What were Humans doing 1,000,000 years ago?

  Рет қаралды 1,024,638

NORTH 02

NORTH 02

Жыл бұрын

#paleoanthropology #human #ancienthuman
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Sources:
1.) Augusti J, Lordkipanidze D (June 2011). "How "African" was the early human dispersal out of Africa?". Quaternary Science Reviews.
Zhu Z, Dennell R, Huang W, Wu Y, Qiu S, Yang S, et al. (July 2018). "Hominin occupation of the Chinese Loess Plateau since about 2.1 million years ago". Nature. 559 (7715): 608-612.
Barras C (2018). "Tools from China are oldest hint of human lineage outside Africa"
2.) Rogers AR, Iltis D, Wooding S (2004). "Genetic Variation at the MC1R Locus and the Time since Loss of Human Body Hair". Current Anthropology. 45 (1): 105-108. doi:10.1086/381006. S2CID 224795768.
3.) Roach, & Richmond. (2015). "Clavicle length, throwing performance and the reconstruction of the Homo erectus shoulder". Journal of Human Evolution, 80(C), 107-113.
4.) M. Pante et al. Bone tools from Beds II-IV, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania, and implications for the origins and evolution of bone technology. Journal of Human Evolution. Vol. 148, November 2020, p. 102885. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2020.102885.
5.) James, Steven R. (February 1989). "Hominid Use of Fire in the Lower and Middle Pleistocene: A Review of the Evidence"
Luke, Kim. "Evidence That Human Ancestors Used Fire One Million Years Ago"
Miller, Kenneth (May 2013). "Archaeologists Find Earliest Evidence of Humans Cooking With Fire"
6.) Saladié, P.; Huguet, R.; Díez, C.; Rodríguez-Hidalgo, A.; Cáceres, I.; Vallverdú, J.; Rosell, J.; de Castro, J. M. B.; Carbonell, E. (2011). "Carcass transport decisions in Homo antecessor subsistence strategies".
7.) MISHRA, SHEILA. “THE INDIAN LOWER PALAEOLITHIC.” Bulletin of the Deccan College Research Institute, vol. 66/67, 2006, pp. 47-94. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/42931441. Accessed 14 Oct. 2022.
8.) Antón SC, Taboada HG, Middleton ER, Rainwater CW, Taylor AB, Turner TR, et al. (July 2016). "Morphological variation in Homo erectus and the origins of developmental plasticity"
9.) Yang, L. (2014). "Zhoukoudian: Geography and Culture". Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology. Springer Science+Business Media. pp. 7961-7965.
10.) Boaz, N. T.; Ciochon, R. L.; Xu, Q.; Liu, J. (2000). "Large Mammalian Carnivores as a Taphonomic Factor in the Bone Accumulation at Zhoukoudian"
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Пікірлер: 2 200
@intricatic
@intricatic Жыл бұрын
They were doing stuff that made an order of magnitude more sense than what we're doing right now.
@LucasSommer
@LucasSommer 10 ай бұрын
Order of magnitude
@Crabchann
@Crabchann 10 ай бұрын
I like this comment.
@intricatic
@intricatic 10 ай бұрын
@@LucasSommer ...anti-semantic. ...anti-simant?
@peterenevoldsen7199
@peterenevoldsen7199 10 ай бұрын
They struggled to survive.
@necurrence1776
@necurrence1776 10 ай бұрын
Cool comment 😂 but yes, most of what we do now is killing time
@smokeystarr
@smokeystarr Жыл бұрын
To me this is an extremely fascinating period in history. Would love to see more.
@goodwillhumping7904
@goodwillhumping7904 Жыл бұрын
prehistory
@Trathien-
@Trathien- Жыл бұрын
@@goodwillhumping7904 there is no such thing
@goodwillhumping7904
@goodwillhumping7904 Жыл бұрын
@@Trathien- i guess my dictionary is either broken or erroneous
@TastyChevelle
@TastyChevelle Жыл бұрын
@@goodwillhumping7904 You're broken and erroneous
@goodwillhumping7904
@goodwillhumping7904 Жыл бұрын
@@TastyChevelleso witty and smart. you must be popular at parties
@YourCapybaraAmigo_17yrsago
@YourCapybaraAmigo_17yrsago Жыл бұрын
It's so amazing to think of functional humanoids living 1 MILLION years ago on this planet. Considering history as we know it has only been around maybe 10,000 years, this is really mindblowing to me. One wonders if they had a developed language with articulated words and how much they spoke, or if they spoke at all.
@Foxxie55
@Foxxie55 Жыл бұрын
There's no history around to point that there were any humanoids around.. Demonic scabs dream up this BS and put it out as fact, when they have no proof. What does one history book, the Bible say about humans.. Adam and Eve the first - then a flood - then the tower of Babel. Government all around the world today is this Mystery Babylon, that the Bible speaks about that will be destroyed in the end of this age, which is about to take place.. Revelation 12 "The Great Sign" of the pregnant woman in the sky/heaven took place on 23 Sept. 2017. This has started the countdown for the end times before Jesus comes back down to earth to rule over from Jerusalem.. WAKE UP People... Time is short. ASK Jesus to save you or suffer of what's coming upon earth..
@Homo.sapiens.sapiens2001
@Homo.sapiens.sapiens2001 Жыл бұрын
No 10000 maybe maximum 3000 bc
@YourCapybaraAmigo_17yrsago
@YourCapybaraAmigo_17yrsago Жыл бұрын
@@Homo.sapiens.sapiens2001 I'm talking about human ancestors and proto-humans. Not just within recorded history.
@user-cg2tw8pw7j
@user-cg2tw8pw7j Жыл бұрын
@@YourCapybaraAmigo_17yrsago People used to say that monkeys are mythical creatures
@blueways6699
@blueways6699 Жыл бұрын
100k+ yr old monoliths/structures all throughout the world.
