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@LiruScarrrbauu19 күн бұрын
Vez nu judec p pa
@fruityloopzman2 жыл бұрын
Cuzz this had us glued to the TV me and the homies were amazed at how good ice preserves history one of the best archaeological documentaries we've ever witnessed.
@stjbananas2 жыл бұрын
This is one of the most fascinating archeological videos I have ever watched. Thank you.
@angelicaquinones69686 ай бұрын
I’m Norwegian and Native American from North Dakota, USA. I’m really happy to come across this video!!🎉
@WilliamJohnson-g6z12 күн бұрын
Norwegian and native American is a cool combination. I am Irish French Spanish and native American.
@dmartinnj2 жыл бұрын
I agree with below KenVI. I was in auuww the whole time watching the video. I have found arrow heads in my life but never really took in the reality of its time until now frozen in time... My jaw dropped to the floor many times. I was simply blown away at what was found in real time... This video is simply AMAZING...!
@chrisb14782 жыл бұрын
Absolutely fascinating!!! Definitely watching this documentary again. I’ve already sent it to friends.
@EMuro-wu7uy2 жыл бұрын
I'm glad these indigenous people are conserving their rights. As someone who is native American, it is great to see people cooperating, and finding so many artifacts to preserve for future, and how much of this have reignited interest in the people themselves.
@robbieyoder42012 жыл бұрын
Best start making arrows
@courtneyriley185 Жыл бұрын
Wow....thanks for stopping important scientific findings. Your gods are soooooo pleased 😂
@junestanich78886 ай бұрын
Really cool that the First Nations children are getting into archaeology and their culture.
@patlafleche96452 жыл бұрын
I'm native first Nation from Western Canada and we still make moccasins the exact same way, happy to see my peoples old tools and hunting weapons
@ludwigderzanker976719 күн бұрын
Liked the cooperation of Native, Canadian and Norwegian scientists or not !Oetzi was far older! Thank you for this article and all the best from Northern Germany Ludwig.
@Andy_Babb2 жыл бұрын
Oh man I love this! lol second time I’ve watched this… so fascinating
@Xx1tyler21xX2 жыл бұрын
Northern Canada and Alaska landscapes just amaze me because I think they haven't changed since the Ice Age or before it.
@cyallits2 жыл бұрын
Northern Canada and Alaska were under ice sheets as much as a kilometre thick, so they’ve changed quite drastically
@Xx1tyler21xX2 жыл бұрын
@Cam Yallits I realize the ice is gone but the landscape almost looks alien with the rocks and mountains or foot hills being almost barren. How the creeks are rivers are just melt water that runs down through these rocks and they never really get any deeper. I'm in the Midwest and our creeks and rivers are deep and muddy. That's actually the name of a couple of them. Big Muddy and Little Muddy Rivers.
@AECRADIO12 жыл бұрын
At 62, I would give up everything to chase my actual ancestry in Sweden. My family ran extensive genealogy tests over several decades, and I found I am a direct descendant of Lief Ericsson. Our lineage traces back to almost 470 a.d. I want to scour the same areas in Sweden for similar artifacts, follow every trail. This has been a life dream of mine, but doubt it will come true, sadly. Family is everything to me, and since my ex made certain I was robbed of all I was supplied, I am starting over. My grandparents came directly from Sweden in 1922, through Ellis island. One town I remember my grandfather stating he was born in, was Göteborg. I hope I spelled that right. I am mildly obsessed to say the least, and Viking lore and culture means the world to me.
