Stunning video shows how ‘earliest Pictish fort’ could have looked

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  • čas přidán 28. 05. 2019
  • A stunning video, based on research by the University of Aberdeen, has revealed what one of the earliest known Pictish forts may have looked like.
    Archaeologists investigating a substantially eroded sea stack near the site of the ruined Dunnotar Castle, which itself was a later Pictish power centre, uncovered evidence of a third or fourth century promontory fort.
    The new video, funded by Historic Environment Scotland, illustrates how the fort may have looked if the sea stack, called Dunnicaer, was still connected to the mainland.
    www.abdn.ac.uk/news/13042

Komentáře • 565

  • @Utubepooperful
    @Utubepooperful Před 3 lety +583

    The thing that is always lost in these videos is that fact that people actually had their entire lives there. Babies were born, parents put them to sleep, got up in the middle of the night to feed them, argued about families, people slept listening to the sound of the waves, stumbled along that pathway drunk, and had parties.
    It's always great to stand in the ruins of an old home and imagine who stood in that spot before you.

    • @aaronvallejo8220
      @aaronvallejo8220 Před 3 lety +39

      I love that feeling of the timelessness of a place...kids falling in love, same kids scared of constant risk of butchery...while we stand here momentarily in peace.

    • @davidpetersen1
      @davidpetersen1 Před 3 lety +11

      I completely agree. A few years ago I did a slow but ongoing, major reno to an 1890's bungalow. Always finding small artifacts behind baseboards, peeling back layers of wallpaper.. everything feeds the imagination.

    • @-deepoid-9158
      @-deepoid-9158 Před 3 lety +34

      Its quite comforting to think that humans that lived hundreds of years ago are really no different from you and me today, aside from the technology we live with. Also I couldn’t imagine walking along that skinny little pathway after 1 too many meads lol

    • @scottwhitley3392
      @scottwhitley3392 Před 3 lety +14

      Yep, I live in a house in Dalkeith built in 1803. I always wonder at night what type of people slept in the room I’m in, what they did for a job, what were their hopes for for the future ect...

    • @ape_man504
      @ape_man504 Před 3 lety +10

      Ya I agree. You sir are awesome for describing a feeling that is hard to put into words at least for me

  • @gremlinking5640
    @gremlinking5640 Před 3 lety +1357

    Finally the algorithm gets something right

    • @sailorkek8672
      @sailorkek8672 Před 3 lety +25

      Now if only they could stop the god awful mobile game and tik tok adverts youtube might be a decent platform again.

    • @pepin8277
      @pepin8277 Před 3 lety +12

      @@sailorkek8672 and the scam ads...

    • @pepin8277
      @pepin8277 Před 3 lety +17

      oh and promoting gambling to underaged children or to people that don't want to see it...

    • @AirborneVet
      @AirborneVet Před 3 lety +3

      Agreed.

    • @Kdssow
      @Kdssow Před 3 lety +2

      I know right?

  • @crazyflaps169
    @crazyflaps169 Před 3 lety +168

    Crazy to imagine how many sites like this may have once existed that have been completely wiped out and we'll never know about them.

    • @coltonbates629
      @coltonbates629 Před 3 lety +3

      and to imagine the implications that creates for our future. If, of course, we have one.

    • @krashd
      @krashd Před 3 lety +16

      8,000 years ago Britain and Ireland were not even islands, we were just the two highest parts of a large plain called Doggerlands. Imagine what settlements existed at the bottom of what is now the North Sea?

    • @therealdarklizzy
      @therealdarklizzy Před 3 lety

      And to imagine what will remain of our civilization.

    • @bulletsfordinner8307
      @bulletsfordinner8307 Před 3 lety

      @@krashd crazy to think eh? Do you have any links you can share?

    • @smorrow
      @smorrow Před 3 lety

      Graham Hancock has entered the chat

  • @Sirmenonottwo
    @Sirmenonottwo Před 3 lety +448

    "The romans will never get us here!" but then erosion happened.

