Time Team S20 special - britains stone age tsunami

Tony Robinson reveals astonishing new evidence that shows how, 8000 years ago, a huge tsunami swamped the east coast of Britain.

Пікірлер: 777

  • @judyklein3221
    @judyklein32219 ай бұрын

    This is one of the best documentaries I've seen on the Mesolithic.💕

  • @Marimilitarybrat
    @Marimilitarybrat4 жыл бұрын

    So good to see Phil. He still has the same felt hat that he may have dug up at an archeological site. I miss the old time team.

  • @benediktmorak4409

    @benediktmorak4409

    2 жыл бұрын

    same here. while it is though not fair to the new team, they also do an excellent job, Sir Tony Robinson was just THE presenter for such a series. Not for nothing, and for sure well deserved, he got his title for that. but the most horrifying though amazing story was that of Carenza Lewis. What a lady! - chapeau - !

  • @MrKmoconne
    @MrKmoconne2 жыл бұрын

    This was a superb program about a world event I never knew about. Tony and the team delivered.

  • @sham421

    @sham421

    2 жыл бұрын

    You should check out the American equivalent. An Ice Age glacial dam. "Mystery of the Megaflood" on PBS's NOVA. It's about the formation of the Scablands.

  • @Happyheretic2308

    @Happyheretic2308

    Жыл бұрын

    Try Neil Oliver’s podcast episode on the Storegga Slide.

  • @BFDT-4
    @BFDT-45 жыл бұрын

    Over here in the Americas. First chance I have had to see a Time Team episode. I am HOOKED!

  • @MsAnpassad

    @MsAnpassad

    5 жыл бұрын

    Still on binge watching all those 280 episodes? Or are you done now? Or did you die from a Time team overdose? ;)

  • @jessewilson8676

    @jessewilson8676

    4 жыл бұрын

    MsAnpassad tried to check myself into rehab for that but they laughed I showed them the show since then I have been lining in a palace next to a mighty lake lots of children running carefree women throwing themselves at me food so tasty that....,Hold on time to take meds

  • @MrDiveDave
    @MrDiveDave2 жыл бұрын

    Being the first born Canadian of a British family I absolutely adore this show. My family is very specifically from Yorkshire and I have traced my family tree back quite far and i love being able to see what and who and where things are that are part of my heritage. I absolutely love the fact I live in a time we can see all this history come back to life. And what great group of people to watch, very educational and entertaining.

  • @MrARock001
    @MrARock00110 жыл бұрын

    I got into geophysics because of Time Team! Thanks Time Team for the adventure!

  • @NoSuRReNDeR001

    @NoSuRReNDeR001

    3 жыл бұрын

    if I ever hear anyone saying "Geofizz" my ears are going to perk up and I am jumping in on that convo lol

  • @robertglenn5398
    @robertglenn53989 жыл бұрын

    Back when I was a devoted fan of Blackadder, I would have never imagined Tony Robinson...aka Baldrick...would eventually become such a superb narrator in what are some very good documentaries. I thoroughly enjoy all of his programs, particularly the Worst Jobs series.

  • @barnabyaprobert5159

    @barnabyaprobert5159

    8 жыл бұрын

    +robert glenn It was all part of his cunning plan, my lord.

  • @robertglenn5398

    @robertglenn5398

    8 жыл бұрын

    Barnaby ap Robert And what a cunning little twit he was....God, I'd about the floor in laughter whenever Rowan Atkinson would call him an addle-brain twit...

  • @barnabyaprobert5159

    @barnabyaprobert5159

    8 жыл бұрын

    I wish we had an American version of Rowan. Instead we have mindless sitcom with recycled jokes and plot twist you can see from the first 30 seconds of the show.

  • @robertglenn5398

    @robertglenn5398

    8 жыл бұрын

    Oh, God how you nailed it! Anytime some American crappola hits the air, I've got it line for line after the opening kick...

  • @barnabyaprobert5159

    @barnabyaprobert5159

    8 жыл бұрын

    Which is such a shame! They don't even run the original "The Office" here! Instead we get an American version with its guts cut out!

  • @summerrose299
    @summerrose29910 жыл бұрын

    I absolutely adore Tony Robinson and the Time Team series. I'm so glad I found all the Time Team shows on You Tube..

  • @jleechadwick

    @jleechadwick

    2 жыл бұрын

    This American is totally hooked on Time Team! Living in Montana, I enjoyed Tony's series on the American West. I live about 50 miles from the Little Bighorn battlefield where the Sioux/Northern Cheyenne tribes defeated Gen. Custer, so I enjoyed seeing that part of the series. If you haven't seen that series, it is very enjoyable, and I especially enjoyed his interviews with the native Americans very interesting. Here is the link to the 1st episode (it is 2 episodes all together): kzread.info/dash/bejne/hGGAlpWBYrfMYrw.html

  • @inkydoug
    @inkydoug10 жыл бұрын

    Looking at that recreation of the 8000 year old lakeside hut,which was occupied for some 400 years, I was struck by the thought that most of what is produced by us is, in the end, noise and want.

