On the plane from Johannesburg to Paris recently, I happened to sit next to professor Braga, a very kind and humble man. I was fascinated by his work and could have picked his brain for hours more. It was such a pleasure to meet him.
@hlemmen89863 ай бұрын
Finally a serious, grown-up documentary approach on early humans. The automatic English transcription however…….: the simple name Kromdraai was crafted in about 12 different ways! Also I am curious of what Mr. Braga’s colleagues would say about this story. As we know, every anthropologist tries to present his own achievements as big and important as possible.
@robertmoye75653 ай бұрын
Erudite and comprehensive look into the complete methodology of discovery and analysis from field to laboratory. A very inspiring story and an amazing contribution to science,
@PowerScissor2 ай бұрын
Documentaries like this should never be uploaded anywhere without the date it was originally created.
@nickifrickel47362 ай бұрын
José Braga conducted his excavations in Kromdraai, South Africa, in 2021. These excavations are part of his ongoing research into human evolution and have provided significant insights into our ancestors.
@pomegranate62212 ай бұрын
@@nickifrickel4736😅
@PorterWood09Ай бұрын
The earliest date I found was 2020 for this documentary.
@LeelooBastetАй бұрын
Original Title : Kromdraai, A la Découverte du Premier Humain (2021)
@mack848823 күн бұрын
60.000 years ago
@philippedome155315 күн бұрын
Passionnant documentaire, très riche, très pédagogique, et exposant remarquablement la sophistication des méthodes employées pour faire parler les données paléontologiques ou géologiques. C'est un superbe travail d'équipe qui fait plaisir à voir. Qu'il s'agisse surtout d'une équipe française donne une idée de la qualité éminente de nos scientifiques. Hommage à eux ! Et félicitation à ceux et celles qui ont réalisé ce documentaire.
@lotfibouhedjeur3 ай бұрын
What I don't understand is how a documentary goes through a whole production process with no one noticing the music is too goddamn loud!
@mrssibelius3 ай бұрын
It drives me nuts, too. Why?
@volkerkalhoefer39733 ай бұрын
Happens far to often 😢
@johnnybravo90963 ай бұрын
It's to do with the way youtube encodes stuff originally broadcast on tv.
@SuperManning113 ай бұрын
A big part of the problem may have to do with the fact that it was originally produced in French, then the narrative track was replaced with English and someone dropped the ball in the final English edition.
@feliciagaffney19983 ай бұрын
A lot of times bootleg videos have the sound messed up. I don't know anything about how, when, with whom this documentary was produced. Just a suggestion.
@prototropo3 ай бұрын
Around 6:00 we aren't told why ancient hominids found that area amenable for life over enough time to leave fossils, or other evidence of habitation. Was there a river? A lake? A cave? Humans are characteristically drawn to fresh, running water and rock overhangs, for obvious reasons. Open ground with no topology or hydrology holds no obvious promise. Later we hear that still water, maybe stagnating, was present, and around 18:00 we get a very elegant explanation of how a conical talus was built up in a cave beneath a hole barely concealed in the surface ground above. But that general phenomenon would have been useful to know earlier. In any case, this is a very intriguing documentary. It takes the focus of early human exploration from Olduvai and the Rift Valley to this region further south on the African continent. I am so grateful to have access to such scholarly news and analysis of the paleoanthropology of our time. Professor Braga's focus on neoteny in early human societies is very appealing, and, clearly, a winning strategy that launched our tendentious species on a few million year journey of survival success.
@HarnessOmegaMolecule3 ай бұрын
See my above comment... @HarnessOmegaMolecule 0 seconds ago I would also like to mention..we are not allowed to build or do anything on the premesis as it is a "Heritage site" however... the river is now solid sewerage as the sewerage plants that are supposed to service the nearby township of Munsieville have not been operational for 3 years now. The stench is unbearable, we have tried in vain for the last year to get someone to take it seriously but the departments just dont respond. Most of the resorts and getaway tourist venues around us have closed as guests cant be hosted with this smell. The heritage value of The Cradle is, in reality, filthy and its a shame as it really is very beautiful.
@onixotto2 ай бұрын
Probably a Walmart supercenter.
@argosz80462 ай бұрын
They are digging in what was once a cave!