@ebonyblack4563
@ebonyblack4563 Жыл бұрын
Oh, well, this reminded me how much a backlog of your work I've missed. Life gets crazy sometimes, and now and then looking at the distant past can be deeply grounding. Thank you for your work.
@nogoodgod4915
@nogoodgod4915 Жыл бұрын
Yay
@ThinkHarderPlz
@ThinkHarderPlz Жыл бұрын
Me too!!!
@cynthiashepherd7754
@cynthiashepherd7754 Жыл бұрын
Me too
@marsh2537
@marsh2537 Жыл бұрын
Pause
@julianshepherd2038
@julianshepherd2038 Жыл бұрын
You should be attached to a sports team you don't play for like a norm.
@nostalgio697
@nostalgio697 Жыл бұрын
Weird
@NORTH02
@NORTH02 Жыл бұрын
“Human” does not only refer to our species. Most anthropologists refer to other species in our genus as humans as well. Therefore, homo erectus can be referred to as a human as with the other hominins in this video.
@VicksasT
@VicksasT Жыл бұрын
Living spaces of prehistory please
@hughjunit2503
@hughjunit2503 Жыл бұрын
If you could go back in time to live out your life, what time would you go back to????? I'd say about 20,000 years ago for me would be like heaven. Mega fauna, clean Earth and a much simpler time
@VicksasT
@VicksasT Жыл бұрын
@@hughjunit2503 lots of death lol
@hughjunit2503
@hughjunit2503 Жыл бұрын
@@VicksasT true. But what a sight it would be eh???
@VicksasT
@VicksasT Жыл бұрын
@@hughjunit2503 omg yes dude building a cabin 20,000 years ago with, like what you said, megafauna!! It would probably have to be a tree house lol
@paradoxworkshop4659
@paradoxworkshop4659 5 ай бұрын
Mostly sitting around complaining that kids don't have respect for elders these days, and that they don't make things like they used to.
@godparticle3833
@godparticle3833 27 күн бұрын
Watch the video about ten thousand years ago, not really much to talk about a million years ago
@hillsofwi
@hillsofwi Жыл бұрын
Enjoyed the narration. Calm and informative. I look forward to more content.
@ashermirgrumpymind1866
@ashermirgrumpymind1866 Жыл бұрын
Have you ever played the game ancestors: the humankind odyssey? It a wonderful game about evolving from different species of hominids that i think you should check out
@nobodyinnoutdoors
@nobodyinnoutdoors Жыл бұрын
watching him play and add commentary would be a series i watch
@ashermirgrumpymind1866
@ashermirgrumpymind1866 Жыл бұрын
@@nobodyinnoutdoors me too
@danb1618
@danb1618 Жыл бұрын
@@khyatisharma8944 🤷🏽‍♂️ 🤔
@Murphys_Law9
@Murphys_Law9 Жыл бұрын
I made it to Lucy
@DarthTalon66
@DarthTalon66 Жыл бұрын
Ark survival
@hughjainisis1683
@hughjainisis1683 Жыл бұрын
I am so fascinated by our species of humans interacting with other species. It would’ve been wild to be the first sapiens to encounter a neaderthal or denisovan tribe.
@corilia9529
@corilia9529 6 ай бұрын
Cro magons met Neanderthals.
@213kilacali
@213kilacali 4 ай бұрын
Our instinct would’ve been to kill them, we just hard wired to view the unknown as threat.
@czimisieu8337
@czimisieu8337 4 ай бұрын
It will be the same for the first cyborgs encountering us
@stevehuggett2098
@stevehuggett2098 3 ай бұрын
What, before we attacked and wiped them all out you mean?
@hughjainisis1683
@hughjainisis1683 3 ай бұрын
@@stevehuggett2098 he literally said there's no evidence we attacked them and pushed them to extinction in the video dum bass.
@MaryAnnNytowl
@MaryAnnNytowl Жыл бұрын
Oh, hey, another North02 video! Hurray! I've missed your videos, man - you do an amazing job with these things!
@edwardfletcher7790
@edwardfletcher7790 Жыл бұрын
Every single video you make is better than the last. This is a broadcast quality doco, fantastic work 👍😁
@MarlboroughBlenheim1
@MarlboroughBlenheim1 Жыл бұрын
Except it’s factually wrong as there were no humans one million years ago!
@mtndew157
@mtndew157 2 ай бұрын
This is quality af
@sipioc
@sipioc Жыл бұрын
As someone who found your channel recently and watched the old videos first, you are really coming into your stride my friend! Excellent work!
@alannohlgren
@alannohlgren Жыл бұрын
Thanks, man. Your videos always fascinate & stimulate my imagination in the most compelling way. After a couple of anthropology classes back in the early 70's, I was sorely tempted to follow that path, & would have been happily productive doing so. But music, & jazz specifically, won out, & the beautiful soft sciences which touch your field were left behind, as pertains to me. Thank you again for bringing it all back so artfully. I look forward to your future productions, so please, keel it up!
@kevinwilson2082
@kevinwilson2082 6 ай бұрын
Jazz.......ahhhhhhhhhhh! You did the right thing Alan. Kevin
@larrydirtybird
@larrydirtybird Жыл бұрын
This video is great to watch if you’re stoned. The voice is so calming in the music is so mellow that I really felt like I had drifted in an out of prehistoric times.
@eatsblades
@eatsblades 8 ай бұрын
I like the relaxed and informative delivery. Good video 😊
@curiodyssey3867
@curiodyssey3867 Жыл бұрын
Dude the production value of your videos have vastly improved since your started...you're blowing up so fast...almost brings a tear to my eye
@gregbors8364
@gregbors8364 Жыл бұрын
Kids - they blow up so fast 😢
@dirtedirte8771
@dirtedirte8771 Жыл бұрын
It’s literally cut and paste ….