  • @slhughes1267

    @slhughes1267

    4 жыл бұрын

    And garbage/waste.

  • @devonseamoor

    @devonseamoor

    2 жыл бұрын

    This time of plague may invoke awakening and a realisation that it's time to change it, yes.

  • @inkydoug

    @inkydoug

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@devonseamoor Lay not up treasures on earth, But lay up your treasures in heaven, for where your treasure is, there will also be your heart. Matthew 6:19, (paraphrased) I say this could be read free of any religiosity, as a wise injunction to beware of spiritual dissipation in the pursuit of the material. I think people are beginning to look around and wonder: Why? What is the purpose of all this? Can we not do better?

  • @sgrannie9938

    @sgrannie9938

    10 ай бұрын

    @@devonseamoor that was my hope, but it seems to have had the opposite effect 🙁

  • @Burl-tw1yu

    @Burl-tw1yu

    2 ай бұрын

    That last sentence of your's..says it all

  • @zebooker
    @zebooker6 жыл бұрын

    Reijer Zaaijer: Thanks for posting so many Time Team episodes!

  • @MrBtb34
    @MrBtb3411 жыл бұрын

    RIP Mick Aston

  • @jskjsk3986

    @jskjsk3986

    2 жыл бұрын

    In a thousand years an archaeologist will uncover a high status burial in a multi-colored sweater.

  • @DJInsidiousCliff
    @DJInsidiousCliff10 жыл бұрын

    The way they experimentally built that hut - thatching from the top down, and the reeds sticking up - they are experimentally building the wettest shelter ever.

  • @clintonmiller1698

    @clintonmiller1698

    5 жыл бұрын

    I also silently laughed at this "house". Lol.

  • @LindaTCornwall

    @LindaTCornwall

    4 жыл бұрын

    it's all a load of bollocks... as for that clay wrapped fish, they have shards of clay pots that show they've sat in fires and contain cooking residue.. As if you're going to dig up clay every day to cook some fish haha... makes me laugh. There's a video on here some where of that same women explaining something else on some other show, but she didn't bank on there being an expert in plant meterial, who said to her, no couldn't have been such and such.. that plant wasn't native to this area. I laughed my head off.... her face was a picture!

  • @Headwind-1

    @Headwind-1

    4 жыл бұрын

    Ha ha yea I remember Balders the clever twit thinking a parsnip was a turnip

  • @updownstate

    @updownstate

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@LindaTCornwall People in the Americas still cook food wrapped in leaves and clay. I haven't had the pleasure but they say it makes the most tender and succulent meat they've ever eaten.

  • 4 жыл бұрын

    @@LindaTCornwall You cluless sneering arsehole.

  • @LindaTCornwall
    @LindaTCornwall4 жыл бұрын

    The Cornish name for St Michael's Mount is Karrek Loos yn Koos, which translates to grey rock in the woodland, it wasn't until a number of years ago after a serve storm stripped the sand away, that the remains of a submerged forest was found in the whole surrounding area of mounts bay... The trees have since been carbon dated to between 6000 and 4000 years old. Which would suggest that an oral history was passed down for thousands of years between my Cornish ancestors.

  • @rogerscottcathey

    @rogerscottcathey

    4 жыл бұрын

    How interesting.

  • @Saskmopar

    @Saskmopar

    4 жыл бұрын

    Linda T , you might like the GeoCosmographic REX or Randal Carlson YT channel. Lots of vids about Randals' work looking into the Younger Dryas Catastrophe and evidence of more later catastrophes. Pretty wild stuff.

  • @diekje8728

    @diekje8728

    4 жыл бұрын

    I’m Belgian an if any place names here include “lo”, it refers to woodland or a place where the wood is cleared. It’s a germanic word, but “loos” and “lo” I couldn’t unsee that

  • @diekje8728

    @diekje8728

    4 жыл бұрын

    Linda T I’m Belgian and if any place names here include “lo”, it refers to woodland or a place where the wood is cleared. It’s a germanic word, but “loos” and “lo” I can’t unsee it now

  • @frankjacob3538

    @frankjacob3538

    5 ай бұрын

    The Breton legend of the city of Yz, demise is another example of past watery events that has marked our psyche.......

  • @summersolstice884
    @summersolstice8844 жыл бұрын

    12000 years ago ... such an incredible time... the mysterious end of the Ice Age .... Göbekli Tepe ... The beginning of agriculture ... the start and rise of the cities ... so many parts of the puzzle that we are still trying to piece together ...

