Why don’t you get to think and make a suggestion creating another RUclips Videos Shows that’s all about the Extinct Prehistoric Amphicyons (Bear Dogs) on the next Extinct Zoo coming up next?!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️👍👍👍👍👍
I remember when i found your chanell when you had like 20k subs, one thing that changed is your mic haha, your content is always on the top since I remember. You actually helped me get back to my intrest in prehistory, so I'm really gratefull, glad your chanell is growing❤
So many people lived their lives in terror so that I could watch this video about them. I really appreciate it. Seriously. We're standing on the backs of others.
There are still people today living in terror. Ofcourse we are living in a different kind of terror, like pandemics, terrorist attacks, and possible nuclear war. But just like today, it wouldn't have been a constant state of terror, more like something you had to worry about and be alert about it.
@@tatumergo3931yeah imagine having to worry about a bird with a 15 ft wingspan snatching your child. Or that broken tooth getting you from infection or even getting carried up a tree by a big cat. Incredible stuff
It’s crazy to think that all off humanity nearly went extinct, and everything of human history wouldn’t have happend, if things went a little different
@@dummythin5378 Didn't really enjoyed that much to be honest. Not that nice to think about it. And that wouldn't be a problem at all. Non-existence is super easy. Most things don't exist in this universe. Do you think the billions of alternate you and the billions of your possible siblings suffer eternally because blind chance decided otherwise?
Yiu could also ask the Native Americans. Experts estimate that nearly 90% of the native population was wiped out by disease brought by Europeans. It was a straight up apocalypse.
To quote, we are all ‘standing on the shoulders of giants’. We are here because of the successful generations of ancestors who have lived and died before us and no doubt many millions more will live and die long after us.
"Successful" is the key word here. We need to speak of the evolution of _species,_ not regional populations, and of selection and adaptation. But anyone sitting at a computer is here because every one of our ancestors succeeded in having a child before dying. It's good to discuss science without some educationally-challenged person pushing in to refer to a certain book... Well phrased, XL!
@@gdtoobyou’re probably right. It’s happening now. People can’t be bothered or afford to have children. Humanity is on the decline. This is why the government won’t do anything about migration because it’s bringing in more people.
@@erichvonmolder9310 I’m inclined to believe that, 100K years is incredibly long for such a low population to persist, something jus seems off about this scenario.
There's plenty of historical facts that seem impossible today. How embarrassing is your comment as if it counts as anything to take serious@erichvonmolder9310
Neanderthals never had a large population and they survived for a longer time than homo sapiens have existed and through massive climatic swings, and yet we are fundamentally more successful than them because our arrival in Europe pushed them to extinction regardless of how tough they were. So yeah, I think it's plausible.
There's a hearth at Wonderwerk Cave in South Africa that dates to 1.1 MYA. Controlled fire. But in all likelihood, these technologies (fire, hand axes, etc) were gained, lost and regained in different regions and times.
Early human history is so incredibly interesting. Usually we focus of civilizations but that’s such a tiny tiny part of human history. I would love to really see how they lived and to have knows some of what they though and went through for millions of years. We’ve been around for so long I can’t even comprehend it. And just thinking that something like the Wolly Mammoth was so important to humans for such a long time and now they no longer exist.
Babies are now a lot "tougher" than people give them credit for. They are perfectly equipped and skilled for the task of growing up if adults would stop interfering with the process so much.
And they were able to successfully reproduce to save the species because they ALL knew the difference between a man and a woman, unlike what passes for college level academia today.
The only near-extinction event this world has experienced is the Flood of Noah ~2350 BC. All humanity save 8 individuals perished. This historical narrative recorded in Genesis chapters 6-9 is corroborated not only by the physical evidence/remnants worldwide, but by similar recounts of the same event showing up clearly in cultures and oral traditions everywhere. The fossil record demonstrates this, as well. Recall the discoveries of the past 20 years involving intact SOFT-TISSUE (blood platelets, capillaries, et al) in DINOSAUR (aka 'dragons' prior to 1841) bones e.g. the T-Rex discovery. If the 65-million-year myth was true, no soft tissue could last that long.
@npc4805 Generally speaking we should expect to find steel tools and weapons buried in sediment dating back that far, if a medieval era occurred in ancient history. It's not impossible, but improbable until we find steel dating back that far.
I noticed that immediately. That sort of glitch seriously undermines a viewer’s confidence in just how careful and rigorous the writing is with respect to everything else these videos are addressing.
"The water levels would be falling, not rising." Not necessarily, molecules tend to compress when cold, that principle being applied in hyper conduction. But with one of the exception being water mollecule that tend to expand when it freezes. The water/ice level would therefore rise. If ice forms elsewhere like from the bottom of the water, other than the surface, which isn't the case on earth, the water would expand. Edit: I wish people learn how to read before replying
@@KFC431 - No. The freezing of sea water into floating ice does NOT raise overall sea levels. More broadly, the growth of ice sheets on land (not floating) is associated universally with falling sea levels, exposing previously submerged land bridges. And by trying to quibble over how the volume of water expands when it freezes into ice, you are totally missing the essential point, that the statement in the video simply makes no sense: that human migration to previously uninhabited areas of the globe was made possible by “land routes that emerged as . . . water levels rose.” Rising sea levels do NOT expose land that human populations can walk across. PERIOD. That’s why the video’s statement •was• wrong.
Also 4:23 "dramatic shift in climate change" is clumsy. Not quite redundant - because the patterns of climate change did, also, change - but it needs to be unpacked better.
What I always wondered was how did they manage to work out they could make fire with friction and/or flints. I mean, if I already didn't know how, I might try with a magnifying glass but it would never occur to me to try it with friction. IQ would have a lot to do with it. Aboriginals in Tasmania forgot how it was done and they kept two fire sites permanently lit where others could go to get fire. If those sites ever went out, they'd have been in big trouble.
It is one of the reasons why humanity is so uniform, both in morphology and in behaviour. Without this event, there would be much more variations in body shape, intellect, etc.
@@mutteringmale In humans there's a severe problem in having a too closely related DNA which causes morphology and behavior, makes it more often that recessive diseases and deformities appear.
There it is, the big lie the churches, who control all your normal bodily function and makes you pay for it, has told you. The genetic diversity is only really applicable in small populations, very small. Bad genes then get passed around and there is a TINY bit of malformed genetic code. But then, there is the good thing about that also...think of those northern Italians in a tiny village since 100BC who 40% of them have a mutant gene that protects them from cholesterol, heart attacks etc. You can marry your sister, but it's not a good idea for your kids to marry kids from your uncles' Arkansas's children. :)
Homo heidelbergensis: * Almost dies to ice age * Homo Sapiens: "I have a strange attavistic urge to effect anthropogenic climate change and destroy as much ice as humanly possible."