@persimmontea63833 ай бұрын
Great stuff! Fascinating. So great to see smart people devoting their lives to learning.
@alvaroborja807717 сағат бұрын
Muy buen vídeo, saludos desde Quito Ecuador y gracias por compartir
@evelyne70713 ай бұрын
Excellent conclusions regarding the raising of children contributing to the success of the species.
@anniedessart50113 ай бұрын
Tout à fait d accord.Mais en voyant le peu de temps donné par les parents a l education des enfants , je crains que notre espère soit en voie de regression 😢
@79klkw3 ай бұрын
@@anniedessart5011in the USA, the government is the worst obstacle. No focus on life or trade skills, passing kids who have not earned as much as a high school diploma, on to college, where they either fail, or drop out...or incur debt from loans. And kids who learn the bare minimum, and are not ready to do much more then become podcast creators, or tic tok influancers...it is what happens when every kid gets a trophy. They all start to believe that they deserve the trophy.
@SvenEven3 ай бұрын
Maybe it would be more precise to say that the need to care for the human child ensured the development of humans. The success of the species was still far in the future when the Kromdrai children (both paranthropus child and the human child) were born and died. By the way, this film was very instructive. I enjoyed it a lot.
@tonyryan432 ай бұрын
Yes. And I wonder when Europeans realise that weaning babies too early damages their intellectual development. In north Australia, Aborigines wean at three to four years and it is noticeable that the memories of Aborigines are vast superior to those of westerners. Interestingly, the African author Wilbur Smith once observed that he witnessed a 12 year old African kid absorb a three hour monologue from a Zimbabwe general, then run 60 miles, and regurgitate the monologue, verbatim. Wilbur wondered what it was that we whites do that prevents such memory development. Yet my children were weaned at 3.5 years and have very ordinary memories. A mystery yet to be fathomed.
@kerenhumphreys432 ай бұрын
@@tonyryan43In your eyes my cousin must be an anomaly. He was bottle fed and he was weaned at 3 months old because he had a milk intolerance. Yet he has a photographic memory and can memorise a book by reading it once. So that must have been down to his weaning at 4 years old. 🙃.
@zeph6439Ай бұрын
The other day, we had guests over from the USA, and decided to visit the Kromdraai area (Now a World Heritage Site). It was very dry and hot so we parked the car on a bridge over the river which runs through the area. Upon opening the window we all felt nauseous, as what used to be a pristine, crystalline clear stream had turned into a torrent of raw sewage. Evidently, according to some locals, the problem began two months ago, and despite numerous attempts to get the authorities in charge to do something about it, and petitions being handed in, nothing has happened so far. The river, which was once brimming with life and which supports all of the water birds , fish and other wildlife, is now dead. I can't see how anything could live in or near the river. If the situation continues without intervention, then I am sorry to say there is an environmental disaster on the way for all residents (human and animal alike) who live anywhere in the drainage area. The river flows directly into Hartebeespoort dam. Aquifer water is being contaminated by the sewage as well - for a region facing climate change challenges, and is relatively short of clean water, this is an extremely perturbing situation. Anyway I thought to post this in the hope that someone can do what needs to be done to stop the sewage leak, wherever it originates from as soon as possible. Investing a little in the environment is surely a logical step in ensuring the economy and people who depend on that environment to survive. No-one can drink sewage water.
@chrisdab-29 күн бұрын
Let us know what happens with the sewage runoff going into a river that flows directly into the Hartebeespoort dam.
@zeph643929 күн бұрын
@@chrisdab- Nix as yet, unfortunately. Other feeder rivers such as the Crocodile and Jukskei are also heavily contaminated with sewage and industrial waste. Sometimes, even dead donkeys.
@zeph643929 күн бұрын
The river I am talking about here emerges from the extensive underground lake or aquifer (which is situated between Boons and Kromdraai) just beyond the Sterkfontein caves. If you go to Google Maps you will then be able to follow it's course and see where it joins with another river just before they run into Hartebeespoort dam at the Skeerpoort inlet. What is happening is truly an ecological nightmare.