  • @Catapults4U

    @Catapults4U

    4 жыл бұрын

    Aliens from another planet

  • @summersolstice884

    @summersolstice884

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@Catapults4U LOL ... perhaps it was our ancestors from that other planet ... We might be the aliens

  • @christrinder1255
    @christrinder12554 жыл бұрын

    Reintroduce this programme please!,!, I Wish they would reintroduce Time Team today because archeology is ever advancing further today!

  • @dragonladyfink4685

    @dragonladyfink4685

    3 жыл бұрын

    I heard they are. Check official time team KZread channel.

  • @kikufutaba1194
    @kikufutaba11944 жыл бұрын

    This was one of my favorite episodes. Thank you for posting

  • @Russia-bullies
    @Russia-bullies2 жыл бұрын

    Before seeing the show,I didn’t have an archaeological documentaries playlist/folder,as I’ve now. Keep it up.Time Team.

  • @StephiSensei26
    @StephiSensei264 жыл бұрын

    Absolutely terrific program! You can watch them over and over again, and learn something new every time. Yea TT!

  • @jimmackey2909
    @jimmackey290911 жыл бұрын

    I've just spent the last week or two watching your uploads and must send a big thank you. I have most of the programs but missed a good number. You made my day(s). You've done a wonderful job.

  • @michaelmacdonald2907
    @michaelmacdonald29074 жыл бұрын

    Outstanding photography - simply brilliant ! I could (have) study this for hours. Bravo

  • @elizabethrigby-jones5085
    @elizabethrigby-jones50854 жыл бұрын

    Loved time team and still do. Thank goodness for youtube. Love Phil's huge character and passion of human history. Thank you for hours of fascinating! finds and very important stories that we all as a human race should remember and add as much of our history to understand the struggles and wonderful! inventions in order to survive in such harsh times. Any chance of bringing time team back with some of the original casts of course. ❤

  • @DodiTov

    @DodiTov

    2 жыл бұрын

    I don't know if you have discovered Time Team Official yet, but it's a good part of the old team and they are doing digs! They expect to post to KZread sometime in 2022.

  • @RICDirector

    @RICDirector

    Жыл бұрын

    First two digs are up and excellent, if a bit bittersweet for the absence of so many of our old friends.

  • @wocstudios1
    @wocstudios110 жыл бұрын

    Phil takes off his hat in deference to the artifacts....brilliant.

  • @grimsplague

    @grimsplague

    6 жыл бұрын

    Leave Phils hat alone, a man of such character could wear the skin of a swine and still be allowed onto the archaeological dig site

  • @Shigawire

    @Shigawire

    4 жыл бұрын

    That's rare. Almost as rare as him cutting his finger nails. XD

  • @WhiteVett03

    @WhiteVett03

    3 жыл бұрын

    I didnt realize though I totally understand. Thank you for enlightening me !!

  • @RKHageman

    @RKHageman

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Shigawire He’s an accomplished guitarist. Didn’t you know?

  • @richardsanchez9190

    @richardsanchez9190

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@RKHageman any video of him playing.

  • @devonseamoor
    @devonseamoor2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, for a great episode with a valuable education about this tsunami that hit Britain once upon a time. I did know that the North Sea Channel was a tundra once, where people and animals crossed from what's now the European continent, to what's now the east coast of Britain, more or less. On one of our Wadden islands in the North of Holland, there's a museum and educative centre, where this is shown. I enjoyed Phil's reverence for the deer skull object, taking his hat off, haha. But most impressive is what he said about those Mesolithic ancestors, conscious of the existence of the spirit world, intuitively. With the company of a shaman as well, who may have contributed to the shaping of these skull masks.I

  • @lorrieharkey3383
    @lorrieharkey33834 жыл бұрын

    Fascinating..... absolutely riveting. I greatly enjoyed this, thank you for posting

  • @phillwheadon5940
    @phillwheadon59404 жыл бұрын

    Now that the Younger Dryas event is becoming better understood there are suggestions that the people of the Mesolithic period were descendants of survivors trying to recreate civilisations that had been lost in that earlier cataclysm. This means that although their tools were simple their dreams were not. So not hunter gatherers except under duress and all the while dreaming of a return to organised society. Their way of life perhaps does not reflect an emergence from a more animal like stage to a more modern lifestyle but rather reflects their preexisting knowledge of what humans could aspire to. Well it's a thought.

  • @MossyMozart

    @MossyMozart

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Phil Wheadon - If the Younger Dryas Event occurred about 12,000 years ago and this event was 8,000 years ago, that is one huge gap. Stabilization must have occurred well before that.

  • @nme0830

    @nme0830

    Жыл бұрын

    Well said.