@curiodyssey3867
@curiodyssey3867 Жыл бұрын
@@dirtedirte8771 LMAO would love to see you create a video. Then come back and tell me it's just cut and paste Didn't you learn as a young adult not to talk about s*** you don't know a thing about?
@weseehowcommiegoogleis3770
@weseehowcommiegoogleis3770 Жыл бұрын
Was that an offer to go on a Date?
@RLee-we1fc
@RLee-we1fc Жыл бұрын
Do you know this guy personally?
@deadcatbounce3124
@deadcatbounce3124 Жыл бұрын
It's the rate of change in humans that is truly astounding, especially the last 100,000 years or so.
@kalrandom7387
@kalrandom7387 Жыл бұрын
With accepted history is to be believed, the past 10,000 years is astounding.
@eugeniaskelley5194
@eugeniaskelley5194 Жыл бұрын
@@kalrandom7387 I agree.
@u235u235u235
@u235u235u235 Жыл бұрын
@@kalrandom7387 yes, you know. mostly because of farming tech (cultivation, seed domestication, irrigation, crop rotation) leads to cities, which leads to specialization and more tech.
@scambammer6102
@scambammer6102 Жыл бұрын
what change? Homo sapiens have been anatomically identical for 200,000 years.
@u235u235u235
@u235u235u235 Жыл бұрын
@@scambammer6102 lol someone knows. exactly.
@mundanestuff
@mundanestuff Жыл бұрын
It's always surprising to me how many hominids lived in parallel with each other around the world all throughout history. Our line literally was never alone on the planet as the only human species. Maybe not even today.
@daverose2012
@daverose2012 Жыл бұрын
Around 5 other species lived alongside us 50,000 years ago
@casualcausalityy
@casualcausalityy Жыл бұрын
Homo Floriensis was around until about 13,000 years ago. There was a comet strike about 12,800 years ago that may have ended our cousin's stories
@KathySarich
@KathySarich 7 ай бұрын
⁠@@casualcausalityySounds like the Laschamp excursion about 42,000 years ago, which they figure is when the Neanderthals went extinct. It’s about every 12,000 years that we face a bigger cataclysm, smaller ones on the half cycle of 6,000 years.
@josephjohnson6849
@josephjohnson6849 6 ай бұрын
@@casualcausalityy wasn't that in the younger dryas era, when much flooding happened
@jonasdavies1806
@jonasdavies1806 5 ай бұрын
I think my high school maths teacher was indeed a neanderthal, he had much hair all over his body, can use basic tools, wore a leather jacket usually, walked on two legs, had a prominent brow ridge too.
@banzaii4422
@banzaii4422 Жыл бұрын
I love this!! perfect before sleep, love your voice and work man!
@VicksasT
@VicksasT Жыл бұрын
Omfg thank you bro🧡 I needed this today
@memybikeni9931
@memybikeni9931 Жыл бұрын
I would go back to the time that Stone Henge was being built, and ask them to move it a few hundred yards, it’s way too close to the A303.
@1pcfred
@1pcfred 3 ай бұрын
Stonehenge was built in 1959 so you wouldn't have to travel too far. At least the Stonehenge as it stands today was built then. Go look it up. There's pictures of them doing it and everything.
@sriramwriting
@sriramwriting Жыл бұрын
The content of your videos brings me much peace of mind. Thanks.
@comments2840
@comments2840 Жыл бұрын
Your voice is soothing to hear and well paced (not too hurried.) Not showing yourself or any live contemporary personage in the video makes the content of the video good for meditation. Those are the best qualities for a documentary.
@rocroc
@rocroc Жыл бұрын
One thing that is very interesting about your videos is the number of people who watch them and provide strong feedback about how much they enjoy them. It tells you that as a culture, we want to know about our past and how we became what we are today. At the same time, you don't see much on TV about our past even on channels that should generate this kind of information. You could easily take the material you develop to television and it would be a big hit. I know the kids love this stuff as well as the adults but those who carry the big viewer stick have no interest. Time to replace those folks making the decisions.
@ianstuart5660
@ianstuart5660 4 ай бұрын
For sure. Guess it doesn't have the high entertainment value compared to typical television!
@angelicdexter
@angelicdexter Жыл бұрын
Damn, you're back! I've been looking forward to this and you never fail to amaze
@rljpdx
@rljpdx 11 ай бұрын
great video again. subbed. the outro music gave me pause to giggle a bit, but only because i imagined that tune outro'ing anything lol. like when i turn my back and start walking off into the sunset, my mind blares in extravagant tones the non-haunting melodic outro of "What were Humans doing 1,000,000 years ago?".
@nivin4787
@nivin4787 Жыл бұрын
This channel is a gem 🌟🌠keep it up NORTH 02
@bakkila99
@bakkila99 Жыл бұрын
Man I remember I use to watch Trey the Explainer all the time and then KZbin recommended your channel when you were first starting out and I’ve been a fan since! You guys had a lot in common with how you explained things and the content you put out. Trey has become not as frequent of a poster, but I still follow them and enjoy their content. But you more than definitely have helped fill the void! I’m Hank you for your great work and I look forward to a lot more in the future!
@NORTH02
@NORTH02 Жыл бұрын
Trey is the best
@nogoodgod4915
@nogoodgod4915 Жыл бұрын
I still watch Trey almost every night before I fall asleep!
@paulanthony5274
@paulanthony5274 Жыл бұрын
Are you really called Hank or has that pesky predictive text been at it again?
@Gameboy-Unboxings
@Gameboy-Unboxings Жыл бұрын
Hey, Hank. 👋🏻
@peterzinya407
@peterzinya407 Жыл бұрын
@@NORTH02 Nice vid. Too bad not one word of it is true. Man just popped onto the scene about 12,000 yrs ago.
@Anuchan
@Anuchan Жыл бұрын
Much better coverage of the topic than your video from last year. Thanks!!