    • @iumiforgot
      @iumiforgot Před 3 lety +19

      Picts slowly sinking into the sea, but perfectly safe from romans

    • @angelopueyygarcia43
      @angelopueyygarcia43 Před 3 lety +20

      the romans never did get them. Although that’s probably because the Romans thought they were absolutely worthless rather than their forts.

    • @TarsonTalon
      @TarsonTalon Před 3 lety +9

      @@angelopueyygarcia43 No treasure+incredible defenses=no taxes

    • @sutapasbhattacharya9471
      @sutapasbhattacharya9471 Před 3 lety +16

      Although the Romans built the wall, they had managed to conquer Scotland in the 70s c.e. but they withdrew from it as it was not economically worthwhile spending money on troops in this largely barren land. They had an episode about the mysterious 'disappearance' of the 'Picts' (around 9th Century) on Clive Anderson's Mystic Britain series on Smithsonian Channel last week The Romans called them them Picts due to their body paint/tatoos and the elite amongst them seem to have adopted it. It seems that the Vikings weren't much interested in the Scottish mainland either although they settled the Orkneys, Ireland, Western Isles etc. However, the 'disappearance' of the so-called 'Picts' seems to have been due to the Vikings killing off most of the Pictish nobles in some battle. The Scotti or Gaels who had invaded Western Scotland from Ireland - under Kenneth McAlpine annexed the Pictish lands and the Pictish peasants began to see view themselves as Scots.

    • @roryross3878
      @roryross3878 Před 3 lety

      @@sutapasbhattacharya9471 Appreciated your summary , thank you!

  • @TheBrianp1
    @TheBrianp1 Před 3 lety +282

    Picts or it didn't happen.
    Fine fine, video also works.

  • @paulcooper8818
    @paulcooper8818 Před 3 lety +78

    The defensive value is obvious but imagine what it was like when big North Sea storms hit

    • @EscanV
      @EscanV Před 3 lety +18

      "We must defend our settlement from our waring neighbours"
      "But lord king the sea...."

    • @JacarandaMusic
      @JacarandaMusic Před 3 lety

      Bit draughty.

    • @khangsector
      @khangsector Před 3 lety

      Yet its very strategic characteristic is also its downfall. If the enemy was to blockage the path, the town's logistic will fall in no time. It will turn into a waiting game, instead of saber clashing.

    • @poetsrear
      @poetsrear Před 3 lety +1

      Nevermind that, but imagine carrying all the fresh water there....

  • @ivx8345
    @ivx8345 Před 3 lety +732

    The History Channel: "Could it be the Picts were attacked by aliens? Ufologist and author D. Funnyhat says yes: We can see that there is a circle carved in a stone, that is evidence for the flying saucer."

    • @yllbardh
      @yllbardh Před 3 lety +68

      and they had automobiles, the proof is the two circles connected by a line

    • @Catubrannos
      @Catubrannos Před 3 lety +72

      I'm waiting for next week's episode - Did nazi scientists unearth Pictish ufo, what was the real reason for Rudolf Hess' mission to Scotland?

    • @dreamdiction
      @dreamdiction Před 3 lety +5

      "aliens" . . . you mean barbary slave traders ?

    • @BuriedFlame
      @BuriedFlame Před 3 lety +13

      This is what History Channel is now? Creative writing?

    • @luxborealis
      @luxborealis Před 3 lety +11

      @@yllbardh Welcome to Top Gear Caledonia with Yachmas Maii!

  • @ezekielbrockmann114
    @ezekielbrockmann114 Před 3 lety +162

    Makes you wonder what they're going to be saying about us in the 37th Century, doesn't it?

    • @majorhippo2772
      @majorhippo2772 Před 3 lety +21

      Don't have too, the internet is always gonna be around, like a giant library of well... If you consider Facebook as well, a giant library of every human accomplishment and every human themselves. It will get to the point where Facebook will have an ancestry section that will allow family members to look at their great grandfathers facebooks...

    • @tastycookiechip
      @tastycookiechip Před 3 lety +11

      @@majorhippo2772 the Internet will be our destruction

    • @majorhippo2772
      @majorhippo2772 Před 3 lety +11

      @@tchaika2697 Not the same analogy though, the Romans where one civilisation amongst others that fell. Every country on this planet now uses the internet. Only way we could lose the internet is if every country unanimously decided to get rid of it or Aliens nuked us.

