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@Charlie-phlezk2 жыл бұрын
So when you upload a video privately, then at the time you make it public, is when it's published to us all, correct? 😇
@trader21372 жыл бұрын
bruh places where they used pottery wasnt afflicted by ice age at all, they had pretty much warm climate over there
@5_meter_spread2 жыл бұрын
What about "out of place artifacts" like poetry found in coal mines? There many more but I would say that is the most famous one to point out
@akoski122 жыл бұрын
Not going to lie, I have never even thought about putting clay over a basket to make pottery. Now that you mention it, it makes complete sense to me. Thanks again for the great content and making me think about different ways ancient humans were surviving harsh climates.
@AncientArchitects2 жыл бұрын
It does make sense doesn’t it? So simple but so effective!
@skattyopt2 жыл бұрын
Wow yer its seems so obvious now 🙄
@dragonfox2.0582 жыл бұрын
sure you already got the shape you want so press the clay in there and fire the basket away in the fire. We used to do that to create hollow forms for metalworking. Craft techniques are nifty!
@machtschnell74522 жыл бұрын
Rather almost like carbon fiber is made today.
@jonkore20242 жыл бұрын
No plastic
@hampshirepiano638310 ай бұрын
Sensational information presented without sensationalism; what a relief.
@jamietie2 жыл бұрын
I paused the video to take a screenshot of the graphic that goes from "First Pottery" to "My House" because it made me laugh out loud. Nicely done. Great channel
@MrRazielJames2 жыл бұрын
You could totally hold my attention for 30+ minutes everytime you make a video. And I would happily wait for longer form content.
@flipflopski29512 жыл бұрын
Asian cord wrapped ware looks amazingly like the pottery found here on the East Coast of North America. Look at Jomon pottery from Japan and Iroquois pottery from New York. I've made the cord wrapped paddles used and reproduced the pottery myself.
@thomaswalsh2872 жыл бұрын
The earliest pottery may well have been discovered, rather than invented. You can cook a fish, wrapped in seaweed or wet greens. Cover it in clay, and set it in the coals to bake. Juicy , evenly cooked and not subject to scorching or ashes. You pop one in the fire, but you fall asleep. When you awaken, many hours later, your fire has dwindled and your fish wrap is hard as a rock. So, you crack it open, and extract your dry, overcooked fish. But you are left with the hard, though largely intact hull of your fish-cooking vessel. You play with it, and discover that it holds water, and doesn`t dissolve back into gooey clay. These first potters were hunter-gatherers. They were migratory, carrying only essentials when making camp. Baskets are light, pottery is heavy. I would wager that most pots in this era, were made as part of establishing a new camp. Most riverbanks contain clay, and generations of smart, observant people would recognize the properties of different clay soils and understand how they behaved when wet, sun dried and fired (accidentally or otherwise) Pre-agricultural pottery is rare for a reason. It was heavy, fragile, and of limited value to itinerant people. I wonder when the connection between hotter, charcoal fires and superior finished pottery was made. Likely, it coincdes with sedentary, agricultural settlements.
@user-mp3eq6ir5b2 жыл бұрын
In southern Mexico they sell chicken baked in clay, feathers, guts & all. While riding the FFCC in the 80's, i saw a family tear one apart, even had the yolks of eggs!
@Bit-while_going2 жыл бұрын
Also, imagine that someone was cremated after death in their canoe that they'd been using all their life to provide for the tribe. Along the way the canoe had been repaired many times with clay to waterproof the vessel. The fire is very hot and the body/boat is vaporized, but what remains is the clay that was inside the canoe. Somewhere nearby a lone genius gets an idea...
@timontherocks75212 жыл бұрын
If you fall asleep the fire cools down to under 500 °C and that wont sinter the clay. I had the same idea with birds but the more I think about it the less I believe it. You wont cook a fish at 1000 °C or just at 600 °C over hours. You would place it into glowing embers and they have 500 °C max. I think the only way are systematic heating tests or perhaps a wildfire with very high temperatures and a smart observer trying to reproduce what he has found.