@dreday6320
@dreday6320 Жыл бұрын
I swear you make videos about my exact thoughts. I've always wondered what humans did 1 million years ago.
@drips1030
@drips1030 3 ай бұрын
I'm sure many also have the same thought. You're not exclusive 😂
@Roboheart1119
@Roboheart1119 3 ай бұрын
Hey great video man. I really liked this one. It’s so fascinating- the concept of deep time and who we were, when we were
@heritageoutdoorsproduction2460
@heritageoutdoorsproduction2460 Жыл бұрын
Another awesome installment from you yet again! I personally would find a video covering the origins and migrations of Proto indo Europeans/later indo Europeans throughout Eurasia and the culture shifts attributed to that time!
@andrewblake2254
@andrewblake2254 Жыл бұрын
You will find more on that in the linguistics topics. There is a stack of evidence there and it combines with genetics. See also yamnaya people.
@issamint3499
@issamint3499 Жыл бұрын
As always another great video! I wish they could all be an hour in length but I know that’s unrealistic, you’re just very talented!
@peterzinya407
@peterzinya407 Жыл бұрын
Whats unrealistic is the false info in the vid.
@dudeman7826
@dudeman7826 Жыл бұрын
@@peterzinya407 what are you on about ?
@peterzinya407
@peterzinya407 Жыл бұрын
@@dudeman7826 go back to sleep
@dudeman7826
@dudeman7826 Жыл бұрын
@@peterzinya407 ?
@christophercousins184
@christophercousins184 Жыл бұрын
Excellent, once again. Great documentary beautifully done
@4Beats4Me
@4Beats4Me 10 ай бұрын
Thanks for another tastefully done beauty. So respectful, so easy to know and be all the more curious and eager for the next one. Congratulations on your European studies!
@jeanettewaverly2590
@jeanettewaverly2590 Жыл бұрын
Top flight content as usual. Thank you!
@brainworthy
@brainworthy 6 ай бұрын
My grandfather was a fisherman and so was my father. Boy, has my life style changed in one generation. It took a million years for me to become an overnight success. As humans we are lucky that we did not become extinct hundreds of thousands years ago like many other species did. At one point there were very few humans on earth. Now, there are too many !
@ianstuart5660
@ianstuart5660 4 ай бұрын
Yes, great point!
@jimc4839
@jimc4839 4 ай бұрын
Far too many. That will be our demise. We owe our existence to the natural world and are destroying it at an exponential rate.
@drips1030
@drips1030 3 ай бұрын
It's certainly a shame for the planet that we didn't expire. I firmly believe (and wish) we had. We don't deserve it.
@holdthis4279
@holdthis4279 2 ай бұрын
🤓​@@drips1030
@cswanson4476
@cswanson4476 2 ай бұрын
And just one species left. “And then there were none.”
@shakewait7612
@shakewait7612 Жыл бұрын
Great video. Excellent content! One suggestion I have is for you to write your own captions instead of the auto-generated ones from KZbin. In the video you used some words and terms I haven't heard before and the auto-transcription didn't do me any favors trying to understand what it is you said. Cheers!
@jimatmile56
@jimatmile56 Жыл бұрын
A+, Well done, I enjoyed this video very much. Thank you.
@kobebarka8633
@kobebarka8633 Жыл бұрын
Your videos have rapidly become a stable of my thirst for knowledge. Thank you so much for all of your hard work and dedication!
@Morristown337
@Morristown337 Жыл бұрын
After knowing what we have accomplished in the past 12 thousand years; it seems insane to assume that over 100,000 years of good climate that man did not accomplish as much or more then we do now before the younger dryas event (or the flood stories) knocked man back to the stone age 12K years ago. There is NO way it took man hundreds of thousands of years to master fire.
@scambammer6102
@scambammer6102 Жыл бұрын
@@Morristown337 "man" isn't a thing. There are dozens (probably hundreds) of hominid species going back 7 million years or so. Try watching the video and learn something.
@Morristown337
@Morristown337 Жыл бұрын
@@scambammer6102 Try watching Randal Carlson sometime. The oldest homo-sapian which is over 99% like us goes back 800,000. I am not caught up in all the part man part monkey bullshit. Evolution only goes back to family. All dogs and wolfs can be traced back to 1 canine but a dog does not become a cat or vice versa. Even though we are only 1 DNA chromosome from a monkey there are no monkey to people growing a chromosome. Mankind is very much a thing and as I am one its hard to say that I don't exist. Carbon 14 dating is not able to date back over a million years so how exactly do you know this?
@scambammer6102
@scambammer6102 Жыл бұрын
@@Morristown337 don't waste any money on higher education
@frankpienkosky5688
@frankpienkosky5688 Жыл бұрын
@@scambammer6102 seem to recall something about "Lucy"....mother to us all....
@alexanderrosenzweig888
@alexanderrosenzweig888 Жыл бұрын
Good to see another video about our early ancestors. I was waiting for one of those to come 👍👍👍
@eljanrimsa5843
@eljanrimsa5843 Жыл бұрын
Our ancestors were still in Africa during that time. These were some relatives from a different species wandering off on the same trail that our own lineage would also take 900000+ years later.
@readmycomment4696
@readmycomment4696 Жыл бұрын
Missed your soothing voice. Thanks for new upload. Excited to watch now as I lie in my bed ending the day...
@teyanuputorti7927
@teyanuputorti7927 Ай бұрын
Great video very informative and clear to follow
@itsapittie
@itsapittie Жыл бұрын
A few months ago I saw a video of some Kalahari hunters armed only with spears taking a fresh kill from a couple of lions. The way they explained it, it was a matter of having enough men (3-4 if I remember correctly) and not moving in such a way as to provoke an attack. They just slowly moved closer and closer until the lions got nervous and moved away. There's no reason to think our distant ancestors couldn't have done something similar. Prehistoric humans may not have been as much at the mercy of their environment as they are often depicted.