    • @shekelmcfreckle
      @shekelmcfreckle Před 3 lety +23

      @@majorhippo2772 A solar storm could knock that shit out in seconds and everything that wasn't stored in a physical format somewhere safe from the EMP would be lost. Not to mention we wouldn't have the electricity to even access what might have survived. Nothing's permanent.

    • @majorhippo2772
      @majorhippo2772 Před 3 lety +9

      @@shekelmcfreckle Except there are data centres out there that have redundancies for EMP's. Every Government out there knows that EMP's are a threat and so has according precautions.

  • @Benzy670
    @Benzy670 Před 3 lety +21

    I love this, because these people were my ancestors, and we know so little about them. Bless archeologists for trying 🙏🏻

  • @flensdude
    @flensdude Před 3 lety +72

    1:22
    It's amazing how ahead of their time the Picts were. They had levitating technology millennias before we even landed on the moon.

  • @Requiredfields2
    @Requiredfields2 Před 3 lety +14

    2:38 I have translated the symbols in a counter clockwise direction starting at the top thusly: Eat some fish, take mushrooms, create freaky art, go for bike ride. Life was good.

  • @DavidOfWhitehills
    @DavidOfWhitehills Před 4 lety +79

    So much erosion happening all up the east coast of Scotland, there's no telling what's been lost.

    • @MyKharli
      @MyKharli Před 3 lety +2

      Lots erosion all over UK , its the big swells that really beat the coast even if its not especially high tide or bad storm and surge, when all come together there's disasters waiting to happen .

    • @GaldirEonai
      @GaldirEonai Před 3 lety +13

      Particularly annoying for archeologists because of course coastal areas make _extremely_ popular settlement sites. And it's precisely the places that would have had the most action going on that are falling into the sea :P.

    • @EscanV
      @EscanV Před 3 lety +1

      Our Freedom for one.... DA DUM TSSSSS

    • @2sik_UK
      @2sik_UK Před 3 lety +1

      @@GaldirEonai not only that, I think like 12000-13000 years ago Britain was connected too mainland Europe still and there were vast plains called doggerland and hundreds of miles of land completely submerged. Its crazy too think of all the history list too the sea, its even expected that the Isles of scilly were hill toops and connected too mainland Cornwall some time ago within the same period, they are 28 miles off the coast, imagine all the sites that could be lost

    • @GaldirEonai
      @GaldirEonai Před 3 lety

      @@2sik_UK There's also a lot of actual sunken cities around the world that went down when the shoreline slipped, either suddenly as a result of earthquakes or slowly from erosion. They keep finding remnants of ancient settlements underwater that'd tell us an amazing amount about life in those times if they hadn't been underwater for millennia.
      I strongly suspect any archaeologist ends up developing a strong dislike for the ocean over their career :P.

  • @marshmallowwolf3976
    @marshmallowwolf3976 Před 3 lety +9

    Im starting my Honours on archaeological reconstruction and 3D techonology, and this has made me so happy

    • @bernielarsen8108
      @bernielarsen8108 Před 3 lety

      Thats awesome dude. What site/ sites are you focusing on and what recording tech are you using?

  • @Tsoiugidali
    @Tsoiugidali Před 4 lety +40

    Thank you for this video. My yDNA goes all the way back to the Pictish People in this area of Scotland. Coincidentally, 7 generations of my family were born, lived and died in Dunnottar Castle. I have a large picture of Dunnottar hanging on my living room wall. I am an old man now and will never travel to Scotland. Videos like yours helps me to remember things I have never known.

    • @dannyboywhaa3146
      @dannyboywhaa3146 Před 4 lety +7

      czcams.com/video/BGFZT3VOsfY/video.html - awesome new discovery of an early Pictish fort or Kingdom in Aberdeenshire! It dwarfs any other in the UK and is possibly the largest post-roman fort found in all of Europe! The Vikings didn’t just suddenly appear - they were doing things before the 8th Century, as were the Picts - there’s a reason the Romans built two walls, and it wasn’t to keep out a few hundred Scots - I believe ancient British and Norse/danish cultures were very closely linked! It’s a pretty awesome discovery!