Homo sapiens have been around for approximately 300,000 years, but the concept of civilization, characterized by the development of cities, writing, and complex societies, emerged much later. This means that while anatomically modern humans have existed for a long time, organized civilization as we know it has existed for only about 5,000 to 6,000 years. Very amazing !
I have seen some suggestions it was more 100,000 - 200,000 years ago when homo sapien sapien emerged. But your point remains, these extinctions were earlier homo species, not our current species. The film maker does partly cover this.
Even then it's disputed if we can even call them humans though. Modern humans are thought to have only existed for 10-30 000 years with at the extreme most 60-90 000 years
@@Brandon-nr8fn Well, let's qualify his bad information by revising it to the fact that "modern" Homo Sapiens, as we pretty much are today, started about 160,000 years ago.
@@bintanglintangerlangga1983 I wouldn't put much stock in birds, no matter what happens to other lineages: without hands, they are only capable of very rough, very limited manipulation of their environment and, to my knowledge, have never re-evolved them.
@@angrymokyuu9475 Raven have the head start, it have tamed or at least befriend Wolf something that we do thousand of years ago and keep in mind they used to be rival, but their infrastructure would be much different and they probably be stuck at a certain point but they would have massive head start compared to other animal, only primates can compete because they have opposable thumbs but unless primates make a breakthrough they would be at a massive disadvantage
Have you seen the full video? I can't post the link but search for this RUclips video title: "HUGE LAVA FLOWS LEAVE PEOPLE IN AWE-MOST AWESOME VIEW ON EARTH-Iceland Volcano Throwback -May31 2021"
@@randallbesch2424 Aaaaand the asvertisement of the second movie showed that indeed it was, since it's well, fiction, artistic liberties are to be expected
@@iloveprivacy8167Im pretty sure that was just a coincidence, the Yellowstone eruption in the future are predicted to be smaller than the Yellowstone eruption that happened in the past
@@UncleLeosneweyebrows Where do you think the ice is coming from? The moon? That's not how glaciers work. Yes when you add ice from a separate source, that is an increase in volume. If a portion of the water in the glass is frozen, it decreases in volume.
@ so you know the oldest is 350K. But that's just a bone, they need to fossilize and they hardly do. A bone will not easily last 100,000 years. Dinosaurs got wacked so a lot fossilized. You know a bone is 350K years old but the species being 500K years old is impossible? Nah, it's 100% likely that we are older. DNA says we are over 500K, I believe that
Excellent video. You have a talent for taking complex topics and breaking them down while keeping them interesting. I also appreciate that you don't 100% buy into a theory just because it is dramatic and instead give us the evidence for and against. Please keep up the great work!
The time frames that so many of these things reference is just mind blowing. When hundreds of thousands of years seem like one of the shorter time frames. it's just crazy how long some of this stuff took.
@@ZombieSlavfax they got to hunt and fish we have to watch out for mentally unstable people, pay car insurance, work 80 hours a week. And I’m sure humans got along better back then. Ain’t no politics just survival
what my guess is .. because now a days ppl are kept away from radioactive mines etc so my guess is there could have been radioactive soil locations back then on which those early ppl where unknowingly living ... hence their next generations could have got both good and bad mutations and bad ones died/eliminated naturally ... or they stumbled/found/chased a meteorite falling and because of fire or interest started living there .. not knowing it was a particularly unique radioactive meteorite causing good and bad both mutations and bad ones died out naturally... it can also make sense why say chinese/japanese look different as obviously not all good radiative mutations should not result in 100% same result.. or maybe radioactivity of that location plus choice of particularly radiactive food could have caused said visual variations.
what my guess is .. because now a days ppl are kept away from radioactive mines etc so my guess is there could have been radioactive soil locations back then on which those early ppl where unknowingly living ... hence their next generations could have got both good and bad mutations and bad ones died/eliminated naturally ... or they stumbled/found/chased a meteorite falling and because of fire or interest started living there .. not knowing it was a particularly unique radioactive meteorite causing good and bad both mutations and bad ones died out naturally... it can also make sense why say chinese/japanese look different as obviously not all good radiative mutations should not result in 100% same result.. or maybe radioactivity of that location plus choice of particularly radiactive food could have caused said visual variations.
@@EkimDyslexia Global mean water vapor is about 0.25% of the atmosphere by mass. If all the water vapor in the atmosphere were condensed and spread over the world's oceans, it would add 3.64 cm (1.43 inches) to the depth of the oceans. The average global ocean depth is roughly 370,000 cm. So the oceans contain 100,000 times as much water as the atmosphere.
@@SanePerson1 okay lets start simple...what happen to a sphere when heated? It expands..LOTS more land area..what happens when its cooled? Shrinks..less land area:)..Now where do you get that so little water exists in the atmosphere of up to say 100 nautical miles? :) Do you realize how thin a skin of the earth oceans are? ) What percent of water is trapped on/in land and in plants? :)
Thanks SO much for your clear narration and this terrific compilation of thoughtful, artistic discussion. When I saw your title, I thought: Toba! It's good to learn that the hypothesis has been updated. I'm also grateful that you took the time to share other hypotheses about the bottleneck. Most of all, it's wonderful that you spoke in terms of species, adaptation and selection, rather than the fashionable scientifically sloppy language. ("Then humans chose to..." 🙄) Great job, gold stars! 😊 👍 ⭐⭐⭐
It would be best if the video is true. We don't need more like this teaching people wrong. Once a false statement is learned it is 1000 times harder to get the person to believe the truth. This is not fact or truth. It is conjecture. Please educate yourself with facts. No humans on earth 900,000 years ago. Homo species wore but not humans. depending on who you talk to humans did not appear till 300,000 some says 500,000 no one says 900,000.
I remember reading that this event is also suspected to have been caused by something cosmic. Like, a meteor impact or a powerful ray burst. A lot of species went extinct during this event. One interesting thing that those species who survived had in common was that they tended to live at least part-time in caves.
You are mixing up millions of years apart extinction events. The meteor extinction phase saw our rodent-like tiny ancestors hiding in burrows at that time, in a reptilian world.
Imagine being the cavebro whose family had won the cave real estate by combat, you wake up one more morning and all your outside homies are blackened skeletons.
0:07 The picture shows a population bottleneck, not a genetic bottleneck. In a population bottleneck, all populations survive and reproduce, just in fewer numbers. In a genetic bottleneck, genetic diversity has been reduced, usually from the extinction of one or more genetically distinct populations within the species.
@@billcrandall9386 A population bottleneck is just a large reduction in the overall number of individuals in a species, while still keeping its genetic diversity. A genetic bottleneck is an elimination of several populations within the species, greatly reducing the species' genetic diversity. Of course, they can both occur at the same time.
I only clicked on this to debunk it for myself. I am SO happy this is actual factual substance that I was able to verify at least in part with search results from reputable sources. Subscribed!