@johnpauljones9310
@johnpauljones9310 Жыл бұрын
Homo Erectus hunted in packs armed with stone hand axes. Also interesting to note is that every fossil thigh bone of homo erectus had the tell-tale ridge line that today only shows up in extreme long distance runners. This meant that being hunted by homo erectus meant being run down until exhausted, then pounced on and cut to pieces with stone hand axes. What a brutal way to die. If that's what prehistoric lions faced, no wonder they would just give up the kill.
@jasonpercy184
@jasonpercy184 Жыл бұрын
I'd like to see the Archaic period of the eastern United States . Some really awesome cultures and tool assemblages during that period . I'm going to watch whatever you make though. Your videos started out good but keep getting better. Always love to see a new one .
@dave.p153
@dave.p153 Жыл бұрын
They've only been there 20000 years to an Australia and that's absolutely nothing lol
@MrMegamike2k
@MrMegamike2k Жыл бұрын
Pre Cahokia civilization would be interesting to learn about.
@andrewblake2254
@andrewblake2254 Жыл бұрын
@@dave.p153 Actually 60k...at least.
@dave.p153
@dave.p153 Жыл бұрын
@@andrewblake2254 I was being a smart aleck so remind did the guy say 20000 years ? apparently the Australian Aborigines have been here for anything from 60 to 80 thousand they think now
@andrewblake2254
@andrewblake2254 Жыл бұрын
@@dave.p153 Some archeologists claim 120k, but that is disputed.
@BeRightBack131
@BeRightBack131 Жыл бұрын
Newly subscribed. Excellent videos. Thank you.
@sarah3796
@sarah3796 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating!! Great videos!!!
@raylivengood8040
@raylivengood8040 Жыл бұрын
Another great escape into the distant and perilous past. Thanks for the content 🙂
@stevoplex
@stevoplex Жыл бұрын
I don't remember much, but it was mostly boredom punctuated by terror and then we ate a lot of food.
@dionysise5008
@dionysise5008 Жыл бұрын
Just discovered this super interesting channel!!
@GenericUsername1388
@GenericUsername1388 Жыл бұрын
It's amazing to think these people were just like us, going about their days making food, washing clothes etc and had no idea the legacy thwy would leave on the world and potentially the universe
@hikingdawn8640
@hikingdawn8640 Жыл бұрын
Can you please tell me a bit more about the image you showed of the hominid skull inside of the predator’s jaw?? Where was that found? What was the predator? And what hominid was it? Thank you for your awesome lessons!!❤
@chompachangas
@chompachangas Жыл бұрын
Fascinating. I often wonder what our oldest ancestors were up to, what they were like. We are a species with amnesia.
@rickkwitkoski1976
@rickkwitkoski1976 Жыл бұрын
Without a written record from so many years ago we will never know exactly what was happening Amnesia? No. An oral account will only go so far and then it becomes garbled and embellished, to whit: The Buybull!
@wingedhussar1453
@wingedhussar1453 Жыл бұрын
Just imagine all the tribes or even cities and civilizations
@GenericUsername1388
@GenericUsername1388 Жыл бұрын
​@@wingedhussar1453 1 million years ago there were no "cities". The concept hadn't even existed yet
@wingedhussar1453
@wingedhussar1453 Жыл бұрын
@@GenericUsername1388 when did I say millions of years
@GenericUsername1388
@GenericUsername1388 Жыл бұрын
@@wingedhussar1453 the title of the video.
@darrencorrigan8505
@darrencorrigan8505 7 ай бұрын
Thanks, NORTH 02.
@jasonz7788
@jasonz7788 Жыл бұрын
Awesome thanks great work Sir
@pete6705
@pete6705 Жыл бұрын
I think it would have been interesting to see life back then before TikTok and IG. I'd love to know how our great ancestors were able to express themselves and connect with others without social media apps. And also to know what kind of fashion trends there were back in those days
@jasonaguilera3536
@jasonaguilera3536 Жыл бұрын
How old are you 12?! Dude this is all new lol, people would go outside to speak to people. Read news papers or simply converse amongst peers to spread information. Life is sad, we’re all getting to the point of Big Brother. Constantly being watched and monitored. “Adding” cancel culture to get you stay in line. Not speaking out and simply being a sheep. It won’t last, mankind wasn’t meant for slavery.
@MomoKunDaYo
@MomoKunDaYo 10 ай бұрын
I was born in 1995, and it's not all that different if you avoid those social media sites to begin with.
@nbenefiel
@nbenefiel 7 ай бұрын
We didn’t have computers when I was a kid. We used to actually go out and play.
@auntyfluffy
@auntyfluffy Жыл бұрын
Wow, ok, indulge an old lady? Your channel has evolved and develped as do your subjects!!!!!!!! Again, thank you for this endeavor!
@kaanjel
@kaanjel 2 ай бұрын
Your voice is so soft and soothing, I could listen to you all day.
@jounisuninen
@jounisuninen Ай бұрын
Talking s-t softly ...
@roylilly4252
@roylilly4252 Ай бұрын
That is as I have read about for many years very well done....thank you
@ayy2193
@ayy2193 Жыл бұрын
wild to think how many human storylines there have been through all those time points
@Emmanuel_Ramirez717
@Emmanuel_Ramirez717 Жыл бұрын
Exactly what I was thinking 💯🌌
@chiricahuaapache5132
@chiricahuaapache5132 Жыл бұрын
There has only been one. We come from Adam and Eve.
@dwainkitchel1316
@dwainkitchel1316 Жыл бұрын
as to the which are human question: it seems Lee Berger's(teams) work on Naledi has turned up some interesting discovery's about the impressions that sinus cavities leave in skulls/fossils and how that relates to being human. expect to see much more on this soon.
@ntdcypeq8560
@ntdcypeq8560 Жыл бұрын
Amazing video!