@2MuchPurple2 жыл бұрын
I remember myself at age 7 or 8 discovering a clay deposit near a creek in my native California. Itcseemed amazing to me somehow, and ay 72 I still remember it. I must have been similar to our ancient ancestors in their time.
@raywhitehead730Ай бұрын
Bet you got this correct.
@JMM33RanMA2 жыл бұрын
Considering how brittle and fragmentary were the shards found, we are lucky to have even that much evidence. Amazing detective work is needed to piece together the evidence [this looks like an intentional pun, but I'll leave it for readers to wonder if it is or isn't]. Thanks, Matt, for yet another glimpse into the far distant in time lives of our ancestors.
@herewardtheunwoke29402 жыл бұрын
Pottery is actually reasonably indestructible, it is why we have such an extensive artefact record and why it is used as the primary source for dating.
@AKu-xs5vg2 жыл бұрын
You forgot the fact that it was found in southern China. Hot weather severely degrades artifacts and fossils. The oldest fossil DNA from europe are 50,000ya, while the oldest fossil DNA from SEasia is 8000ya. Despite this, Southeast asia still has the oldest cave art (45,0000ya)
@omegatired2 жыл бұрын
As I recall from a period where I was fascinated by pottery, there is a theory that cooking baskets were lined with clay which then led to the baskets being used as molds to produce pure clay bowls, etc. Doing this during the ice age actually makes a lot of sense. Firing the clay may have been an accidental discovery when a basket got too hot, leaving only the clay lining at some point. Our ancestors were smart people to recognize that the pottery was more resilient than the baskets ... Nice presentation.
@tonygrowley52752 жыл бұрын
Yep! That's what we learned in class. I was a professional potter for over 20 years and this makes perfect sense There is archaeological evidence of this. Clay pots with basket impressions, also people who still boil water in baskets over fire.
@GeckoHiker2 жыл бұрын
Can you suggest any resources for this theory of clay lined baskets preceding the introduction of pottery? I find this fascinating. Also, I've seen traditional Native American tightly woven cooking baskets in use. As I understand it these were not actually placed in the fire, though accidents would have happened. Even animal skin bags were used for cooking in the same way--with hot stones dropped inside. It's like we are missing aomething or it's staring right at us and we don't quite get it, yet. So somewhere along the way people got the idea to line the inside of baskets. Maybe by using clay lined depressions first they got the idea. I suspect carrying water came before the clay lining, then the cooking followed.
@GeckoHiker2 жыл бұрын
@@tonygrowley5275 I'm interested in learning which groups might still be using woven baskets over fires. Do you know of any resources I could look up?
@GeckoHiker2 жыл бұрын
@@tonygrowley5275 I just found the hangi used by the Maori. It is a stonelined firepit where they cook food in covered baskets. Fascinating.
@timontherocks75212 жыл бұрын
Pottery is heavy and only makes sense if you stay longer at one place. The alternative are sacks from leather filled with water in which you drop heated stones. To cook meat for hours would be more convenient in an oven. Pottery needs to be heated for long hours at 500 - 1200 °C. That are already temperatures for metallurgy and glas. Ceramics wont come into existence by chance in a log fire. Perhaps people smeared a chicken with clay to keep it juicy and had the fire heated up in a strong wind. I guess it is possible to make a more or less watertight pot with wood ash and water. That might be the beginning of pottery.
@jimfulbrook23462 жыл бұрын
Great job as usual. I have learned so much from your videos and I appreciate that you are careful about not going beyond data and artifacts when you speculate on the past. The hallmark of true science is often to suspend judgment rather than theorizing haphazardly (overreaching really). Thanks again for your efforts. JimF Fairfax, VA USA
@ignachioelsmith90532 жыл бұрын
I see someone else mentioned it below, but a fascinating idea about the evolution of pottery. Used to initialy waterproof woven containers. Brilliant, but so simple. Makes me wonder about cordedware pottery. It may not have been fired the same way, but just continuing the traditional aesthetic. Reminds me of the idea stone pillars copy the look of pillars made from reeds. Another great, eye opening, and thought provoking, video. Thanks.
