonneandreassen-vo3dt Před rokem +2

      the cave drawings are septically correct - anybody who draws knows how difficult it is to capture correctly...they were brilliant artists....

    • @stirlingmoss9637
      @stirlingmoss9637 Před rokem +1

      @@yvonneandreassen-vo3dt indeed, and probably women

    • @dingusdingus2152
      @dingusdingus2152 Před rokem +2

      The cave images were logos of mascots of sports teams. There was a prehistoric football league. They were kept by local team statisticians who preserved records of tournament champions. They had nothing to do with religious rituals or hunting. Many of them are palimpsests, indicating practice by apprentices. None of the caves were used for human habitations. Almost none of the images depict human figures, and of these, none appear to be hunting.

    • @dingusdingus2152
      @dingusdingus2152 Před rokem

      The guys who made the cave images (most of them were paintings, but some are charcoal drawings or engraved in the stone) were not artists.

  • @Jacob-yg7lz
    @Jacob-yg7lz Před 3 lety +173

    "No ritual (symbol) lasts 15000 years"
    *Sad Venus figurine noises*

    • @SatumainenOlento
      @SatumainenOlento Před 3 lety +30

      Love for women is eternal!

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 Před 3 lety +22

      I think there are some really ancient penis carvings too.

    • @garret1930
      @garret1930 Před 3 lety +22

      @@gregorymalchuk272 how are we so sure they were just carvings?

    • @SatumainenOlento
      @SatumainenOlento Před 3 lety +4

      @@gregorymalchuk272 So true! 😊

    • @SatumainenOlento
      @SatumainenOlento Před 3 lety +10

      @@garret1930 I would bet that there was some amazing "ritual" uses for those 😊

  • @bneskylights1152
    @bneskylights1152 Před 3 lety +40

    "Life ain't all reindeer burgers and flute solos"
    I'm stealing that.

  • @MH-tn3pp
    @MH-tn3pp Před 7 měsíci +3

    In 2015, a Musée de l’Aurignacien opened in the city of Aurignac, France. It’s not far from Toulouse and Lourdes. You are all very welcome to visit it, passionate about prehistory.

  • @moistmike4150
    @moistmike4150 Před 2 lety +57

    This channel is interesting, educational, inspiring, thought-provoking and beyond charming! I pray you keep on with your amazing vids Stefan!! (I'm sub'd now too!)

  • @jwvandegronden
    @jwvandegronden Před 3 lety +64

    This is why I love CZcams so much! This is by far better than any tv program, personally invested CZcamsrs following their individual interests, yet being able to create such professional content it is breathtaking to watch! And most explicitly I like long form, which creates a window for us to accompany you on a deep dive on the subject.
    Don’t get me wrong, I don’t for a second assume an episode like this is a breeze to create, I have tried on a blue moon to make an episode on one of my personal interests but I drowned in the quicksand of editing tools...
    So this long form is absolutely highly appreciated! Thank you so much!!
    Of course subscribed, and liked, the latter simply to accommodate you in the YT algorithms, fighting my subversive side. Your gains in this as a producer outway my passive consumptional ethics ;-)

    • @redstarling5171
      @redstarling5171 Před rokem +3

      A program made with passion over profit, I agree 👍

  • @HistoryTime
    @HistoryTime Před 3 lety +160

    OH HELLO

  • @jforozco12
    @jforozco12 Před rokem +18

    this channel is great man! you manage to make it entertaining and humorous at the same time. thanks for the great content.

  • @jamesmeister3423
    @jamesmeister3423 Před 2 lety +3

    Fantastic! Thank you from Jim in Maryland!!! First time commenting but I've watched your vids so MANY times...all of them but this is one of the tops! Listen to them while I garden, wash dishes, fold clothes, etc. to take in as much as I can...then start it all over again during my next chore :) I've been craving to learn about this exact timeframe so again, thank you! Cheers!!!

  • @TheHistocrat
    @TheHistocrat Před 3 lety +503

    Waiting for the inevitable spin off channel thats just flute covers of Metallica

  • @Ivftinianvs
    @Ivftinianvs Před 3 lety +64

    I once played an Irish whistle almost identical to yours in the Vienna bahnhof. I was playing Scottish bagpipe tunes, but a Bosnian in a window on one of the trains headed toward Bosnia got all excited and started clapping and crying at the music. This was 1995 and he may have been emotional due to the conflict his land at the time.