  • @ladyflimflam

    @ladyflimflam

    7 ай бұрын

    Oh, good. Pseudoscience bs.

  • @davidtownsend6092

    @davidtownsend6092

    4 ай бұрын

    Nobody educated thinks that. Graham hancock is not only wrong but actively lying to make a book. Bc he's a writer. And his son works at Netflix. Any point he makes van be quickly proven wrong or a lie in a 5 second Google and I challenge you to offer any of his fake evidence and I will bust it wide open

  • @davidtownsend6092

    @davidtownsend6092

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@ladyflimflampeople are so dumb. It's all nonsense and if people had the mental capacity to look into shit themselves they'd easily find out.

  • @shafur3
    @shafur32 жыл бұрын

    This is such a great show ! Thank you for sharing ❤

  • @Zardoz4441
    @Zardoz44414 жыл бұрын

    Ah, Baldrick! How good to see him again! Great character out of one of my fav TV shows.

  • @lisamcandrews8594

    @lisamcandrews8594

    4 жыл бұрын

    I live in America and I’ve learned so much about British history from the show. More than a lot of documentaries that I’ve watched

  • @Bkeytx
    @Bkeytx11 жыл бұрын

    I appreciate the posting of this video, as I like these type Documentaries, History.

  • @moggywan
    @moggywan11 жыл бұрын

    The problem cleared up and I've just finished watching the video, many thanks from a Brit in California.

  • @erictaylor5462
    @erictaylor54625 жыл бұрын

    Pete is a great old fellow. It was thoughtful of him to keep all that stuff around for archaeologists.

  • @shotforshot5983

    @shotforshot5983

    4 жыл бұрын

    Ok, but he was kinda creepy . Keeping all those mummified murder victims around too and all.

  • @GayleMaurer
    @GayleMaurer10 жыл бұрын

    I am really enjoying the Time Team programs! I want to get in there and dig with them.

  • @jenamyallen
    @jenamyallen2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you!!! I loved this episode!!!😍❤❤

  • @paulanthonybalistrieri5978
    @paulanthonybalistrieri59788 жыл бұрын

    Back in the late 70's/early 80's, the "SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE" skit "THE ANTLER DANCE" MIGHT have had an actual archaeological basis after all. So bloody cool! (Way to go Lorne Michaels!)

  • @tinaharrison9354
    @tinaharrison93542 жыл бұрын

    Excellent episode time team thank you all

  • @granskare
    @granskare4 жыл бұрын

    I like what Phil is telling us. This retelling shows great things about the old times.

  • @charlie2elk
    @charlie2elk2 жыл бұрын

    Every show keeps me captivated....learning made interesting and memorable

  • @banjodon9
    @banjodon94 жыл бұрын

    Thanks. I love this program.

  • @uski59
    @uski598 жыл бұрын

    Excellent Documentary,....worthy of watching

  • @justinbraham9118
    @justinbraham91182 жыл бұрын

    Great program ty

  • @manekeyneko
    @manekeyneko2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks to the whole time team for uplifting the lives of ancient peoples. Too many docs paint their lives as the unending misery- a holdover of 18th and 19th century projection. I'll take the Mesolithic over the 1830s any day

  • @charlottefogg8710
    @charlottefogg87104 жыл бұрын

    I am very glad I found this site. Education with a sense of humor

  • @bettycrabtree3107
    @bettycrabtree31072 жыл бұрын

    Wonderful program

  • @orchidorio
    @orchidorio4 жыл бұрын

    I had not heard of this. My eyes are open ! Thank You. Thank You.

  • @nicholassweazey1780
    @nicholassweazey17805 жыл бұрын

    great show and information/ thank you

  • @philswede
    @philswede5 жыл бұрын

    Awesome channel. You got yourself new subscriber and a thumps up.

  • @b_uppy
    @b_uppy3 жыл бұрын

    In my area cherries ripen in June. What a difference latitude makes...

  • @MossyMozart

    @MossyMozart

    2 жыл бұрын

    @B uppy - Also, your cherries have the benefit of 8,000 years of agricultural cross breeding. They are undoubtedly much different that the cherries that these stone-aged people had access to.

  • @653j521
    @653j5214 жыл бұрын

    I wish they had mentioned even briefly what the tsunami did to Iceland, Greenland, and North America that could be found today.

  • @garywheeler7039

    @garywheeler7039

    4 жыл бұрын

    There is something theorized that a group of comets hit 12,900 years ago. One in Saginaw Bay in the US, others perhaps in Greenland, maybe South America, maybe Siberia. Wiped out all the biggest animals (megafauna) in North America. Perhaps from ice chunks thrown out by the main impacts. Hundreds of thousands of secondary craters recently found on Lidar imaging in places like North Carolina. I wonder if this is the right time period for the Tsunami's if the dates could be made more exact. Sea level rise would also happen at the same time which ties into other old stories and even the date of Atlantis's destruction.