With no disrespect, as interest threshold is a personal thing, our evolutionary history is a pretty standard one in comparison to the most of other mammals :)
Yea, what he says is wrong. It had the same outcome, as the ice sheets grew migration was easier, but not over land, it was over the ice. Please turn your flag around.
@@bigredc222 Actually there was a lot more land on the seacoast, the ice on the continents lowered the sea levels, ice in the water will raise them slightly as water expands when it forms ice, and yes as the weight depressed the land under the glaciers, other ice free areas would have risen. Ice melting at the North Pole will not make that much difference to the Sea levels, ice melting in Antarctica and Greenland is what will sink Miami. Climate change is a fact and whether it happens naturally or we speed it up, it is real and doesn't give a damn if you believe in it or not. The only reasonable argument to be made is not whether it is happening, but how are we going to adapt to it in order to survive as a viable civilization.
We now know that Toba was more locally devastating than globally. While certain areas of humans nearly went extinct in many other places they were doing just fine.
75,000 year ago Mt. Toba exploded wiping out many humans, animals and plants. If there was a highly advanced human civilization say Ramachandra was more advanced that we will be in 200 years failed to stop the caldera. I would say it was a centuries long civil war that took more time and tech to maintain instead of ending it. Why they were caught with their pants down when it exploded. damaged it severely and 42,000 years ago was the final end to it.
@@davidanderson_surrey_bc What a weird comment, most likely coming from someone who was just ROASTED by a gen z'er and got offended enough to leave a completely random nasty reply on a unrelated comment.. You okay? Who hurt you? Go call them a "right foul git" and maybe "boogers". You'll feel like you've won then. i guarantee it. No need to leave such stupid comments lmao. Not gen Z btw! Notice how I didn't insult any other generation? You should try it, seems the only people talking shit about generations in general are people 50+ and above. Don't go attack someone else cause of my comment now!
The near extinction event discussed in this video happened tens of millions of years after we lost the ability to produce vitamin C. That happened in some stem primate. Edit: All of our nearest relatives (all the way to tarsiers) have the same broken GULO gene. That puts our loss of the ability to produce vitamin C at probably more than 60 million years ago.
They did not die. 900k years ago was when two of the 24 chromosomes primates normally have fused, to create the 23 humans have. It was not a near extinction event, it was actually the start of our species.
@eekamoose You can look it up if you want, it is well known. Search of "when did chromosome 2 fuse" I will provide a link to a paper in a second post, but it may not appear because youtube does not like links. Anyway the current accepted estimate is around 900k years ago, but more generally it is 0.75 to 4.5 million years.
they don't and this is all fiction. Humans weren't around 900,000 years ago. Humans weren't around 10,000 years ago there's literally zero proof of any of this without giant holes in it
You miss one hypothesis: That they kill each others to almost extinction... and that we are the heirs of the worst of the worse. The ones who survived.
we would not be living close. our ancient ancestors lived in small family tribes. and would live pretty far from any other tribe. because hunting and gathering requires you to cover huge piece of land to get enough food.... but yea, if you were living close to some other tribe, you would no be very friendly with them because you are competing for same resources. they would probably get into frequent raids. stealing food and women.
The 'Volume of Material Erupted' graphic at 0:39 is wrong, on the date of the Yellowstone Huckleberry Ridge eruption. That was 2.1 million years ago, not 74000. If it was 74000, that would put it roughly concurrent with the Toba eruption - which would definitely help to bolster the Toba bottleneck theory...if it were a correct dating...which it's not.
"I am going to invent technology just to keep this entire cold planet warm, nature may have got us here but I'm gonna get us out of it because I don't like it." Is probably the most Human of sentiments.
There'd be so much more proselytizing nowadays if the Velocopastors didn't go extinct. Some say it was the ice, others say it was the lack of donations.
The most amazing and rapid evolution over the decades is the observation that depictions of our "ancestors" skin tone in books and videos keeps getting lighter and lighter. Fascinating.
Just scrolling, saw the title, had to comment. There were NO humans on Earth 900,000 years ago! Not even "early humans!" Only hominids. Neanderthals weren't even around until 200,000 years ago.
What are the references to the papers on which this video is based? I could not find the reference listed in the notes section and the authors were not named. Please provide references so that viewers can read these papers for ourselves.
@@silent_reaper999 Yeah, that is a real problem with YTubers who make scientific claims based on 'research papers' but as a Ph.D. researcher I am perfectly capable of reading most research papers on my own. And in this case I am married to a population geneticist in case I get in over my head. I am always suspicious of those who do not back up their claims with independent references when it is so easy to do so.
2 years of ExtinctZoo! Feels absolutely wild to type that out…Thank you everyone for helping make ExtinctZoo what it is today - you all are the best.
Nah you the best, thanks for taking your time and makin these videos.
Why don’t you get to think and make a suggestion creating another RUclips Videos Shows that’s all about the Extinct Prehistoric Amphicyons (Bear Dogs) on the next Extinct Zoo coming up next?!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️👍👍👍👍👍
I remember when i found your chanell when you had like 20k subs, one thing that changed is your mic haha, your content is always on the top since I remember. You actually helped me get back to my intrest in prehistory, so I'm really gratefull, glad your chanell is growing❤
I'm happy I could have joined you on this journey
why havent you verified your channel yet?
So many people lived their lives in terror so that I could watch this video about them. I really appreciate it. Seriously. We're standing on the backs of others.
There are still people today living in terror. Ofcourse we are living in a different kind of terror, like pandemics, terrorist attacks, and possible nuclear war.
But just like today, it wouldn't have been a constant state of terror, more like something you had to worry about and be alert about it.
‘Nasty, brutish, and short’ was very much most of human history’s verdict on life 😳
@@lornarettig3215 We are quite the story.
Shoulders of giants
@@tatumergo3931yeah imagine having to worry about a bird with a 15 ft wingspan snatching your child. Or that broken tooth getting you from infection or even getting carried up a tree by a big cat. Incredible stuff
"Why don't you just give up"
"Because they never did"
All those humans ages ago survived and the ultimate culmination of our species as of this moment includes you. Don't dare give up now!
Is what they tell little sheep to keep them working in the factories.
@@YolandaHalfAlmonde what do you do?
A sub species also survived. Homo Hawk Tuahis.
*Distant, ethereal “ooga boogas”*
It’s crazy to think that all off humanity nearly went extinct, and everything of human history wouldn’t have happend, if things went a little different
And in different I'd think it would be better for everything and everyone else.
If you go back far enough, us and all extant species are the descendants of those that survived every major mass extinction.
@@4124V4TA-SNPCA-x well you seemed to enjoy leaving that comment and you wouldn't have gotten to do that
Well shoo, what was the ccp almost blew us all up in an unwarranted nuclear retaliation less than a century ago😊
@@dummythin5378
Didn't really enjoyed that much to be honest. Not that nice to think about it.