@phylismaddox48802 жыл бұрын
Um, what's the clay content of the soil? Low clay content could explain why they used stone instead. In places where clays are readily available it's just a matter of time before people notice that it hardens when heated but in low clay content areas ceramics would most likely be introduced by trade.
@watcherspirit23512 жыл бұрын
An excellent documentary full of new (to me) and valuable knowledge. Thank you for it.
@penneyburgess54312 жыл бұрын
It’s interesting to me that early Native Americans boiled water by throwing hot stones in a basket full of water, and fish was cooked sometimes by covering the fish with river clay and putting it in a fire. It wouldn’t have been long, I am assuming, that the intuitive connection of the fish pattern in the clay after cooking it would have lent the idea of water proofing a basket and hence pottery. Cool. Thank you Matthew.
@anita22932 жыл бұрын
This channel always saves me when I'm bored. Great job
@iamllux Жыл бұрын
When someone says "pre-pottery" or "didn't have the wheel" I take it with a grain of salt. There could be any number of reasons we haven't found such things in any given area. I really appreciate this video. Thanks.
@agnesday92332 жыл бұрын
i recall fifty years ago being told that pottery was invented by lining baskets with clay to make them waterproof then inadvertently fired by setting them to boil water on an open fire. i have experimented firing pots that way,with reasonable results. but to equate pottery with climate or even the invention of agriculture is putting the cart before the horse. pottery has been invented and reinvented multiple times in human history and as is often the case, it is not necessity that is the drive but the opportunity of having suitable materials. not all people have access to clay and still fewer have access to clay suitable for the uneven temperatures of firing on a bonfire. having the right material to begin with, added to human ingenuity often has astonishing effects. Take the Jomon culture for one example and isn't it interesting that they and the Chinese instance have resulted in regions with histories of exceptional ceramics. It is the same with every other material. It may well turn out that it was the availability of those workable hardstones for those marvelous bowls that powered Gobelki Tepe just as it was obsidian that powered Catayl Huyuk. As with megaliths and pyramids, it is always the accessibility of materials that drives the culture.
@thetidycookie2 жыл бұрын
This is true even of the industrial revolution in Britain. Easy access to coal allowed it to happen.
@sneeringimperialist66672 жыл бұрын
Pottery has to be really dry when fired. Steam will wreck anything when it gets hot enough , and pottery fires well above that temperature. They could have cooked dry food in it , and overcooked it, though.
@williamrosenbloom2152 жыл бұрын
When I was at engineering school I came to a similar realization that material science is THE limiting factor in advancement. People thought of submarines and combustion engines and computers and helicopters hundreds of years before they became reality. The world had to wait for material science to achieve the proper tolerances.
@herewardtheunwoke29402 жыл бұрын
OK, I'm just gonna say it - in archaeology pieces of pottery are referred to as sherds, not shards. That is pieces of glass.
@rhettoracle96792 жыл бұрын
Humans can only go 3 days without water, making range 1.5 days away without ability to bring water, or @75 miles. Pottery is vastly superior to animal skins for this purpose. Truly an important step in exploration and migration! Peace
@AncientArchitects2 жыл бұрын
Massive step, agreed!
@jonkore20242 жыл бұрын
Large bird eggs
@hexadecimal73002 жыл бұрын
If you have to bring water with you!
@GeckoHiker2 жыл бұрын
I have suspected that the need to transport water efficiently with pottery predated cooking woth pottery. Nomadic proples probably used pit cooking with leaves holding their food.