@petehoover6616
@petehoover6616 Жыл бұрын
Baldness is an ancient trait that vastly increases heat transfer. I found out in my forties taking a couple of 20 somethings to a Texas beach and ran rings around them while they sat and complained of the heat. The reason smoke follows you around a campfire is the top of your head pours heat out like a chimney and that air is drawn from around you. A bald man draws more smoke than a fully-haired man. Weirdly, from a distance a naked white man with black hair and a hairy back and no tan line has the same coloration as an otter, which is what he looks like. As for small brains; in the 80's Steven Spielberg put out a puppet series named Dinosaurs! and at the end of one of the episodes the characters mentioned that they are mathematically superior to mammals because having four toes instead of five they live in a hexadecimal world. And hexadecimal translates directly to binary. They can do calculations by counting on their toes impossible for mammals, who must memorize tables of numbers. I have pet birds. I play musical instruments. Sometimes the birds sing with me. If you play the same song again a bird who is into it will cheep at the same place in the music each repeat (try it! A wild bird will do) By listening to their chirps you can see their interpretation of musical phrasing. Odd numbers of beats per measure seems to interest them. A right handed bird or a left handed bird could not fly. Birds are binary and ambidextrous. (not the New Zealand Wry-bird, an exception) My birds have brains the size of beebees. Yet scientists have found they have a 45-word vocabulary that we can distinguish, and they understand a question about their desires gives them the right to a choice. (Do you want out? YES! we want to play! NO! I have eggs I am sitting on! This works and psychologists have not tested it because they can not handle empowered animals) Then again the society of chickens held a meeting: they were tired of predation on their young and asked humans for help. The humans offered protection in exchange for slavery. This free chickens live rare and in fear in their jungles but slave chickens have taken over the world. It's what worries me about Russians.
@allenwood4771
@allenwood4771 Жыл бұрын
What an absolutely AMAZING word salad!
@joeduff8761
@joeduff8761 Жыл бұрын
All over the place my dude
@kalrandom7387
@kalrandom7387 Жыл бұрын
Nice factoids dude
@thomasfoss9963
@thomasfoss9963 Жыл бұрын
Wow--- And that's why we always brought a bald guy with us on our 10 day wilderness trips as the designated "Smoke Choker"-- whose ONLY job was attracting the billowing clouds of smoke we generated to keep the black flies, and mosquitos at bay, so we could get the important tasks done around our camps!!!!!!
@thomasfoss9963
@thomasfoss9963 Жыл бұрын
Get yourself a lyrebird, they will drive you nuts in 20 minutes mimicking virtually every noise they hear, from conversations to construction sounds in vivid detail!!!!!!
@marilyncornell2194
@marilyncornell2194 Жыл бұрын
How quiet it must have been back then
@DMUSA536
@DMUSA536 4 ай бұрын
And pitch black nights
@213kilacali
@213kilacali 3 ай бұрын
Not a phone in sight everyone living in the moment.
@emre2658
@emre2658 3 ай бұрын
@@213kilacali😂😂
@helmann9265
@helmann9265 Жыл бұрын
Awesome 👌 p.s "B'not- Ya'acov" (bridge, and the old old site in Jordan Valley) and what about the "Ubedaya" site? Worth to remember
@whitesun264
@whitesun264 6 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing that was brilliant. That really helped clear up my understanding. Particularly that Homo Sapiens evolved in Africa, departed (later than other humanoid species) where they then encountered other humanoid species in other parts of the world who had departed Africa in earlier migrations, I hadn't understood or been able to make sense of that before .(last 1-2 minutes of the video)
@sweettrak4221
@sweettrak4221 Жыл бұрын
Have you considered lava flows in Africa as the source of fire? For example, constant flows occurring along the rift valley where humans simultaneously evolved
@travismoss3492
@travismoss3492 Жыл бұрын
this could have some merit.
@frankpienkosky5688
@frankpienkosky5688 Жыл бұрын
nature provided fire before man found ways to create it....
@twalk6164
@twalk6164 Жыл бұрын
very educational and well narrated. thanks for this great overview of our past.
@formulajuan6038
@formulajuan6038 Жыл бұрын
Another excellent video.
@davidgriffiths7696
@davidgriffiths7696 6 ай бұрын
A charming and original presentation.
@healthiswealth1452
@healthiswealth1452 2 ай бұрын
Crazy to think I had a relative 1 million years ago,
@jounisuninen
@jounisuninen Ай бұрын
Well, you didn't.
@healthiswealth1452
@healthiswealth1452 Ай бұрын
@@jounisuninen why not
@7eventh
@7eventh Жыл бұрын
I’d love to learn more about the hardships prehistoric humans faced that was every day for them. Do we have any stories (based on their fossils) of individual lives from then?
@joeyhunter842
@joeyhunter842 Жыл бұрын
Those hardships pale in comparison to the hardships of corporate USA and the ass kissing, back stabbing politics necessary to advance within.
@VitezRafael
@VitezRafael Жыл бұрын
I cant imagine how they lived withouth smartphones.
@-whackd
@-whackd Жыл бұрын
We have completely frozen bodies where we've done nitrogen isotyping and know 100% of their diet.
@frankpienkosky5688
@frankpienkosky5688 Жыл бұрын
@@-whackd agriculture changed everything...the greatest discovery in human history.....
@-whackd
@-whackd Жыл бұрын
@@frankpienkosky5688 Gave us tooth decay, shorter stature, rickets, bone loss, and created a feudal slave society.
@richx9035
@richx9035 Жыл бұрын
It’s really a big picture story - the human story. Chance and circumstance play a significant role.
@larrykay4061
@larrykay4061 Жыл бұрын
Thank you NORTH2..Very interesting narration..l watch your channel from Southeast Asia. Do you have anything about the origin of the people of Borneo Island? Larry
@kalrandom7387
@kalrandom7387 Жыл бұрын
Was having one of them sleepless nights a few nights ago turned on some classical music to float on to try to sleep. And I wondered how important music became in our evolutionary development. Excellent video sir. What was the red screen with the yellow exclamation for?