And that wouldn't be a problem at all.
Non-existence is super easy. Most things don't exist in this universe. Do you think the billions of alternate you and the billions of your possible siblings suffer eternally because blind chance decided otherwise?
When ever I feel bad about my day, I watch this and think "I wonder if this is what bacteria thinks when I put on rubbing alcohol, wipeout 90%?"
“Damn Covid, bringing Purell into the mix. Well, there goes the neighborhood!” says all the bacteria.
@@DeborahThird-og1uoGood one!😂👍
99.9999%
Did you think “90% alcohol” meant alcohol that kills 90% of bacteria?
Yiu could also ask the Native Americans. Experts estimate that nearly 90% of the native population was wiped out by disease brought by Europeans. It was a straight up apocalypse.
Earth: "Damn, almost had'em"
Try again.. don't feel bad. YOU CAN DO IT!!!
@@PhrontDoor Nah, we're too powerful now. The only force that can end humanity at this point, is ourselves.
We’re like cockroaches
@@Ruzzky_Bly4t random GRB from a black hole : *bet*
Earth: Maybe 5th time is a charmed. (Earth mass extinction have happen 4 times)
Kudos to the cameraman for getting footage from 900,000 years ago. What a goat!
Camerasaurus it's the technical term
this is not funny anymore. Overused comment and overrated
@@Exiler360 first time I see it tho
It's damn hard to get decent footage when you're running, even with a Steadycam.
@@hopelessnerd6677 GoPro.
When people say my ancestor's lives were boring, I'll say they clutched up 900,000 years ago.
Having a smilodon roaring outside your cave makes your life a bit less boring, hey?
@@mutteringmale Indeed!
I don’t think anyone has ever said that, though.
@@masamune2984 Ik, ik, but....its a thought...
@@mutteringmale a Xenosmilous is more intimidatingly.
To quote, we are all ‘standing on the shoulders of giants’. We are here because of the successful generations of ancestors who have lived and died before us and no doubt many millions more will live and die long after us.
Yes, that is how procreation works... Billions of microorganisms could say the same... In fact any lifeform can
"Successful" is the key word here. We need to speak of the evolution of _species,_ not regional populations, and of selection and adaptation. But anyone sitting at a computer is here because every one of our ancestors succeeded in having a child before dying. It's good to discuss science without some educationally-challenged person pushing in to refer to a certain book... Well phrased, XL!
@@FionaKelleghan111lmao _all science refers to a book._
That’s the whole part about recording your experiments so others can replicate them 😅
Nah. They'll all stop having children. That's how humanity will die out.
@@gdtoobyou’re probably right. It’s happening now. People can’t be bothered or afford to have children. Humanity is on the decline. This is why the government won’t do anything about migration because it’s bringing in more people.
1,000 Humans away from not having to work today.
You just want to bang on de drum all day?
Is it your dream to be a couch potato ?? LOL
😂
@@matildagreene1744 Absolutely yes!
😂😂😂😂
It’s hard to believe that there were only ~1100 humanoid individuals for over 100,000 years from a population of almost 100K before that.
Because there wasn't.
@@erichvonmolder9310 I’m inclined to believe that, 100K years is incredibly long for such a low population to persist, something jus seems off about this scenario.
@@marjus89 yeah, that doesn't sound realistic to me.
There's plenty of historical facts that seem impossible today.
How embarrassing is your comment as if it counts as anything to take serious@erichvonmolder9310
Neanderthals never had a large population and they survived for a longer time than homo sapiens have existed and through massive climatic swings, and yet we are fundamentally more successful than them because our arrival in Europe pushed them to extinction regardless of how tough they were.
So yeah, I think it's plausible.
There's a hearth at Wonderwerk Cave in South Africa that dates to 1.1 MYA. Controlled fire. But in all likelihood, these technologies (fire, hand axes, etc) were gained, lost and regained in different regions and times.
Crazy it took us 1 million years to get from hand axes to nukes, we're slow AF smh
@@BirdieDev
Not really. For great apes, we've done very well.
@@BirdieDev do some research. The last 1000 years sped up human progress.
@@Sheepdog1314 it's a joke bro
Wrong and evolution proves you're wrong. You sound like a racial apologist instead of a realest.
Early human history is so incredibly interesting. Usually we focus of civilizations but that’s such a tiny tiny part of human history. I would love to really see how they lived and to have knows some of what they though and went through for millions of years. We’ve been around for so long I can’t even comprehend it. And just thinking that something like the Wolly Mammoth was so important to humans for such a long time and now they no longer exist.
What trips me out is the fact that dinosaurs were around for so long that there were fossilized dinosaurs while there were still dinosaurs around!
@@AnneHathawayRules Fossilization can happen in as little as a few days under controlled conditions… regularly in a few years, thats not saying much.
@@travispratt6327 wow... way to suck the fun out of that, jerk.
Kudos to our ancestors, they must have been real tough mfs, even their babies were tougher than anyone of us today. We owe them big time.
Babies are now a lot "tougher" than people give them credit for. They are perfectly equipped and skilled for the task of growing up if adults would stop interfering with the process so much.
And they were able to successfully reproduce to save the species because they ALL knew the difference between a man and a woman, unlike what passes for college level academia today.
The only near-extinction event this world has experienced is the Flood of Noah ~2350 BC. All humanity save 8 individuals perished. This historical narrative recorded in Genesis chapters 6-9 is corroborated not only by the physical evidence/remnants worldwide, but by similar recounts of the same event showing up clearly in cultures and oral traditions everywhere.
The fossil record demonstrates this, as well. Recall the discoveries of the past 20 years involving intact SOFT-TISSUE (blood platelets, capillaries, et al) in DINOSAUR (aka 'dragons' prior to 1841) bones e.g. the T-Rex discovery. If the 65-million-year myth was true, no soft tissue could last that long.
fatherless ? why do you feel so weak
@@mikemondano3624never have kids. have you not seen all of the studies they did about infants without their parents?
That 40k world is so grimdark.
The Planet broke before the Homid did
Once they saw the weakness of their flesh..
They mastered fire and wore furs
IN THE GRIMDARK FUTURE OF THE 41st MILLENIUM THERE IS NO VICTOR
@@mikuios just Viktor Hark
In the grim darkness of the distant past, there's only war.
My relatives survived this event.
OMG that's crazy mine too
no yours came a lineage of swine
mine didn't
Good Job Mine too!
Just keep pulling on that thread and it'll give you an entirely new appreciation for life
You can understand why people prayed to nature gods, begging not to be wiped out.
Their prayers worked, obviously. I don't think prayers will work this time around.
If their prayers worked, their population wouldn't have lost so many
I mean we don't have evidence of religion anywhere near that far back so I doubt it was a contributing factor 😂
Atheists are right about religion being a bs Santa claus story. But most atheists would call God when they are about to die in a plane crash.