  • @CAMacKenzie

    @CAMacKenzie

    4 жыл бұрын

    Actually, if you listen closely, the Tsunami's going to Iceland and North America is mentioned.

  • @chrisclark7212

    @chrisclark7212

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@garywheeler7039 there was global extinction type events 12000 yrs ago . Our sun has a nova cycle every 12068 years .

  • @sirmoke9646

    @sirmoke9646

    4 жыл бұрын

    The comet impact isn't just theorized. It is established science. You can go to the cosmic tusk website and see the peer reviewed literature in the bibliography. All of it. The tsunami from the Norwegian land slide is a completely different event. No point in mixing the two together. The op asked about evidence for the latter in the rest of the Atlantic. And please forget the 12000 year sun nova cycle theory nonsense. Better yet go to the source of it and see for yourself how it ignores anything that doesn't fit the narrative. Douglas Vogt who is pushing it on youtube does nothing but wrap nonsense into videos dismissing and ignoring decades of established science in one slide PPTs. With nothing to back it up other than a CIA cover up fantasy and mental gymnastics. For God's sake the guy claims that any comet forms when a glorified CME blows off the oceans from Earth. A 5 minute read on the Rosetta mission throws his brainfart out and beats it into a pulp.

  • @chrisclark7212

    @chrisclark7212

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@sirmoke9646 no it does not and from the sound of it u r also a red herring .

  • @paulmahon2563
    @paulmahon256311 жыл бұрын

    This is so cool just learned something new many thanks.

  • @patricianunez4025
    @patricianunez40254 жыл бұрын

    Fascinating !!

  • @wjnahuy
    @wjnahuy4 жыл бұрын

    Really interesting you all are so smart to find this stuff.

  • @maryannweldin4633
    @maryannweldin46332 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this. I had never heard of this. Just bits and pieces that didn’t connect

  • @tommcqueeney6774
    @tommcqueeney67742 жыл бұрын

    Tony is great 👍 on these history shows

  • @markdicker2732
    @markdicker27325 жыл бұрын

    Awesome video with the best narrator

  • @jessh5310
    @jessh53106 жыл бұрын

    I won't suggest preparing for the next tsunami, we can't even prepare for snow and that is a dead cert.

  • @LuvBorderCollies

    @LuvBorderCollies

    3 жыл бұрын

    Sounds like people in the hurricane zones in the US. Huh? Prepare? I'll think about when it hits.

  • @westho7314
    @westho7314 Жыл бұрын

    Happy New year to Meso & Neo enthusiasts in 2023, That decade really flew by quickly, I'm starting to feel like a meso fossil myself at 70. Just love the history of British Isles & surrounding area of the euro northlands the Stone Age episodes &.cheers to all Craig Harald a mestizo-norseman from Death Valley California.

  • @jeanbloom7513
    @jeanbloom7513 Жыл бұрын

    Fascinating program!

  • @Maridun50
    @Maridun502 жыл бұрын

    Very interesting progam about Doggerland, which on it's eastern part was hooked up with Jutland. The tsunami must have affected Danes a lot also. However - I haven't seen any Danish programs about it. Also interesting to learn that you can actually use soap-weed as soap. I thought it got the name because of the sweat smelling flowers. I have had some in my garden for years and worked very hard to prevent them from spreading too much. They spread very quickly.

  • @GRACEAK01
    @GRACEAK012 жыл бұрын

    I am so fascinated by Doggerland :) This is my happy-place viewing.

  • @alexhayden2303
    @alexhayden23034 жыл бұрын

    There are a few submerged tree stumps to be seen at extreme low tides, on the N. shore of the Forth, just E. of the rail bridge. Inverkeithing area. I never seen any mention of them anywhere. Thought they might have been beech. (Not sure why: Long time ago'80's.)

  • @lazarus8237
    @lazarus82374 жыл бұрын

    Best time team ive seen

  • @hojiscott733
    @hojiscott7338 жыл бұрын

    Awww, I love Phil! Too bad for you, you're missing many of the good bits.

  • @BirdieRumia
    @BirdieRumia8 жыл бұрын

    First Time Team episode I watched, I think!

  • @ericschmuecker348
    @ericschmuecker3482 жыл бұрын

    The split log boards ! That is important!

  • @kimkellems1706
    @kimkellems17064 жыл бұрын

    Enjoy the videos! Love learning about British history!

  • @benaveiga546
    @benaveiga5469 жыл бұрын

    Coastal houses that stood up for 400 years and only were only demolished by a 10 metre high tsunami. When they build houses now, If it lasts 30 years you've been Lucky... You've got to ask yourself..whos in the Stone age, them or us.

