What are these enormous piles of Mammoth bones?

Go to drinkag1.com/stefanmilo to get a FREE 1-year supply of Vitamin D3+K2 and 5 AG1 travel packs with your first purchase. Thanks to AG1 for sponsoring today's video!
Across the riverbanks of Russia and Ukraine, archaeologists have found enormous piles of mammoth bones. What are they?
Timestamps
0:00 Introduction
0:57 Mammoths
2:50 Thanks to AG1
4:23 Mammoth Structures
8:03 Houses?
10:53 Not Ritual AGAIN!
12:36 Odd construction
20:15 Bear Ritual
Sources:
Sablin, Mikhail, et al. “The Epigravettian Site of Yudinovo, Russia: Mammoth bone structures as ritualised middens.” Environmental Archaeology, 19 Apr. 2023, pp. 1-21, doi.org/10.1080/14614103.2023....
“Paleolythic dwellings of Anosovka-Mezin type: Construction features and the issue of interpretation.” Rossiiskaia Arkheologiia, no. 4, Nov. 2019, doi.org/10.31857/s08696063000....
Khlopachev, Gennady A. “Les Cabanes de Type « anosovka-mézine » du site de Yudinovo : éléments de construction, architecture, Classification.” L’Anthropologie, vol. 125, no. 4, Sept. 2021, p. 102923, doi.org/10.1016/j.anthro.2021....
Iakovleva, Lioudmila. “The architecture of mammoth bone circular dwellings of the Upper Palaeolithic settlements in Central and Eastern Europe and their socio-symbolic meanings.” Quaternary International, vol. 359-360, Mar. 2015, pp. 324-334, doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2014....
Pryor, Alexander J.E., et al. “The chronology and function of a new circular mammoth-bone structure at Kostenki 11.” Antiquity, vol. 94, no. 374, 17 Mar. 2020, pp. 323-341, doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2020.7.
Ethno-archaeology among Evenkian forest hunters. Preliminary results and a different approach to reality! Mesolithic on the Move Papers presented at the Sixth International
Conference on the Mesolithic in Europe, Stockholm 2000, Ole Gren and Oleg Kuznetsov
Huge thanks to my generous patrons
/ stefanmilo
Watch my videos Ad free only on Nebula
go.nebula.tv/stefanmilo
Local Elevator by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. creativecommons.org/licenses/...
Electrodoodle by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. creativecommons.org/licenses/...

Пікірлер: 1 900

  • @StefanMilo
    @StefanMilo3 ай бұрын

    Go to drinkag1.com/stefanmilo to get a FREE 1-year supply of Vitamin D3+K2 and 5 AG1 travel packs with your first purchase. Thanks to AG1 for sponsoring today's video!

  • @AndrewBlucher

    @AndrewBlucher

    3 ай бұрын

    8 to 12 oz of water. How much is that in cubic cubits? Or other units, maybe.

  • @michaelrichardsoninternet

    @michaelrichardsoninternet

    3 ай бұрын

    @stephanmilo I really enjoy your videos, and I admire your coverage of such interesting topics. I've learned a lot from you. I am disappointed you are shilling for the supplements industry. I find it irresponsible. Hopefully you won't continue endorsing an industry well-known to be deceptive and unregulated.

  • @natbumpo8430

    @natbumpo8430

    3 ай бұрын

    Thanks for promoting those health supplements. They prevented COVID from catching me.

  • @rowredround7206

    @rowredround7206

    3 ай бұрын

    Bit dubious recommending vitamins

  • @rowredround7206

    @rowredround7206

    3 ай бұрын

    @@natbumpo8430 do you have any proof of that? I didn’t get Covid and I don’t take vitamins. I did bother to get vaccinated though.

  • @StefanMilo
    @StefanMilo3 ай бұрын

    Hey everyone! Thanks for watching, I was reading all your comments on my end of year video and a lot of you mentioned how much you appreciate me covering topics that we don't fully understand yet and that I am happy to mention when we don't know something. Well I've decided to lean into that a little bit and create a series "unknown...at the moment". I do honestly feel like archaeology has shied away from mystery and intrigue as a knee jerk reaction to ancient aliens etc but it really is exciting to discuss things we don't know in an honest way considering the evidence. Anyway, hope you enjoy!

  • @Seven-Planets-Sci-Fi-Tuber

    @Seven-Planets-Sci-Fi-Tuber

    3 ай бұрын

    Great idea. I watch all your videos andhave 't found one that I didn't enjoy.

  • @antonilwd

    @antonilwd

    3 ай бұрын

    A brilliant idea, it will be great to come back one day, when we know the answer, to watch it again and be amazed at how much progress we have made in research.

  • @laerton4202

    @laerton4202

    3 ай бұрын

    Love your work brother. Your passion and diligence shows. Keep it coming.

  • @matc87

    @matc87

    3 ай бұрын

    sounds like an amazing series and very keen for this mammoth videos

  • @adammchugh5456

    @adammchugh5456

    3 ай бұрын

    Agree with you, as per usual. More great content!

  • @meganmorgan6529
    @meganmorgan65293 ай бұрын

    Last week my family’s pet gecko died, and when we buried her we all found our favorite rocks to put with her. My daughter added a tumbled piece of amethyst we got at the Renaissance Fair, my son added a rock carved into the shape of a star that I got for him in New Mexico, and I added a beautiful stone from a nearby hiking spot. Maybe these people had a connection with the mammoths as deep as the one we had with our pet and wanted to show them reverence? At least, that was what was brought to mind when you mentioned the shells placed inside the bones.

  • @StefanMilo

    @StefanMilo

    3 ай бұрын

    I think that’s exactly the kind of thing these people were up to. It’s an incredibly human thing to do. Sorry about your gecko

  • @PeachysMom

    @PeachysMom

    3 ай бұрын

    You sound like an amazing mom. ❤

  • @elsonck2523

    @elsonck2523

    3 ай бұрын

    Pet mammoth. Interesting concept.

  • @nuance9000

    @nuance9000

    3 ай бұрын

    I perceive people from the paleolithic to be more brutal, intelligent, and superstitious. A funeral pyre for their main source of resources makes sense, since a common diaspora would relate stories of the long generational cycle of Mammoths, and how to properly hunt and process them.

  • @user-zl7uo3qf4d

    @user-zl7uo3qf4d

    3 ай бұрын

    😂

  • @pulepebane5679
    @pulepebane56793 ай бұрын

    Loved this video. As someone living in South Africa, elephants have always been a part of my culture. As far as I know they have a very noticeable reaction when they come across the remains of their dead relatives. Of course this is a stretch, but I wonder if those hunters didn’t notice that. Perhaps they felt compelled to treat the bones in some ritualistic manner, because they recognized a similar behavior in mammoths. Big hypothetical by the way, I have no idea what I’m talking about

  • @SeeThroughist

    @SeeThroughist

    3 ай бұрын

    Very interesting point. Makes complete sense that they may have been making a mammoth graveyard out of respect. Especially considering the additional trinkets (shells and coral ) that was carefully placed in the bones.