I suspect that there was more than one near-extinction events, and probably several near-near-extinction events.
true, it would be hard to track those extinctions of humans from so long ago, we might have had multiple medieval times in process
@@NostalgicMem0riesnah bc medieval level technology would have left a trace even that far back
@@greatestaxolotl4933How so?
@npc4805 Generally speaking we should expect to find steel tools and weapons buried in sediment dating back that far, if a medieval era occurred in ancient history. It's not impossible, but improbable until we find steel dating back that far.
What?? How do you not know that Earth went through 5 mass-extinction events?? Were you home-schooled?
8:22: Errata: "Thanks to land routes that emerged as the ice sheets grew and water levels rose." The water levels would be falling, not rising.
I noticed that immediately. That sort of glitch seriously undermines a viewer’s confidence in just how careful and rigorous the writing is with respect to everything else these videos are addressing.
"The water levels would be falling, not rising."
Not necessarily, molecules tend to compress when cold, that principle being applied in hyper conduction. But with one of the exception being water mollecule that tend to expand when it freezes. The water/ice level would therefore rise.
If ice forms elsewhere like from the bottom of the water, other than the surface, which isn't the case on earth, the water would expand.
Edit: I wish people learn how to read before replying
@@KFC431 - No. The freezing of sea water into floating ice does NOT raise overall sea levels.
More broadly, the growth of ice sheets on land (not floating) is associated universally with falling sea levels, exposing previously submerged land bridges.
And by trying to quibble over how the volume of water expands when it freezes into ice, you are totally missing the essential point, that the statement in the video simply makes no sense: that human migration to previously uninhabited areas of the globe was made possible by “land routes that emerged as . . . water levels rose.” Rising sea levels do NOT expose land that human populations can walk across. PERIOD. That’s why the video’s statement •was• wrong.
Also 4:23 "dramatic shift in climate change" is clumsy. Not quite redundant - because the patterns of climate change did, also, change - but it needs to be unpacked better.
The term you are looking for is "glacial rebound" as heavy ass ice sheets melt and recede the land itself rises.
every story is a story of survival, no matter the species
unless they don't...
@@Honest_Question still story of survival, just without happy end
@@likeAG6likeAG6 Technically it's then a story of failed survival or a story of death
@@Honest_Question Well technically it's a story of survival until the last paragraph.
@@Honest_Question a story of failed survival is a story of survival at the end of the day.
The video quality is great for being over 900,000 years old.
What happened to photo and video quality in the 18-1900s?
still better than cameras on supermarkets
The fire was too op, such a buff for humans.
They realized they could cook mobs by killing them with fire aspect.
@@Super-Saiyan-Blue-Gogeta True that
Common Prometheus W
Even now, nothing contributes more to population growth than dependable and plentiful energy.
What I always wondered was how did they manage to work out they could make fire with friction and/or flints. I mean, if I already didn't know how, I might try with a magnifying glass but it would never occur to me to try it with friction. IQ would have a lot to do with it.
Aboriginals in Tasmania forgot how it was done and they kept two fire sites permanently lit where others could go to get fire. If those sites ever went out, they'd have been in big trouble.
It is one of the reasons why humanity is so uniform, both in morphology and in behaviour. Without this event, there would be much more variations in body shape, intellect, etc.
Crows and rattlesnakes are so uniform both in morphology and in behaviour. Your point?
@@mutteringmale In humans there's a severe problem in having a too closely related DNA which causes morphology and behavior, makes it more often that recessive diseases and deformities appear.
There it is, the big lie the churches, who control all your normal bodily function and makes you pay for it, has told you.
The genetic diversity is only really applicable in small populations, very small. Bad genes then get passed around and there is a TINY bit of malformed genetic code.
But then, there is the good thing about that also...think of those northern Italians in a tiny village since 100BC who 40% of them have a mutant gene that protects them from cholesterol, heart attacks etc.
You can marry your sister, but it's not a good idea for your kids to marry kids from your uncles' Arkansas's children. :)
we have huge variations already; intellect wise some people are closer to other species than some humans
one would kill other anyway... it partly happened.
Homo heidelbergensis: * Almost dies to ice age *
Homo Sapiens: "I have a strange attavistic urge to effect anthropogenic climate change and destroy as much ice as humanly possible."
😂
Humans hate ice
L@@whyyoulooklikethat5748Homo Sapiens: The ice killed my grandpa species all Ice will be destroyed!!!!!
Homo sapiens have been around for approximately 300,000 years, but the concept of civilization, characterized by the development of cities, writing, and complex societies, emerged much later. This means that while anatomically modern humans have existed for a long time, organized civilization as we know it has existed for only about 5,000 to 6,000 years. Very amazing !
I have seen some suggestions it was more 100,000 - 200,000 years ago when homo sapien sapien emerged. But your point remains, these extinctions were earlier homo species, not our current species. The film maker does partly cover this.
Even then it's disputed if we can even call them humans though. Modern humans are thought to have only existed for 10-30 000 years with at the extreme most 60-90 000 years
Wrong
Given that we quite literally have no bullshit non conspiracy theory archeological sites from 12k years ago, I’m not sure that’s correct.
@@Brandon-nr8fn Well, let's qualify his bad information by revising it to the fact that "modern" Homo Sapiens, as we pretty much are today, started about 160,000 years ago.
Imagine our ancestors had gone extinct. Would it be a line of “Planets of the Apes” primates versus super-smart rats? Lol
You forgot raccoons also the apes were made smart.
Rats there's already rats walking into legs
Or more likely Raven and Primate
@@bintanglintangerlangga1983 I wouldn't put much stock in birds, no matter what happens to other lineages: without hands, they are only capable of very rough, very limited manipulation of their environment and, to my knowledge, have never re-evolved them.
@@angrymokyuu9475 Raven have the head start, it have tamed or at least befriend Wolf something that we do thousand of years ago and keep in mind they used to be rival, but their infrastructure would be much different and they probably be stuck at a certain point but they would have massive head start compared to other animal, only primates can compete because they have opposable thumbs but unless primates make a breakthrough they would be at a massive disadvantage
1:41 that volcano footage is AMAZING.
Have you seen the full video? I can't post the link but search for this RUclips video title:
"HUGE LAVA FLOWS LEAVE PEOPLE IN AWE-MOST AWESOME VIEW ON EARTH-Iceland Volcano Throwback -May31 2021"
I think that is the best volcano footage I have seen. Make sure you search with the quotes and get the 8min52sec video on RUclips. Your welcome. 🙂
Did anybody else notice that the next 3 largest eruptions in the graphic were all Yellowstone?
ok now the plot of the croods startin' to make sense 🤔
The Croods are not on Earth.