  • @CologneCarter

    @CologneCarter

    9 жыл бұрын

    You don't have to go that far. Think about Roman bridges that still are in good shape, while concrete bridges we built 50 years ago are about to crumble.

  • @benaveiga546

    @benaveiga546

    9 жыл бұрын

    I live near Tarragona in Spain. In the old part of Tarragona the shops and buildings have the original foundations of what was once the Roman circus from over 2000 years ago., they've simply bult on top of them they're so solid.

  • @CologneCarter

    @CologneCarter

    9 жыл бұрын

    BEN AVEIGA I live in Cologne/Germany, a city with lots of traces of the Roman buildings. Everything that is left is solid, more solid than what we built during the last 100 years.

  • @benaveiga546

    @benaveiga546

    9 жыл бұрын

    We are so retarded as a race, that we can put a man on the moon and send a robot to mars, but we can't build a damn building that stands up for more than half a century..we are doomed..

  • @Philrc

    @Philrc

    9 жыл бұрын

    BEN AVEIGA them

  • @kategratkowski9486
    @kategratkowski94865 жыл бұрын

    Could it be possible for the deer skull hole used for straps to tie the thing the head?

  • @leslieeaston3383

    @leslieeaston3383

    5 жыл бұрын

    Or attach a deer skin to drape over himself. Masking the hunters scent whilst he mimics the prey to approach within striking distance. We'll never know.

  • @hellonwheels6887

    @hellonwheels6887

    4 жыл бұрын

    That drawing of the pagan with drum-his headpiece with antlers had two holes in it like the antler sets shown!

  • @VCYT

    @VCYT

    4 жыл бұрын

    ...deer me, thats true.

  • @edwhatshisname3562

    @edwhatshisname3562

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@hellonwheels6887 Which if you think about it probably means that ritual was thousands of years old even by the time that drawing had been done.

  • @iansloan4261
    @iansloan42616 жыл бұрын

    So much history. And not just a rehash! Civilizations have risen and fallen and it's all beyond our control.

  • @clintonmiller1698

    @clintonmiller1698

    5 жыл бұрын

    The didn't have Progressive Liberals to save them. Lol

  • @MossyMozart

    @MossyMozart

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@clintonmiller1698 - We do now.

  • @anthonybrownhovelt
    @anthonybrownhovelt4 жыл бұрын

    Always amazed at how Hunter-Gatherers are considered primitive! You have to be an expert to survive and also know where to be at what time of the year to gather and of course store what you have found to survive the winter! So it is not really that surprising that such communities had a base to operate from. All the major edifices of the ancient world required a communal rather than an individual effort. As for the antler headdress, I think she had it upside down. A few years ago a group of Tibetan monks came to stone henge and did a series of dances including some dressed as animals it sent a shiver down my spine as the dance seemed timeless and so relevant as Deer, Bear and other creatures cavorted around to drums and wind instruments!

  • @loud6037

    @loud6037

    4 жыл бұрын

    You ought to check out the band Heilung, if you liked that. They did a live show called 'Lifa' that you can find on KZread and their music is very much like what you are describing.

  • @anthonybrownhovelt

    @anthonybrownhovelt

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@loud6037 have seen them on utube

  • @donscheid97
    @donscheid974 жыл бұрын

    A few years ago, researchers discovered sonar evidence of the collapsed or washed out land bridge in the English channel. They speculated this tsunami may have been what did it. (or you may already know this by now)

  • @ershamp4266
    @ershamp42664 жыл бұрын

    time team is great!! :P

  • @TheKubelman
    @TheKubelman5 жыл бұрын

    so funny that he flies about in a Robinson heli for this bit (;-)

  • @johansmallberries9874
    @johansmallberries98742 жыл бұрын

    Ah sweet, time team episodes I haven’t discovered yet!

  • @thebergbok8279
    @thebergbok82794 жыл бұрын

    On tsunami's. I recall reading about a threat posed by a huge unstable section of rock on/of the volcanic Gran Canaria's, which if & when it dislodged & slid into the Atlantic would displace a large volume of water causing a massive series of tsunamis, which within hours would reach the eastern seaboard of the Americas & ricochette a few times across that stretch of ocean thereby affecting the western coasts of the British isles, Europe & the African continent. Perhaps this channel could look into this......

  • @CAMacKenzie

    @CAMacKenzie

    4 жыл бұрын

    Similar situation on the south side of the Big Island of Hawaii.

  • @michaelbelisle8930
    @michaelbelisle89302 жыл бұрын

    This time team special confirms what I thought of ancient people. They weren't as ancient as we think they were.