@Livingproof0823
@Livingproof0823 Жыл бұрын
I think the red screen represents a local of visuals of the times and events he was describing.
@theflyingdutchguy9870
@theflyingdutchguy9870 Жыл бұрын
music is a crazy one because we have no idea how long we have been making music. and if other hominids made it. its one of those things we may never know much about.
@frankpienkosky5688
@frankpienkosky5688 Жыл бұрын
@@theflyingdutchguy9870 virtually all primitive cultures feature some form of "music".....
@normieuser
@normieuser Жыл бұрын
I wish i was born 1 million years ago, one with nature and at peace with the universe
@whiskeytango9769
@whiskeytango9769 Жыл бұрын
And struggling for survival every single day.
@kalrandom7387
@kalrandom7387 Жыл бұрын
Why can't you be now? If you just want to live their lifestyle drop all your stuff and walk into the woods, there's plenty of places around the world where you could just live without the trappings.
@normieuser
@normieuser Жыл бұрын
@@kalrandom7387 I wish i could go live in the woods but nearly all of them are destroyed and long gone 😐 the few remaining woods its illegal to go and live in them. modern society keeps you a prisoner of the system and rat race, no way to escape but i do what i can
@thomasfoss9963
@thomasfoss9963 Жыл бұрын
While you're out there enjoying nature, You'd be consumed by a large saber- toothed tiger, or a cave bear!!!!
@normieuser
@normieuser Жыл бұрын
@@thomasfoss9963 It would be the absolute highest honor to me to be eaten by a great carnivore of the past and be used for their sustenance. Absolute win/win
@norml.hugh-mann
@norml.hugh-mann Жыл бұрын
You'd smell 'em an hour before you saw them
@ramire7heavenz252
@ramire7heavenz252 2 ай бұрын
😂. Actually they'd smell us wearing Channel #5 in the savanna.
@Fjdb1648
@Fjdb1648 Жыл бұрын
We need more videos like this 🫡
@jakec5618
@jakec5618 Жыл бұрын
What do you think caused humans to develop exponentially at a certain point ? It seems like for a while it was linear, then around a certain time development become exponential ?
@KathySarich
@KathySarich 7 ай бұрын
Industrial Revolution and we found and started using coal and crude oil, I’d say.
@nekrataali
@nekrataali 2 ай бұрын
A couple of things: 1) The ability to create fire. 2) The invention metal tools. 3) Reading, writing, and oral tradition that let information pass down from one generation to another. Even though humans have been using fire for hundreds of thousands of years, our ability to create fires from scratch (using flint or friction) has only been around ~200,000 years (give or take). Fire is an incredibly useful tool not just for cooking food and for warmth, but for doing a lot of labor. For example, since our ancestors didn't have saws, they couldn't cut a tree in half easily. But they could burn it in the middle to turn large trunks into smaller pieces. Fire allows you to create pottery to store food long-term. Metal tools were another large step because they're just better at cutting than stone tools. They're better for hunting, can be turned into complex shapes, don't break as easily so you don't have to remake or repair tools so frequently, etc. Reading, writing, and oral tradition is what allowed these technologies to spread a lot quicker. Complex systems of storytelling are often overlooked in these discussions, but accurately passing down information orally meant you could remember things without having them recorded elsewhere. All of these things led to exponential development and eventually two of humanity's most important inventions: interchangeable parts and the printing press. The proliferation of these two inventions has led to more expansion of human knowledge in the last 2,000 years than the previous 200,000 years combined. The modern printing press and interchangeable parts as we use them today have led to more developments in the last 500 years than the last 5 million.
@williamromine5715
@williamromine5715 Жыл бұрын
We have a tendency to romance the "one with the world" of ancient people. I doubt it gave them a very warm and wonderful feeling. Finding food and shelter took up most of their time. They were constantly having to be on the lookout for preditors who very dangerous. I don't think they had much time to contemplate "higher" elements of life. Very good video.
@oongieboongie
@oongieboongie Жыл бұрын
The same fear they would get from a predator is what we today get when doing a speech in front of a big crowd.
@williamromine5715
@williamromine5715 Жыл бұрын
@@oongieboongie Actually, I never had any problem giving a speech before a large crowd. I found it tougher speaking to a small group. A thousand people are just a blur. Ten people is a different matter. They might know more than I know, and they are more likely to let me know that fact.
@oongieboongie
@oongieboongie Жыл бұрын
@@williamromine5715 Same thing. Everything is more trivial today yet the physiological responses remain the same.
@frankpienkosky5688
@frankpienkosky5688 Жыл бұрын
just watch one episode of "Naked and Afraid"....it should give you a clue......
@frankpienkosky5688
@frankpienkosky5688 Жыл бұрын
@@williamromine5715 defending a thesis is always fun......
@DoggosAndJiuJitsu
@DoggosAndJiuJitsu Жыл бұрын
I’m 100% sure there were cave paintings where someone left a hieroglyph of “lol youre art suks!” directly below and a bunch of other cavemen drawing thumbs up next to the comment.
@deborahpaulin1188
@deborahpaulin1188 2 ай бұрын
Great video! I earned my undergrad degree in Anthropology in 1985. This is a great update.
@hamzah5643
@hamzah5643 Жыл бұрын
Who else wants to go back a million years, to an ancient grandma ancestor of ours, give her a hug, and tell her, her kids long down the line have walked on the moon, your struggle and love for your kids have made us do things that look impossible.
@XB10001
@XB10001 Жыл бұрын
They wouldn't understand.
@hamzah5643
@hamzah5643 Жыл бұрын
@@XB10001 you understimate the instinct of a grandma, this will be your downfall
@XB10001
@XB10001 Жыл бұрын
@@hamzah5643 that's even sillier than your first statement. That instinct exists because you get to KNOW your descendants.