@hughjunit25032 жыл бұрын
Quite the story of your family my friend. I'm Irish and my name has been date all the way back to about 200ad among the old kings of Ireland. Seems we both have a family legacy and history to live up to
@laurasmith146 ай бұрын
I can understand how you feel 100%! Sadly… Devastatingly really, Sweden has become the most dangerous country in Europe thanks to in-veighdors yes I know how to spell correctly but this picks up those words and then you never see the post. But yeah it's like Third World in the cities, that's what I have been hearing. I only have 4 ancestral home sites, all in northern Europe. One is in Ireland all the way to the west. My family has roots there that are over 600 years old, and last I knew, the farm was still in the hands of my ancestors family. The thought of going there and seeing faces that don't belong there rips at my heart. I would relocate in a heartbeat if it meant those other people having to leave.
@saxen23996 ай бұрын
@@laurasmith14 That is just total bs. Sweden is one of the worlds safest country. Ranked 26th in the world. Compared to 129th for the US and 34th for the UK. Ofc it has its problems, just like any other country. / An actual Swed
@harryhole57865 ай бұрын
Oh, my lineage leads back to Jesus Christ !
@laurasmith145 ай бұрын
@@saxen2399 of course the US has higher crime rates...they imported a feral breed from a (still!) largely uncivilized continent, ever since 1965 but most notably over the last 16 years (began w Obama) they've been letting In people who aren't contributing to society, but rather draining from it. It's also exponentially larger than Sweden. But still, grooming gangs? No go zones! I'm speaking if Malmo. "Their" entire life mission is to spread Izz lahm and Conker lands! (Spelled incorrectly on purpose, I want to make sure it gets past the scentsorship ) You either become one or you lose your life. There is no peaceable middle ground.The US "experiment" was to be the "melting pot." And it was working for a time... creating "euromutts" - but generally working. Because though we were from separate countries, our general temperaments and largely our value system(✝️), our societal norms that we often don't even need to speak of, were all in alignment. We were able to Nash and within one generation, you had English living side-by-side with German or French, etc. ever since they have started throwing third world into the mix, it is no longer melting at all. It's a failed disaster. And the ominous "they" are pushing for the same in Europe so that we will lose any/all homelands! My mum's first flat in London is now in a snackbar region, unsafe to even visit. When she found it on Google Earth she looks like she was ready to burst into tears, it didn't look like a recognizable country let alone area she spent five years in. It's devastating. All of it. Unfolding rig before our own eyes.
@dinarusso33202 жыл бұрын
That looks so fun exploring the melting ice, wish I could be there....
@laara14262 жыл бұрын
Only if you love to be bitten by mosquitos, deer/caribou flies and no see ums would you like to be on a dig like that.
@junebrilly53023 ай бұрын
This is a wonderful documentary. I love the 1st Nations involvement and awakening of their powers and rights. Thankyou So Much.
@terrymoran37055 ай бұрын
Spectacular! The boundaries that archeology is pushing is just breathtaking! What a boon for our native brothers and sisters!!!!!
@judyklein32212 жыл бұрын
Awesome! Excellent documentary.
@perrrry2 жыл бұрын
Loved this documentary. Incredible!
@ronelsteenkamp87162 жыл бұрын
Interesting and captivating! I really enjoyed watching this. I only wish we would treat the living (and the dying) with as much respect as these ancient bodies and artifacts. If only we could care so much for the "now" people... Maybe one day, some distant relatives would honor our dead
@Roylamx5 ай бұрын
These are very difficult times and our grand children will inherit a much better world and will be grateful for what we did after we deal with and clean up all these important and very perplexing issues of political intrigue and deception at all levels.
@muktukjoe5 ай бұрын
This is absolutely beautiful. Thank you. It's everyone's past. DNA is beautiful. Ancestors for many.
@gayeinggs51796 ай бұрын
Wow how marvellous it must be. So exciting to find these things just imagine holding something that was 4000 years old and the last person to hold it was 4000 years ago
@coryhardcastle30312 жыл бұрын
The narrator claims Otzi the iceman is 3500 years old ...he is actually from around 3500 BC ..which would make him approximately 5200 years old.. Makes me wonder what other mistakes are in the video that I did not catch.. Still very interesting
@richardsamuelson71896 ай бұрын
The one thing you can be for sure of is that the dates are always going to change
@harryhole57865 ай бұрын
are you living in the 18th century? 3500 years (BC) + 2024 gives me 5574 years.