    • @dannyboywhaa3146
      @dannyboywhaa3146 Před 4 lety +2

      Cymro 65 yes, quite correct - slip of the tongue... indeed the Scotti as the Romans called them were Gaels in Northern Ireland, correct? And they held the Hebrides and most other Scottish Islands from Northern Ireland? Picts only means painted ones in Latin after all, so we don’t really know who they were. They were pushed into what we now consider their homelands - north eastern Scotland/Aberdeenshire. I think the links between Orkney, Shetland and the Norse go way back - when the seas were the highways! The Norse painted themselves too after all! I never bought the story that the Romans built the walls for economic reasons or to display power! What an enormous expense - IMO there was a real threat! Northmen who controlled the high seas!

    • @dannyboywhaa3146
      @dannyboywhaa3146 Před 4 lety +2

      Cymro 65 most welcome - thanks for your intriguing reply! Ahh the Welsh - my favourite folk! Where Rugby is rightly number one! I can sing in Welsh as used to sing with John’s Boys - a very successful Welsh choir but I haven’t much understanding! It could be connected to Cumbrian, one of the Brythonic languages however, it’s all speculation as we literally don’t have any clues whatsoever! I never knew the link with the Aber prefix - although one has to treat place names carefully, as with loan words between languages, for example - Banburgh and Edinburgh - a Burgh suffix points to Anglo-Saxon founding, yet they’re in Scotland lol... I just have this strange feeling that the ancient Brythonic speakers had much contact/influence with the Greeks/Phoenicians who came to mine the tin - as Prof Wilson (the famous Welsh historian) notes with the use of the Coelbren alphabet, whereas I feel the Picts were in less contact and further north - perhaps this contact sewed the future of Picts and Welsh being different - did the ancient Welsh paint themselves? I’m not sure they did, nor the ancient Irish! So I think the Picts are closer to the Eastern cultures of Norse and Danes - the North Sea was a highway and it’s not only later times that waves of migration would come form the East! I think people have always settled the eastern coast of Britain and pushed whoever was here Westwards - it makes sense to me as most ancient civilisation came from the east... We say for certain the Welsh are the oldest - because we don’t know enough about the Picts to pass comment! For example in the link I posted above it states that this huge Pictish settlement was far older than they anticipated and far grander - pushing the dates for the Picts much further back in time!

    • @Argrouk
      @Argrouk Před 4 lety

      @Cymro 65 Rumour has it the Picts didn't write, which is why so much is lost. The earliest we have are Irish Ogham on some Class I Pictish stones from about 5 AD or something. Added to that all our historical documents stolen by the English that are now at the bottom of the sea.
      It's safe to say that the Picts were pre-Roman, and could go anywhere back to 6000 BC if they are the same people who lived and worshipped on Orkney.

    • @Argrouk
      @Argrouk Před 4 lety

      @Cymro 65 No need to apologise, and yes, very interesting times. DNA research is still young, many mistakes are being made surrounding where people live now, versus where they actually came from. There are also many arguments about the differences between genocide, conquering and assimilation.
      The standard assumption was that the Scotti wiped out the Picts, but it's probably safer to say that they took over the kingship rather than mass murder. Gaelic replaced Celtic, just as Latin and then English mostly replaced Gaelic in modern times.
      There is evidence of people living in Scotland going back over 10,000 years, but trying to name them or map them is pretty impossible, especially as archaeology is a minor pursuit in Scotland, with most people caring about Romans onwards.
      Hopefully we will get more Stone Age and Bronze age sites discovered, and we can learn more about the ancients.

  • @yaznarerkinsaw1914
    @yaznarerkinsaw1914 Před 3 lety +17

    Makes you wonder how much history is lost to time, located in places that no longer exist for us to find.