    • @voskreglavincevska3651
      @voskreglavincevska3651 Před rokem +5

      He was more upset , because of the tunes !
      We in the Balcans have similar pipe music like Scottish !

    • @myhandlehasbeenmishandled
      @myhandlehasbeenmishandled Před rokem +5

      As a Bosnian I got admit it's amazing what Irish and Scottish did with their instruments. I love your music. The fact is put traditional instruments in hands of traditional musicians from Balkans and it would make me jab screwdrivers in my ears. In most places, not all but most, of Western Balkans pre-islamic music made outside of more populated areas is little more then crying and wailing. It just sounds like they are dying. Search for gusle music and you'll see.

  • @stacywarren4739
    @stacywarren4739 Před rokem +4

    Two years in I bet you’re shredding on that flute now

  • @pomicultorul
    @pomicultorul Před 2 lety +1

    I am watching and enjoying your videos again and again! Thank you for producing and distributing for free what I am considering to be high-end content. Best of all to you!

  • @marvinbecker388
    @marvinbecker388 Před 3 lety +120

    I teared up when you played the song at the end, magnificient.

    • @afz902k
      @afz902k Před 3 lety +4

      A beautiful rendition of the Spanish song "Martinillo"

    • @edi3162
      @edi3162 Před 3 lety +3

      @@afz902k It is Frère Jacques, french song

    • @afz902k
      @afz902k Před 3 lety +7

      @@edi3162 it is of French origin, but exists in many languages. Frere Jacques in French, Martinillo in Spanish, Bruder Jakob in German, Brother John in English, and so on

    • @edi3162
      @edi3162 Před 3 lety +4

      @@afz902k" Bratec Martin" in croatian, still french song, not spanish, " Martinilo" or whatever is just spanish version of a FRENCH song, OK?

    • @davidec.4021
      @davidec.4021 Před 3 lety +1

      We have it in Italian too! Fra Martino is called

  • @OldieBugger
    @OldieBugger Před 3 lety +140

    Why did the Aurignacian people eat reindeer so much? If you ever tasted it, you'd know! It's fantastically tasty. And nowadays here in Finland, quite expensive.
    EDIT: Ok ok, the availability may have had something to do with it as well. Like eating horses further to the east. (Horse meat is a delicacy as well, if you didn't know.)

  • @citizenschallengeYT
    @citizenschallengeYT Před 2 lety +32

    3:30 Key phrase: "Conclusions based on the evidence at hand." - It's an evolving story ;-) Keep up the good work Milo!

  • @blessedveteran
    @blessedveteran Před 2 lety +3

    It wasn't awful, you did a great job! Thank you for not only doing it, but also deciding to keep it in the video!!

  • @stefanodadamo6809
    @stefanodadamo6809 Před 3 lety +14

    The explanation of the use of antler by early hunters in glacial era contexts is truly brilliant.

  • @Fushione
    @Fushione Před 3 lety +145

    Ooh French titles, I’m feeling privileged as a baguette

  • @teamstriemer
    @teamstriemer Před 2 lety +1

    Brilliant content! You have made my leaning about this so enjoyable!
    Love your new book too!
    Excellent work! Looking forward to your next video

  • @lepajolecnicolas5291
    @lepajolecnicolas5291 Před rokem +5

    I just discovered your channel and I love it, thanks for all the efforts you clearly put into these

  • @wnchstrman
    @wnchstrman Před 3 lety +10

    The replaceable bone tip on the spear is actually genius. Highly likely to successfully retrieve your spear shaft on the trail of a wounded animal like a modern arrow, with the difference being that spear is intact and a new bone spear point can be attached immediately for re-arming.

  • @Metal0sopher
    @Metal0sopher Před 3 lety +80

    Based on the growing information I think this perception of "expansion" or "waves" of people moving into Europe, or out of Africa, is not really accurate, and more of perceptual illusion due to the slow discovery of evidence. We only find a bone here and one there and it gives the impression of a migration in that time only. What's more realistic, I think, is that the movements were continuous with occasional ebbs and flows determined by the changing landscape due to weather. And I doubt it was a "movement", more likely a generational spread rather than migration. Each generation had a territory and as the tribe grew it would split and the newer generations had to move outward to seek their own territory. Not that different than the way we behave today. We are very territorial creatures.
    Every generation would have moved further north during mild climate events, and back south, during glaciation events. Some groups could have been isolated by either land features, or climate again, and developed some extreme differences to other populations or new genetic markers, than when opportunities to move opened up they would re-mix with the older populations their ancestors had left. Or out populate them if their new changes gave them an advantage.
    At least that's the impression I'm getting as information grows, that this idea, of a "distinguishable out of Africa" movements is not accurate. The flow seems to me continuous and it is rather the absence of evidence that makes it seem like there are gaps between moments both out of Africa and into Europe and also Asia. And that absence is slowly being filled in with every new discovery.