@MagicBrownie4203 ай бұрын
@harryhole5786 one Google search told me he is 5300 years old.
@Cnsalmoni3 ай бұрын
@@harryhole5786Radio carbon dating, if that’s what they used, is approximate, which means give or take a few centuries. It’s not completely accurate, but incredibly better than extrapolating from clues in the clothing, body, and environment.
@mikei7498Ай бұрын
These so-called educated elites are absolute Morons
@jasminenwhitaker97172 жыл бұрын
Happy healthy blessed New Year everyone ✨️ 💖
@kylewilloughby52552 жыл бұрын
It seems unlikely that a dart that missed would not be recovered. Hunting experience suggests that it is more likely that the dart hit and was carried away by the animal, carried too far for either animal or dart to be recovered.
@plugspud4215 ай бұрын
In this setting the dart would still be with the animal
@user-nf7ui7dz1z5 ай бұрын
It happened all the time, it’s not worth digging through 12 feet of snow.
@latanafowler713610 ай бұрын
The Best video on historical finds I have EVER SEEN! I loved it so so much!
@lonestarbellepk5 ай бұрын
European countries and Scandinavian have extraordinary excavation finds
@SA-1012 жыл бұрын
It's a tiny bit odd to me that they don't use nitrile gloves when retrieving these organic material artifacts from the field.
@SA-1012 жыл бұрын
...oh wait... huh,... in some clips they do.
@alexissandusky22 күн бұрын
I believe it's up for discretion since gloves can make you less tactile and they don't want to damage anything but seeing it practiced still freaks me out a bit sometimes lol.
@carlchristensen8157 Жыл бұрын
Definitely a archaeological extravaganza Happy Hunting
@jamesleonard28704 ай бұрын
Whoh! The last artifact is stunning. My mind was blown. And I just learned about copper nuggets this year!! Incredible 🌊🌊🌊🏄♀️🏄♂️
@eileenlocke93975 ай бұрын
Very interesting . Thank u 🙏
@systemicxdesign Жыл бұрын
Wasn't aware until now... Tysm¡
@michaelpcooksey50964 ай бұрын
Very well done. Thank you. It would be interesting to have a full segment on looking at the artifacts and then the exact process for producing them ... wood type and source ... knapping ... types of nocks on the arrows ... atlatl shaft and length ... means of affixing the arrow point to the shaft ... the throwing stick configuration ... and the modern competition ... workshops ... organizations ... volunteers for artifact discovery ... museums with observable items ... books with good documentation ... etc.
@konstantinder92628 ай бұрын
Це робота мрії, ходити шукати такі гарні артефакти, це дуже приємно!
@davidletasi33224 ай бұрын
We tend to think of prehistoric hunters technology based on lithics, but the vast majority of their technologies were dependent on materials that simply perished over time. Thanks to ice patches and permafrost preservation, a whole new world of archeology comes into view. Canada and Siberia have rare frozen treasures that are now finally being discovered. Even wood and bone artifacts are being exposed in wetland habitat. I think of the Windover site in Florida, where complete burials with brain tissue were preserved. I enjoyed the section on Atlatl throwing, something i used to enjoy teaching youngsters in the 1990s.
@chrispetersen46392 жыл бұрын
Another good documentary ruined by a 100% meaningless overlay of music. Documentaries facilitate knowledge / information meaning the focus should be on the narrating or speech from individuals.
@jasonshumate64562 жыл бұрын
Considering there used to be 2 mile deep Ice Sheets covering Canada & the Northern US, no.need to abandon the Coast.
@nutew48092 жыл бұрын
Climates will always change
@chris65596 ай бұрын
Not at this speed.