@ChaniKynes-xc8qi11 күн бұрын
@@zeph6439 Go complain to your municipality. Why bring it up in the comment section of a documentary? 😂
@zeph643911 күн бұрын
@@ChaniKynes-xc8qi Well it's pretty simple. The relevant authorities are unresponsive to petitions and pleas from the locals and so, lacking any other means of resolving the issue, the internet seems the best option. It's not my municipality by the way - I am just one of those few and far between people who actually gives a shit. (excuse the pun)
@tributarytears3 ай бұрын
This is an excellent documentary.
@SteveWarlee3 ай бұрын
If it was even remotely correct perhaps. When 2.5 million years is used, you know it's horsesh-t. Besides, everyone knows that nothing cradled in Africa but from the middle east
@daviddavies597527 күн бұрын
Brilliant 😊this is the first documentary I have seen on this subject,I am in ore. Thank You.
@Tesa-zw2lp3 ай бұрын
Un gran reportaje y muy especial para comprender nuestra historia.. Gracias a todos. 🎉
@joanfurtiere11773 ай бұрын
I was too busy watching the doco to worry about the music
@alexsie301226 күн бұрын
Fossil traps. That’s such a wonderful idea. Naturally forming time capsules dating back several million years. Archaeology is a truly fascinating area of study. ❤
@TrevorTaylor-p1e23 күн бұрын
And Smart asses are not Smart!!!! Some respect, please, the results that we get from work like this are priceless and precious. These people work hard and long and Everyone interested in the human being that you are and how it became that way can learn about ourselves.......and I for one am grateful, may we only get smarter as a society.😊
@tinkerstrade35533 ай бұрын
A very good documentary. Plain and simple, like a story passed down with an old skull fragment; a relic of some forgotten day. 👍 Eyes on the side, denote prey which need to watch everything everywhere. But predators have eyes in front, to focus on our next meal. Humans scavenged because a free meal is a good thing. But I'm sure they didn't rely solely on luck and berries. Throwing sticks and rocks used from ambush could take down an antelope.
@LaurencioLermaLerma3 ай бұрын
Si, es un documental excelente, interesante que desafía la prehistoria!
@damoisellecadillacducarlad6626Ай бұрын
C'est trop cool de connaitre notre Histoire complète, merci aux paléos
Ай бұрын
Archaeology is such an act of love towards the human race. Like a love letter to the entire population of this sacred planet. And one of the great things about it is that it is all so factual. Unlike religion?💙
@alainsalandre86993 ай бұрын
chapeau bas pour la qualité, l'originalité et la persévérence dans cette fouille
@BestFitSquareChannel3 ай бұрын
Superb. Thank you. Best wishes.
@WilbertOlivera-db8vt3 ай бұрын
Excelente documental sigamos indagando.
@TUPELO_HUNNYАй бұрын
To think about what our species once was and what it has become. 😢😢😢 we are trying soooo hard to extinct ourselves
@SachaSVT3 ай бұрын
Merci pour cette excellent documentaire, de la part d'un étudiant en paléoanthropologie.👏
@harrisonandrew3 ай бұрын
That was superb. Thank you 🙏
@sidonfilho309222 күн бұрын
Vídeo educativo que me traz conhecimento , obrigodo ❤
@JimEckhardt3 ай бұрын
Well, I've been into about 10 different little caves within just a few hundred metres around the Westminster cave (where naledi was found). One of which had a completely virgin section that took my caving partner and I about 30 minutes to squeeze into - a smaller being would happily use it as refuge. I just hate to think how they will destroy the rest of the caves in the area.
@1251966LH2 ай бұрын
Excelente documental!!!
@johntaplin31263 ай бұрын
Remote it ain't in distance. It's a short drive from Jo'burg.
@intelprointelpro44523 ай бұрын
Excellent documentaire 👍👍👍
@thabisoshelembe3 ай бұрын
I’m a Zulu from South Africa 🇿🇦
@evermeet613 ай бұрын
Yo ! greetings !
@cynthiaahern90813 ай бұрын
Respect and admiration from California ❤😊
@elizabethcarter11753 ай бұрын
Hi. I am an American, living in the state of Pennsylvania. Amazing, that as different as our lives are, we now know of each other. Elizabeth
@stevensalt36833 ай бұрын
What do you want, a medal?
@emibermu3 ай бұрын
Soy español de España
@henrywilliamgallopedraza473111 күн бұрын
Grande privilegio tienen estos humanos, al sostener en sus manos a nuestros antepasados...