  • @sharibigay4712

    @sharibigay4712

    3 ай бұрын

    That was my thought at the start of the video. Did mammoths like elephant have graveyards? And if so when the hunters came across one did they then organize, enshrine the bones since they were so necessary to their lives, and then continue to add the bones of their hunts to help appease the spirits of the mammoths.

  • @bartlebyscrivener2980

    @bartlebyscrivener2980

    3 ай бұрын

    I agree with pulepebane5679's observation, but suggest that hunters' assemblage of these mammoth bones may be not about spiritualism, ritual, or to honor the mammoths, but instead as a means to hopefully kill even more of them. Elephants linger with and grieve the bones of their dead, and sometimes revisit their relatives' bones years later. If mammoths did this, too, then mammoth hunters would surely have observed it, and thought about how they could turn it to their advantage. I suggest that assembling masses of mammoth bones was done as a lure, an attractant, for other mammoths... and those visiting mammoths would be ambushed. Say that's how these assemblages began. It would be natural for specific practices for how to do it, based on what legend says has worked best, to develop into something approaching doctrine or ritual over hundreds or thousands of years.

  • @pulepebane5679

    @pulepebane5679

    3 ай бұрын

    @@bartlebyscrivener2980 Oh yeah that’s a really cool hypothesis! It would make sense, because then they could more reliably predict where the mammoth would be in case natural features like watering holes are disrupted.

  • @timkirsten6184

    @timkirsten6184

    3 ай бұрын

    Interesting point!

  • @Avalanche_Broncos_Fan
    @Avalanche_Broncos_Fan3 ай бұрын

    Living in the Interior of Alaska, USA, many bones are found. My step kids’ ancestors used the bones as the base of their homes. They used animal hides to cover the bones. Eskimo people more often used whale bones. Evidence can be seen in many villages. Also Univ of Alaska Fairbanks has a fantastic Museum of the North!! Come visit!

  • @rebexyy

    @rebexyy

    3 ай бұрын

    There is no such thing as "Eskimo" people.

  • @jamesrowlands8971

    @jamesrowlands8971

    3 ай бұрын

    This might help explain the lack of weathering of the bones.

  • @annepoitrineau5650

    @annepoitrineau5650

    3 ай бұрын

    But they would have a hearth inside these tents? (Alaska being potentially very cold)

  • @bigjohn5142

    @bigjohn5142

    2 ай бұрын

    @@rebexyyEs·ki·mo /ˈeskəˌmō/ noun noun: Eskimo; plural noun: Eskimos; plural noun: Eskimo 1. a member of an indigenous people inhabiting northern Canada, Alaska, Greenland, and eastern Siberia, traditionally living by hunting (especially of seals) and by fishing. 2. either of the two main languages spoken by indigenous peoples of the Arctic (Inuit and Yupik), forming a major division of the Eskimo-Aleut family.

  • @solitairepilot

    @solitairepilot

    3 сағат бұрын

    @@rebexyy So there is no such thing as a “Siberian” Person?

  • @chrisball3778
    @chrisball37783 ай бұрын

    "Walking in the woods... thinking about mammoths..." As you do. Don't ever change.

  • @mfaizsyahmi

    @mfaizsyahmi

    3 ай бұрын

    Archeologists' version of thinking about the Roman Empire every day

  • @thelimon4338

    @thelimon4338

    3 ай бұрын

    @@mfaizsyahmiwe must restore the empire INVICTA

  • @dat2ra
    @dat2ra3 ай бұрын

    Geologist here. Had the bones been covered by natural processes, the sediment would likely have stratification or grading, whereas had humans buried them, this would likely be absent.

  • @testbenchdude

    @testbenchdude

    3 ай бұрын

    Good insight! Hopefully the conflict over there can be resolved sooner rather than later, and if there are more of these sites, maybe they can perform some careful soil logging along with the archeology. Though I'd imagine it'd be kind of difficult to log the soil if you need to remove most of it to uncover each site... Maybe if they find an exposed bit, they could advance a borehole adjacent to the site prior to uncovering it. That would at least lend a clue imho. I love when archeology intersects with our field of study, and vice-versa. It's all just so fascinating. I'm 100% behind Stefan's goal of "reclaiming mystery and intrigue from pseudoscience". The truth, once uncovered and understood, is far more interesting than fiction.

  • @Bitchslapper316

    @Bitchslapper316

    3 ай бұрын

    I've read comments from other geologists that have said there is a lack of communication (not sure if that is the right way to say it) between archeologists and geologists in the scientific community. Meaning sometimes they propose unknowns that may have been better explained by a geologist. What is your take on that?

  • @DT-sb9sv

    @DT-sb9sv

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Bitchslapper316 Archaeologist here. Archaeologists are usually trained in sedimentology as part of the course work. We do hire soil scientists sometimes.

  • @ChipmunkRapidsMadMan1869

    @ChipmunkRapidsMadMan1869

    3 ай бұрын

    They were separated by individual bone types it looks like. My guess, I'm just a museum accessionist, they built these structures and had them as a nomadic base camp. Roll up the coverings and move on until next year.

  • @woodspirit98

    @woodspirit98

    3 ай бұрын

    It makes no sense at all that humans would take the time or energy to bury bones.

  • @michaeldeierhoi4096
    @michaeldeierhoi40963 ай бұрын

    What I find most fascinating about the ancient art of mammoths is the anatomical accuracy in the scupture and drawings.

  • @blanska
    @blanska3 ай бұрын

    Gotta love that the Evenki go to such trouble burying the bear then go "wasn't me" Amazing :D

  • @RareEarthSeries
    @RareEarthSeries3 ай бұрын

    So happy every time you upload

  • @SilentSalad

    @SilentSalad

    3 ай бұрын

    You two should do a crossover :)

  • @jwinter7480

    @jwinter7480

    3 ай бұрын

    @@SilentSaladI absolutely second this

  • @RareEarthSeries

    @RareEarthSeries

    3 ай бұрын

    @@SilentSalad I don't know if I'm talented enough to have anything to offer beyond my respect - I think he's got it more than figured out!

  • @SilentSalad

    @SilentSalad

    3 ай бұрын

    @@RareEarthSeries All I know is that a colab between the two of you would be absolutely phenomenal :D

  • @BrandanLee

    @BrandanLee

    3 ай бұрын

    Ancient Rare Earth.

  • @tsulong
    @tsulong3 ай бұрын

    I get so emotional every time I see prehistoric art like the little mammoth carving you showed 😭 I just find it beautiful that the artistic spirit of creativity is something so innate to humans

  • @thelukesternater

    @thelukesternater

    3 ай бұрын

    I love the cave paintings, they have little marks to show where to throw a spear to kill it. Heart and gut for the kill kids! I can imagine other random lines being a plan of attack...

  • @matty543210098

    @matty543210098

    3 ай бұрын

    I think to cope with horrors of history we dehumanize people of the past. It can be quite humbling to think someone whose brain processes information the same as wedo made that art. Hopefully they found some comfort in those moments surrounding the arts creation.