@neilpetersen52875 ай бұрын
@@chris6559 the only thing climate has done is change, 13000 years ago it changed overnight, how are you an expert on how things are changing, the super caldera could go tomorrow, and where would we be then. its changing and there isn't anything that the current system will do about it.
@SuperTreemendus4 ай бұрын
Absolutely, its happed way quicker previously. @@chris6559
@andyman86304 ай бұрын
@@chris6559 true! in the past climate has changed 200 times more rapidly!
@AotearoaAngeАй бұрын
Always have, always will.
@Flowshow886 ай бұрын
So mamy bums in the comments hating on this free content
@deborahriley1166 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating!!!🙏☯️🙏
@70stunes712 жыл бұрын
How incredible. Loved this video
@helenhunter45402 жыл бұрын
Norwegian treatment of Sami people was the same as English treatment of Irish people was the same as U.S. and Canadian treatment of Indigenous people. None of us can wish that history away, pretend it's been resolved.
@robbieyoder42012 жыл бұрын
Yes and all over the same treatment of the people native to lands someone came and took conquered
@salm89902 жыл бұрын
@28:12 you are holding it backwards bud. someone should show him how a bow is strung lol
@Simonjose72582 жыл бұрын
47:50 Wow! 🤯
@rented_mule87902 жыл бұрын
Some animals carried the weapon away and died in tall grass , never to recover the weapon.
@joecorrero67632 жыл бұрын
“All the shit in these ice patches proves it.” Love the old timer Art
@gud2go503 ай бұрын
We have so much to learn from these amazing finds of the past. Bottom line is that they were trying to survive and thrive back then, just like we do to this day. It doesn’t matter if you are indigenous or the average white guy. We are all indigenous to this planet, so we all have the right to study our past together, be it politically correct or not. It makes me mad when sovereignty is given over one group of people over another to research this stuff. We are all from planet earth!😊
@WilliamJohnson-g6z12 күн бұрын
Well this is a positive thing about climate change. I would love to be able to see history as it unfolded with a time machine. I find it extremely interesting almost nostalgic. I would love to be up there in the Yukon finding artifacts. It is amazing.
@eliseolopez27902 жыл бұрын
There is so much information I am overwhelmed, please be careful with our past
@johnpauljr633319 күн бұрын
It's been a long time most people don't realize time and experiences are not replaceable
@rockyriveroutdoors92292 жыл бұрын
It's funny how 3 ton boulders move with the ice, but small arrows stay still to be found!!!!!!
@Jalartifact5 ай бұрын
Great stuff. I wished I had told one of the bosses, I was taking a Nature Break.♧
@GT-jp4bo2 жыл бұрын
Wtf did they cremate him 🤦🏻he may not have believed in that and they did wrong by making that decision for him lol damn
@alexissandusky22 күн бұрын
It has to do with the treatment of the dead, burial grounds and places of spiritual importance to those indigenous groups. There has been a track record of destroying them or taking them and not being responsible or respectful. the field of archaeology is changing and adapting to be more moral.
@nvegas45526 ай бұрын
It's amazing how ingenious humans have been as they've adapted to and thrived in whatever conditions they've found themselves. Some places on earth have been colder, some have been hotter, some have been dryer, some have been wetter, some flat, some mountainous, but humans have worked together to survive and thrive in their environments. I don't think warming will be that catastrophic since there've been warmer years and colder years since we've been able to measure artifacts and humans have successfully taken on the challenges.
@gayeinggs51796 ай бұрын
When these original ancestors are taught the local language they can mix with the rest of the country and not be backward !
@TrishWragg6 ай бұрын
Backward by whose standards
@teenafahrenheit8082 жыл бұрын
Hey!! I seen my Niece!! 😍🥰
@ferengiprofiteer91452 жыл бұрын
Gee, I wish it was as warm now as it was back then. Those areas had plants and animals aplenty. What did those people do to warm the world up?