@3-DtimeCosmology3 ай бұрын
Fascinating
@SuigetsuHozukiTV3 ай бұрын
The crust of the earth in those time frames will destroy most fossils that is why a true consensus is crude.
@evermeet613 ай бұрын
Bravo aux paléontologues français !
@alinaanto2 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@MariaRobb3 ай бұрын
i know n place in Kromdraai where is old skeltons that look like rocks. It is on a farm near lionpark of Kromdraa i. We rented a house there we loved walking and fount it
@Audibob3 ай бұрын
From Kenya🇰🇪🇰🇪🇰🇪
@sunstarpunk3 ай бұрын
Croatia❤
@freyawion42423 ай бұрын
Beaucoup d'affirmations et de présupposés de mon point de vue. Je vous regarde et je vous écoute remplir cette grille de sudoku, persuadés d'avoir gagné après avoir rempli 3 cases. C'est ça qui est dommage. Mais la recherche de la vérité est toujours admirable. Et pour cela je vous dis bravo.
@chiccngeorge30583 ай бұрын
If they had said it was in Europe somewhere you wouldn’t question it.
@chiccngeorge30583 ай бұрын
Needing sunscreen is a non advantageous mutation you people did not come first. Pale skin and eye, straight hair, and the ability to eat cheese and drink milk are all mutations. Having pale skin and a eyes is actually 3 separate genes being turned off.
@timothycook73882 ай бұрын
So the land scape is almost completely unchanged, but a whole underground cave got the whole roof removed? That sounds pretty changed too me
@danielbarrios58142 ай бұрын
Meu deus é a voz da Scully do arquivo x? Amo essa voz!!
@Thaltir2 ай бұрын
Il est important de mettre la date du documentaire quand on le publie sur KZbin !!
@sietchtabr51202 ай бұрын
Documentaire Réalisé par Cédric Robion • Écrit par Cédric Robion France • 2021 • 90 minutes • Couleur T'as vu un peu ce c/c ?😏
@thierrypercevault30972 ай бұрын
Parcontre ce que je trouve bizard dans ces fouilles comme en Égypte , il y a toujours une caméra A tiens un machoir A tiens un tombeau Bizard enfin ça fait un reportage
@HarnessOmegaMolecule3 ай бұрын
I live on the edge of the river and have the caves on the premisis, the University excavated all the bone fragments from our caves and then literally disappeared one day, they left the processing office with hundreds of bone fragments with little numbers marked on them, they left most of the tools and equipment, its all still up there. Weve gone through the caves but the supports they left are getting rickety so not going as deep as we used to. There are things in those caves that I dont think the world knows about.
@HarnessOmegaMolecule3 ай бұрын
I would also like to mention..we are not allowed to build or do anything on the premesis as it is a "Heritage site" however... the river is now solid sewerage as the sewerage plants that are supposed to service the nearby township of Munsieville have not been operational for 3 years now. The stench is unbearable, we have tried in vain for the last year to get someone to take it seriously but the departments just dont respond. Most of the resorts and getaway tourist venues around us have closed as guests cant be hosted with this smell. The heritage value of The Cradle is, in reality, filthy and its a shame as it really is very beautiful.
@Janet-f9v2 ай бұрын
@@HarnessOmegaMolecule How incredibly small and selfish minded the supposed caretakers of our world can be. From the scientists who leave their garbage behind, to the bureaucrats who refuse to do their simple duty of human decency. It is mind boggling to me that out of our entire world, this small hole which supposedly shows us why we became humans, is being treated as a garbage and sewer pit! I guess we really haven't evolved that much or that well.
@natalialinharesaguiar29832 ай бұрын
I was enjoying the documentary, but after your report I no longer feel like watching it. How can these "scientists" be so disrespectful to a place like this? A region that should be preserved and cared for for the good of humanity. The South African government needs to regulate these fossil excavation sites, because when these "European" scientists arrive and destroy an environment with so much history, they simply leave without thinking about the consequences of these excavations.😢
@jonashagstrom46643 ай бұрын
Report to some archaeological institution so they can analyze the setting and squeeze more information from your great find.
@sergioguadalupeperezalba56133 ай бұрын
El problema de los humanos es que se creen los elegidos por Dios un Dios que ellos mismos crearon
@mrssibelius3 ай бұрын
😂
@carlosrenatoduarte68383 ай бұрын
Es curioso que el antepasado que no razonaba creó la razón y empezó a razonar.