  • @mauandainuralarconm.9121
    @mauandainuralarconm.91213 ай бұрын

    Stephan's videos always give wholesome vibes when he shows walks in nature to recreate the idea of ancestors wondering nature

  • @trace9130
    @trace91303 ай бұрын

    Not having a fire inside but having them nearby would indicate to me that they were used for food storage. The bones protect the food from scavengers and you would want it to stay cold inside, that explains the lack of a fire inside.

  • @watsonwrote
    @watsonwrote3 ай бұрын

    In defense of many objects being labeled as religous or ritualistic, the things most likely to survive the pressures of time are sacred objects because people go out of their way to preserve and protect ritualistic objects and places compared to ordinary objects. Ordinary objects are also in daily use which degrades them and they are usually used until they're disposed of or repurposed, whereas ritualistic objects are normally only used in special occasions.

  • @hedgehog3180

    @hedgehog3180

    3 ай бұрын

    There are way more medieval churches in Europe than medieval houses. EDIT: Just because people don't seem to understand what I'm implying, my point specifically is that things meant for ritualistic worship tend to survive for longer because they're made to a higher standard and people take more care of them.

  • @nicholashodges201

    @nicholashodges201

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@hedgehog3180that's only because houses regularly get torn down and rebuilt in more modern materials. Those ancient monuments are too much of everything to do that with. If rebuilding Notre Dame for the current era were feasible it would've been torn down and rebuilt ages ago

  • @marekradoski7267

    @marekradoski7267

    3 ай бұрын

    As Pole, I have to agree. Churches everywhere! Everywhere...

  • @stephanieyee9784

    @stephanieyee9784

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@hedgehog3180, Only because the houses have been demolished to make way for sturdier houses over the centuries.

  • @SwollenHero

    @SwollenHero

    3 ай бұрын

    I'd also say most people making that point have an overly discrete definition of what "ritual" is. Like a kazoo is literally a ritual object, musical performance is a ritualistic activity.

  • @Laura-kl7vi
    @Laura-kl7vi3 ай бұрын

    @1:59, the baby mammoth, found preserved in ice, is in good enough shape to still be adorable. Thanks for the great video, Stefan.

  • @jeanettewaverly2590

    @jeanettewaverly2590

    3 ай бұрын

    It makes me so sad to see this poor baby. 😢

  • @boa1793

    @boa1793

    3 ай бұрын

    @@jeanettewaverly2590, You ‘ve to face a that babies die.

  • @andriidubinin955
    @andriidubinin9553 ай бұрын

    Thank you Stefan for your donation to the children! 🙏❤

  • @rksando1
    @rksando13 ай бұрын

    Untanned hides that were dry or frozen could easily be used in combination with bones to build a structure. I wouldn't be surprised if the leather from a full grown mammoth was about an inch thick. Just build the structure gradually with wet hides then let them dry or freeze. They probably also packed mud between the bones to support the structure. Such a structure would have been insulated very well and probably didn't require a large fire to keep warm. Providing an escape for the smoke may have been considered counterproductive. The structures may also have been used primarily to store food. Meat placed in such a structure would have been preserved much better over the summer months. Very much like a root cellar. And a secure structure would have deterred predators from raiding the cache.

  • @KangarooKarpenter
    @KangarooKarpenter3 ай бұрын

    Honestly this is one of my favorite channels on the whole site

  • @openhueblue6661

    @openhueblue6661

    3 ай бұрын

    Yes

  • @TheShottyBoys

    @TheShottyBoys

    3 ай бұрын

    what about pewdiepie

  • @henryscott6787
    @henryscott67873 ай бұрын

    Stafan just wanted to go the zoo and get it back on his taxes. I respect it so much. Excellent vidoe as always.

  • @timlambert5165
    @timlambert51653 ай бұрын

    When our children were about 6 and nine(Rosie,eldest,Cameron,son,youngest) our 21 year old cat passed away.I felt the whole family’s sadness and felt a small ceremony could help us with closure.So we built a fire,wrapped the cat in silk.Placed him between two ceramic planter trays and lit the fire.I suggested we might like a tooth each for keepsake and with sad yet gratifying humming we waited by the fire until late….all without religious connotations or pre planned notions.We humans seem to know love,sadness’s,and deep gratitude.If we ate such huge creatures as mammoths we would certainly have learned a lot about them,perhaps even individually .So respect and heart felt actions would almost certainly follow 😊.Thanks for your heartfelt studies and presentations.❤

  • @BobsUruncle-dl7cs

    @BobsUruncle-dl7cs

    3 ай бұрын

    Thats dam creepy...leave bones /teeth alone...let it go already...dont be creepy. You better not have Grandpas molars hanging on your keychain.

  • @annepoitrineau5650

    @annepoitrineau5650

    3 ай бұрын

    Is it your business? @@BobsUruncle-dl7cs

  • @annepoitrineau5650

    @annepoitrineau5650

    3 ай бұрын

    Great post. One of my best friends had a little heart made of her little dog's ashes when the little dog died. She still cries, but also says that touching the heart immediately conjures pics of Finja and makes her feel better. And she has another (rescue too) dog now.

  • @junepearl7993

    @junepearl7993

    2 ай бұрын

    That’s a lovely story. Nice way to teach your children how to grieve and honor the life of the pet they loved. Ignore the trolls.

  • @catchasindog

    @catchasindog

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@BobsUruncle-dl7csit's not like they had sex for a few days with elderly expired cat roasted marshmallows over the blaze as the family. Family activities are important

  • @unclvinny
    @unclvinny3 ай бұрын

    I'm glad you decided to stick with the personal approach in your videos. I get the temptation to be detached and objective, but you're amazing at being yourself and carrying that tidal wave of enthusiasm right onto the screen.

  • @erniegutierrez2288
    @erniegutierrez22883 ай бұрын

    Mammoths were absolutely essential to the people back then but also must have been an awesome sight. Almost divine. It wouldnt surprise me that these magnificent beasts were worshipped. Great Video as always! "Like"

  • @bassplayersayer
    @bassplayersayer3 ай бұрын

    There is video evidence of modern Elephant examining and "visiting" sights of bones of past members of their herd. The hunters could drag all the bones together as a way to draw future herds to the same place instead of leaving the bones spread all over. Maybe? I also like the ritual side too.

  • @poppymason-smith1051

    @poppymason-smith1051

    3 ай бұрын

    Hopefully he sees your comment as I saw a study where even skulls from poached elephants that had been taken to a reserves camp would have elephants from their herd visit. The elephants hadnt been told they were there and smelt them out to visit.

  • @callmeneutrino7136

    @callmeneutrino7136

    3 ай бұрын

    I wish I’d read this comment before writing almost the same thing, myself. 😊

  • @StefanMilo

    @StefanMilo

    3 ай бұрын

    That’s an interesting idea

  • @infinitemonkey917

    @infinitemonkey917

    3 ай бұрын

    Why make such an elaborate structure though?