@robbieyoder42012 жыл бұрын
Made a fire
@laara14262 жыл бұрын
How did they find the wood to make an "exact replicate" of the spear/dart ?
@Sokol102 жыл бұрын
In Yukon Mountains forest. 😁
@randomvintagefilm27316 күн бұрын
That guy said these arrows could be from 12 million years ago? 😂😂😂 how the hell would he know that? Carbon dating which is how you would date these, only works up to 50,000 years!
@brettcurtis57106 ай бұрын
Australian Aborigines call them a woomera! Still used for hunting - a culture that is 50,000 years old!
@T.J-and-Soul2 жыл бұрын
Uploaded 10 days ago but I watched this 12 months ago on another channel omg
@oldmanfromscenetwentyfour81642 жыл бұрын
Yea, YT is a video recycling site.
@T.J-and-Soul2 жыл бұрын
@@oldmanfromscenetwentyfour8164 sure is
@MagnaMater26 ай бұрын
38:01 Why on earth should any 'indigenious group' claim Oetzi? Italy claimed him on behalf of the border, and it turned out true, with him having grown up and living and dying in today's Southern Tyrol that was annexed by Italy. He has some 25 male relatives all over the central Alps, those might be charmed to have such a famous relative, but it doesn't change anything about them having known all along, that their families lived in the region 'for quite a while'. And not all of them are 'Rhaetic' 'Ladinic' or whatever other tribe. I know some visit him and wave at him occasionally and are very concerned about his preservation, fearing he might rot away without his glacier. With him being closely related to Sardinians, there happened another effect: Many Sardinians moved to the Tyrol since then, sort of 'reclaiming their old clan-colonies', feeling suddenly 'related' to what they had priorily considered to be 'foreigners' and 'abroad'. And they feel welcomed, with some local women being very interested in their 'centianrian DNA' and their cheeses and cuisine, them being obviously healthy. I know two locals that married Sardinians, men they wouldn't have met but for them visiting - and staying - in their cousin's Ötzi's lands. I'm for whatever chance of genetic lottery genetically related to the misfortunate Hunter of Bichon as well as to G2 of the Loschbour-Skeletons, and the Elba-Shepardess, but why on earth would I feel the need to 'reclaim them', asides them having lived in today's Swizerland/Belgium/Spain? Once somebody is dead for 200 years and has no living relatives that remember them, they're part of the geological landscape. They belong to everybody interested in them.
@howardlashbrook85002 жыл бұрын
I found a metal spear point in the Columbia river in 2013. It was the only piece of metal that I picked up while picking up scrap metal that was not rusted. The museum here will not give me any information on it. Can anyone help me find out more about it? Thanks for the great video
@robbieyoder42012 жыл бұрын
Probably made after contact sum scrap metal some plains tribe made into a point
@DonHavjuan6 ай бұрын
Yeah it's mine but you can have it.
@lizzy661252 жыл бұрын
there is no such thing as mountainvikings... the term viking is a way of life not a person or people
@Surga_myth_dewa_real10 ай бұрын
Now days,in time super tech right now,is still so much giant creature and wild animal attack human,,imagine in that artefact time edge,perhaps its still survival with dyno or some other giant animal grouping❤❤
@themobseat2 жыл бұрын
The First Nation natives do nothing to explore their history through science, but they are the first to lay claim and sue when a white archaeologist discovers something about their history.
@triciamcmillan12822 жыл бұрын
It’s sad that they don’t have the same money and resources as the Canadian government to preserve their history like white people preserve theirs in state sponsored museums. SMH
@courtneyriley185 Жыл бұрын
Exactly 💯
@cassidylockard15272 жыл бұрын
Could I come help look ??
@rented_mule87902 жыл бұрын
The climate changed and buried t h e artifacts in snow, which changed to ice patches.