@@randallbesch2424it was a joke lol
True
😂😂😂😂👍
@@randallbesch2424 Aaaaand the asvertisement of the second movie showed that indeed it was, since it's well, fiction, artistic liberties are to be expected
Congrats on 2 years! Ive been kbsessed eith your videos since last night, theyre all im watching
Kyle
Lake toba is a super volcano like Yellowstone. That’s why its eruption was so powerful
Yeah
It was Mount Toba before the caldera exploded 70,000+ years ago.
Speaking of Yellowstone: anyone else notice that the three eruptions listed get progressively larger over time?
@@iloveprivacy8167Im pretty sure that was just a coincidence, the Yellowstone eruption in the future are predicted to be smaller than the Yellowstone eruption that happened in the past
Wait until Yellowstone blows. Talk about getting hurled back
Error: About 8:20. As the glaciers grew, the water level DROPPED, not rose.
caught that too
@@UncleLeosneweyebrows Not when you take ice out of the glass and put it on the table next to it.
@@UncleLeosneweyebrowssalt water. Density is different. Put fresh water ice into salt water and see.
@@UncleLeosneweyebrows Where do you think the ice is coming from? The moon? That's not how glaciers work. Yes when you add ice from a separate source, that is an increase in volume. If a portion of the water in the glass is frozen, it decreases in volume.
@@hiramabiff604 The density doesn't make a difference if ice is being magically added from an outside source.
The producers of "Quest for Fire" movie were way ahead of all these geneticists and scientists.
Kino movie
You mean the part where they depicted Neanderthals more like apes?
@@johnt3805 To be fair, Neanderthals *were* apes. And so are we. But yes, if you mean "they were too ooga booga," then point taken.
Good movie
@@johnt3805 Have you seen a N.Yorker in a wifebeater t shirt on a hot summer's day?
Thanks for the continued efforts
I'm really happy that you made it this far with your channel as I hope you continue to grow a teach people about prehistoric times and creatures.
Congrats to 2 years of Extinct Zoo!! Keep up the awesome work
Imagine the struggle to survive those poor savages had to go through. The stress, the pain, the hunger, the sorrow...
It builds character. Which results in Danny Devito
Strugle for modern humans, all normal back then.
I agree. We are the offspring of epic survivalists!
Its always good to note that when he says humans, he isn't referring to Homo sapien, which came to be about 200,000 y/ago..
Ehhhh Homo sapiens are probably 500K + years old
@Sylvester4571 we haven't found homo sapien bones that long ago yet.
Oldest remains estimated at 350k years ago.
@ so you know the oldest is 350K. But that's just a bone, they need to fossilize and they hardly do. A bone will not easily last 100,000 years. Dinosaurs got wacked so a lot fossilized. You know a bone is 350K years old but the species being 500K years old is impossible? Nah, it's 100% likely that we are older. DNA says we are over 500K, I believe that
Excellent video. You have a talent for taking complex topics and breaking them down while keeping them interesting. I also appreciate that you don't 100% buy into a theory just because it is dramatic and instead give us the evidence for and against. Please keep up the great work!
The time frames that so many of these things reference is just mind blowing. When hundreds of thousands of years seem like one of the shorter time frames. it's just crazy how long some of this stuff took.
Assuming that the time frame is real.
you live closer in time to the last dinosaur, in the last dinosaur did to the first dinosaur.
Kiss a frog and instantly turn into a prince? Fairy tale.
Kiss a frog and wait millions of years to turn into a prince? - Evolution!
@@earlysda 👍🤣
@@earlysda Patience is a virtue.
Excellent production and an honest and more than fair solicitation.
Good on you!
Except at 8:20 When ice sheets grow, sea level DROPS.
If you ever feel down, just remember, your ancestors had to live through this shit.
Note to our descendants, we had to live through this shit, different shit, still shit 😂
@@ZombieSlavfax they got to hunt and fish we have to watch out for mentally unstable people, pay car insurance, work 80 hours a week. And I’m sure humans got along better back then. Ain’t no politics just survival
Damn! Didn't know grandpa got so lucky
what my guess is .. because now a days ppl are kept away from radioactive mines etc so my guess is there could have been radioactive soil locations back then on which those early ppl where unknowingly living ... hence their next generations could have got both good and bad mutations and bad ones died/eliminated naturally ... or they stumbled/found/chased a meteorite falling and because of fire or interest started living there .. not knowing it was a particularly unique radioactive meteorite causing good and bad both mutations and bad ones died out naturally... it can also make sense why say chinese/japanese look different as obviously not all good radiative mutations should not result in 100% same result.. or maybe radioactivity of that location plus choice of particularly radiactive food could have caused said visual variations.
In more ways than one....hubba hubba. Spry old guy, eh?
8:20 - I'm sure you meant to say, "...as the ice sheets grew and water levels FELL."
what my guess is .. because now a days ppl are kept away from radioactive mines etc so my guess is there could have been radioactive soil locations back then on which those early ppl where unknowingly living ... hence their next generations could have got both good and bad mutations and bad ones died/eliminated naturally ... or they stumbled/found/chased a meteorite falling and because of fire or interest started living there .. not knowing it was a particularly unique radioactive meteorite causing good and bad both mutations and bad ones died out naturally... it can also make sense why say chinese/japanese look different as obviously not all good radiative mutations should not result in 100% same result.. or maybe radioactivity of that location plus choice of particularly radiactive food could have caused said visual variations.
umm nope..put ice in water..displaces water:) MOST of worlds water is in atmosphere after all:)
@@EkimDyslexia Global mean water vapor is about 0.25% of the atmosphere by mass. If all the water vapor in the atmosphere were condensed and spread over the world's oceans, it would add 3.64 cm (1.43 inches) to the depth of the oceans. The average global ocean depth is roughly 370,000 cm. So the oceans contain 100,000 times as much water as the atmosphere.
Yes, that was a major missread/error on the narrators part...or bad research.
@@SanePerson1 okay lets start simple...what happen to a sphere when heated? It expands..LOTS more land area..what happens when its cooled? Shrinks..less land area:)..Now where do you get that so little water exists in the atmosphere of up to say 100 nautical miles? :) Do you realize how thin a skin of the earth oceans are? ) What percent of water is trapped on/in land and in plants? :)
Thanks SO much for your clear narration and this terrific compilation of thoughtful, artistic discussion. When I saw your title, I thought: Toba! It's good to learn that the hypothesis has been updated. I'm also grateful that you took the time to share other hypotheses about the bottleneck. Most of all, it's wonderful that you spoke in terms of species, adaptation and selection, rather than the fashionable scientifically sloppy language. ("Then humans chose to..." 🙄) Great job, gold stars! 😊 👍 ⭐⭐⭐
Videos like this need to have millions and millions of views. Our history is crucial for our future
It’s all fanfic anyways
@@PenguinTac0s Proof?
@@ishros look around see any evolution?
