It's a boneyard that's where all the cavemen had their barbecues
@MrDalerex3 ай бұрын
@@kevinpearson6705 see that's what I am saying
@yannickbeaudin36833 ай бұрын
Lol wtf hope you dont believe what you wrote
@MikkellTheImmortal3 ай бұрын
Yup. And mammoths are tasty.
@MrDalerex3 ай бұрын
@@yannickbeaudin3683 I believe history isn't what we were told.
@MrDalerex3 ай бұрын
@yannickbeaudin3683 and why do guys and girls like you just have to be nasty. Why not just except someone's opinion for their own. Remember this world is perfect, and no one walks a perfect path
@RustyShackleford1083 ай бұрын
"Help me, Steppe Bison. I'm stuck in the permafrost!" 😜
@dylonpress70343 ай бұрын
Don't worry I'll help you 😂
@uncletiggermclaren75923 ай бұрын
"Hmm, didn't you also get "stuck" in the tar-pit just on the weekend?. I think you are doing this deliberately".
@Tronzoid3 ай бұрын
Literally was just about to post this exact comment word for word.
@TeeterTuckin3 ай бұрын
Seeing what I assume are older degenerates in the comment section it makes me more comfortable. Sometimes Pauly gets a bit too “youtuberish” and as a 27 year old the adhd kid style that’s extremely safe for work can be a bit much.
@RustyShackleford1083 ай бұрын
HOLY FLY POOP! I got a ❤ from my favorite KZbinr!
@guillermodelnoche3 ай бұрын
Super respectful blurring out the BeBe in every shot. Awesome video! I saw this initially on JR experience. Fascinating man and site!
@sforza20922 күн бұрын
It’s a baby. Nothing that needs to be blurred out. So strange…
@BallardBaller3 ай бұрын
14:33 when she flashes her wedding ring at you, after you say you want to impress her family 🤣
@rh55633 ай бұрын
Worn on the left ring finger, not the right.
@nunyabusiness32673 ай бұрын
lol i missed that
@BallardBaller3 ай бұрын
@@rh5563she had a pretty fancy ring on that right hand ring finger.
@DogSpeak3 ай бұрын
@@rh5563 Sometime the camera inverts the picture. What's left might be right and what's right might be wrong. Which one is different and does not belong?
@rh55633 ай бұрын
@@DogSpeak , copy. I have seen that before, but usually by people who republish someone else’s work and just flip it to conform to republishing guidelines. There would be no reason for Paulie to do that. Let’s ask Paulie.
@Joseph_Christopher3 ай бұрын
My theory is after the Younger Dryas events, water rushing over the landscape bringing bones and debris fro hundreds of square miles formed an eddy in that location, depositing a large amount of material.
@otool3 ай бұрын
What about the animals they’ve found frozen intact. Something happed quick and fast.
@bfstackledirect3 ай бұрын
@@otool yeah, a massive flood! caused by cosmic impacts instantly melting ice sheets.
@OwO---Drunk_Seulgi---OwO3 ай бұрын
Younger Dryass
@beavis63633 ай бұрын
@Joseph_Christopher, I'm kind of aligned. This seems like some type of wash or delta.
@mattiasdahlstrom20243 ай бұрын
@@bfstackledirect May be the same even that caused the Carolina Bays kzbin.info/www/bejne/ZoWtp2eJpJyYbbcsi=Tcg_i-uqtRMLoXPy
@kerrysmith98443 ай бұрын
I was there last year! Loved the bone dome and got to meet all the Reeves family. I was in awe. Such a great day
@OwO---Drunk_Seulgi---OwO3 ай бұрын
I bet you loved the bone dome.
@kerrysmith98443 ай бұрын
@OwO-NateHiggers-OwO yes I did. Had the best time
@OwO---Drunk_Seulgi---OwO3 ай бұрын
@@kerrysmith9844 any trouble walking the day after?
@GreenCanvasInteriorscape3 ай бұрын
I'm surprised your username is not a cancellation notification from KZbin yikes
@Luffybloxyt-p9lАй бұрын
yooo dud how do you get to viset and how do there make money
@Justthemow3 ай бұрын
15:32 this area was the bottom of an ancient water fall as the animals died and flowed down river their bones collected in the “plung pool void” you should dig deeper there will be a lot of gold under this area
@AsttoScott3 ай бұрын
That's a lie. To have a waterfall you need a cliff.