@sergioguadalupeperezalba56133 ай бұрын
@@carlosrenatoduarte6838 su nombramiento es evolución 🧬
@sebasarenas08033 ай бұрын
Excelente, gracias!🎉
@luismelchertfaberschmutzle5783 ай бұрын
Espetacular!
@RubbittTheBruiseАй бұрын
Slightly ghoulish to keep repeating how useful the find of the remains of the baby is, without ever acknowledging that it would have been a personal tragedy at the time of death.
@jaxsax85353 ай бұрын
HUMAN KIND AIN'T KIND 😭
@sunstarpunk3 ай бұрын
The worst,thinking they are the best.Sad affair in whole multiverses.Foolish race.
@Fiilis13 ай бұрын
About 1% is kind. Rest are total trash. 😮💨
@jaxsax85353 ай бұрын
@@Fiilis1 I agree JESUS BOOST US HOLYSPIRIT TO BE HUMBLE HUMAN KIND
@Alec.403 ай бұрын
Nicer than zebras
@PauloBagodUva-f3c3 ай бұрын
Que estupidez...!
@marcerodriguez46573 ай бұрын
exelente documental.
@stevensalt36833 ай бұрын
We cannot draw any final conclusions in the quest for human beginnings, we need a lot more TIME...
@Romerolivre3 ай бұрын
Não tem como negar, alguém ajudou o homem antigo.
@ralphwortley12069 күн бұрын
Very interesting about a place I have either visited or driven through many times, and where I first went down the Sterkfontein cave long before it became a tourist attraction. However. I want to comment on the voice recognition program. Kromdraai, or crooked bend or turn, is of course not an English word, and irt is recognised as Chrome Dry and other words. Since this is an educational programme, surely it would not have been too difficult to edit the text. As it is, people will wonder what the real name is?
@vimilchar2 ай бұрын
As a native South African, i just wonder where you got your information from. 🤔
@ChaniKynes-xc8qi11 күн бұрын
It's clear that they are scientists studying ancient fossils, from that knowledge is gained. Do you have any information to add to the study that can be scientifically examined?
@RigoLecler3 ай бұрын
Lo que no muestran los creyentes de la biblia, evidencias como esas
@Rico-Suave_2 ай бұрын
Great video, thank you very much , note to self(nts) watched 51:54
@otiyacot2 ай бұрын
Ambicioso el tal Braga, habría que ver opiniones de sus pares para ver si es película de Holiwud o ciencia.
@zabzeblack3 ай бұрын
vous pourriez préciser qui est José Braga, et pourquoi vous ne parlez que de lui, alors qu'il s'agit visiblement d'un travail d'équipe. Question subsidiaire : pourquoi n'y a-t-il aucune femme dans les équipes de recherche françaises ?
@sietchtabr51202 ай бұрын
Il a dû en diriger des équipes depuis 2002... et si, il y-a des femmes, pourquoi n'y en aurait-il pas d'ailleurs
@Badwolf2223 ай бұрын
Another spotting of @Penguinz0 without his makeup
@scottmagruder91572 ай бұрын
Can we all agree, we're just lucky to be here. Aka astroid hitting the Yucatan peninsula.
@TCCYM3 ай бұрын
also in turkey there is an 4.9 million years old human skull
@nickifrickel47363 ай бұрын
No, there have been discoveries of Homo erectus fossils in Turkey. One significant site is the Dursunlu area, where stone tools and fossilized remains attributed to Homo erectus have been found. These finds date back to around 1.2 million years ago..
@DevonClaireFlannery3 ай бұрын
When was this documentary released.
@DoctorMagicUK3 ай бұрын
Yeah it seems very old. It says Sapiens came out some 100 000 years ago. Research over the last 10 years indicate this is actually 250 000 - 300 000 years ago. This documentary is quite obsolete
@SvenEven3 ай бұрын
@@DoctorMagicUK The human child they found in Komdrai would not be a homo sapiens. There have been a lot of human species afoot before we got to modern man. I would guess that they have not even named the specie that gave birth to this baby.
@jerlee6203 ай бұрын
Meanwhile, ancient humans casually watch father being viciously attacked and eaten by sabertooth.