@hamzah5643
@hamzah5643 Жыл бұрын
@@XB10001 no, you jus have a broken family, and also, you are gay
@XB10001
@XB10001 Жыл бұрын
@@hamzah5643 No, and no. It's actually the opposite of that. Your resentment is very clear.
@junebyrne4491
@junebyrne4491 Жыл бұрын
I will tell you how much I like your channel. I carefully watch all the ads to help your. Algorithm. 😅
@chriscapablanca3491
@chriscapablanca3491 Жыл бұрын
Thinking about hunting and what I would do here . . . . barbed stone is challenging to make, easier to make from wood. Stone is needed if you want both a super strong spearpoint that is super sharp and reusable. But for fishing you don't need a barbed tip that is super strong. So if wood was used primarily for barbed spears and stone for throwing spears it might account for the lack of barbed stone tools in the fossil record. Barbed stone tools are not that necessary and are very hard to make relative to the other options.
@ancesthntr
@ancesthntr Жыл бұрын
What were our ancestors doing a million years ago? Probably wondering what their descendants would be doing in a million years. 😜 More seriously, this was a very well-done and informative video.
@frogglen6350
@frogglen6350 Жыл бұрын
Yaba Daba Dooooo!!!
@InhumanCondition-gh2qj
@InhumanCondition-gh2qj 4 ай бұрын
On this day 1,000,000 years ago? Sitting around a campfire, eating bison, making zugzug later on.
@theopinion9452
@theopinion9452 4 ай бұрын
We also had soups with zebra bones but most of the time,the cave lions would smell that and take it from us.
@keepitdialed
@keepitdialed Жыл бұрын
awesome. great narration buddy! subb'd!
@Livingproof0823
@Livingproof0823 Жыл бұрын
This is fascinating information. I can’t get enough of human history. I wish we had a more accurate time line leading up to the Egyptians and how they maybe discovered the pyramids. I know it in my soul we had a worldwide civilization during the super continent Pangea.
@nealsterling8151
@nealsterling8151 Жыл бұрын
Pangea broke apart around 200 million years ago. That was dinosaur time, a far cry from any human like being.
@theflyingdutchguy9870
@theflyingdutchguy9870 Жыл бұрын
the egyptians didnt discover the pyramids. they made them. and pangea was long before the first monkeys even existed
@jamisojo
@jamisojo Жыл бұрын
Your soul doesn't know anything. Probably because it does not exist.
@zackakai5173
@zackakai5173 Жыл бұрын
I think your "soul" needs a better education on the distant past. Most of the Egyptian pyramids were built something like 4500 years ago. The oldest evidence of an agricultural civilization in Egypt dates back to something like 7500-8000 years ago. Our own species has been around maybe 300k years, and even if you include australopiths as humans, then the earliest humans don't appear until nearly 7 million years ago. Meanwhile Pangea began to break up during the late Triassic/early Jurassic, about 200 million years ago.
@zackakai5173
@zackakai5173 Жыл бұрын
@@nealsterling8151 not only that, but it was still tens of millions of years before the earliest of the dinosaurs that are well-known by the public today. Those don't appear until the mid-Jurassic, and Pangaea was long gone by the. The dinosaurs around in the Triassic tended to be small and were likely being out-competed by the more crocodile-like pseudosuchians.
@michaellastname4922
@michaellastname4922 Жыл бұрын
Another question: what were humans doing during the last interglacial? (See Wiki: " Eemian / Marine Isotope Stage 5e (130-115 thousand years ago). The preceding interglacial optimum occurred during the Late Pleistocene Eemian Stage, 131-114 ka. During the Eemian the climatic optimum took place during pollen zone E4 in the type area (city of Amersfoort, Netherlands). Here this zone is characterized by the expansion of Quercus (oak), Corylus (hazel), Taxus (yew), Ulmus (elm), Fraxinus (ash), Carpinus (hornbeam), and Picea (spruce). During the Eemian Stage (from about 128,000 BCE until 113,000 BCE), sea level was between 5 and 9.4 meters higher than today[4] and the water temperature of the North Sea was about 2 °C higher than at present.")
@chasingmidnight6592
@chasingmidnight6592 Жыл бұрын
Keep it up! 😎
@Harpoika
@Harpoika 8 ай бұрын
Those old ancestors look like their eyes are higher so that they can see further with minimal exposure
@440SPN
@440SPN Жыл бұрын
Super interesting channel and comments.
@luketimewalker
@luketimewalker Жыл бұрын
Fantastic! Thank you. Just one bit of I hope constructive criticism: try to speak up/articulate a bit more ^^. There's a few times I had to go back a few seconds (like second oldest stone tool, I heard "nine thousand years old" at first which seemed odd, then realized you said "nineTY," but ever so faintly ) Cheers!
@wingedhussar1453
@wingedhussar1453 Жыл бұрын
The movie quest for fire sure does show a world how it was back then
@gentrynewsom2080
@gentrynewsom2080 8 ай бұрын
Here on Turtle Island USA the Clovis people were hunting and gathering and became the Ojibwe Tribe...trail blazers from the eastern continent .
@ElRayDelRio
@ElRayDelRio 7 ай бұрын
And what struck me was that Camels were originally creatures of the west 😮. I always thought camels belonged to the middle east or Africa
@DrBe-zn5fv
@DrBe-zn5fv Ай бұрын
a voice of this quality on YT is like cool fresh water
@ralphacosta4726
@ralphacosta4726 Жыл бұрын
We, too, are one with our environment. It's just a very different environment. Thanks for the video. Homo Erectus lasted so long, about 1 - 2 million years, their brains were much larger at the end of their existence than at the start; i hope we last as long as they did, or longer.
@philipcoriolis6614
@philipcoriolis6614 Жыл бұрын
Being long dead and my family too, I don't really care what my species will do one million years in the future.
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