It would be best if the video is true. We don't need more like this teaching people wrong. Once a false statement is learned it is 1000 times harder to get the person to believe the truth. This is not fact or truth. It is conjecture. Please educate yourself with facts. No humans on earth 900,000 years ago. Homo species wore but not humans. depending on who you talk to humans did not appear till 300,000 some says 500,000 no one says 900,000.
@@PenguinTac0sbuddy probably thinks the bible is historical. that’s the ultimate fanfic lol😭😭
Great presentation.
No ai voice or distrating music.
There is a tinnitus reminding background sound, though.
This will be the leading theory....until it's not.
Science in a nutshell
The leading theory will always have one thing in common though...... completely opposite of the bible.
@@NigelM18 theres several spots in history that could have been the flood
@@ReznaQay Wow, at least you're admitting there was a flood.
...until its accepted as fact
Carry on, mate!
Sugestion: When showing graphs, do a little interaction with them. Hard to follow for neophytes ;)
I remember reading that this event is also suspected to have been caused by something cosmic. Like, a meteor impact or a powerful ray burst. A lot of species went extinct during this event. One interesting thing that those species who survived had in common was that they tended to live at least part-time in caves.
You are mixing up millions of years apart extinction events. The meteor extinction phase saw our rodent-like tiny ancestors hiding in burrows at that time, in a reptilian world.
Imagine being the cavebro whose family had won the cave real estate by combat, you wake up one more morning and all your outside homies are blackened skeletons.
@@iGame3D What did Daenerys Targaryen have to do with your cave bros?
Youre thinking of the Cretaceous/Paleogene Mass Extinction Event....at least partly due to the Chicxulub asteroid impact.
@@Kiwigeo8339Chicxulub Is that a new hip hop rave bar? Get me some x when yu're there! Then I won't care about the nuclear winter.
0:07 The picture shows a population bottleneck, not a genetic bottleneck. In a population bottleneck, all populations survive and reproduce, just in fewer numbers. In a genetic bottleneck, genetic diversity has been reduced, usually from the extinction of one or more genetically distinct populations within the species.
Population bottlenecks involve genetic bottlenecks; fewer individuals, less diversity, while asll else is close to equal.
@@billcrandall9386 A population bottleneck is just a large reduction in the overall number of individuals in a species, while still keeping its genetic diversity. A genetic bottleneck is an elimination of several populations within the species, greatly reducing the species' genetic diversity.
Of course, they can both occur at the same time.
@@somkit9102 there was a bottleneck of tigers in the 70,000 year time.
@@randallbesch2424 That's interesting.
@@somkit9102Both relate to one another.
I only clicked on this to debunk it for myself. I am SO happy this is actual factual substance that I was able to verify at least in part with search results from reputable sources. Subscribed!
bro. it was a war between the apes and the new primates on the scene. the humans. oh what a glorious battle LMFAO
what a wonderful day!
@@kovi-kovi-viko lmfao
Us against every wild thing alive. Have you seen modern landscaping?
😂😂😂😂😂😂
You forgot Orcs
Thanks for the video! Congrats on the continued success!
As ice sheets grew and water levels FELL.
Absolutely
The opposite is also with current climate change 😊!
This man needs 500k
Tack så mycket för videon! 🇸🇪
Our history is so massively interesting 🤩
Our history is mostly made up speculation after 6000 years. They have no clue.
With no disrespect, as interest threshold is a personal thing, our evolutionary history is a pretty standard one in comparison to the most of other mammals :)
I was always under the perception that as ice levels increase, ocean levels DEcrease.
Yea, what he says is wrong. It had the same outcome, as the ice sheets grew migration was easier, but not over land, it was over the ice.
Please turn your flag around.
@@bigredc222 Maybe his boat is sinking.
Yes eventually but not at first.
@@bigredc222 Actually there was a lot more land on the seacoast, the ice on the continents lowered the sea levels, ice in the water will raise them slightly as water expands when it forms ice, and yes as the weight depressed the land under the glaciers, other ice free areas would have risen. Ice melting at the North Pole will not make that much difference to the Sea levels, ice melting in Antarctica and Greenland is what will sink Miami. Climate change is a fact and whether it happens naturally or we speed it up, it is real and doesn't give a damn if you believe in it or not. The only reasonable argument to be made is not whether it is happening, but how are we going to adapt to it in order to survive as a viable civilization.
Camera man never dies taken to a new extreme
Excellent content!
Liked and Subscribed.
Earth, you had ONE JOB. ONE JOB!
after you 👉
Wait, you mean God right? lol
Flegrian fields or Yellowstone this time, take your pick though Tambora 2 might still be on the backburner.😉
Pretty twisted to wish excinction of your own species. Marxist brainwash might do that to some.
The job is for Earth to eat all of the human's refuse, toxic garbage?
So what is dattto job?
That’s honestly crazy
It would be appropriate and appreciated if you provide the citations on the description
Tinfoil hat time: It was dragons
Dragons? Pfff foolish, it was obviously Voldemort
@@tätt_ninjahr It was Sauron
"Ice sheets grew and water levels rose." The water levels would have dropped with the ice sheets growing.
I mean if you put an ice cube in a half full cup of water the water level rises so maybe it’s something like that
@@JurassicEdits1993 Ice sheets grow on land.
@@JurassicEdits1993Where would the ice come from? Freezing ice causes the water level to drop.
@@brendanh8193the a t m o s p h e r e......and from within the earth itself.
@@brianstarnes2718In the Arctic?
And now theres 8 billion people today! Amazing humans have come a long way! 😮❤
And we are still fools reproducing mindlessly like other animals.
@@randallbesch2424 Even the flies are exhausted trying to keep up.
Tooo many
Too many. All in the wrong places. Doomed to fail. Even Taylor Swift
@@randallbesch2424we need a superior alien predator to curb that.
Even crazier that fewer than 100,000 people existed across the entire globe
STARTED FROM THE BOTTOM NOW WE HERE
Still on the bottom with a trail of crimes behind us.
I call this an alabama level event
In Alabama, the Earth is 6,000 years old.
LMAO I'm from bama and I approve this message 😂@@mikemondano3624
@@mikemondano3624
Most visited dating site: my heritage.
Lol
😂😂😂❤❤
That Mt Toba event in the Pleistocene epochs of the ice Age
We now know that Toba was more locally devastating than globally. While certain areas of humans nearly went extinct in many other places they were doing just fine.
75,000 year ago Mt. Toba exploded wiping out many humans, animals and plants. If there was a highly advanced human civilization say Ramachandra was more advanced that we will be in 200 years failed to stop the caldera. I would say it was a centuries long civil war that took more time and tech to maintain instead of ending it. Why they were caught with their pants down when it exploded. damaged it severely and 42,000 years ago was the final end to it.
I was about to extinct from all the ads popping up.