@douginorlando6260 Жыл бұрын
Boiling water must have been vital for both sterilization and extracting Maximum food from animals. Plants such as acorns need to be heated but not necessarily in water. This can’t be done in animal skins nor any kind of water proofed basket. Stone bowls would work but hard to make, hard to heat compared to thin walled pottery. Plus imagine the hot water needs for a clan of 50 people. This means larger bowls with lids would be the ideal solution. This might be the practical driving force for pottery over stone
@johncurtis9202 жыл бұрын
It takes a certain type of soil, clay, to make pottery. You can't just take some dirt and slap it on a basket. So, a question I have is did the Gobekli Tepe region have that type, or not? This might explain it.
@herewardtheunwoke29402 жыл бұрын
Pottery can be made from any type of clay tbh. Locally made pots could use clay from river beds or they would simply mine it. Certain clays were sought, however; for example medieval whiteware pottery was made from, in general, a formation called the Reading Beds - a type of pink clay found across parts of southern England. It fire white and usually had a green glaze added. Check out Cheam or Kingston ware.
@Fuzzmo1472 жыл бұрын
Terrazzo floors & plastered skulls? I’d say YES
@Rovinman2 жыл бұрын
Basically, the finer the "dirt" is the more clay-like it becomes ! So the "finest" clay is the last to settle in water, (try it out), So in a puddle of water, the clay is on top. The guy who realises this is the guy who becomes the first potter !
@johncurtis9202 жыл бұрын
@@Rovinman Thanks for the education provided in the reply, not only to this one but to the others. I suspect the first "guy" to realize this about finer dirt was a "gal." The division of labor done by pre-modern societies, men tending to the hunt and women more to the home and hearth front, makes me think it was the female who first came up with ideas we now take for granted. From pottery to weaving (textiles) and the like, I suspect it was the ladies who had the "ah HA" moment in those critical areas of our primate development over time. And no this isn't a "battle of the sexes," comment. Or shouldn't be viewed as such. It's more an acknowledgement about just how complimentary, how necessary, the two sexes are to each other. John~ American Net'Zen
@Rovinman2 жыл бұрын
@@johncurtis920 I think you have a good point there, although the Hunter may have stepped in a puddle and got covered in clay, which was caked by the time he got back from the hunt ! But the answer is we just don't know, but I'm sure that agter the caked mud fell off the hunters foot, someone saw how dry and hard it had become, hence a container of sorts. It's all speculation ! How long after the Sun baking and softening again, did the idea of Fire hardening appear ? I am sure it was more than one rainy day, and a night in by the fire ! But I like the idea you propose ! I'm ALL for innovation !
@GeckoHiker2 жыл бұрын
I was born during the greatest age where humans worked out how make drinking vessels and plates out of PAPER! Then my mother discovered Tupperware and humanity was doomed.
@JohnSmith-ft2tw2 жыл бұрын
That was the tipping point, but the real speed of change was Pampers. When disposable diapers came along, roadside litter lead to a plastic planet. (Mini rant over.🤯)
@d.t.bigley72542 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this video. I know you only use the terms used by "professionals", but I always cringe a little over such finite terms created out of the lack of evidence instead of actual evidence. Far too many times have discoveries been claimed as "the first". Challenging the static narratives is a large part of this channel, so once again, thanks!
@benmiller98542 жыл бұрын
I guess you really do read the comments. Realistically how can you actually date the invention of pottery? I believe it is a relative term. If a concave stone is found naturally and used for crushing herbs and grains, is it considered to be pottery? Or perhaps this is what inspired the use of clay. It is so brittle that I am positive that it has been reinvented a few times.
@SenshiOngaku2 жыл бұрын
“My House” lol
@joeseabert83912 жыл бұрын
We have to keep in mind vast majority of people lived on the shoreline of the oceans a shoreline during the ice age which would be under ruffly 200 feet of water now.
@austinellis76252 жыл бұрын
i chuckled at "My House", cheers :)
@parrotraiser65412 жыл бұрын
It wouldn't be surprising if the first step in the invention of pottery was the lining of bags with mud in order to transport fire from place to place, Noticing that the mud turned into a sort of stone would be the next.