@freddelavier3 ай бұрын
Un vrais technicien ce Josée Braga , ça change des mythos diplomés
@freddelavier3 ай бұрын
Ce qui fait l'humain c'est les notions de temps exprimées, Paranthrope a disparue a cause de son régime végétarien , qui obligeait les femelles a s'aventurer loin des arbres pour manger , les rendant vulnérables aux grands fauves quand elles portaient dans leurs bras leurs petits
@hectorbarrera65913 ай бұрын
❤ Gracias!!
@yusuflawal69013 ай бұрын
Hello
@landontruman36323 ай бұрын
Can a geologist amateur or pro explain this to me? The deeper the fossil/dirt layer the older it is, right? How is it possible for that to be the case and at the same time, erosion is also happening?
@johnvaughan82393 ай бұрын
I think this is a unique scenario. In this instance, there was a system of underground caves. The dirt and rock making up the roof/ceiling of these caves was probably all around the same age. Erosion occurred until holes opened up in the roof/ceiling. Once a hole had been opened up, the cave turned into a time capsule. As animals, dirt, rock and debris fell into the holes over hundreds of thousands of years plus, layers built up on the floor of the cave as stuff fell through the whole, with obviously the first stuff that fell through being on the bottom layers of the sediment in the cave, with the most recent stuff laying on top.
@SvenEven3 ай бұрын
Maybe you should watch the beginning of the film once more. Where they explain why Komdrai and the surrounding area is so interesting for this kind of excavating. That places like this exist is almost unbelievable, but I would say that you should not eexpect to find places like this outside Africa. The whole continent has undergone relatively few changes since it broke loose from Gondwana land
@landontruman36323 ай бұрын
I'm not necessarily asking about where they are in the video in particular. I'm asking in general. Meaning everywhere on earth. How can both be happening at the same time?
@michaelfritts62492 ай бұрын
Look up Stratigraphy, lithostratigraphy, biostratigraphy and chronostratigraphy. Erosion and sedimentation are not opposites. Erosion creates sediment that erodes and becomes sediment.. It varies. The K-T boundry can be found 2 meters below the surface in some areas.. 2 kilometers in others. Too many factors to explain Stratigraphy in youtube reply. Be curious!! 🤔👍 Be Well!! 😀
@rikrasmussen2 ай бұрын
Listen again. Sorry, typo.
@davidyemm7910Ай бұрын
The computer generated images are a bit disappointing, showing what looks like a modern human simply covered in hair.
@pascalvacquie8516Ай бұрын
Une vidéo sur l'Adn des hominidés, disait qu'ils à exister plusieurs genre hominidés un peu partout dans le monde ?. Donc l'Afrique ne peu pas être le seule berceau de l'humanité... Et l'Antartique !!?...
@tnekkc3 ай бұрын
The worst combination is trying to understand a brit accent with background music:(
@Lanzbdog3 ай бұрын
Yes, those with english as a second language will struggle.
@chandomukherjee30623 ай бұрын
@@Lanzbdog Caption
@ADude-f3z2 ай бұрын
“What caused us to diverge from the other primates?” is where you lost me… Compare a Pygmy mouse lemur to a gorilla then tell me that the rest of the primates (other than us) are remarkably similar.
@mikef.10003 ай бұрын
What is it with these irritating AI narrator voices?
@stevensalt36833 ай бұрын
Sounded ok to me, very clear, not sure it is AI, think you are mistaken.
@prestonforayter25843 ай бұрын
When you steal from crocodiles that would explain the lack of fossils.
@nickifrickel47363 ай бұрын
hi, I like this video, 👍but I miss the "audio-Track" for german
@andreventer8734Ай бұрын
Not really important I know but those animals are blesbuck, not springbuck
@shanehester53172 күн бұрын
why did we lose hair.thats a step down instead of a step up in evolution.
@waynesworldofsci-techАй бұрын
Why don’t you link the studies? Downvoted because of that.
@TCCYM3 ай бұрын
in spain there are 2.5 million years specimens, and they are human........