@ashlaunicaalpari45846 ай бұрын
Good point… the climate changed as they were buried… now thousands of years later they reappear due to climate change also
@TheBadger5555 ай бұрын
Hot is okay. It’s when it gets cold that man will face the hardest trials
@cameronkapetanov54673 ай бұрын
Who narrated this? His voice is so familiar!
@Dynomitedog218 күн бұрын
I remember the kennewick man drama, what a mess. Glad they came to a quick compromise!
@elconquistador50953 ай бұрын
Interesting that the Mexica (Aztecs) used the al atl as one of their weapons..
@4wdflying6 ай бұрын
Since this turned into a video about climate it is strange nobody thought to explain how primitive people we're leaving items underneath what became ice Fields clearly was a lot warmer in the past
@pattersonfilm91172 жыл бұрын
Where are the skeletons of the carabou they killed? They should be preserved in the ice near the darts no?
@Konkata2 жыл бұрын
Reindeer are small enough to move
@pattersonfilm91172 жыл бұрын
@@Konkata What in pieces?
@nathanduckeorth8062 жыл бұрын
They might have missed
@pattersonfilm91172 жыл бұрын
@@nathanduckeorth806 Enough times to starve to death?lol 🤷♂️ they had to have killed and ate something or we wouldn’t be here today.
@oldmanfromscenetwentyfour81642 жыл бұрын
It would have been carried and processed at their main site, very little would have remained. Meat, skin, bones, antlers would have been made into various tools or weapons.
@noreenmadden30286 ай бұрын
I live near to where the oldest Fish trap in the world are made by the Aboriginal peoples.Noreen Australia 🦘
@darrelld.paveyjr.14775 ай бұрын
Can anyone further educate me on the Radiocarbon Dating Process? {date+\-45} is that half from each Early & Late or the total 45 from both ends? Example 1297+45=1342 & 1297-45=1252 or 1297-22=1275 & 1297+23=1298? How is this calculation done and why is there such a wide variance? I pick 1297 because Sterling Bridge was also September 11, but the number are easy to work out. Are these calculations more difficult the older the specimen? And how do Paleontologists date fossils, how did they achieve their mathematical or statistical dates? How do us English Majors know these are accurate?
@brianlucas760414 күн бұрын
So, the oldest organic artifact is about 4000 years before present. Kinda throws out the millions and millions of years theory.
@Carl-ht7cg6 ай бұрын
Sweet, I like playing with my native darts and arrows😎
@honeybear84852 жыл бұрын
Very interesting I love archaeology and science I'm just not a big fan radioisotopes dating... Just the fact that radio carbon-14 dating two k's rapidly... I would love to look at some graphs from ice core samples.. right there in Canada if they were available... But even if the weapons and tools.. are only sixteen hundred years old. Would still be fascinating and an amazing find.. so much material.. especially organic.. can be contaminated.. an effective through the process. Of ice melting and repeating the process... Not to mention the chemical changes.. from the Suns temperature fluctuation and radiation levels... Thank you for sharing really cool... Such a blessing.. be able to be.. in the field.. finding a researching these artifacts 🙏💚
@workpfister5 ай бұрын
Best documentary ever on you tube going to share it on my social media people got to know about the "shit in these montians"😅😅😅😅 i Love it Art Johns with forever live in my memory Art Johns you legend
@dartmart92635 ай бұрын
Thank Goodness for “climate change”!
@cinemaipswich46362 жыл бұрын
If you can measure anything in place or in time, then it is not pre-historic.
@davidbamford47216 ай бұрын
I wish that someone would invite some aboriginal Australians, who have used woomeras to hunt, where accuracy is essential or you go hungry.
@holgere.5 ай бұрын
"Story of the land" - all there is! Understand who we are, the clans/tribes/nations. And realise that this rock is our home. And indeed, 'Oetzi' is not 3,500 but 5,500 years old! And, 😉 we should try not to touch potential artefacts w. bare hands!
@gayeinggs51796 ай бұрын
And our ancestors were cleverer than us these darts are. Better than we can do !