@christopherleveck683519 күн бұрын
@@AsttoScottthere could have been a cliff. Mountains have eroded over periods of 100's of thousands of years. Land has been pushed up in areas over periods of even 10's of thousands of years. The weight of miles thick flows of ice ground areas of Wisconsin flat. My father's farm was under miles of ice only 10 thousand years ago. These things change in what geologically speaking would be a blink of an eye. It doesn't take
@hiddentruth19823 ай бұрын
There was probably a river or creek running through there that would flood from time to time. Most likely that was a bend in the river where corpse were deposited. That would also explain the way the layers of mud were laid down that you can see in the wall. They aren't just even layers like if it was a plains.
@jrtruscott333 ай бұрын
A massive glacial lake caused that . Same thing that made the Grand canyon
@Weeks253 ай бұрын
@@jrtruscott33I’m assuming the glacier shifting is what pushed all the bones into one area?
@petercomeau7033 ай бұрын
@@jrtruscott33p
@ReggieMiller-sf7fi3 ай бұрын
Or the worldwide flood that happened about 4000 years ago. It was probably a main drainage hole that sucked everything into it. I’d encourage you to look into the scientific proof of Noah’s flood, it’s real stuff.
@geronimo5537Ай бұрын
This is exactly what I was thinking. There must have been a flood event every so often that pushed everything to this location. Or it could of even been from the ice formations over time.
@Ceil-Ciel3 ай бұрын
1:10 Bro ,is a VAMPIRE 😜
@paulhopkins19053 ай бұрын
Just an attention seeker
@Ultimategecko3 ай бұрын
Hence when he reveals his gold haul for the day he calls it the moment of tooth.
@brandenhellman43812 ай бұрын
Fame canine teeth??
@dianetersigni7359Ай бұрын
I know! Why?
@badgerwaxer1Ай бұрын
I loved watching John in Goldfathers a few years back. Truly a genuine guy. And just by chance, I watched that docu last week. people in cities have no idea what they are missing!
@O.K.-Raised3 ай бұрын
Loved this video! Not gold based but Pioneer based. Doesnt matter what the video is about, it will always have the Pauly personality and flare that we all love!
@quantumparodox3 ай бұрын
@6:36 "if you find bones, it's a good sign there might be bones around". words of wisdom.
@Canthus133 ай бұрын
The hole through that bone would be where a blood vessel entered the bone. It has to reach the marrow somehow.
@DogSpeak3 ай бұрын
This is what I found, 'A central artery, also known as the nutrient artery, enters the bone through a foramen and branches into smaller arteries and arterioles'.
@Josh-oz4yy3 ай бұрын
Looks carved. Deep central groove. Notched between the knuckles.
@OwO---Drunk_Seulgi---OwO3 ай бұрын
my bones is Bluetooth
@FoulOwl21123 ай бұрын
2:05 " I feel like finding a bone here would be really difficult". Literally steps on a rib bone...
@BellmanProduction3 ай бұрын
im glad im not the only one who noticed that lmao
@markmoorhead1442Ай бұрын
I thought I saw that too, a rib attached to a spinal vertebrae ? @ 1:58
@TheRealestBubbyКүн бұрын
Came down to look for this comment, feels intentional, but had me geeking out in the moment lol
@seedless-bud3 ай бұрын
as someone that is from Alaska it is so cool to see you visit! Hope you have a safe trip back home Bud
@anthonyd50793 ай бұрын
In the first few seasons of Alaskan Gold Rush, the Hoffman's found a tusk and asked around. They were told during the gold rush there were lakes of bone 6ft deep. There's only a few events that can do that kind of damage.
@OwO---Drunk_Seulgi---OwO3 ай бұрын
Oktoberfest
@Skriggler3 ай бұрын
Burning Man
@Teeveepicksures3 ай бұрын
magic zoo boat?
@AsttoScott3 ай бұрын
Happens every 12068 years.
@thatdude82472 ай бұрын
Catalina wine mixer?