@amommamust2 жыл бұрын
I find it incomprehensible that pottery was not used very early on, just not durable pottery. As a 4 year old playing in the creek, I discovered clay and made stuff out of it.
@DaveTexas2 жыл бұрын
Sweetie, you weren’t firing that clay so what you made wasn’t pottery. You didn’t pay attention to the video, did you? It’s sad when exceptionally simple concepts elude people.
@amommamust2 жыл бұрын
@@DaveTexas I did not say what I made was pottery, I was pointing out that clay is ubiquitous and almost impossible to not notice how useful it is. I was not firing my little clay pots, but somewhere in ancient times, it seems very, very likely that someone did a crude form of firing the clay. Some people are just so pretentious they cannot help but being assholes.
@kurtschulmeyer10412 жыл бұрын
Pottery, ceramic figures and carved figures show that early man was much smarter than we were taught.
@johncurtis9202 жыл бұрын
Indeed. They were us, and we are them. Anatomically speaking no difference. They were "modern" humans. So it stands to reason they were just as capable as we are today, just as intelligent. They just didn't have the massive information infrastructure we have today, from which our intelligence now springs, although from their ability to work in stone it's pretty clear they had information we lack even today... John~ American Net'Zen
@StephiSensei262 жыл бұрын
Mind broadening! Thank you Matt!
@Melih_R_Calikoglu2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Matt. Another eye opening video. It seems we need to make a map and timeline that includes all things happened in prehistory including all places discovered to understand how and why they are linked
@AncientArchitects2 жыл бұрын
I might start one in photoshop
@telebubba55272 жыл бұрын
@@AncientArchitects Where does that timeline map come from that you show at the end? I'd like to download it. That map already give wonderful insight because it also has a timeline of the population on earth. Often people don't realize how incredibly small the population was back then and tend to think in many millions.
@debbralehrman59572 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing this explanation. When I had asked before what was meant by Pre-Pottery. And I thanked you for the answer. But I still had trouble with how they were able to cook and eat with out some way to store and hold things. I didn't get that they made them out of stone. But it makes sense if they were so good with carving rock and this is what they knew that is what they used. And the idea of making pots inside of baskets is a great idea. I can surely see how this was a way to start if the idea was new to you. I have worked with clay and made pots. So the baskets would have given you just what you needed to get you started. The size the shape flat or round. Thank you so much for this explanation. I do enjoy your videos.
@user-mp3eq6ir5b2 жыл бұрын
I like the transition stage of the Americans where they covered a woven grass basket with pine tar so they could boil water in it. Much lighter and durable than a ceramic covered one. All these innovations created the NeoLithic.
@socratesDude2 жыл бұрын
What indicates that farming has occurred? Figuring that out sounds interesting too.
@floydriebe47552 жыл бұрын
hi, Matt! another interesting, eye opening video. there is a comment about how pottery wasn't discovered, it was just there. no big deal. get some clay and, voila! pottery! balderdash! my 1st wife took courses in pottery and i'm hear to tell you, making a functional bowl, vase, or whatever is FAR from easy! and, you can't use just any clay with success! and, the firing process needed to be learned, either by trial and error or being taught how. even then, it isn't easy. naysayers need to attempt things before saying they are easy. sorry, just had to get that off my chest. it really gets my goat when people downplay the acheivements of the ancients!
@vikingskuld2 жыл бұрын
Lol great points, I wanted to say that pottery may just be to big a pain to make compared to stone wood or animal horn vessels. Makes me wonder how far back stone cooking utensils go. Loved you pointed out the issues of pottery thanks.