    • @kchuk1965
      @kchuk1965 Před 3 lety +11

      Yes great comment. Out of Africa is a punchy narrative. Just like the story about one group of people coming over the Bering land bridge. No real data to back that up. And the more we learn the more complicated it gets as you would expect.

    • @chasecharland1160
      @chasecharland1160 Před 3 lety +13

      I agree except I would add that many populations would have died off as well, smaller groups, a bad winter or a trend of disease could decimate a population easily, therefore I do see it as waves, or ebbs and flow as you put it, populations expanding and shrinking expanding and shrinking, along with the animals the terrain the weather, the health and who knows what else.

    • @dirksharp9876
      @dirksharp9876 Před 3 lety +12

      @@kchuk1965 There is strong evidence for both Out of Africa and the ancestors of Native Americans crossing from present day Russia into North America. The finds like the Kennewick man have proven to be basal to all Native Americans. The first Eurasian was a descendant of Africans and we know this because all modern paternal and maternal haplogroups are related to and descended from basal African ancestors.
      With Out of Africa, it was more of a time frame issue. Not too long ago even academic sources were claiming 35K-40K years ago was the point of people leaving Africa and going directly into Greece or other parts of Europe, which couldn't be further from the truth. The Aurignacian culture, one of the most fascinating in human history (all Europeans carry some of their genes too) was kicking off around 46K years ago at the latest (as stated in the video).
      Imo the current estimates may even be too recent, and they are saying 200,000 years now. There are skull fragments of non-Neanderthal, likely homosapien found in places like Greece that are older than that, also mentioned in the video I think. Some homosapien remains have been found in North Africa over 300,000 years ago.

    • @kchuk1965
      @kchuk1965 Před 3 lety +6

      @@dirksharp9876 ah yes I don’t dispute that. It’s just that with limited information these too neat narratives are put in place. “One band of intrepid explorers crossed the Bering land bridge”

    • @dirksharp9876
      @dirksharp9876 Před 3 lety +4

      @@kchuk1965 That's completely reasonable, I don't care for people in the media especially trying to form narratives out of their rationalizations of prehistory either. So often they are trying to re-construct an event or a people with just a fragment of information, which is beyond absurd.

  • @myroslavohorodnyk7814
    @myroslavohorodnyk7814 Před rokem +2

    Thank You for the video. I learned a lot from it! Also your content influenced my view of our history a great deal!

  • @mikef.1000
    @mikef.1000 Před rokem

    Great work Milo! I really like your caution melded with logic and reasonable supposition. With a list of possibilities you are usually prepared to consider a combination of the alternatives; I think that is a wise way forward. Fascinating stuff! Thank you.

  • @factstrumpprejudice6740
    @factstrumpprejudice6740 Před 3 lety +15

    Absolutely superb, fact filled and informative, well constructed without overbearing music or verbose time filling. Well presented by scholarly, well spoken educator. Can't thank you enough, a real gem.

  • @MrJonsonville5
    @MrJonsonville5 Před 3 lety +54

    Yay yay yay let me get my bowl ready, gotta get my mind right.

    • @StefanMilo
      @StefanMilo  Před 3 lety +27

      That's the spirit

    • @MrJonsonville5
      @MrJonsonville5 Před 3 lety +5

      @@StefanMilo Cela a fait un excellent état d'esprit de visualisation.

    • @sarad6627
      @sarad6627 Před 3 lety +3

      @@StefanMilo The amount of time put in to carving images of horses on a purely utilitarian baton seems counter intuitive to me. Given the that the grip ridges can have a practical purpose and that the baton can snap, I'm tending to think along the lines of the protective use of the horse image as say an amulet. The Iron Age Celtiberians used the wolf images in the four cardinal points on food storage items to ward off contamination of food and it has been found on rings in Britain. I can also see the image being used to protect a home. Just speculating.

    • @seanhaarhoff3726
      @seanhaarhoff3726 Před 3 lety

      I'm with you on that one.