  • @geezzerboy
    @geezzerboy9 жыл бұрын

    The peoples of the Pacific Northwest Coast, were in the Mesolithic when Capt Cook arrived in the 1770's. The Haida and other Nations, lived in wooden houses as big as any in England.

  • @christosvoskresye

    @christosvoskresye

    9 жыл бұрын

    Absolutely. I think there are a lot of parallels between northern Europe during the neolithic and even the Bronze Age and American Indians. With similar climates and similar plants and animals, they developed similar technologies and similar cultures.

  • @geezzerboy

    @geezzerboy

    9 жыл бұрын

    christosvoskresye It's interesting to compare the Queen Charlotte Islands and Japan. A few environmental differences and some cultural ones, caused quite different cultural developments.

  • @christosvoskresye

    @christosvoskresye

    9 жыл бұрын

    geezzerboy I suppose "some cultural ones" means the existence of China nearby? That is not a small difference! Or maybe you are thinking of the Ainu, who were in Japan before the people we think of as "Japanese" arrived? I'm not sure it's really correct to think of Japan under the Ainu as Japan, though, any more than it is to think of a big chunk of North America before Columbus as the USA, or Asia Minor before the fall of Constantinople as Turkey.

  • @alanatolstad4824

    @alanatolstad4824

    5 жыл бұрын

    And I find that one hut to be similar to the teepees of the Plains Indians...similar lifestyles as well.

  • @maureensalter5752

    @maureensalter5752

    4 жыл бұрын

    So climate change has been going on for millions of years thank goodness. Change in everything is forever.😀💕

  • @queencersei2644
    @queencersei26443 жыл бұрын

    Interesting and weird to see this again in 2020.

  • @liberty-matrix
    @liberty-matrix2 жыл бұрын

    That was us, no smarter, no dumber. They watched the sky at night like we watch KZread.

  • @judgedoneness5230
    @judgedoneness52309 жыл бұрын

    Brilliant

  • @ralfgroh5967
    @ralfgroh59672 жыл бұрын

    Sincerest condolences.

  • @SandraNelson063
    @SandraNelson0632 жыл бұрын

    As a species, we love living next to water. There's anthropoloģical reasons for that, leading to the growth of the human brain. Unfortunately, our connection to coast lines has left us open to the dangers from the water: tsunamis and severe storms and floods.

  • @takinisurvivalchannel3812
    @takinisurvivalchannel38122 жыл бұрын

    Pre shaped needles are already existing in a deers leg. All modern deer have lost portions of the lateral metacarpal bones (think of your ulna and radius bones, and imagine if you only have a 2" sliver of you ulna above the wrist, etc). This is because of evolutional morphology. In America is there is a sliver of bone on lower leg, front, called distal remenant of the metacarpal. And in Europe is located on the upper limb, called the proximal remnant of the lateral metacarpal. The reason I mention this because it took very little time to make these needles, unlike the estimate in the program. I know this because I'm from a Reservation, and we removed these bones quickly from a fresh kill, the bones would be fresh and "wet", then they were chewed (in our mouth) to remove a sinew sheath, then drilled out easily (we used a steel triangle in wood spindle, but flint would be just as fast). The tip was left unsharp, and a little blunt, because if you sharpen it, it could fracture while sewing, the needle does not make the hole, like modern needles. Old needles just guided the thread, and a hand awl was used for punching holes, made from fish teeth, sewn into the palm of a glove. Now, later I left the Reservation, got an undergrad in biology, hence the technical terms. There, now i feel better.

  • @joeyfragile2330
    @joeyfragile23304 жыл бұрын

    In the aftermath of this the Britons started building hillfort settlements. Previously it made sense to build settlements near to waterways and the coast. After this the fear of future large flooding prompted the latter stone age and bronze age populace to build hilltop settlements with embanked defences (it makes even a strong uphill surge abate if it has to flow up and over extra embankments that cause it to backlash on itself..)

  • @mouthpiece200

    @mouthpiece200

    4 жыл бұрын

    With no writing, they probably had very short memories. They probably forgot about these events quite quickly.

  • @joeyfragile2330

    @joeyfragile2330

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@mouthpiece200 seriously..?

  • @mouthpiece200

    @mouthpiece200

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@joeyfragile2330 Yes seriously. 0ral history gets jumbled and lost quickly.

  • @joeyfragile2330

    @joeyfragile2330

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@mouthpiece200 as in, so the native american tribes who have an oral history that goes back to them first entering the Americas across the icy Bering straits is "jumbled and lost" ...?

  • @mouthpiece200

    @mouthpiece200

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@joeyfragile2330 No they don't have an oral history that long. What did they pass down from that long ago?

  • @cogsinister100
    @cogsinister10011 жыл бұрын

    Sir Tony Robinson.