  • @poppymason-smith1051

    @poppymason-smith1051

    3 ай бұрын

    @@infinitemonkey917 maybe because it is still ritual from that practical beginning. And because humans have always loved shaping their world.

  • @noodlewitch
    @noodlewitch3 ай бұрын

    i feel so so lucky that youtube suggested your channel to me! i started yesterday with your video about population y and i’m making my way through your others now. these videos are a joy to watch because they are so well researched and presented, but i have to say that my favorite thing about them is your genuine enthusiasm for the subject!! i love your consistent sincerity and awe, it makes watching these videos an absolute delight ❤

  • @Dave-bt8pm
    @Dave-bt8pm3 ай бұрын

    I remember hearing that elephants are smart and social enough to visit and mourn the bones of dead members. Makes even more sense that hunters would want to honor and respect the mammoth by creating some meaningful tomb. Much like we do for our own. Perhaps owing the success of the following years hunt to the respect offered from the previous year.

  • @bartolomeothesatyr
    @bartolomeothesatyr3 ай бұрын

    These structures first came to my attention after reading Jean Auel's "The Mammoth Hunters" as a teenager, and they've occupied a corner of my imagination for the last thirty years. Thanks for this.

  • @jlzombiecat

    @jlzombiecat

    3 ай бұрын

    I have often been asked what I was doing reading those books at that age (12), lol. I read them obsessively as a teenager and about once every year or two for the past twenty years. My favorite series.

  • @bartolomeothesatyr

    @bartolomeothesatyr

    3 ай бұрын

    @@jlzombiecat For me the series kinda runs out of steam after The Mammoth Hunters, but I revisit them every few years anyway because I love the first two so much.

  • @barbrice721

    @barbrice721

    3 ай бұрын

    I remember reading those decades ago.

  • @therat1117
    @therat11173 ай бұрын

    Hmm, perhaps ancient people were making offerings to the dead mammoth spirits to make sure that the mammoth spirit doesn't ruin later hunts for not being appropriately respected? Something like a Finnish peijaiset for a bear where the point is to appease the bear spirit and semi-apologise for it for its killing. EDIT: Oop, Stefan got a similar thing for the Evenki.

  • @seabhactheshifty4741

    @seabhactheshifty4741

    3 ай бұрын

    Yea, I could imagine an expression of gratitude too. Such a HUGE animal giving an enormous amount of food, as well as materials for tools and clothing in such an inhospitable environment. Not starving, freezing, or having vital/beloved people mamed or killed, that's quite a big deal.

  • @mr.dalerobinson

    @mr.dalerobinson

    3 ай бұрын

    @@seabhactheshifty4741 Considering without the Mammoth their ancestors wouldn't have survived and humanity likes to 'make sense' of its existence, It seems extremely probable that rituals to celebrate and 'spiritually' perpetuate the practice would exist.

  • @bendy6626

    @bendy6626

    3 ай бұрын

    The Hindi revere cattle, "The cow is our mother". Indeed it is -- providing milk, cream, butter, cheese, and manure for the fields ... as well as bull calves to pull plows and new cow calves as well. Perhaps the mammoth similarly provided sustainance sufficient to confer them worthy of appreciation and reverence.

  • @MTreatVO
    @MTreatVO3 ай бұрын

    So as a Hunter, I have a guy in my party who has been leaving a deer antler from his harvest every year, for about 13 years now, at the base of the same tree, Its just HIS Ritual, and we all respect it.

  • @zcrazymaniac6966
    @zcrazymaniac6966Ай бұрын

    I think its pretty clear that these people were incredibly empathetic to life and were simply respecting what they killed. They decorated some of the skeletons with things that were precious and delicate to thank them for the life they gave. What an incredible culture!

  • @julyanjohns1237
    @julyanjohns12373 ай бұрын

    i saw a display similar to this in Kyiv's natural history museum! it's great you did a video about it, it's a really interesting but not very well known part of history. i'm British but lived in Ukraine for 20 years until a few years ago. all the videos about Ukraine i've been watching the last 2 years are about the war, so it was unexpectedly therapeutic to relax and watch this. thank you for a well balanced and fascinating presentation as usual, and cool you donated man. good luck for 2024 :)

  • @LouAlvis

    @LouAlvis

    3 ай бұрын

    so glad that museum is intact.. i am reminded that the original trojan artifacts were lost in the bombing of a German art history museum I hope they can be Safe

  • @Chompchompyerded
    @Chompchompyerded3 ай бұрын

    The structures are spirit "houses" for the mammoth's spirit. You don't need a roof for a spirit house. They honoured these animals, and were grateful to them for the food they provided, much like my ancestors felt about bison and elk. Even recently, when my father would shoot an elk or a deer, he would thank the animal, then give thanks to the grandfathers and to father sun and mother earth, to the four directions, and to the nadir both of self, and of the animal he killed. He prepared the animal for butchering carefully in such a way that it's spirit could leave and be free. He did this with fish he caught too. He didn't just catch them and let them flop around. He caught them, killed them immediately, then put them with their heads in the water so that their spirit could go back to where it was most at home, and of course thanks was given for the fish, just as it would have been for a deer or an elk. When you must take a life, it is important to give the spirit of the animal whose life you took thanks for giving itself up to nourish you. My people don't believe in putting horrible chemicals in a body of our loved ones, then putting them in a box that gets put in the ground. Maybe we wrap our people in a blanket and take them to a sacred site where we will put them in the ground. We don't try to stop the process of decomposition, because to us, in our death, we are feeding the flora and fauna of this world as the flora and fauna of this world fed us. It is a circle which has been going on forever. I always wonder what it will be like thousands of years from now when they go to dig up one of our cemeteries, expecting it to be like all t he other cemeteries on this continent, but all they find is empty boxes. We bury the coffins to placate the government which have ridiculous laws about the proper disposal of a body which are there only to serve undertakers and morticians and to make them rich. We dutifully put a wooden box in the ground, then dispose of the bodies of our loved ones in the way we always have. As we consume food, we are also food, and as such our ancestors are always with us, and with the grandfathers and grandmothers and everything else which has ever lived. I cannot speak for people from other tribes. Most, I think, stick with modern ways of doing things. I wonder though, if maybe this might not be part of the reason there is so much trouble these days.

  • @Alarix246

    @Alarix246

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank you for your careful input! I tried to write about this way of approach to animals in discussions which blame men for extinction of megafauna. They blam us in a strange masochistic way, without 1) trying to calculate how many men would there had to be in order to consume all the megafauna and 2) without acknowledging the customs you described (they might read it but their eyes are blind to comprehend) and 3) without comprehending how difficult it would be to hunt to exctinction some elusive species. I consider your way as better than the biblical one: there is this special sentence in Bible where God gives all animals to men. I think this sentence is there to exonerate us, to not feel guilty when we kill a domestic animal or hunt.