  • @darko714
    @darko714 Před rokem +4

    The tent peg explanation of it the “batons” appeals to me. Shelter is THE most basic necessity, and a nomadic hunting clan would likely live in portable shelters. I’ve done extreme camping in winter, and if you want a tent, you need lots of them. Besides, they LOOK like tent pegs.

  • @allansroom
    @allansroom Před 2 lety

    Thank you for this amazing video with great information!
    This is my first time ever visiting your site or channel.
    I was directed by Ancient Architects
    Thank you again for this amazing information!
    I'll be happy to see what else you have and will have coming up.
    😊❤😊

  • @vlizam123
    @vlizam123 Před 3 lety +22

    Holy fk, I literally never comment on videos, but I just found out about this channel and this thing needs to blow up. +1 sub.

  • @johnjriggsarchery2457
    @johnjriggsarchery2457 Před 3 lety +21

    I toyed around with the Baton with a javelin, figuring out length of cord and wrapping point on the dart and found that it was pretty effective and accurate. I have a video on my channel showing me hitting close to a stump at a bit over 30 yards. Someone practiced could throw much farther and more accurately and yes, it increases power over simply throwing.

  • @shikawgoh
    @shikawgoh Před 2 lety +4

    Stefan, great video as usual! I’ve been a subscriber for awhile now but just got around watching this one. It was perfect timing too because I just finished reading a book called “Shaman” by Kim Stanley Robinson that takes place in the same time period and region that you cover here. I can’t recommend it enough. Yes, it is fiction but it is so well researched and so well written that I couldn’t put it down. It totally made the time and people come alive. Normally I strictly stick with nonfiction books (Cro-Magnon by Brian Fagan or First Peoples in a New World by David Meltzer) and articles (and videos like yours) when it comes to subject matter like this but… I’d heard good things about this book…and it was really captivating. It’s so well researched and incredibly detailed. Your video touched on a number of the topics the book delved into. All so fascinating! Just thought I’d share. I’m sure you and your subscribers would enjoy it. Also, love your sense of humor. Cheers!

  • @jacksonfl
    @jacksonfl Před 2 lety +1

    Watched it again. Particularly enjoyed your flute playing at the end. And your wonderful sense of humor.

  • @williamkeith8944
    @williamkeith8944 Před 3 lety +46

    Interesting video with thought provoking theses. As an American with archeological experience in the Great Plains, I find the information on split points interesting. Reusing spears due to lack of wood resources is clever. The variations in jewelry practices by different bands of people is another research area that is promising and notable in American archeology of identifying various early cultures.

    • @marceloorellana5726
      @marceloorellana5726 Před rokem

      You are a European born in America. You aren't American. You are US citizen not a Indigenous Aboriginal Native American.

  • @peterheneghan1227
    @peterheneghan1227 Před 3 lety +6

    Stefan I absolutely love your videos. This one in particular is amazing, the information about the antler tips and wood shafts is an incredible observation. I've always found prehistory fascinating and will continue to watch your videos

  • @InlikeMikeQuinn
    @InlikeMikeQuinn Před 2 lety +1

    Love your videos! You do an awesome job, so informative and the content is so well put together.

  • @markalden7848
    @markalden7848 Před 2 lety +4

    Sir Milo, I really appreciate your videos and style of communicating this info. Except for the occasional maths, your videos are resonating well with my children, assisting with their understanding of the basics of ancient civs and hominids.

  • @brianmccarthy5557
    @brianmccarthy5557 Před 3 lety +36

    Do the people who study this period ask people who live in environments similar to that time, and whose families probably engaged in similar activities to the people of that time, but only a century or so ago (e.g. Western Alaskan natives, the Sami of northern Scandinavia) if the bone and stone tools are similar to anything they know about? The Sami and other northern nomads stiil use some traditional shelters similar to the Paeolithic ones. Perhaps comparing the banner stones to fittings on their shelters would be helpful. I've been in traditional Plains Indian tipis, which actually are quite different from the way they are typically portrayed in art and film. There are all kinds of little fittings made from bone for various utilitarian purposes, including drip sticks and rawhide line tighteners. I doubt that someone not familiar with them who found them at an old campsite would easily determine what they were used for. I think this is what Lewis Binford used to call process archaeology, which I understand has fallen from favor.