@markmiller314520 күн бұрын
Maybe.....we could actually acknowledge that the ice wasn't there when these items were left there.....ice comes and goes.
@tracyworley514 ай бұрын
We're discovering our past as our future is ending.
@baddog93202 жыл бұрын
First Nations should not have exclusive rights to artifacts. They moved around. So there is no way of telling who they belong to. There are nations that are thousands of miles away from where they were only a thousand years ago. Also until all Natives are recognized. No one should have any rights.
@JessiBell_Valo21202 жыл бұрын
😂😂😂
@gayeinggs51796 ай бұрын
300 years is not old that is a great great grandfather. Not 4000 years old that a find not 300 years old
@mattmatt65724 ай бұрын
Also clovis point I found was not flat it was spiraled I would guesse to also spin the dart
@gayeinggs51796 ай бұрын
I wonder if they will ever find a body from 4000 years ago
@katearmiger85357 ай бұрын
The Australian indigenous people have used a similar tool called a Woomera. Has been around for upwards of forty thousand years
@DonHavjuan6 ай бұрын
Actually it has only been in Australia for about 5000 years. And dingos only about 3400 years. All these things arrived much later than most Australians think.
@lifesajoke6965 Жыл бұрын
You "but he's muh ancestor" people are ridiculous.
@siriusleigh247 ай бұрын
This was annoyingly presented and far too many ad's.
@michaelchase4186 ай бұрын
Can't comment on the annoyingly presented part. That's on them, but the ads? You realize this whole platform is for profit, right? That it exists because there's monetary costs and people to pay, both the creators on the platform and the platform employees/owners itself. You realize that it only exists that way because the whole human existence of all the world exists on a platform of monetary trade? Literally nothing exists for free. Everything has a cost, even down to our human existence, even down to a blade of grass growing. Shut tf up and pay them.
@siriusleigh246 ай бұрын
@michaelchase418 wow really I didn't know what doh me... you spent so much time arguing about something obvious when my point was the "frequency " of adverts. Adverts in themselves are obviously not the issue you pea brain, but the add frequency per time of content shown is excessive to the point where it will have a negative impact on viewership. The ratio matters. Look at successful channels, and you'll quickly notice a content to advert ratio that doesn't have such a negative effect of viewing pleasure. There's no need to be such a crybaby about it.
@Flowshow886 ай бұрын
Your comment is annoyingly irrelevant
@siriusleigh246 ай бұрын
@Flowshow88 still whining... let it go kid. No need to insult me and then report my reply because you know I'm right.
@georgedavis65835 ай бұрын
Its almost like the climate has changed before
@austerepanic946116 күн бұрын
So what they are saying is the world was much warmer and humans thrived further north than we do now..... so perhaps warmer and more co2 is better for humans....
@rachelstrahan24862 жыл бұрын
👍
@heidiengellenner96512 жыл бұрын
The lower cost clothing stores. Martials, Ross and TJMax.. something went wrong for the clothes to end up there, and all beings that shop there get the benefit.
@randyclark114 ай бұрын
I appreciate the hard work and investigation. The problem I have is the vast amounts of time attached to the dating processes. The earth is not billions, millions of years old. Genesis clearly tells us the age. Science is pretty much full of holes especially with time. Conventional science is falling away unable to counter the history provided by Genesis. The flood is cutting off their billons of years theories. They know they are just inflated accepted dating processes.
@lacey38802 жыл бұрын
They...r listing !!?
@terryfox15756 ай бұрын
If we don't stop climate change what exactly will happen to the Earth, I've heard a lot of arguments about climate change but I've never heard anybody articulate what would happen to the Earth if we don't stop it
@4wdflying6 ай бұрын
It might be like it was when the prehistoric people were walking about from under that ice
@StuWilson-mh2fl2 жыл бұрын
Please stop the music! It makes it hard to hear some of the message.