  • @gillianr-w8720

    @gillianr-w8720

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank you. ❤

  • @-whackd

    @-whackd

    3 ай бұрын

    All the people in my family always got cremated. I think they still got pumped with chemicals beforehand so people could visit the body at an open casket funeral.

  • @brooklyna007

    @brooklyna007

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Alarix246 Humans killed the megafauna all over the world. The every is pretty clear there.

  • @marjus89
    @marjus893 ай бұрын

    Bro I’ve been watching your videos everyday on my way to work on the train since I discovered your channel in January. Ancient human history and pre history is so so fascinating and incredible, that it’s even more fantastic than we could ever imagine. Love your channel and presentation and joy that you display man. Keep it up and can’t wait to see all the new videos and ideas/topics!

  • @BrianMontesQ
    @BrianMontesQ3 ай бұрын

    Another banger, Stefan. I first read about these mammoth houses in The Dawn of Everything and for you to cover it brings me great joy. Thanks!

  • @grizzerotwofour7858
    @grizzerotwofour78583 ай бұрын

    British people saying "vitamin" warms my heart 😂❤

  • @spacemanapeinc7202

    @spacemanapeinc7202

    3 ай бұрын

    British people saying Aluminum makes me 🤤

  • @helenamcginty4920

    @helenamcginty4920

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@spacemanapeinc7202 US Americans trying to say aluminium is sooo funny.

  • @precursors

    @precursors

    3 ай бұрын

    American: Aluminum, Sodum, Potassum, Helum, Lithum, Radum, Calcum

  • @alacom205

    @alacom205

    3 ай бұрын

    @@helenamcginty4920you mean aluminum

  • @hadronoftheseus8829

    @hadronoftheseus8829

    3 ай бұрын

    When I was a left tenant in the milla tree, I would take a vittamin to supplement my diet of mostly chicken fillitz, pa-totto crisps and wooster sauce. I made certain to take it right on shedjool at hallf-eight each morning, and washed it down with a swig of wootah from my alloo-MIN-ee-um flask.

  • @jessicap4998
    @jessicap49983 ай бұрын

    The fact that there are no hearths is very telling, and true. No fire = people cannot live there. A ritual is good explanation, but I propose a simpler one: They are storage places. They are made of bone and will last a long time and not be swept away by heavy weather. They are too small for a family, but with some strings or branches strung across the open space inside, you could hang all kinds of things like hides or jewelry. A single small storage place is built when all you have is a few bones and need immediate storage. More storage places are built as needed, but they are small because there are limited bones. Different storage places could hold different things- any gamer knows you organize your loot so it is quick and easy to find. A fire outside the structure means you can see inside, but no need to waste fuel when you are just ducking in to grab something.

  • @pattheplanter

    @pattheplanter

    3 ай бұрын

    Or they are frames to dry skins on.

  • @jadehamilton1878

    @jadehamilton1878

    3 ай бұрын

    My first thought was definitely storage. Live in the skins and stack all the meat in a dark cold structure made out of the bones. Keep the meat storage a distance away from your living area so you don't have visits from predators in the night looking for an easy meal. Cover the whole thing in soil for added security and better temp control during the warmer season. You could even dig down to the permafrost before the bones get laid for even cooler storage options. During the colder season they could serve as freezers so you can draw your meat ration when needed. You would assume that the hunter gatherers followed herds during the hunting season and that they killed more than they could consume on the move. So the storage structures could serve as meat caches for the lean periods. You could survive the winter moving from cache to cache consuming the contents. As for the ritual aspect. It doesn't take humans very long to add ritualistic aspects to any practical endeavour.

  • @MultiCappie

    @MultiCappie

    3 ай бұрын

    For reasons other than hearths, I'm tending to agree that these are not houses. But as for hearths, they are not essential to be inside dwelling structures, and in fact smoke can outweigh the heat created. It's still possible that cooking was conducted in adjoining structures, or that food processing entirely took place during summer and dried food was consumed in winter, heat being created by communal sleeping with heavy fur blankets.

  • @who4743

    @who4743

    3 ай бұрын

    @Jessicap4998, you and jadehamilton1878 both make insightful points, but the no fire, no heat, no people thing has one glaring oversight and the communal sleeping under heavy fur blankets ( which would be a necessity)still possibly needed some form of additional warmth during sudden cold snaps. The fattest part of the mammoth is its hump, so they had the fuel. Each group and possibly each family had the stones to create the spark. And any absorbent and slowly combustible fiber could be a wick. Then all you need is small place for a shallow stone basin and someone to look after the oil lamp. Like the northen peoples used to keep their ice houses warm enough to live. Would it have been needed all the time? Probably not needed, but if you had an abundant supply, let's say over six months of constant cold snaps worth and the winter is nearing the end it would raise people's spirits to be a little warmer. What about places that were used for rituals, there had to have been some. Because of their nature they wouldn't be in constant use and therefore, especially during the winter months , would need to be warmed before conducting the ritual and definitely before the entire community attended or they would risk everyone freezing to death .

  • @who4743

    @who4743

    3 ай бұрын

    @@pattheplanter you and MultiCappie should have been added too but I had to go take care of something, I'm sorry for that. I agree that some buildings might have had a spiritual meaning, and storage would be neccessary even for a short stay like in a hunting camp. And it makes sense to process as much meat as possible in the hunting camp because dried/smoked meat weighs less and in its various states less room needed for transport and storage, like dried meat pounded into a powder. Where I'm from we had two type of mammoth and both had thick skin, so some structures used to dry and tan the hides into the shapes needed seems necessary too. If you ignore the hair, imagine that you are anywhere from a few hundred meters to a couple of hundred miles from the ice shelf and you have to skin an elephant and make whatever kind of building covering that your group decides is going to built next. Are you going to use that building with fresh, wet skin or do you dry and tann it first. Scaffolding and frames have been used for millenia to get hides into the desired shape when dried. Everyone here has a valid point or two. Mammoths needed grassland, or steppe, to survive, and in that type of biome there is minimal rainfall so usually things don't grow larger than a Bush unless the water table, underground aquifer, is high enough like a natural spring allowing for larger plants like trees to survive. So we know that trees were a rarely seen thing on the steppe. This group of people has many different ways of looking at things and I find you all interesting, so I propose a question for you. With given the rarity of trees in a steppe environment would wood be better used in a structure or as a source of fuel?

  • @nr4930
    @nr49303 ай бұрын

    I enjoyed this very much and look forward to more "unknown at the moment" vids. Thanks!

  • @TheStarBlack
    @TheStarBlack3 ай бұрын

    Thank you for making this Stefan!

  • @aspiringscientificjournali1505
    @aspiringscientificjournali15053 ай бұрын

    The devil put them there to confuse the elephant scientist

  • @aspiringscientificjournali1505

    @aspiringscientificjournali1505

    3 ай бұрын

    I know what your objections would be obviously… These are future elephants

  • @moodist1er

    @moodist1er

    3 ай бұрын

    Uncle Dave?