@Spudz763 ай бұрын
Some bones have holes like that for ligaments or tendons or nerves to pass through, but total guess.
@uncletiggermclaren75923 ай бұрын
Yep. We humans have a few just like that, they look smooth and kinda artificial.
@stareintothewoods70303 ай бұрын
Maybe the ice edge from glaciers pushed the bones to that location
@halschultz3 ай бұрын
The hole is for a blood vessel to get into the bone, tendons and ligaments attach directly to the bone
@Camroc373 ай бұрын
Definitely nerves, not sure about ligaments and tendons. These holes are called foramen. The one he showed with this hole is a hinge joint, like your elbow.
@joroger927Ай бұрын
Nutrient artery
@biglawngnome3 ай бұрын
10:15 now that's a joke I can get behind, multi-level buffalo wing find 😂
@DahvitaPassells3 ай бұрын
Watched 3 hours of Joe Rogan interviewing that guy who owns the bone yard.. SUPER interesting story from an equally interesting guy.
@angelakimbrell12143 ай бұрын
12:17 The black bone with a hole in it-the hole may be where a tendon connected,-also, Pioneer Pauly STOP PUTTING THINGS IN YOUR MOUTH!! Science has found out that there are dormant viruses that are in the permafrost and you are making yourself very vulnerable to getting infected with something that doesn’t have any treatment for. You need to have something to chew on while you’re doing anything near there so you can keep that urge safely busy. You are irreplaceable!!! Stay safe ♥️
@thatsmallrockshop3 ай бұрын
He is helping fauci breed the new new covid strain 😅
@kevinbosworth33 ай бұрын
seen the 2 mens teeth both have fangs reeves family
@hoborobprospecting3 ай бұрын
Those are pretty awesome! I would not want to meet a cave lion or a saber tooth on my claim. The humans that lived among them were some tough people for sure
@NotYoNatchos3 ай бұрын
I imagine the bone yard is the site for an old plunge pool or lake bed where a fast streaming river used to flow into. The beat-up bone remnants, rather than full carcasses, tell us that the animals didn't die at that site- but most likely were transported from further upstream and deposited there by the drop in flowing force of water !
@markmoorhead14423 ай бұрын
The face carved in the bone at 14:53 is really cool !
@iambosscoАй бұрын
Hi Pauly. Larry from Montana here. My theory is that They were all PUSHED there by the glacier as it moved along. Just like a snow plow.
@DenverDave3033 ай бұрын
Haha I knew buffalo's had wings. 😂
@MrDalerex3 ай бұрын
@@DenverDave303 only the female Buffalo has wings! Lol
@Scott_Diverscott3 ай бұрын
Paulie: "If you find bones, that's a good sign there might be bones around" 🤣
@devinsullivan72332 ай бұрын
lol your standing in the Alaska bone yard. That’s a good sign bones are around!
@VincentNajger13 ай бұрын
Just even thinking about some of the wood from out of the bank too....that was growing tens of thousands of years ago and still looks like it fell off a tree a month ago. Gives you some perspective.
@Monsterreviews12173 ай бұрын
Most logical explanation towards the mass of animals buried there i can think of is there must of been some sort of mountain during the ice age that was affected by a earthquake which created a massive land slide of ice and dirt which froze over.
@BryDesignz3 ай бұрын
Just saw this in my recommended, gonna watch the whole thing and like it for ya! This is amazing man!
@nathans.37513 ай бұрын
The majority of the bones appear broken either longitudinally or transverse at the articulation prominence. I have seen bison bones in Iowa that looked the same. They were broken like that to allow access to the bone marrow. Whether they were dumped there over time or perhaps there was a river that the remains were thrown into and carried to that location would explain the fragmentary nature of the bones and their disposition in the soil.
@deannfrey34693 ай бұрын
Every paleontologist watching this is having a panic attack. Rightly so.
@GreenCanvasInteriorscape3 ай бұрын
Why?
@deannfrey34693 ай бұрын
@@GreenCanvasInteriorscape paleontologists can learn a lot about a species by the way it lays in the dirt. Also, many items are lost with the hydro method. What they are doing here is basically strip mining to sell these parts, this has nothing to do with learning anything.