@nickifrickel47363 ай бұрын
No, the oldest humanoid finds in Spain come from the Sierra de Atapuerca in the province of Burgos. These fossils, referred to as the remains of the “first European,” are about *1.4 million* years old. Home antecesseor and Homo heidelbergensis,
@chiccngeorge30583 ай бұрын
No there’s not the earliest hominins got to Europe 1.3 million years ago. 🙃
@kerenhumphreys432 ай бұрын
1.4 million to be exact. Don't lie.
@6484143 ай бұрын
This old fossil cannot hear this - think the bit I heard was interesting.
@LofusYanchi-jt1yp3 ай бұрын
My cradle has been and always will be Canada 🇨🇦 thank you very much!
@daniellefaure98173 ай бұрын
Canada is the Amerindians cradle. Are you Amerindian ?
@emibermu3 ай бұрын
Vives en la reserva?
@LofusYanchi-jt1yp3 ай бұрын
@emibermu no I don't.
@emibermu3 ай бұрын
@@LofusYanchi-jt1yp pues eso.
@ChaniKynes-xc8qi11 күн бұрын
Then you must not be human. What kind of species evolved in canada?
@D-kaka3 ай бұрын
Completely miss information. Hominids was first found in Nepal which is 15 million years ago where first cognitive hominids evolve to become human.
@tayfunenka81823 ай бұрын
No human will evolve from murderous Monks! Maybe perhaps Jew apes? These two have a lot in common waiting to be punished.
@kerenhumphreys432 ай бұрын
Wow 15 years, now that is old. First hominids are in Africa whether you believe it or not.
@D-kaka2 ай бұрын
@kerenhumphreys43 thanks for you reply that was supposed to be 15 million 😂 autocorrect u know how it is
@ChaniKynes-xc8qi11 күн бұрын
You are talking kaka @@D-kaka
@baillondisette15883 ай бұрын
0:25 "on ignore encore qui était le premier être humain, et comment il est apparu" FAUX! On peut supputer qu'il est apparu à poil, et on est sûr qu'il ne s'appelait pas Jean-Christophe.
@Rachels12312 күн бұрын
Amazing what they can piece together with a 2 and a half million year old partial childs lower mandible
@robertamurphy11243 ай бұрын
Perhaps he found Abel.
@rubencortes775528 күн бұрын
Está anticuado, no salen los nuevos hallazgos de Europa central
@TCCYM3 ай бұрын
JAJAJAJJAJAJAJAJ 100 mil años en africa dicen...... DESPERTAD HUMANOS SOMOS MUUUUY ANTIGUOS
@hectorVillalobos-n8d3 ай бұрын
💛💛💛👌👌👌👌
@robertyoung94033 ай бұрын
kill the music. huge distraction
@JamesBarry-j7m3 ай бұрын
There is nothing greater than the star chamber
@denisovan19553 ай бұрын
As always, some scientists ignore Denisovans
@FTY133 ай бұрын
Try living in Australia and having the oldest race of stone Age people that still exist being ignored , they won't do any research in Australia because they know it will destroy the out of Africa theory completely
@evermeet613 ай бұрын
No, denisovians are later humans.
@mustyfan15843 ай бұрын
This is a few million years too early for Denisovans. No modern paleoanthropologists are ignoring Denisovans.
@Andy_Babb3 ай бұрын
Wrong epoch, my friend
@khazrakleborgne71333 ай бұрын
And wrong area, Denisova is in Asia.
@prestonforayter25843 ай бұрын
They didn't fall in love. That I know.
@Nicarand3 ай бұрын
Tf are you on about?
@mattneillninasmom2 ай бұрын
Dear People: please consider that the sewage now surrounding the site and making the area impossible to continue work on, as well as elimination of tourism in the area due to the stench, is perhaps not accidental. Rather, consider that many view the invasion of the resting place of our earliest ancestors a desecration, the carrying off of body parts by foreigners - including babies, an insult, and that future sites may well suffer the same fate.
@hsmd45332 ай бұрын
The average iq there is low.
@howardleekilby73903 ай бұрын
Fire the music director.
@JILOA17 күн бұрын
I believe in the big bang theory. God said it - BANG ! There it is.
@satriamustaki153Ай бұрын
Indonesia love❤
@HowardArnold-be9ly3 ай бұрын
MANkind. You’re welcome
@Dr.Ian-Plect3 ай бұрын
I'm almost certain what your point is, but can you state it? Then I'll correct you...