  • @lostpony4885

    @lostpony4885

    3 ай бұрын

    To make little kids ask questions

  • @perceivedvelocity9914

    @perceivedvelocity9914

    3 ай бұрын

    Hahaha

  • @jackburton4020

    @jackburton4020

    3 ай бұрын

    Correction they were alien cyborg elephants from the future, thank you.

  • @conroc01
    @conroc013 ай бұрын

    Stef keep up the great work! Your content and production value are on par or better than PBS and BBC...legit seriously.

  • @wingwangtingtang
    @wingwangtingtang3 ай бұрын

    stefan, you have quickly become my favourite youtube channel. every video you post is so informative and well made. keep it up my dude!!!!

  • @curtiswilson859
    @curtiswilson8593 ай бұрын

    I love the format and I’m so excited to see what else you have planned!

  • @redheadedbint
    @redheadedbint3 ай бұрын

    Watching this I couldn't stop thinking about Kutne Hora, the bone church in Czechia. It's fantastic and very eerie to see the remains of hundreds of people arranged in so many intricate ways. There are huge structures made only by interlocking the bones and careful stacking. The fact is that people have always loved creating things, structures, patterns. I think it's an inherent part of who we are. We may not ever know what they were created for, perhaps they were just created because they could.

  • @hunterG60k
    @hunterG60k3 ай бұрын

    It definitely does say a lot about some aspects of society when the go to explanation is that we used their bones as objects and lived in them. Imagine if they revered mammoth and these were shrines, as you mentioned, the cultural leap from us to them is pretty huge.

  • @ColasTeam

    @ColasTeam

    3 ай бұрын

    I think it pairs well and is very telling how many people have a general negative response to the amount of objects and finds that are generally catalogued as religious in nature even tho the evidence is pretty good of them being that.

  • @Mark_GL

    @Mark_GL

    3 ай бұрын

    Just go and study actual hunter gatherer tribes right now. They perform rituals before every hunt, add ritual behaviors in common day activities and have supertitious thinking all the time. No wonder Archeology has to lean so much on the ritual argument.

  • @Bitchslapper316

    @Bitchslapper316

    3 ай бұрын

    I think the constant need to explain things we don't understand with religion and superstition is kind of lazy. Why are we assuming anyone built shrines that long ago? For all we know religion is a modern (-10,000 year old) construct. A cave man didn't wonder out into the open and start building shrines to "gods" out of nowhere.

  • @PeachysMom

    @PeachysMom

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Mark_GLtheir survival was much less predictable and more vulnerable to chance than ours is. I think that would definitely foster a very superstitious mindset and magical thinking could be considered rational.

  • @ColasTeam

    @ColasTeam

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Bitchslapper316 Ok, sure, we don't know 100%, but literally since we have records of human activity, religion is at the center of it in some way or another. Every piece of writing from 5000 years ago tells us religious and spiritual believes were deeply important in everyday life. Every isolated tribe we find in the Amazon jungle has some form of religion, as do the tribes deep in Africa, or every tiny village deep in the Eurasian plateau. For pretty much every society that we have records of, including many modern people, religious believes aren't a once every Sunday thing but an ever present everyday thing. Scientifically, you'd have to be deeply stubborn to not think paleolithic people had deeply ingrained spiritual/religious believes, and it's arrogant from people to think archeologists are lazy for assuming ritual looking objects to be ritualistic, because every group of humans we've ever met no matter how isolated or for how long they've been without meeting any other humans, has them. Are some objects other things? Sure, ancient humans had toys, tools, souvenirs,. random Knicks knacks, but people here on the internet seem to think that we should just assume paleolithic humans had a big luxury goods based economy with trading card games, daimakura pillows, and anime figurines or something, which is ridiculous. Ancient humans moved around, they couldn't afford to carry piles of commodities around, most of what they carried had to be deeply important, which means that most of it would be survival gear, and things with DEEP emotional importance, a lot of which was bound to carry some religious or spiritual significance as well. And for that matter, it also seems like modern people don't understand that religion for ancient people was very different, acts that carry no spiritual significance for us today did so back in the day. Since I'm on my phone I won't list a ton, but my favorite example is gambling games. Nowadays they're seen as dumb sleazy fun, but ancient people had GODS attached to them, for ancient people, even a game of dice would be a religious or spiritual act, because they believed a god was guiding the game, ancient people believed sickness was the result of demons and lemme tell ya sickness was definitely an everyday occurrence, the rising and setting of the sun, the moon, the tides. For hunter gatherers every animal they killed had a soul and was a sentient creature no different than us. Absolutely everything for ancient people was the result of divine action, and this is bound to be MORE truth the further back you go in time when humans understood even less about the physical mechanisms that drove things. As for how old religion itself is, true, we don't know for sure, but we have good evidence of it potentially being older than homo sapiens, potentially at least as old as the neanderthal (tho this is deeply debated). Certainly no mainstream archeologists or historian doubts that religion is AT LEAST as old as homo sapiens. So, in summary, no, I don't think it's even a little bit lazy to assume most strange things we find from ancient times had religious significance. Obviously the context of the dig is important, and there's always room for other theories like this video demonstrated, but I think people are far too high on their own farts if they think they're being oh so clever by telling professional archeologists who dedicate their lives to studying ancient humans that they're being lazy in their analysis.

  • @junebrilly5302
    @junebrilly53023 ай бұрын

    Absolutely Love this Channel! More Please!

  • @artofescapism
    @artofescapism3 ай бұрын

    Very very cool! Thank you for teaching us about this- very interesting to learn about!

  • @ltdada
    @ltdada3 ай бұрын

    I appreciate the shot of Grotte Niaux at 8:58--I recognized it instantly because I've been there; the public can tour the cave, and the art is fantastic (11-13,000 BPE). GREAT video Stefan!

  • @NikoMoraKamu
    @NikoMoraKamu3 ай бұрын

    clearly an advanced civilization of mammoths

  • @dukeon

    @dukeon

    3 ай бұрын

    Skeletal mammoths, at that!

  • @ludovica1914
    @ludovica19143 ай бұрын

    You're the first sponsor spot for AG1 that made me want to try it, and I've seen it everywhere.

  • @raymondbrolly18499
    @raymondbrolly184993 ай бұрын

    Nice one Stefan. I hope these invaluable sites don’t get destroyed.

  • @JoRiver11
    @JoRiver113 ай бұрын

    Before you started talking about the burial of bear remains, my guess was that it was an expression of gratitude and connection to the mammoth (as a species and individually). The lives of the people would have been intertwined with the lives of the mammoth, and it’s not hard to imagine the people acknowledging that relationship.

  • @mohmmedbinsalmanalsaud
    @mohmmedbinsalmanalsaud3 ай бұрын

    Id love to see some longer videos every once in a while where you go over broader topics in detail .

  • @ricknielson1947
    @ricknielson19473 ай бұрын

    Thrilled to see a new episode, and loved it.

  • @greenman6141
    @greenman61413 ай бұрын

    I get so happy every time I see a new Stefan video. Though, I have to say, the topic of this one was so sad. Those poor lovely woolly mammoths.