    • @erinmac4750
      @erinmac4750 Před 3 lety

      I know there's a specific term for that type of archeology, where you reconstruct and try out ancient tools, tech, shelters...experimental archeology? Trying to remember....😁

    • @nsdtgabe4082
      @nsdtgabe4082 Před 3 lety +6

      Erin Mac archaeological anthropology?

    • @yoo_hoo_anyone_there
      @yoo_hoo_anyone_there Před 2 lety

      Could you say that again. In plain English, please.

    • @FPSIreland2
      @FPSIreland2 Před 2 lety +2

      @@yoo_hoo_anyone_there Compare the tools found at these ancient sites to those used by people who still live the way they lived, and infer from that what they are.

  • @scragglybeard9322
    @scragglybeard9322 Před 3 lety +66

    "oh you're wearing a wolf teeth necklace... Sorry mate I'm more a fox skull guy"

    • @_robustus_
      @_robustus_ Před 3 lety +2

      Fossil walrus ivory is where it’s at.

    • @terraflow__bryanburdo4547
      @terraflow__bryanburdo4547 Před 3 lety +5

      "Those bloody cave bear claw guys think they're all that!"

    • @lakrids-pibe
      @lakrids-pibe Před 3 lety +4

      You know what I hate?
      Young hipster girls wearing their dads wolf teeth necklace, but they can't mention ONE of their hits.

    • @user-ge8yn4ql4i
      @user-ge8yn4ql4i Před 3 lety

      @@lakrids-pibe love those. Easy lays.

    • @m-agirouard3329
      @m-agirouard3329 Před 2 lety

      @@terraflow__bryanburdo4547 lmao

  • @aidanisan
    @aidanisan Před rokem +3

    Thanks Stefan I love the little humour you bring to the video makes it all the more enjoyable

  • @YanoshRagauld
    @YanoshRagauld Před rokem +1

    Great work Stefan. Always good to see your content. Thanks buddyo

  • @adventussaxonum448
    @adventussaxonum448 Před 3 lety +38

    "Semi-automatic spear"...,love it! 😄

  • @MrTryAnotherOne
    @MrTryAnotherOne Před 3 lety +21

    3:15 Most of the archeological evidence in buried underneath the oceans anyway as much of the past coastal areas was flooded by rising sea levels. Btw, most of the current population is living near the coast (and rivers). I imagine it was quite similiar back then.

    • @kchuk1965
      @kchuk1965 Před 3 lety +4

      Great comment. I think almost 80% of the us population lives within 100 miles of an ocean. Not sure what it it worldwide. Population always clusters around oceans, lakes, rivers. That’s where most of the action is. It stands to reason if was the same in the Paleolithic.

  • @cookiemuncheryumyum
    @cookiemuncheryumyum Před 2 lety

    Great Channel Stefan. Good vibe and approach. Thanks for the knowledge Sir

  • @rogersledz6793
    @rogersledz6793 Před 2 lety +1

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

  • @bobbob5255
    @bobbob5255 Před 3 lety +82

    I'm always so amazed at how professional your videos look and how well they are edited!

    • @steefant
      @steefant Před 3 lety +3

      you forgot to mention the amazing outro music. :D

    • @josem.deteresa2282
      @josem.deteresa2282 Před 3 lety

      Well researched too, it seems to me. I hope you're studying for a PhD, Stefan, and you're a fantastic communicator too.

    • @azzking9305
      @azzking9305 Před 3 lety

      If only he didn’t specialise in european history he would get a whole lot more attention

  • @Acehamster
    @Acehamster Před 3 lety +16

    My cat growled when you “played” Frère Jacques. Great video as always

  • @Domestikos88
    @Domestikos88 Před rokem +3

    You are truly gifted at teaching this subject matter in layman terms. Thank you

  • @tomcook2311
    @tomcook2311 Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent content. Thanks for sharing this. Always interesting to hear another's take on what a piece of bone found in a cave means.

  • @richicecold
    @richicecold Před 3 lety +19

    Awesome video! Especially the relationship of the Aurignacians with lions was a real eye opener; Europe as a freezing Serengeti, interesting stuff!

  • @SnifferCustoms
    @SnifferCustoms Před 3 lety +7

    This is very well done presentation! I learned a lot, and entertaining at same time. Thank you! 🤘

  • @tonybrowneyed8277
    @tonybrowneyed8277 Před rokem +1

    always a pleasure to watch your work milo!

  • @devincahoon830
    @devincahoon830 Před rokem +2

    Great video excellent writing and well researched. Head and shoulders above most of the Ice age content I have found!