    • @JonS
      @JonS Před 3 lety +5

      If you add pre-history to that, places like Doggerland submerged in the post-gracial sea level rise, both fuel the imagination and provide a source of sadness for so much knowledge that is hidden.

    • @blacky1987
      @blacky1987 Před 3 lety

      I like this train of thought. I often look at ruins up the Highlands of Scotland or formations that look too man made and always ask myself " what happened here" spend days thinking about what may have been going on there. Nerdy i know but i cant help it

  • @DarkEuropa
    @DarkEuropa Před 3 lety +10

    Thank you to everyone who took the time to make such a wonderful production. Well done!

  • @BigfootAnthropologist
    @BigfootAnthropologist Před 4 lety +85

    Fascinating video of some extremely significant archaeological discoveries along with important information about natural transformations of the landscape leading to loss of these cultural resources.

    • @aapzehrsteurer9000
      @aapzehrsteurer9000 Před 3 lety +2

      inb4 they find weebs' body pillows and classify them as cult images.

  • @juliaconnell
    @juliaconnell Před 4 lety +43

    Thank you for this - this was awesome - always been fascinated by picts, esp as so little known about them

    • @naturel19761
      @naturel19761 Před 3 lety +1

      Indeed, it seems also that the picts were here too in Vendee, french department under britain (bretagne) which were called here pictons with the same way and habits of life than in scotland.

    • @Ian_Carolan
      @Ian_Carolan Před 3 lety +2

      @@naturel19761 It would be interesting to know if the "Auld Alliance" has its roots as far back as then.

  • @markleesmith729
    @markleesmith729 Před 3 lety

    The reality of it being a tiny village,not a fortress,escapes this presentation.

  • @ML-762
    @ML-762 Před 3 lety +2

    Always had a soft spot for Pictish history. It's been amazing how many discoveries have been made in less than 10 years.

  • @IsThisHandleTaken
    @IsThisHandleTaken Před 3 lety +5

    Excellent video! Anytime we get to see a reconstruction of a historical town/fort/castle it's a win for the people!

  • @tedball8677
    @tedball8677 Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you very much. So very well done. Much respect from across the pond.

  • @mookmook5715
    @mookmook5715 Před 3 lety +20

    Prime position, a perfect fortress in everyway.. apart from the dam corrosion.

    • @neurofiedyamato8763
      @neurofiedyamato8763 Před 3 lety +5

      Not even the mightiest fortress can stop nature's might.

    • @angrypandable
      @angrypandable Před 3 lety

      It could go two ways though, could be easy to keep them bottled up with a relatively small force.

  • @email5for6casey
    @email5for6casey Před 4 lety +8

    Fascinating, and inspiring! Thanks for sharing!

  • @TheLittledikkins
    @TheLittledikkins Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you for putting this video up.

  • @Tiki_Media
    @Tiki_Media Před 3 lety +2

    Great video. I love when you can SEE history. My compliments to the teams of hardworking people who made this possible. Thank you!

  • @patrickvalentino600
    @patrickvalentino600 Před 3 lety +20

    For all who liked this and learned something, let's all hat-tip to drones, computer animation, time-lapse HD video, and all the other technologies that allowed us to learn about this thing we otherwise would have known absolutely nothing about. Yay.

    • @LynxSouth
      @LynxSouth Před 3 lety +4

      Many of us would have known about it. The formats in which the information is presented would have been different, but archeological discoveries and re-creations have existed since back when there was only print media. Big-city Sunday newspapers used to be quite amazing, well back into the 19thC, including all sorts of line drawings and photographs. What's really different is how easily we can access the information, and then casually watch it again and again if we want.
      I remember many years of National Geographic specials and other such documentaries, anticipating them and then wishing so hard I could watch them again, having no way to make sure I'd understood correctly and no way other than writing letters to ask for further details. However, I believe that that hunger for more spurred a lot of us into making the effort to look up books at the library, which helped us develop real interests. I'm guessing that now, lots of people watch another video or two and then forget about the topic. But yeah, to me, this sort of video is what the internet was made for.