@judithgockel10012 жыл бұрын
Consider the fire pit. One might line it with some handy, sticky earth to help keep flames under control. The fire is kept going wherever possible, for warmth and cooking/drying various foodstuffs. It’s nearly time to move on, so the fire is allowed to die out. There is a very odd change in the lining earth, it is hard, and does not bend. Hmmmm. Interesting stuff. Perhaps a youngster, or a woman who tends the fire takes a piece or so from curiosity, fools with it, finds it doesn’t let water melt or penetrate it. ‘Hey, guys! Look at this!’ Pottery is born.
@jnturner78282 жыл бұрын
I believe that the whole Tas Tepeler region is limestone and no clay - perhaps if there had been they'd have developed pottery
@ian_b2 жыл бұрын
"In my day we made proper stone pots. Kids today are so soft."
@jelsner50772 жыл бұрын
Hooray! Another Ancient Architects video!
@AncientArchitects2 жыл бұрын
Enjoy!
@punchipoint84572 жыл бұрын
The push and nag to subscribe kills the video.
@JamesFenczik2 жыл бұрын
My favorite pre-pottery culture is Japan's Jomon (10,000 year ago). The people named after their pottery style. (cords wrapped around their pottery. The inspiration for the art style of Zelda Breath of the Wild)
@AncientArchitects2 жыл бұрын
Yes, was reading about them at the weekend!
@Ps3luvr2602 жыл бұрын
Why is it that there called pre-pottery but are also named for their pottery, that’s super confusing from my uneducated perspective
@JamesFenczik2 жыл бұрын
@@Ps3luvr260 yeah it's super lame. A lot of the western/European history written by (and especially in) the 1800s is really dumb and racist and is just never updated/ corrected.
@Airwave2k22 жыл бұрын
@@JamesFenczik Claiming it is dumb and racist is just it's own kind of dumbness. It is eurocentric and it is ok that is this way. Europeans were in a long time the only ones going out there and digging up history to make a puzzle more complete, refining the way of doing it to the way archeology works as a field all over the world today. Most of the world would be middle age central without what happened in Europe and you and me if we were even born wouldn't know crap about anything beside cooked up stories some people tell us in fancy big buildings.
@JamesFenczik2 жыл бұрын
@@Airwave2k2 claiming Europeans were "the only ones" is that dumb racism I'm talking about lol.
@raywhitehead730Ай бұрын
My take on pottery is that it really became a serious endeavor when beer was discovered. No pots, no beer.
@flipflopski29512 жыл бұрын
The technique of using cord wrapped paddles to decorate pottery like the vessels shown in the video may have a way to add a decorative motif related to basket made pottery but it's not certain that basket pottery was the first type made or if most pottery using cultures even made it that way. Side Note: The punctate pottery rim sherd shown in the video is exactly the same as the punctate pottery found here on the East Coast of America. Parallel evolution of the technology from Asia and America or direct contact?.. Nobody knows.
@larrytinsley42472 жыл бұрын
stuff just keeps getting older
@orwhat242 жыл бұрын
It’s interesting to consider how important pottery was thousands of years ago.
@glennllewellyn73692 жыл бұрын
Ah the simple life...just don’t break the pot else you get kicked out of the cave.
@AncientArchitects2 жыл бұрын
Haha
@EnisudR2 жыл бұрын
“My House” 😆
@808bigisland2 жыл бұрын
There is no use case for fragile pottery. Stone vessels last much longer and are multiuser. Pottery is a sign of a new caste of workers creating a surplus and making their own tools.
@barrywalser23842 жыл бұрын
This was a wonderfully complete, brief history of the creation of pottery. Thank You Matt for the research and production!
@phobiaone3062 жыл бұрын
Once again your persistent digging has brought us obscure knowledge which provokes one to re-evaluate what we thought we understood!
@AncientArchitects2 жыл бұрын
I sometimes like researching more obscure but important topics. I always like learning!
@phobiaone3062 жыл бұрын
@@AncientArchitects Amen brother. That is why I am Subscribed to channels like yours. Love filling my head with weird knowledge, and love it even more when that weird knowledge comes in handy. Thank you!