  • @penamcpena1755
    @penamcpena1755 Před 3 lety +7

    I stumbled upon this video today, absolutely fantastic stuff, along with the related channels! I would honestly pay for content like this, I adore the work you guys do.

    • @saturn722
      @saturn722 Před 2 lety

      But is it all true? Is the evidence that obvious? I don't think so.

  • @ThatLadyBird
    @ThatLadyBird Před 3 lety +17

    I believe the batons being spear straighteners is still the best explanation. Now that ive heard from your guest about how the Aurignacians redesigned their spears to protect the shaft rather than the spear head itself, Im totally convinced that keeping those spears intact and usable (straight) was extremely important to them. Makes perfect sense.

    • @moocyfarus8549
      @moocyfarus8549 Před 3 lety +2

      Running wood through a narrow space does not make it straight.

    • @ericschmuecker348
      @ericschmuecker348 Před 3 lety

      @@moocyfarus8549 bending the stick when its hot. Oven mitts. Or wrench.

    • @northernskow3443
      @northernskow3443 Před 2 lety

      @@moocyfarus8549 no, but they do bear an amazing likeness to shaft straightners.

  • @EVtripper
    @EVtripper Před 9 měsíci +1

    One of the most frustrating things about other History videos is their lack of accurate maps of the era. Thank you for starting this out right! Good to see the actual shape of the continents and shorelines that reflect the time period.

  • @MCP53
    @MCP53 Před 2 lety

    Excellent, fascinating and thought-provoking video! I think the tree of life is probably much more of a bush, with many branches withering, but others reconnecting down the line - a real bugger to pin down! Keep going - you're on the right path (I think) :-)

  • @davidhussell8581
    @davidhussell8581 Před 3 lety +3

    Thank you for this fascinating, scientific account which you've also managed to narrate with the added benefit of, occasional, light touches of humour. That is useful, as it encourages non-archaeologists, but interested people like myself (with an understanding of Geology and Earth Sciences), to stay more readily engaged with the account.

  • @hanschitzlinger3676
    @hanschitzlinger3676 Před 3 lety +12

    I knew the use for the antler tips as soon as he said they were split at the bottom, just disposable spear points. They also don’t shatter like glass, as flint does

  • @CarolineVigneron71
    @CarolineVigneron71 Před rokem

    Thanks for your work and for the few words in French (not that bad!) and for Frère Jacques!
    I feel that your love for ancestors kind of show! That's really nice! Thanks again for all those very new to me & detailed informations. I especially appreciated the mention of what looks like pegs for tents.

  • @MymilanitalyBlogspot
    @MymilanitalyBlogspot Před 2 lety

    Love your videos for many reasons, and this one includes many. Thanks!

  • @thecheaperthebetter4477
    @thecheaperthebetter4477 Před 3 lety +54

    This channel is so underrated

  • @tehbonehead
    @tehbonehead Před 3 lety +13

    Another possible reason for antler tools...
    How hard is it to work stone in mittens? Grinding antlers on stones sounds much easier.

  • @larryparis925
    @larryparis925 Před 2 lety

    How can it get any better? Great information combined with beautiful graphics. Truth be told, Mr. Milo, I'm in awe of your anthropological depth. And what a beautiful image at 24:23 ... And at 25:00 . Whoa! One of the most impressive things, though, in modern-day terms, is that references are provided so that we can read and think for ourselves. Thank you. Larry, Encinitas, Southern California, U.S.A.

  • @Jane-nc2fr
    @Jane-nc2fr Před 6 měsíci

    These videos are so good. I keep coming back to them. Thank you.

  • @chocolartsofia4038
    @chocolartsofia4038 Před 3 lety +3

    Hey Stefan! Another great video and, after seeing your teenage picture, I know why you turned up so great!

  • @erinmac4750
    @erinmac4750 Před 3 lety +5

    Loved this video!!! You're improving in editing, and you covered this in such depth.
    I am curious where you filmed this? It reminds me of some parts of California. It is a perfect location for this video. I could totally see things play out on that back drop.
    Thank you for sharing the link to sources (geek out 😸).
    💚🌎😎

    • @vernonavery2186
      @vernonavery2186 Před 2 lety

      Au contraire mon ami! It looks very much like Idaho to me. I also would like to know.

  • @ellen4956
    @ellen4956 Před měsícem

    Your videos are so great! Thank you for this one; I know it was from 3 years ago but I hadn't seen it. I was looking for more information on Dolni Vestonice - about the burial found and whatever is known about the people who lived there. But I found this delightful video instead and watched it!