  • @homefront1999
    @homefront1999 Před 3 lety +3

    I've said this before and I'll say it again. If I could have one power, it'd be time travel. Just going to these sites and going back in time and seeing them in all their glory. See the people going on with their daily lives. Imagine going to New York City and then seeing what the first-ever hut that the settlement of New York was.

    • @krashd
      @krashd Před 3 lety +1

      One Dutch fella trying to build his house in a marshy bog, happy as Larry because all the flooding and dampness reminds him off home.

  • @eltajinrestaurant-anauthen9427

    I am learning so much, thank you for sharing the knowledge, huge fan of you work.

  • @enda320
    @enda320 Před 3 lety

    Wow, this has recently hit algorithm gold! Nice work on the motion graphics, a very handy tool to visualise what once would have existed.

  • @terryhughes7349
    @terryhughes7349 Před 3 lety +1

    Nicely done with this visualization.

  • @ManoNegraCG
    @ManoNegraCG Před 3 lety +1

    2:33 the carving roughly translates as, "Lavvy heid Angus came here fishing one night and the dobber lost his glasses".

  • @DocSpooky
    @DocSpooky Před 3 lety +3

    Thanks, Valheim, for helping the algorithm get here

  • @EyeSpyHiFi
    @EyeSpyHiFi Před 3 lety +1

    Well, that really was enjoyable. Beautifully put together and extremely interesting. Thank you University of Aberdeen.

  • @davidhoran7116
    @davidhoran7116 Před 3 lety +15

    Makes you wonder what else the seas swallowed whole

    • @thomassmith8140
      @thomassmith8140 Před 3 lety +7

      (assuming you don't know) I recommend looking into Doggerland.

    • @ivan55599
      @ivan55599 Před 3 lety +2

      Atlantis, Mu and Lemuria. Oh l mean...

    • @BaconNationChannel
      @BaconNationChannel Před 3 lety

      Take a look at Doggerland. Europe's Atlantis

  • @jamiemorton113
    @jamiemorton113 Před 3 lety +15

    Just think how cool this would have been when it’s a storm

  • @loneranger4113
    @loneranger4113 Před 3 lety

    Thank you for sharing, great video.

  • @CatThompson
    @CatThompson Před 3 lety +1

    Wonderful video! Thank you for this!

  • @BenLlywelyn
    @BenLlywelyn Před 3 lety +1

    Fascinating work.

  • @manulettleur8577
    @manulettleur8577 Před 3 lety +2

    Well no idea why this was suggested, but I love it! So fascinating!

  • @Mr.McWatson
    @Mr.McWatson Před 3 lety

    awesome video, wish all archeological find would be shown like this

  • @bigbasil1908
    @bigbasil1908 Před 3 lety

    There's so much of Scotland that I haven't yet seen and I don't know if I ever will now.
    There is so much to be uncovered all across the British Isles that we may never know about.
    The past is a mystery indeed

  • @scoobydooo4390
    @scoobydooo4390 Před 3 lety

    Great archaeology and fascinating video, well done Aberdeen Uni..........

  • @duanewilliams7353
    @duanewilliams7353 Před 4 lety +4

    The first pic, before we even started looked like a giant footprint!!!

  • @bingbong6066
    @bingbong6066 Před 3 lety

    SUPER interesting. What a lovely video.

  • @xres1329
    @xres1329 Před 3 lety

    Thanks, this was new, enjoyed learning.

  • @ZGADOW
    @ZGADOW Před 3 lety +1

    Fascinating. I think it caused my think of more questions than it answered though

  • @1earflapping
    @1earflapping Před 3 lety +1

    At 3:29, besides the pictures of fish and mushroom, we have a depiction of the early Pictish bicycle. Historians speculated that bicycles helped the Picts outrun the Roman legions.

  • @ksxx
    @ksxx Před 3 lety

    Thanks, CZcams for recommending me this.

  • @kickbiker7920
    @kickbiker7920 Před 3 lety

    Excellent music to complement the clip and text!

  • @vickiharrington8870
    @vickiharrington8870 Před 3 lety

    Amazing video! Thanks

  • @martinavaslovik3433
    @martinavaslovik3433 Před 3 lety

    I find myself unstunned by this stunning video.