  • @patalbor3507
    @patalbor35074 жыл бұрын

    WHY is there is no mention of Isostatic upheaval from the retreating ice shelf? The very cause of the underwater land slide and earth quakes in the first place?

  • @ianrutherford878

    @ianrutherford878

    4 жыл бұрын

    You mean the bit where TR says ....'end of the Ice age...major upheaval...Earth's crust was creaking and uplifting'27 minutes?

  • @patalbor3507

    @patalbor3507

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@ianrutherford878 Hmmm. I missed this statement but mostly by the context that this upheaval happened gradully vs. Rapidly (even catastrophically). Comes back to the uniforitarianism view is largely represented while the caveat of how and why the change happened so rapidly. Is difficult to represent without its chronological context. Thats really the part that could have been elaborated further. Not to nitpick. Still very good and interesting work though. Much credit to TR.

  • @ianrutherford878

    @ianrutherford878

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@patalbor3507 I lived in Finland for a while.The rising land after the retreating ice is something that is very visible in the score marks on exposed rock and its rate is 'displayed' with markers and signs in at least one city. TR and his co producers sell TT with drama and sensation and a kind of obsessive tunnel vision.The tsunami and his imaginings of 'the problem'!!! facing Doggerlanders suited the format more than other factors..

  • @spliffertonsheldrake6007
    @spliffertonsheldrake60074 жыл бұрын

    Ice dams cannot hold back the pressure created by a thousand foot + deep lake (no more than about 200 ft really). Same problem with glacial lake mizzoula. The proposed 1800ft deep lake would have almost a thousand psi where the ice meets the bedrock. Glacial ice is porous with rocks, melt channels, etc. As we see with modern concrete dams that have to be specially anchored and sealed to the solid bedrock, any little leaks become eroded over time and the bigger the whole gets the faster it will cut away at the concrete, rock, ice, or whatever. Glacial lake agasi or mizzoula is a false presumption for the problem with these huge meltwater pulses and sudden sea level rise that we have evidence of. I think cometary impacts on ice sheets creating enormous ice flows all the way to the ocean on both sides of north america is a good place to put more research into. No crater left behind.

  • @donna4843

    @donna4843

    4 жыл бұрын

    Saw a science bullet gun cannon used on an ice sheet in a documentary. Both vertical and horizontal results causing sheets of ice to displace slicing and covering all in it's path. Then ice rained down in big chunks...then everything melted. No sure if would be called a flow. The for the great info.

  • @Chrisbell804

    @Chrisbell804

    2 жыл бұрын

    Younger dryas

  • @tombaja4.9
    @tombaja4.92 жыл бұрын

    That's amazing

  • @mikehartman5326
    @mikehartman53262 жыл бұрын

    Seems like others should have been mentioned in the credits if their input was significant. Professor Nicky Milner of York University for example.

  • @domcizek
    @domcizek4 ай бұрын

    VERRY INFORATIVE, FOR THE FUTURE OF THE WORLD

  • @angelkalchev1666
    @angelkalchev16664 жыл бұрын

    Very good movie

  • @mirostanimirov8952
    @mirostanimirov89524 жыл бұрын

    So interesting. This program nails me in my chair and I'm binging endlessly like housewife" Desperate housewives"

  • @Unoduetrequattro340
    @Unoduetrequattro3402 жыл бұрын

    Tony Robinson 💓💓💓💓

  • @MrWeedWacky
    @MrWeedWacky2 жыл бұрын

    fascinating, and still, this happened in 6100BC (8100 years ago). that is a couple thousand years after the Göbekli Tepe was abandoned, and about 3500 years after it was constructed.

  • @ashleyshepherd1285
    @ashleyshepherd12852 жыл бұрын

    My man Phil!!!

  • @mastergroomer6941
    @mastergroomer69414 жыл бұрын

    Смотю все эпизоды! Узнала много нового. Очень рекомендую!

  • @marlenaamalfitano2727
    @marlenaamalfitano27277 ай бұрын

    We tend to think that stone age people weren't very bright etc. Etc.etc. how wrong we have been and how wonderful to have this series to widen our knowledge.

  • @just_kos99
    @just_kos9925 күн бұрын

    My maternal grandmother's family is from the Swindon, Yorkshire area -- I wonder if any of my ancestors were there!

  • @mav5204
    @mav52042 жыл бұрын

    Could the holes be strap holes that twine or leather passed thru to fasten to head

  • @swedichboy1000
    @swedichboy10002 жыл бұрын

    25:54 That whole segment reminds me a tad bit of Might & Magic 8: Day of the Destroyer.

  • @dionnedunsmore9996
    @dionnedunsmore99964 жыл бұрын

    Wow!

  • @moggywan
    @moggywan11 жыл бұрын

    Video stops working every few minutes?