Never thought I'd see KSI in a video like this.
☠️☠️☠️
🦍
💀💀💀
Wdym? He was in the thumbnail
@@pistolduce1230 LOL
With 8:24 mark, an error occurred. The narrator said, "As the ice advanced, ... water levels rose"; they meant water levels fell.
Ice is larger in volume than the same volume of liquid water
You could've known every person alive at that point in time.
Yeah, but the Gen Zs of the day would be crying the blues because they only had a thousand followers.
@@davidanderson_surrey_bcthey would have 999 followers 🤦
@@davidanderson_surrey_bc What a weird comment, most likely coming from someone who was just ROASTED by a gen z'er and got offended enough to leave a completely random nasty reply on a unrelated comment.. You okay? Who hurt you? Go call them a "right foul git" and maybe "boogers". You'll feel like you've won then. i guarantee it. No need to leave such stupid comments lmao. Not gen Z btw! Notice how I didn't insult any other generation? You should try it, seems the only people talking shit about generations in general are people 50+ and above. Don't go attack someone else cause of my comment now!
@@oShadowkun found the gen z'er
Actually, smaller brains mean a small Dunbar Number, so you could not know that many.
Cool video as always honestly
The blue blooded "maca maca" sound crabs might want to know your sources.
You're a genius.
My grandmother told me about this!
Probably she heard it as a little girl from Joe Biden.
This was fascinating.
Thank-you
Please provide the references for the studies you discuss.
Maybe this is around the time we lost the ability to make vitamin C
nah that would be tied to an all year round availability of fruit which makes autogeneration of C vitamin useless.
I didn't even know we had that ability
@@DirtyHippy420yeah many other animals can naturally produce it
The near extinction event discussed in this video happened tens of millions of years after we lost the ability to produce vitamin C. That happened in some stem primate.
Edit: All of our nearest relatives (all the way to tarsiers) have the same broken GULO gene. That puts our loss of the ability to produce vitamin C at probably more than 60 million years ago.
It's already gone at the time hòmò èrèctus shows ùp.
I really hope Earth gets it right next time.
Earth got it right the first time. It cradled Humanity, that's all it needed to do.
Homo sapiens existed for approximately 200,000 to 300,000 years. 900,000 years is a bit of a stretch.
Do you think humans magically appeared 300,000 years ago?
But what about that Sci Fi book that says the Earth is only 6000 years old?
They did not die. 900k years ago was when two of the 24 chromosomes primates normally have fused, to create the 23 humans have. It was not a near extinction event, it was actually the start of our species.
Can you provide evidence of that?
@eekamoose You can look it up if you want, it is well known. Search of "when did chromosome 2 fuse"
I will provide a link to a paper in a second post, but it may not appear because youtube does not like links.
Anyway the current accepted estimate is around 900k years ago, but more generally it is 0.75 to 4.5 million years.
@eekamoose The title of the paper is " Revised time estimation of the ancestral human chromosome 2 fusion"
@@Tugela60 OK, many thanks for those details, I’ll look for that article.
@@Tugela60 Rubbish...I just posted up a link to a scientific paper.
1,280 is a very specific population. How do they know this? A prehistoric census? 😅
Counting the differences in area d1s80 is one way.
@@quijybojanklebits8750 Still seems highly specific. Likely it's a average between a min and a max reasonable likely amount.
@@Ranstone that's because it is specific.
they don't and this is all fiction. Humans weren't around 900,000 years ago. Humans weren't around 10,000 years ago
there's literally zero proof of any of this without giant holes in it
The more outrageous the claim, the more believable it is. Even though it's fiction.
Absolutely brilliant video thankyou
1:08 Was this guy in his cell phone during the eruption?
"Yeah, nah, just chillin' at home watching Stickflix, this season is fire."
Lol looks like it! Who would he be calling?
Who’s he gonna call?
GHOSTBUSTERS
GET OU-🔥🔥🔥🔥🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️
Lmfao
“Hey Grog its Gork, if you go out hunting for elephants make sure you bring me some tusk for my new hor-. Grog why the fuck is the sky on fire!?”
You miss one hypothesis: That they kill each others to almost extinction... and that we are the heirs of the worst of the worse. The ones who survived.
we would not be living close.
our ancient ancestors lived in small family tribes.
and would live pretty far from any other tribe.
because hunting and gathering requires you to cover huge piece of land to get enough food....
but yea, if you were living close to some other tribe, you would no be very friendly with them because you are competing for same resources.
they would probably get into frequent raids.
stealing food and women.
Yes, past atrocities are barely mentioned
The 'Volume of Material Erupted' graphic at 0:39 is wrong, on the date of the Yellowstone Huckleberry Ridge eruption. That was 2.1 million years ago, not 74000. If it was 74000, that would put it roughly concurrent with the Toba eruption - which would definitely help to bolster the Toba bottleneck theory...if it were a correct dating...which it's not.
"I am going to invent technology just to keep this entire cold planet warm, nature may have got us here but I'm gonna get us out of it because I don't like it." Is probably the most Human of sentiments.
Ironically we may now extinct ourselves with our technology.
There'd be so much more proselytizing nowadays if the Velocopastors didn't go extinct. Some say it was the ice, others say it was the lack of donations.
The most amazing and rapid evolution over the decades is the observation that depictions of our "ancestors" skin tone in books and videos keeps getting lighter and lighter. Fascinating.
So Africans and Australians and Melanesians are getting lighter?
Two minutes in and I fell asleep.
What a great thing to watch if you are having trouble sleeping! 👍
8:20 ice sheets grew and water levels rose. HUH?
Next mass extinction.
“Due to low human population you will have to procreate with your relatives”
Appalachia: “it’s our time to shine!”
Just scrolling, saw the title, had to comment.
There were NO humans on Earth 900,000 years ago! Not even "early humans!" Only hominids. Neanderthals weren't even around until 200,000 years ago.
I was gonna comment this lol because humans didn't exist till recently.
Hominids are considered human
Addressed @2:05 onwards.
@@keithsavagelives, hominids are humans
But weren't some form on non-evolved humans there 2 myo?
rare caveman match clutch u walked so i could run ty my ungabrotha
1:59 whats the name of that show!? it was so good
Walking with beasts 🔥
@@bubb655 thank you so much!!!
What are the references to the papers on which this video is based?
I could not find the reference listed in the notes section and the authors were not named.
Please provide references so that viewers can read these papers for ourselves.
Unfortunately i think he's under the impression that most viewers will just go tldr and so not bother😅
@@silent_reaper999 Yeah, that is a real problem with YTubers who make scientific claims based on 'research papers' but as a Ph.D. researcher I am perfectly capable of reading most research papers on my own. And in this case I am married to a population geneticist in case I get in over my head.
I am always suspicious of those who do not back up their claims with independent references when it is so easy to do so.