@ronnie22able3 ай бұрын
@deannfrey3469 I felt a little bummed when she said tissue and hair are found,well there's lost DNA, and the bone with carved face is history of how the North American migration happened.
@reptilecare13 ай бұрын
Exactly im just a biologist but this fucked me up literally no different from the guys in Siberia or mongolia digging up bones with explosives and zero care😂
@DarkValorWolf3 ай бұрын
@@deannfrey3469They don't actually sell anything. But yeah, this method is the "we don't have the time or money to do this slowly" type of clearance unfortunately.
@paranormalnightmaretv2 ай бұрын
Great video
@AndreS_-df2nw3 ай бұрын
Geologists talk about ice dams breaking during portions of the ice age that held back huge vokumes of water. When the damwould break, it would take all manner of materials hundres of miles, up to very large boulders (larger than semi trucks) this may be part of something like that, where the animals were all swept into an area together, before the waters receded
@Glenn-m1t3 ай бұрын
Noah's flood!!!!
@athelwulfgalland3 ай бұрын
I think this is a pretty good guess. Though I would think that the plant/animal matter was lighter & able to overcome some sort of obstacle before settling into this valley, cove or whatever; While leaving rocks & heavier debris behind.
@YolandaPullman3 ай бұрын
This is my theory as well.
@alexanderwingeskog7583 ай бұрын
Think that is a good theory! And would be my guess as well!
@AsttoScott3 ай бұрын
@@Glenn-m1t Noah's flood was a story literally copied from Sumerian tablets by the Phonecian's.
@rh55633 ай бұрын
One of the coolest things you’ve done, brother. The Firestone Team has a theory on that, along with Randall Carlson and many others.
@gailasbury99783 ай бұрын
“Big massive flood”. WOW! Where have I heard that before?
@weekendwarriorprospecting8173 ай бұрын
The news maybe 🤔
@mufasta83223 ай бұрын
If you're referring to the story of the magic zoo boat, that's adorable.
@thomasknapp64033 ай бұрын
Can you say "Noah"
@OwO---Drunk_Seulgi---OwO3 ай бұрын
In the book written by J3ws to control humanity by abusing their natural empathy for the last 2,000 years? Is that where?
@beavis63633 ай бұрын
Don't be naive. It's a great story but it doesn't make a lick of sense. I follow the evidence that the natural world provides us. Two biggies, geological stratification, and the concept of genetic bottlenecks. There is more but I'm not here to do AronRa's work for him.
@wesleymadsen43573 ай бұрын
Thanks for all the years!
@wrxfrontier65843 ай бұрын
I'm thinking tsunami 'debree' triggered by the earthquakes could be the reason why so many bones are in the area?
@LuciferMorningstar-wk8qu3 ай бұрын
"Debris"
@shizlittlebam3 ай бұрын
Mud flood. Phoenix reset.
@Patrickhenry17seventysix3 ай бұрын
Rapid glacial melt catastrophic flooding
@chrisfurnier47903 ай бұрын
This is awsome, Pauly. I love your regular content. Underwater sniping etc doesn't get old to me but this is so cool too! I know up in the Yukon, gold miners and prospectors often come across mammoth bones etc, some even still so frozen and preserved in permafrost that some people have actually ate mammoth meat that is thousands of years old. Idk if I'd eat 40,000 year old meat but this is SO COOL!
@chrisfurnier47903 ай бұрын
*Edit, I think the same people/claim as the dude on Joe Rogan that talked about eating mammoth meat that is thousands of years old! 😳
@Duke27852 ай бұрын
2:03 you stepped on a bone
@MKontheBayАй бұрын
I came to see if anyone else noticed that! Looked like a femur or jointed bone
@Duke2785Ай бұрын
@@MKontheBay we are of the .0000000001%
@jaimecooper2945Ай бұрын
@@Duke2785I saw that too! I was gonna comment this
@javbw3 ай бұрын
Glad you are having fun Pauly - I’ve enjoyed your videos for many years- this is super interesting! When you are done in the boneyard, throw Joe Rogan in the hole!
@dustinwilson366023 күн бұрын
Why are your fangs so large…….?