@MrTryAnotherOne2 жыл бұрын
Pottery only makes sense after people developed settlements (and maybe agriculture). It's too cumbersome and too fragile to transport (by carrying).
@tsclly23772 жыл бұрын
As 'your' bag starts wearing out.. turn it into a clay pot.. recycling.. something that this modern society need to do more of.
@TheVMYak2 жыл бұрын
You can see the potential arc of development. If you line a basket with clay you can carry water in it, it’s not a huge leap from there to accidental or perhaps even intentional firing. Cool :0)
@DivXDemonRik2 жыл бұрын
great episode. keep them coming.
@설-s4k5 ай бұрын
The history of china's pottery technology is amazing. The information that they made pottery by covering a basket with clay is amazing. I wonder how primitive humans discovered pottery. A bowl covered with clay to keep the water from flowing, is this made by heating it for cooking? Thank you for making this interesting video!
@Charlie-phlezk2 жыл бұрын
Watching immediately!
@AncientArchitects2 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@RobertBeerbohm2 жыл бұрын
Amazing. Thank you!
@Brusentsev2 жыл бұрын
Very interesting. Would you make a video about Japanese Jomon period? Pottery and clay figurines of that period are absolutely fascinating.
@kenlieck77562 жыл бұрын
I just *knew* this whole “pre-pottery pottery” scenario was only gonna get more complicated…
@art1muz132 жыл бұрын
AFTER YESTERDAY'S VIDEO WITH ANDREW GOGH, INNER EARTH AND GREEN ENTITIES, A LOT OF QUESTIONS WERE ANSWERED IN MY ITTY BITTY MIND, SO 8,000 YEARS IS NOT EVEN A DROP IN THE HISTORICAL BUCKET.
@krisbruenn108227 күн бұрын
Dolni Vestonice in Czech Republic dates to 28,000 BP and features a kiln and fired clay objects.
@malakiblunt2 жыл бұрын
unlike many ancient inventions its very easy to imagine how pottery was invented -
@user-mp3eq6ir5b2 жыл бұрын
Had to reload page about 6 times to get past the 14 second no opt out ads... it's not you, been getting this so frequently I'm becoming proficient at it. I like the 5 second ads because only with discipline can you brand yourself in that time, even tho there would be 2 ads in a row. Any advertiser can't set their image in 5 seconds has already failed on the shelf. You're Welcome.
@fortuitousthings86062 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this I had no idea I was still convinced pottery was 8000 years old fantastic really pleased to be put straight fabulous thanks so much!
@brianmackenzie12212 жыл бұрын
That was fabulous!
@AtlasRathbane4346 Жыл бұрын
But seriously....could stone pottery making lead humans to this level of skill with stonemasonry.... Never thought about that before
@joban49632 жыл бұрын
Concrete denial is a weird ideology to have considering that clay pottery is effectively the same thing. Would you even be able to spot 10,000 year old formed clay being different from random pieces of dirt?
@taylormorris_2 жыл бұрын
This is why I had true distain for the term "pre-pottery"!!
@ronaldgoss68552 жыл бұрын
If anyone reads this I have an idea what the clay venues figurines were used for.. Once it’s pointed out it’s obvious, an “oh of course what an elegant solution to a simple problem.
@dazuk19692 жыл бұрын
I don't know enough about Chinese pottery history to comment, but as you said, there has been no pottery found at Gobekli Tepe or the surrounding sites. Very interesting vid as always Matt....peace to ya.
@AncientArchitects2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching mate
@marcv26482 жыл бұрын
I love this topic.
@doomed2die5952 жыл бұрын
I committed Heresy, I watched video..........before hitting the Like button, Blasphemy!