  • @MaryAnnNytowl
    @MaryAnnNytowl Před 2 lety +3

    Great video, glad I found it! Still a ton of your stuff I haven't seen, yet, but you are a top-rate content creator, a great educator, and you cover so many really cool subjects! So, here's my like, and my comment for the Almighty Algorithm! 👋😊

  • @jennifer_duke
    @jennifer_duke Před 3 lety +4

    Thanks for making this video, I’m writing a novel set during this period and found it very useful as well as entertaining! 👍

    • @kibnob
      @kibnob Před 2 lety

      How is the novel going?

    • @jennifer_duke
      @jennifer_duke Před 2 lety +2

      @@kibnob Ok thanks 👍 I have a draft but it still needs a lot of work

    • @santiagodeavila94
      @santiagodeavila94 Před rokem

      @@jennifer_duke have you finished? i am curious about

    • @jennifer_duke
      @jennifer_duke Před rokem

      @@santiagodeavila94 It still needs tweaking but is on the back burner currently as I’m busy with other things. Thanks for asking!

  • @ettore_mazza
    @ettore_mazza Před 3 lety +5

    This double upload is going to do my day!

  • @junebrilly5302
    @junebrilly5302 Před měsícem

    Love your channel...excellent, thought provoking and just plain wonderful. Thankyou❤

  • @user-ri1ti6go7s
    @user-ri1ti6go7s Před 7 měsíci +1

    Very very important phrase. Great information and really like accurate maps, photos of important locations and finds. The discussions and ideas. All great. And such an important time period... Great to see it so well covered

  • @AethelredTheReady
    @AethelredTheReady Před 3 lety +65

    Imagine roaming the steppe with your group and hunting mammoth and horses

    • @danielsayre3385
      @danielsayre3385 Před 3 lety +25

      Roaming the steppe with the bois

    • @overbeb
      @overbeb Před 3 lety +13

      Almost makes you wish humans never figured out agriculture and just kept on roaming the earth as hunter gatherers. I just want to funnel a herd of reindeer into a choke point so me and my boys can spear them for their meat, hides, and bones.

    • @madhijz-spacewhale240
      @madhijz-spacewhale240 Před 3 lety +18

      @@overbeb sounds cool but on the other hand I'm a double ply toiletpaper kind of guy and that was in short supply 37,000 years ago.

    • @dcyork2703
      @dcyork2703 Před 3 lety +5

      Steppe gang.

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před 3 lety +1

      @Taiwanlight - It's not a romance: it's the epic (and unavoidable tragedy) of life. Unlike today's awful tragedy without any epic, barely spiced with some comedic relief at best.

  • @anonymousalias.5059
    @anonymousalias.5059 Před 3 lety +5

    I never knew pre-historic europe would be so interesting, thanks for this 👍

  • @stephanieyee9784
    @stephanieyee9784 Před 2 lety

    Nice throwback photo, Milo! Your playing of Frère Jacques on your flute was, um, different. Wally!
    Your video was very interesting and a good watch. It was great getting the information first-hand from Dr Dilley. That was a great score and his hypothesis makes perfect sense.
    I think re the question of jewellery and the Choice of eg fox teeth or not could be an expression of "clan" or familial group, along the lines of Polynesian tattoos. Each family has its own tattoo that is the base of an individuals tattoo.

  • @philomenahearn1717
    @philomenahearn1717 Před 2 měsíci +1

    James Dilley is a good example of how and why practical demonstrations of the tools etc are so vital.

  • @lexington476
    @lexington476 Před 3 lety +38

    I really like your documentary-style prehistory videos. This is what the History Channel on Discovery Channel used to be. These are very well edited videos.

  • @Kanzu999
    @Kanzu999 Před 2 lety

    Love your vibes man, keep up the nice work!

  • @TheTrainGeekShow
    @TheTrainGeekShow Před rokem

    Another great vid, keep up the excellent work!

  • @JeffNeelzebub
    @JeffNeelzebub Před 3 lety +23

    The fact that they eat Reindeer almost exclusively reminds me of modern Sami and other Reindeer herding cultures. Are we sure they were hunting and not herding? Is it possible they semi-domesticated these reindeer? Getting them to trust them, guiding them to particular grazing grounds, working to keep the herd healthy, etc.?