@dannyzelaya3 ай бұрын
loved this episode Pauly. thanks for sharing.
@SamBerry593 ай бұрын
Crazy part is there’s a sub division not a quarter mile back above this
@kerzwhile3 ай бұрын
Great episode Pauley!!❤
@TheSilverSphincter693 ай бұрын
its like the great pacific trash heap on a greater scale. a giant water event happened sweeping all the life into the ocean, plants animals and organic matter trees logs sticks and oils just swirling around out there. .after the waters calmed down all of the organic matter and oils floating on the surface would collect together until the water goes away leaving behind the evidence of the destruction..... and then with the permafrost being on top of it does that mean that whatever water event happens caused an ice age?????
@Everything.On.Wheels5193 ай бұрын
"Is it a moose knuckle?" That had me laughing 🤣
@letsgobrandon13007 күн бұрын
I see those all the time!
@triple_A_rockhound3 ай бұрын
🤔my geology nerd me is seeing a lot it was part super flood that happened after ice age n or during 👍 top layer is overburdion mid to bottom younger to older stuff you can tell by the layers👀
@DavidHartIII3 ай бұрын
Love the videos man, I can’t believe you haven’t Hit 1 mil subs yet
@exploration.creations3 ай бұрын
I love your videos great job
@louisaytuarte81603 ай бұрын
I have been following them for years! Awesome you got to go there!
@greenman52553 ай бұрын
It was Godzilla's toilet.
@Skankhunter4203 ай бұрын
Seriously probably one of the coolest freaking places on earth! Way to go Pauly!
@richardwarnock27893 ай бұрын
Found Mammoth tusk and bones like complete then feds step in tried to take it away from the land owner law suits went on for years there were four of them I was brushed aside like dirt got to touch them that was cool!!! The owner got all of them back good for him!!!; )
@RHYGAR13 ай бұрын
One of your Best Episodes. TY
@jessewilson86763 ай бұрын
Imagine a conversation between a couple animals. Hey Tom can you imagine in 40,000 years from now some ape’s descend will be twirling our bones.
@ImGettingOld9113 ай бұрын
I've been watching their channel for the last few years. It's amazing all the things they find!
@psilver0633 ай бұрын
Younger Dryas
@EE-fl1tw3 ай бұрын
I don't believe any of these animals lived there. I think they just wound up there after the floods
@psilver0633 ай бұрын
@@EE-fl1tw wouldn’t you like a Time Machine? Be so awesome to see
@devarskinnee87603 ай бұрын
Exactly what it is,so much was deposited there from the flooding and asteroid impact
@martismastiffs3 ай бұрын
Glad to see you back!
@HistoricalGeology563 ай бұрын
The reason these bones are dispersed the way they are is due to the massive glaciers that actually reached hundreds of feet tall in some areas, and these things where moving as well so anything that died on top rarely ever stay together. The only ones you really see together where the ones that got buried right after death and frozen. Which is why you see them mummified. If it wasn’t for the leather hard skin the bones would end up the same way. But as for why there are large amounts of bones in one area likely had to do with water. During the ice age it was actually extremely dry and if any water was available it became a watering hole for every animal including predators. If you ever look at the bottom of a lake in Africa for instance there are massive boneyards from animals dying from predation, or just disease.
@AsttoScott3 ай бұрын
Dispersed? They're all in water catchments. Nothing dispersed about concentrations. Stop spreading bs.
@HistoricalGeology563 ай бұрын
@@AsttoScott I explained why there are concentrations? Dont reply to someone who literally is has a phd in the subject bucko
@HistoricalGeology563 ай бұрын
@@AsttoScott the bones are almost always dispersed and not just a whole skeleton is what I was saying if you learned how to read better you’d understand what I meant.
@upnorth67223 ай бұрын
Thanks for the tour Pauly 👍👍
@woodsoundsflutes3 ай бұрын
The bones are relatively consistent in density. Glacier activity and water flow would concentrate the bones in a similar density drop point.
@Lawson8tor17 сағат бұрын
Knowing the topography would definitely help us understand what could have brought such diverse specimens into this area. I think that maybe, a glacier melting and depositing different species and types of animals frozen on top of each other over centuries, then became refrozen …..adding more specimens over the centuries then possibly melting again and redepositing more animals. The lay of the land possibly contributing to this phenomenon over and over again through time.