  • @Elephantine999
    @Elephantine9993 ай бұрын

    "Walking in the woods, thinking about mammoths..." Great story. Finding shell and coral etc. amongst the bones and no hearths seems pretty convincing that these were not houses. I used to see the bleached bones of cattle on a ranch when I was a kid. Remembering that got me wondering if these bones were assembled fresh after butchering or possibly collected later--maybe much later if the bones were lying in frozen tundra.

  • @daleavery4843

    @daleavery4843

    3 ай бұрын

    I cannot imagine living in a home partially made up of freshly butchered animal bones. Think of the stench and rancidness as those bones were exposed to the heat inside the abode. The construction would make more sense as a totem rather than a domicile. I also wonder about the piece of coral found with the bones. Where in the world did that originate? That specimen must have been traded a long distance from its origin. Just incredible to think of that alone.

  • @who4743

    @who4743

    3 ай бұрын

    Maybe the bones were collected later after the scavengers of that time had already cleaned the bones. Then there's no need to worry about any smell, disease or pests in a home. And anything traded over large distances and even locally sourced totems had immense value and power and could have been used to invoke protection towards the home and its occupants. Mammoths were so highly esteemed and valued not only for survival, there was a spiritual aspect to it . And what better way to link both then to utilize the bones out of necessity and adorning them with such powerful and rare items.

  • @MyEarthEcoNut
    @MyEarthEcoNut3 ай бұрын

    I love this channel and Stefan's enthusiasm for inquiry!

  • @paavobergmann4920
    @paavobergmann49203 ай бұрын

    That is super fascinating, thank you for telling me about it!

  • @rosenraikov
    @rosenraikov3 ай бұрын

    Ah, in this video, I finally confirmed my suspicion that you are of Balan origin! Your videos and calm delivery are so good, I must have watched a vast majority of them. May God bring you lots of rakija and Adidas tracksuits!

  • @screamingeagles2670
    @screamingeagles26703 ай бұрын

    100+ Mammoths!? Damn that's a lot of grand soul gems...

  • @ThePhatrooster1
    @ThePhatrooster13 ай бұрын

    always a good day when a stefan video comes out

  • @leetester8612
    @leetester86123 ай бұрын

    Great video. I look forward to the next one. Thanks

  • @Algrenion
    @Algrenion3 ай бұрын

    a day with a new Stefan Milo video is always a good day :)

  • @John-qo9hw
    @John-qo9hw3 ай бұрын

    Bro I love you. Your personality and content just makes me very happy( and pleased? Idk). I don't even know why I felt like commenting this lol.

  • @A808K

    @A808K

    3 ай бұрын

    I understand John and feel the same way.

  • @Incandescentiron
    @Incandescentiron3 ай бұрын

    I'm going to enjoy this series!

  • @aske1602
    @aske16023 ай бұрын

    As always, thanks for the great content.

  • @crowvii
    @crowvii3 ай бұрын

    This was amazing thank you!! I love your channel but this was one my favorite videos ❤

  • @Incandescentiron
    @Incandescentiron3 ай бұрын

    As an architectural engineer, the structure seems unlikely to be a residence. The amount of time required to stockpile materials and the uncertainty in stacking a stable structure would make this a questionable choice. Simple and fast is better for a residential structure.

  • @onkelmicke9670

    @onkelmicke9670

    3 ай бұрын

    They would probably want portable structures like any nomads.

  • @AlbertaGeek

    @AlbertaGeek

    3 ай бұрын

    "Simple and fast" makes flimsy residential structures. Compare the houses in a modern "throw it up as quick as you can" development to the still-standing stone houses hundreds of years old over in Europe.

  • @chriskehoe1394
    @chriskehoe13943 ай бұрын

    Great! You have so many hats too!

  • @ivarbrouwer197

    @ivarbrouwer197

    3 ай бұрын

    Continuity error in film making… 😂

  • @russellbarndt6579
    @russellbarndt65793 ай бұрын

    Wow , I so appreciate your interest in sharing your knowledge, I appreciate the sponsor and will be giving both the drink and vitamin d3 with k2 a try once I am off blood thiners .Thank you, good sir.!

  • @johnmcnulty4425
    @johnmcnulty44253 ай бұрын

    Absolutely fascinating!

  • @chucklearnslithics3751
    @chucklearnslithics37513 ай бұрын

    I favor the idea that they were work animals, buried in this manner at common grave sites, with meaningful memorabilia left with some.

  • @dMb1869

    @dMb1869

    3 ай бұрын

    Wouldn't "work animal" imply some level of domestication? Im not exactly a mammoth expert, but I've personally not heard of any evidence, physical or genetic, that mammoths were ever domesticated even a little.

  • @chuckleezodiac24

    @chuckleezodiac24

    3 ай бұрын

    that's adorable.

  • @dMb1869

    @dMb1869

    3 ай бұрын

    @@chuckleezodiac24 Oh? In what way?

  • @gotworc

    @gotworc

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@dMb1869i mean people used elephants for a very long time for work and warfare. They were never domesticated. If mammoths were similar to elephants they could totally be used in similar ways

  • @chuckleezodiac24

    @chuckleezodiac24

    3 ай бұрын

    @@dMb1869 romanticizing that Noble Savages lived in unison with their adoring pet Mammoths who volunteered their labor services for some type of ... "work" or various pre-agricultural activities...

  • @claudiaxander
    @claudiaxander3 ай бұрын

    Guess people just love stacking empties! Wonderful Cheers!

  • @gstlynx
    @gstlynx3 ай бұрын

    Great presentation Stefan, thanks.

  • @funkymutation3392
    @funkymutation33923 ай бұрын

    Looking good Stefan! thank you for the great content as always!

  • @sandrahealey6385
    @sandrahealey63853 ай бұрын

    Thank you for speaking of and donating to Ukraine! I enjoyed the video, but had issues with "modern day" descriptions. That was until the end, very glad I watched the entire video! As is my habit 🙂 Thanks for sharing your passion with us all ❤️

  • @oceansRising
    @oceansRising3 ай бұрын

    The end of this video made me tear up. I love thinking about people depositing gifts to these great mammoths as a way to give back or thank them for the food. I love the paleolithic peoples so much.

  • @M3W3
    @M3W33 ай бұрын

    Very interesting and entertaining, Tks for sharing . Looking fwd to more unknown at the moment videos

  • @peterpayne2219
    @peterpayne22193 ай бұрын

    Always love your videos, Stefan. Greetings from rural Japan.

  • @That-Native-Guy
    @That-Native-Guy3 ай бұрын

    Hi Stefan Milo it’s me the Native Colombian in London again and I am excited to see this video as it interests me to see all these mass burial sites with megafaunal mammalian remains in them all over the place with different circumstances like the one in the Yellowstone Caldera caused by volcanic eruption and the one in the Mexico basin due to the hunter-gatherers of the valley

  • @lesliesylvan
    @lesliesylvan3 ай бұрын

    Now that you bring it to our attention, the "Mammoth House" was suspect. I'd certainly prefer sleeping under a leather tent with hearth, than the RITUAL site ~

  • @annaandre9131
    @annaandre91313 ай бұрын

    I love your content! So happy everytime you upload!