    • @fudgedogbannana
      @fudgedogbannana Před 3 lety +5

      YES. Of course you understand that in an ice age climate is everything, farming on a large scale would have been impossible, even animal husbandry would have been very difficult. Once the climate became stable(9,500 years ago), farmers planted crops on a grand scale enabling the beginning civilization on a large scale. Now whole villages can engage in something other that farming (pottery etc.).

    • @aaronlandau5575
      @aaronlandau5575 Před 3 lety +6

      I kind of love the image of aurignacian humans riding around on reindeer like the reindeer riders of the russian and mongolian taiga.

    • @gx8con17
      @gx8con17 Před 3 lety +6

      sami is directly related to the other uralic native people in siberia nenets, khanty, nganasan, enets, selkup, mansi and our reindeer culture has nothing to do with these european people in this video. All uralic siberian tribes were originally deer hunters and fishers not herders. Well maybe they had some tamed reindeer but bigger herding is more of newer thing. At some point nenets samoyeds learned the reindeer herding from altai/sayan mongolia direction. Khanty and nganasan then learned herding from nenets and mansi from khanty. Well whats now northern sami maybe also lerned it from nenets as at some point in recent history northern sami and nenets were again in contact. Northern sami then spread out and all other sami became reindeer herders too inspired by northern ones.
      In some nenets stories sami is mentioned as brothers who left ural and went to faraway land in the end of the world.
      In some sami stories Son of sun comes to lapland thats populated by giants. He fights the giants and marries daughter of giant. They then give birth to the early sami, the children of Son of sun and daughter of giant. Our ancestors arrived to finland 4000 years ago from siberia but earliest people were already here 10000 years ago.
      Whats interesting is that those norths giants are also mentioned in norwegian and swedish viking stories.
      So at one point in whats now known as nordic countries: sami lived in finland, "giants" in northern areas aka lapland, ancestors of vikings in south of sweden and norway. So thesese "giants" were kind of in pressure between vikings from south and sami uralics from east. They had fights and sami and vikings won and what was left of those "giants" (that probably talked basque type language) mixed to sami and vikings just like the stories say., so uralic people from east and ancestors of vikings from europe pretty much squashed between some earlier european people when they arrived to nordic area. Entire finland was mostly sami between 3500 years ago to year 500 after sami had pushed away those earlier people in finland, so sami were the main population of finland for 2000 years. Sami were then pushed to north of lapland when farmers (finns) from south arrived from estonia and southern finland for more farming land in north.

    • @aaronlandau5575
      @aaronlandau5575 Před 3 lety +4

      @@gx8con17 this is an excellent historical lesson, but it doesn't negate the hypothetical that a culture dependent on reindeer herds developed similar practices to contemporary reindeer cultures. The two cultures do not need to be related in order to develop similar habbits/technologies. Take wild crop cultivation for example. Central valley mseoamericans started genetically targeting and cultivating wild teosinte (precursor to corn) some 9000 years ago. They did not learn those cultivation techniques from Mesopotamia.

    • @JeffNeelzebub
      @JeffNeelzebub Před 3 lety +4

      @@aaronlandau5575 This is what I was getting at. I wasn't trying to imply that the Sami got their reindeer herding culture from early europeans, though it might be possible, I was commenting on convergent cultural practices, not unlike how unrelated species can end up looking similar due to convergent evolution. Like you said, Chinese and Mesoamericans developed farming completely independent of each other, and the same could be true of reindeer herding.

  • @nebulan
    @nebulan Před 3 lety +4

    "Stools?" I love the quirks.
    I also like the physical items you show us. Even tho they are replicas it helps us kinda visualize the life.

  • @juanpascallucianobravado6112

    Love this one so much, your commentary on the cave art and its importance is que magnifique.

  • @exoskeleton5660
    @exoskeleton5660 Před 22 dny

    That beautiful flute serenade at the end just really adds to this whole video, you're a man of many talents! ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @robinfrederick3020
    @robinfrederick3020 Před 3 lety +13

    Neat, you finally did something. Love your stuff, man.

  • @cursor1459
    @cursor1459 Před 3 lety +15

    That ending though! Hahaha Excellent presentation Man. 👍

  • @kevinmccarthy8746
    @kevinmccarthy8746 Před rokem

    Love GB, great show, very interesting . More informative than Time Team. Thank you.

  • @jasontwynn7356
    @jasontwynn7356 Před 2 lety

    Great video,as always 👍. Love the channel.