  • @freekmusbach8722
    @freekmusbach8722 Před 3 lety

    Fascinating, I've been to Ireland and have seen very old forts half eaten up by the seaside ( on cliffs so very high ) and the years in general wich is logical. history at work thanks so much for the insight! Freek Musbach

  • @KleioChronicles
    @KleioChronicles Před 3 lety +1

    Dunnotar Castle is one of my favourites that I’ve been to because the area in Stonehaven is so pretty. I had no idea about this discovery but I suppose it must have been happening during the time I was visiting. I was also studying anthropology at Aberdeen Uni so even more surprised I didn’t hear about it. In terms of castles, I think Dunrobin Castle is my favourite. I haven’t seen Eilean Donan yet and some of the minor ruined castles but those two certainly stick out. Stirling is my sister’s favourite. I’ve been meaning to visit some of these old sites as well like the ones in Orkney. I take it that this will have been a bit hard to get to lol.

  • @SouthernOceanBlue
    @SouthernOceanBlue Před 5 lety +1

    Fantastic video.

  • @PapaSchlumpf78
    @PapaSchlumpf78 Před 3 lety

    Cool, thanks for the animation!

  • @donjorge8329
    @donjorge8329 Před 3 lety

    Such a lovely place!!!

  • @Jim5988
    @Jim5988 Před 3 lety

    absolutely wonderful

  • @catocall7323
    @catocall7323 Před 3 lety +2

    I thought someone had copied my valheim base design. Turns out it was the picts.

  • @mariusweber4990
    @mariusweber4990 Před 3 lety

    Great video!

  • @miraclemuaythai
    @miraclemuaythai Před 3 lety

    super amazing, interesting and informative video!

  • @derektaylor8830
    @derektaylor8830 Před 3 lety +1

    Great film about an awesome site.

  • @leonlawson2196
    @leonlawson2196 Před 5 lety +12

    Brilliant

  • @petko5335
    @petko5335 Před 3 lety

    One of the rare moments I thank YT for having their algorithm.

  • @johnsmall9729
    @johnsmall9729 Před 3 lety +1

    echo beach, far away in time...one of my favourite haunts

  • @astro_manta9733
    @astro_manta9733 Před 3 lety +4

    Funny that, I’ve walked past that stack not a small number of times, guess I’ll bring some trivia with me next time

  • @brianmitchell6547
    @brianmitchell6547 Před 5 lety +1

    Great Photography and music appropriate terrific.B M

  • @carolmurray187
    @carolmurray187 Před 3 lety +1

    Very interesting 🙂 more please

  • @kaiserY
    @kaiserY Před 3 lety +1

    Strangely I feel sad. All gone with the wind.

  • @rvail136
    @rvail136 Před 3 lety

    Very cool. Nice animation.

  • @sarrumac
    @sarrumac Před 3 lety

    2:38 Guy on the right was named bicycle. What a madlad.

  • @pelicanus4055
    @pelicanus4055 Před 3 lety +1

    Excellent recreation. Thank you!

  • @user-ee8oh2mp1u
    @user-ee8oh2mp1u Před 3 lety +2

    Земля вечна,природа вечна.Люди приходят и уходят,буря их страстей,лишь слабый всплеск в океане вечности.

  • @wtfisditvoorbullshit
    @wtfisditvoorbullshit Před 3 lety +1

    All of us are slowly eroding into the sea of forgetfulness.

  • @rnedlo9909
    @rnedlo9909 Před 3 lety +8

    Thank you, beautiful picture and interesting subject. The power of water is awesome. How many sights were flooded at the end of the last ice age when the water level was 200' lower? If things continue, future generations will be speculating about us, digging around high places in Boston, London, New York, Tokyo

    • @RodFleming-World
      @RodFleming-World Před 3 lety

      Uh there were no sites in Scotland because it was under a sheet of ice hundreds of feet thick. Search Doggerland though.

    • @rnedlo9909
      @rnedlo9909 Před 3 lety +4

      @@RodFleming-World I was talking world wide

  • @machtschnell7452
    @machtschnell7452 Před 3 lety

    Fascinating.