  • @bridgham1
    @bridgham13 ай бұрын

    Just found your channel. Very listenable!

  • @johnward5102
    @johnward51023 ай бұрын

    I like the ritual hypothesis. The modern example of the bears suggests a level of respect, and of empathy, that is significant. 'I have to kill you to survive, but I know that I have taken something of value. Thank you'. This is a sensibility which we still need. We all take life in order to live, animal or vegetable, and we must realize that it is all precious, both our lives as their lives. We must not take it for granted.

  • @jfu5222

    @jfu5222

    3 ай бұрын

    I appreciate your comment, I think we are in some way like minded. I'm not religious, but I have a deep respect for life in all it's forms. I think when many people hear "ritual" they automatically think about god. It would be interesting to know more of the Evenki people's ideas of life and how their regards for the bear fits into any traditional spirituality. A quick search says that along with shamanism they have adopted orthodox christian beliefs.

  • @johnward5102

    @johnward5102

    3 ай бұрын

    That's pretty interesting. And good for the Evenki. They will understand the body and the blood, the basic Christian paradigm, as it is the basic paradigm of evolution.@@jfu5222

  • @kiminnehalem8669
    @kiminnehalem86693 ай бұрын

    Maybe they're just organizing the bones, sorting and stacking so they can use the materials? I mean it would be a holy mess.....if you're living around there, searching for the bits that you want to use, they would be best organized. I think they're bone, material warehouses!!

  • @genekalutsky8813
    @genekalutsky88133 ай бұрын

    Awesome story. Thank you very much!

  • @gregh5861
    @gregh58613 ай бұрын

    the professionalism. keeps me coming back for the next episode!

  • @matt-qz2dv
    @matt-qz2dv3 ай бұрын

    I always have a fresh bong ready for Stefans new vids

  • @jstenuf
    @jstenuf3 ай бұрын

    I love your videos! Nice to see Oregon beauty woven in! Yes!

  • @hamiltonmcclymont1967
    @hamiltonmcclymont19673 ай бұрын

    Fascinating! Thanks!

  • @stephenwylie7194
    @stephenwylie71943 ай бұрын

    The burial, and making sure there is no bad blood with the animal spirits is very compelling. Especially when you have extant indigenous culture practicing similar rituals.

  • @Seven-Planets-Sci-Fi-Tuber
    @Seven-Planets-Sci-Fi-Tuber3 ай бұрын

    My first guess would be, it's the result, overtime of hunting by chasing mammoths over a cliff

  • @billiondelfuego1875

    @billiondelfuego1875

    3 ай бұрын

    Could be an elephant graveyard or maybe a stampede

  • @aspiringscientificjournali1505

    @aspiringscientificjournali1505

    3 ай бұрын

    Could be the local dump Or resource storage

  • @therat1117

    @therat1117

    3 ай бұрын

    If they're on the Russian-Ukrainian steppe then there aren't really many cliffs to drive mammoths off of, and you can't really drive an elephant over a cliff because elephants don't stampede in the same way as bison. They're too slow and surefooted. Maybe a flood? The Dnipro, Don, and Volga Rivers are more than large enough to sweep mammoths away and then deposit them in a scattered pile.

  • @therat1117

    @therat1117

    3 ай бұрын

    Ah, further context makes these sound more like offal piles

  • @Seven-Planets-Sci-Fi-Tuber

    @Seven-Planets-Sci-Fi-Tuber

    3 ай бұрын

    @@therat1117 my guess was based on the picture alone before the video aired. I haven't watched the video yet.

  • @thedankknight2066
    @thedankknight20663 ай бұрын

    Great video Stefan! Love the channel. It's funny you mentioned the bear rituals, I think a really cool follow up video would be the idea of Neanderthal 'bear cults' in the Paleolithic

  • @sarot2002
    @sarot20023 ай бұрын

    Love this. Well done.

  • @gordonlawrence1448
    @gordonlawrence14483 ай бұрын

    I would like to add a bit in here from bush-craft/survival skills. If you make a structure you really do not want a fire too close to it. A fire about 6 feet away with a heat reflector made from saplings or rocks (or maybe memoth bones?) is good enough. The radiant heat from the fire is good enough for -25C to be relatively comfortable and -45C it will keep you alive. So perhaps they had platform fires outside the structures? That said all this argument does is bring another argument into question. It does not prove anything.

  • @johannageisel5390
    @johannageisel53903 ай бұрын

    I had not formerly heard of the "mammoth bone houses" or those middens at all. When I started the video I thought that it sounded a lot like a kind of funeral for the mammoths. Those animals are very charismatic and can easily be seen as special and sacred. Not the kind that you simply kill. But the people needed the resources from them and therefor they had to kill them. They probably felt they should honour the mammoths by giving the parts they didn't need a proper funeral ritual. Maybe it also was to ensure that the great mammoth spirit, or whatever the people believed in back then, did not become angry. Maybe it was to ensure that the mammoths would also be there in the next hunting season. When you mentioned those special object found among the bones it only made it clearer. The hypothesis that these were a offerings or "giving back" sounds very compelling to me.

  • @malkomalkavian
    @malkomalkavian3 ай бұрын

    Absolute professionalism, cheers Lad :)

  • @ArjanKop
    @ArjanKop3 ай бұрын

    I grew up with the mental image of mammoth bone houses. Good and interesting to see where these ideas actually came from.

  • @baryonx9463
    @baryonx946314 күн бұрын

    I spoke with a Ukrainian professor of anthropology who worked and researched one of these parking lots. He said that these mammoth bones are probably mostly collected from long-dead individuals. They differ in age, often by hundreds of atoms and tens of hundreds of years, and show traces of mineralization in different types of soil. They were probably collected in river deltas, where they were stored for a long time and were carried away by the current, which is why we see such buildings mostly near the beds of large rivers in Ukraine and southern Russia. Therefore, we are most likely not talking about massive mammoth slaughters in these regions

  • @-xirx-
    @-xirx-3 ай бұрын

    Thank you, a fascinating video. Really got me thinking ✌️

  • @MatthewCaunsfield
    @MatthewCaunsfield3 ай бұрын

    Great vid on this subject. Mammoths are always awesome! 👍

  • @Video2Webb
    @Video2Webb3 ай бұрын

    Great work Stefan! Just a fascinating episode which got me thinking alongside you and the scientist you found to talk about these extremely interesting mammoth bone mounds. For me, the respect for the meat provided by a living creature that has been killed is the KEY element of meaning. The people of those days of hunting mammoths knew there was a deep debt owed by them to the animals they killed, their suffering at losing life was all too evident for human perception, and in sympathy and gratitude and guilt perhaps, probably, the mounds of bones were created to honor the mammoth - and placate the gods of the day. I look forward to the next episode very much!