@Spudz763 ай бұрын
This is just where all the abducted animals get dropped off and aliens have been doing that since forever outside the rules of spacetime so that also explains the timeline being a timepretzel instead of natural deposition layering rules.
@GREEKEXPLORERS2 ай бұрын
Amazing video!! Thanks for sharing!!
@valdanilov3 ай бұрын
You opened a pandora box! This phenomenon is well documated, if you do a little searching. The boneyard is scattered all over alaskan coast, Siberia and the northern islands. Key words in your search should be Noah, Great Flood, Earth flip 12000 years ago, Graham Hancock etc. The whole mammoths that have been recovered show signs that they were frozen instantly and stayed in permafrost for 12 thousand years, hence so well preserved.
@valdanilov3 ай бұрын
If you really want to know, pick up a book by Emmanuel Velikovsky "Earth in Upheaval" Most entertaining reading you'll ever do!
@ThomasPaine19743 ай бұрын
Those animals to ask be buried and torn apart broken up went through a massive calamity ... the earth was .moving fast and the land rolling back and burying hundreds of thousands of mega fauna all at once. That area is a time capsule . Both channels are awsome!
@keithwood64593 ай бұрын
I think it was a muddy lakebed, of a lake that existed from 12000 to 4000 years ago. Lots of dead animals in it, but they would have been in order oldest to youngest, from the bottom up. But then the margin of the lake gave way, and the mud with the bones in it slid as a mud slide, mixing the bones up. That's why the mud layer is wavy instead of flat. The failure of the lake margin might have been due to an earthquake. Or if it was a beaver dam lake, maybe something wiped out the beavers for a while and the dams failed.
@nunyabusiness32673 ай бұрын
that was an awesome video Pauly. i agree with the idea of the bones being washed into a feature of some sort and getting trapped there
@weekendwarriorprospecting8173 ай бұрын
Nice one Pauly. Great experience 👍🏻 My guess would be that a river brought the bones down to the same location and over thousands of years the geographics have changed. Just because the river isn't there anymore doesn't necessarily mean that it hasn't been redirected at some point. Obviously this is just a guess from someone who is definitely not qualified. 😂😂
@asd1235436663 ай бұрын
You did a great job on this video. Very different from all your other videos. Keep it up
@larrylewlew63863 ай бұрын
Are you a vampire?
@devinsullivan72332 ай бұрын
Lmao! Dracula for sure
@mikealpha798Ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂
@Wizard_of_the_North3 ай бұрын
Very cool that you went there! Super unique, awesome concentrated deposit of specimens...
@Trash-Castle3 ай бұрын
I wish John would post more content, luckily we have this video!
@markfoust89103 ай бұрын
That was cool!!! Different than your other videos but definitely cool!! Keep it up.i love the diversity!!
@Wolfburns3 ай бұрын
This was a bonetastic adventure. Thanks for bringing us along!
@roylove2763 ай бұрын
Great video Paul. I learned something watching this.
@GreenCanvasInteriorscape3 ай бұрын
Love the fact that this man has this land end is excavating and collecting all of these treasures and that the state of Alaska is not attempting to mess with him. I'm sure some states have seizure rules where what is found on your land if it is deemed historic can be stolen by the state to be disappeared into the Smithsonian. I'm in Minnesota and in search of Bones like this from around here and was amazed to learn that megafauna ancient Buffalo skulls were found near me only 10 ft below the surface when building freeways 30 years ago. Appreciate the clarity at 8 minutes 50 seconds, often hear these finds referred to as fossils when they are not. What is the landowners long-term perfect situation besides continuing to collect? Are these being sold/ displayed / donated? How is the pump powered? I'm not hearing a compressor and thinking most extension cords would not reach miles 👀
@microbus4323 ай бұрын
No way Paulie! The Bone yard!? I'd love to go there. Lucky you!