  • @stanettiels7367
    @stanettiels7367 Před 3 lety

    Well played, algorithm, well played.

  • @holloww_dwella
    @holloww_dwella Před 3 lety

    Yes, CZcams, I do want to watch this. Good job.

  • @edwardhanson3664
    @edwardhanson3664 Před 4 lety

    That's a really cool video.

  • @calumcarmichael7717
    @calumcarmichael7717 Před 3 lety +8

    If enough information could be amassed about them weather it’s hard fact or just rumours and then make a tv show about it, exactly like what they did with Vikings that would be fascinating

    • @LynxSouth
      @LynxSouth Před 3 lety

      I'd like to 'like' this about 10 times, even though half of the programs would be the people huddling inside dark houses due to storms, or trying to shout over the wind.

  • @greenbutter3190
    @greenbutter3190 Před 3 lety

    Stable video 👍

  • @midoribishithegamer
    @midoribishithegamer Před 4 lety +1

    This was quite informative and interesting. My grandmother (dad's mom) is from Aberdeen Scotland!

  • @Johannes_Brahms65
    @Johannes_Brahms65 Před 3 lety

    Very beautyful.

  • @fionagrahame3361
    @fionagrahame3361 Před 5 lety +2

    Fabulous

  • @ImZyker
    @ImZyker Před 3 lety

    fascinating stuff

  • @YOURTECHFRIEND
    @YOURTECHFRIEND Před 3 lety

    So beautiful :-o

  • @howzany6832
    @howzany6832 Před 3 lety

    I played a lot of Survival games on PvP servers like on Ark Survival Evolved... and when I saw the cliff base, I immediately went "Hey that's just literally my cliff base I built to make it hard for enemy players to gank me and steal my stuff!"

  • @rainluna9765
    @rainluna9765 Před 3 lety

    It must've been incredible to live there on that piece of rock sticking out at sea.

  • @karwashblark7499
    @karwashblark7499 Před 3 lety

    It's the miracle now much of anything from antiquity survives at all

  • @lord_kinbote3920
    @lord_kinbote3920 Před 3 lety

    "This rock dunnae look very stable."
    "I Dunnicaer."

  • @hiltonian_1260
    @hiltonian_1260 Před 3 lety +1

    Many years ago (while attending Aberdeen) I visited a similar place on the NE Scottish coast called Acastle (spelling?) near Latheronwheel. Just a rough stone cube on a promontory with a razor back ridge leading out. Now I’m wondering if it is still there. Also wondering if it once was a bigger promontory.

    • @LynxSouth
      @LynxSouth Před 3 lety

      Email the University of Aberdeen and ask. If they haven't done archeological work there, maybe your inquiry will encourage them to study and preserve it.

  • @Wolfgang6129
    @Wolfgang6129 Před 3 lety

    Captivant.

  • @Liamb2179
    @Liamb2179 Před 3 lety

    This is so cool

  • @_HonkeyKong_
    @_HonkeyKong_ Před 3 lety

    my only knowledge of the pictish before this was about the pictish boat warriors from Stronghold 2

  • @Aaron-mj9ie
    @Aaron-mj9ie Před 3 lety

    Not gonna lie, that's pretty cool looking. Imagine how neat it would have looked at night.

  • @doctorshawzy6477
    @doctorshawzy6477 Před 3 lety

    excellent..as a marine geologist I am surprised by the rather high rate of bedrock erosion...

  • @smegmalasagna
    @smegmalasagna Před 3 lety +1

    1:45 Yooo They recreated Solitude from The Elder Scrolls VI Skyrim!!

  • @jeanpierreragequit1726

    awesome..

  • @seanpearce5809
    @seanpearce5809 Před 3 lety

    Even the Picts couldn't stop erosion.

  • @christophmahler
    @christophmahler Před 3 lety +4

    _Damn those mages at _*_Winterhold college_* ...

    • @EscanV
      @EscanV Před 3 lety

      In their Tongue he was.... TOE FUCKING!!! lol