@ShortbusMooner2 жыл бұрын
You'd think a cup would be an immediate invention.. 🤔😁
@Traderjoe2 жыл бұрын
It makes sense they would have filled a basket with clay, as they were probably using the basket to carry it to begin with. They could have been filling the basket with muddy clay, and waiting for the water to trickle out and dry out a bit maybe even put it by the fire to assist in the process and forgot about it and the basket eventually went up in flames and then noticed the interesting shaped remnant. That corded texture is useful for grip, and pleasing to the eye, and if you ever saw an old fashioned wash board, the grooves help with abrading clothing to clean it.
@dragonfox2.0582 жыл бұрын
wow surprising! so many things to discover...so little time ❤️
@AncientArchitects2 жыл бұрын
I know the feeling
@ProfessorToadstool2 жыл бұрын
top notch video
@tokos42732 жыл бұрын
I learned lots of new stuff. Thank you.
@deadhorse13912 жыл бұрын
Gourd containers were probably more common but just didn’t survive like pottery would
@williammaurer94502 жыл бұрын
It's interesting that they didn't make pottery but they made concrete/terrazzo.
@MrJackwork2 жыл бұрын
Thanks, as always.
@pweddy12 жыл бұрын
More is lost to history than is ever found. We have no first person documents from Homer. The notion that the absence of evidence is the evidence absence is the same as questioning the existence of many known historical figures. Considering the complexity of making lime mortar and primitive concrete it seems very suspicious that they made concrete before discovering pottery. Pottery is significantly more straight forward and can be discovered by making a fire pit for a camp fire.
@JoesGuitar2 жыл бұрын
Another very informative and obviously well researched video! “my house” 😂😂 had me laughing 😆
@Billy420-692 жыл бұрын
I've got a few pieces of clay pottery I found when I was a kid in SE Mississippi one is red clay with a straight lines design and the other is darker colored with a design that looks like a fish vertebrate to me. I showed them to an archeologist and she said they were at least 11,000 years old.
@vikingskuld2 жыл бұрын
Great video thank you.
@telebubba55272 жыл бұрын
Great video. It's quite funny that we now use the word China, based on later imports a couple of hundred years back, without ever really knowing that the real origins lie there 10's of thousands years ago.😄
@mrains1002 жыл бұрын
Thank you.
@milivojestankovic99872 жыл бұрын
I love your videos ! You should check out Lepenski Vir and Vinca culture, they are interesting
@AncientArchitects2 жыл бұрын
Yes! Well aware of the Vinca - amazing culture!
@vernboraw33062 жыл бұрын
But isn’t there evidence of rudimentary concrete flooring?
@AncientArchitects2 жыл бұрын
There is at Gobekli Tepe… it’s called ‘Terrazzo’ - an artificial stone floor
@kevlarnegative2 жыл бұрын
I think it's safe to say that we do not and will not know when pottery was ever invented, we can only speculate by the oldest example we have but nothing is surten
@HunterCrim47672 жыл бұрын
Jolly good! Is that an outdated British phrase or is it still used commonly? (If not British please disregard) Squirrel!”
@inkwellflood82762 жыл бұрын
And I'd bet before that there was pottery to. Timelines are going back every week.
@hexadecimal73002 жыл бұрын
I wonder why they never made pots out of that Terrazzo?
@bigfatcody2 жыл бұрын
Like a month ago I told my girlfriend while watching one of these videos I showed her the handbags and said what if they’re just a bucket for carring water and everybody’s just overthinking it..
@glennthomas74352 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your time and effort put into these videos, bravo!
@AncientArchitects2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching and commenting
@SmokeyTreats2 жыл бұрын
I imagine the first pots were portable bathrooms to potty in, hence their name... LoL
@jonkore20242 жыл бұрын
20k years ago
@jonkore20242 жыл бұрын
Micro pottery particles in humans
@ВладимирРусляков-р1г Жыл бұрын
Best of the best!
@FreeWVson2 жыл бұрын
Makes since one group attacks another through there clay coverd basket in a fire and bam pottery
@heldlightning71182 жыл бұрын
Has anyone heard about the footsteps they found in New Mexico?