@rozilindhaver50363 ай бұрын
So cool to see other areas of adventuring. Soooooo appreciated. Your B.C Canadian friend Rozi 💗💗💗🍁🍁🍁😎😎😎
@lucasreid63353 ай бұрын
Other than your gold videos, this is my favorite of your videos. I've always dreamed of doing an adventure like this. The holes in the bone are where the tendons attach. I wonder why this pit only seems to have bone fragments and not complete finds. Were you allowed to keep anything as a souvenir?
@poonksooniger3 ай бұрын
Been waiting on this Vid!
@williamscoggin15093 ай бұрын
Also those holes in the bone is where the blood veins and arteries go in and out from the bone. If I remember right there called "ferenge", or something close to that.
@sydneymitchell88223 ай бұрын
This was very cool to watch.
@laurat5143Ай бұрын
Wow ! That was amazing. Thank you for sharing. When Pauly found that jawbone.
@vancejohn48343 ай бұрын
I would think it is a section of an old river bed. with some glacier movement across that section. maybe? How did you not take a sample of the gravel section?? Gold
@ntlenvy16143 ай бұрын
I’m guessing it used to be a thick bog or swamp that animals would try and walk through and would get stuck and drown. And it just accumulated over time.
@zachbarnes25383 ай бұрын
I’ve always been fascinated by this place but also curious as to what effect melting all that permafrost has on the environment. It can’t be great….
@Smokkedandslammed3 ай бұрын
Yooooo that first Bison knuckle you found was totally worked, it had that hole and both sides had a flat strip and that middle portion was hogged out. Can you do a longer video checking it out?
@christophergray72803 ай бұрын
Is the location close to an old volcano or perhaps a coastal region? Tsunamis or mud flows wouldn't be out of the question. Or even the release of an ice dam
@marccocherell53393 ай бұрын
There's a bone yard like this in another country. i can't remember which one maybe somewhere in Siberia but they figured it was where the ancient hunters processed the animals, which resulted resulted in a something similar to this. I believe there was also a hut made out of mammoth tusk as well.
@pathoodjoy3 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for sharing this! We think we know so much about the earth and yet places like this challenge our knowledge.
@FraktalPriest17 күн бұрын
Dude, your fangs! Awesome! 😳😎
@-timithesis-36223 ай бұрын
Are they doing a New Boneyard channel? I find it fascinating and wish they had at least a monthly update of their finds. I know the girls briefly had posted as well as the Father and some stuff on Joe Rogan. It would be nice to see more of it even though it’s basically recovering bones from the same animals. I can’t recall if they found birds or fish?
@twostroke3503 ай бұрын
I'm with John. That small bone you found is the most interesting one. Looks like a tibia and fibula but usually paired bones are only fused together like that in much larger modern animals. They aren't completely fused either so it looks like some sort of intermediate species. It's an odd shape too, the muscle attachments are very pronounced suggesting a very mobile foot/lower limb. I'd love to know what it's from.
@familieabenСағат бұрын
Hi, I think there used to be a river there. this is because good things are also found there. It may be that there was a whirlpool there and the quays were pulled into the hole. And stayed down
@1kreature3 ай бұрын
Could it be that somewhere "up hill" there was a sort of graveyard where the mammoths went to die, and some event like glacier or such plowed through causing all the shattering and rearranging, depositing everything at the low area that later silted in and became permafrost??
@mindymorgan84793 ай бұрын
If it were just wooly mammoths that would make sence. But it's cave bears, and elk, and everything. And most don't go to a grave yard to die.
@Happysapien763 ай бұрын
Nice, very excite!
@richmasters29823 ай бұрын
I think that there was two adjoining glaciers that had a giant channel where they met and it was part of an annual migration path and animals would slip in and be deposited together in ice pit when avalanches and snow melt would rush down the canyon/ice channel.
@matthiasasmr31003 ай бұрын
My first thought was that predators would bring their kills there, but I mean if you’re a big predator that takes down mammoths I don’t think it would really need to bring it anywhere. And then for like a second I thought maybe that over the course of however long a lot of hunts took place there, but then I figured that was probably unlikely and if so, very coincidental. And I thought maybe it was a popular migration path that animals would travel across and that’s how they got hunted. Just my thoughts, though.
@gdclark25093 ай бұрын
The possible settling place for meterials and animals alike from some sort of huge flood type of event?