What if Nobody Had Lived in the Americas?

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  • Опубликовано: 14 июл 2023
  • Yeah this is quite the idea. What if nobody crossed into Beringia thousands of years ago? What if Europeans came across the New World and it was just, empty? So much changes, but I tried to sum it up quickly.
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Комментарии • 3,4 тыс.

  • @6000.
    @6000. 10 месяцев назад +12176

    If nobody ever lived in the Americas, then the continent would’ve been truly and respectfully discovered by Lief Ericksson

    • @TheDanEdwards
      @TheDanEdwards 10 месяцев назад +747

      The viking explorers pulled back because of hardship, which would not have changed.

    • @Mecha82
      @Mecha82 10 месяцев назад

      Sad how Leif Ericksson gets forgotten and that piece of shit Christopher Columbus gets all credit.

    • @Dock284
      @Dock284 10 месяцев назад +1181

      @@TheDanEdwards while true he's not wrong that they would have actually been the first people in the America's

    • @rudysmith1552
      @rudysmith1552 10 месяцев назад +166

      The industrial revolution would happen likely in the United States or the settler colonies that would exist in Chile and Argentina/southern Brazil because after the first wave of malthusian crisis the settlers would be forced to innovate to capitalize on the new land. If there were some thing like a new France in the La Plata river basin. That could’ve been initially settled by protestants or a new Netherlands and Chile or massive alterations to it the functioning of Latin America. There would be an active incentive to innovate and weak, central government power to stop it.

    • @cult_of_odin
      @cult_of_odin 10 месяцев назад +86

      ​@@Dock284evidence suggests the so called "native" Indians weren't the 1st here either.

  • @merrittanimation7721
    @merrittanimation7721 10 месяцев назад +3216

    Cody’s political angle isn’t colonial revisionism, but to imagine a world where we are unburdened by the scourge of Alaska

    • @iskwewpannekoek
      @iskwewpannekoek 10 месяцев назад +19

      No it's colonial revisionism

    • @mitchmarq428
      @mitchmarq428 10 месяцев назад +219

      Alaska is the most important place in human history, change my mind

    • @rhine3
      @rhine3 10 месяцев назад +328

      @@iskwewpannekoek no it's Alaskan revisionism (or the lack of it)

    • @aaduwall1
      @aaduwall1 10 месяцев назад +269

      "The only real solution is to remove Alaska. I'm removing Alaska!" 😂

    • @9051team
      @9051team 10 месяцев назад +97

      ​@@rhine3anti-alaskan revisionism

  • @fcomolineiro7596
    @fcomolineiro7596 10 месяцев назад +384

    Okay but could you imagine how extremely scary it would be to go to a new land and no one is there, being an explorer and seeing how this fertile big land just doesn't have people would genuinely terrified them

    • @Tsuruchi_420
      @Tsuruchi_420 10 месяцев назад +87

      There would be so many folk tales on what happened to them, and the tales of what goes creak in the night would be crazy in a continent with no people

    • @screamingseal4805
      @screamingseal4805 9 месяцев назад +74

      @@Tsuruchi_420no people= mega Fauna would still maybe still alive to hunt some poor conquistador

    • @mariotheundying
      @mariotheundying 6 месяцев назад +6

      A huge continent but no humans in it, kinda anticlimactic for them

    • @fcomolineiro7596
      @fcomolineiro7596 6 месяцев назад +22

      @@screamingseal4805 ok ok alternative there where people, but they aren't there anymore like the houses are there, the temples everything
      But no one is there

    • @kennethha416
      @kennethha416 3 месяца назад +4

      @@screamingseal4805 thats somehow even scarier

  • @sutematsu
    @sutematsu 10 месяцев назад +2878

    As a Native person, I think it's an interesting thought experiment. It makes the value of Native contributions to science and civilization a lot more stark.

    • @briannevs3422
      @briannevs3422 10 месяцев назад +219

      Never be afraid of controversial subjects, sunlight is the greatest disinfectant. The fact is that if 90% of Natives hadnt died due to disease, Europeans wouldnt have been able to just take everyone over so easily.

    • @Graymeyne
      @Graymeyne 10 месяцев назад +48

      ​@@briannevs3422and probably developed new diseases by themselves.

    • @Tethloach1
      @Tethloach1 10 месяцев назад +16

      Thousands of years worth of work

    • @texasforever7887
      @texasforever7887 10 месяцев назад

      @Graymeyne that's because the America's lacked domesticatable animals. Humans living in close proximity to other animals are where our pandemic diseases and plauges originate from. By proximity im talking living and sleeping in the same room together, especially in winter. Measles, mumps, Small Pox and cholera just to name a few are regular diseases in animals such as cattle and pigs. It gives them the equivalent to our common cold. All it takes is one random mutation of the virus that allowed it to live in humans, but it thinks it is still in the cow. It does what it does to give the cow cold symptoms, but instead it kills us within 48 hours. The America's without domesticatable animals can't develop plauges.

    • @Kqi4A85
      @Kqi4A85 10 месяцев назад +10

      ​@@Graymeynesyphilis 😎

  • @petersmythe6462
    @petersmythe6462 10 месяцев назад +2553

    Vikings: "wait, nobody lives down there?"
    Spain: "wait, there's no one to exploit?"
    England: "wait, there's no one in our way?"
    Ireland: "wait, there's no potatoes?"

    • @xNick01
      @xNick01 10 месяцев назад +264

      France: “wait, there’s no one to trade with?”

    • @DraconisMarchVII
      @DraconisMarchVII 10 месяцев назад +157

      Spain: "Wait, there's no human sacrifices to end?"

    • @EireHammer
      @EireHammer 10 месяцев назад +210

      Portugal: *shrugs* and goes back to trading with Africa and Asia

    • @zaidhussain3293
      @zaidhussain3293 10 месяцев назад +27

      oh boy! wait until the irish get to Idaho xD

    • @BrassPlayr
      @BrassPlayr 10 месяцев назад +120

      @@zaidhussain3293 None of the New World crops would exist in this scenario since they were selectively bred by Native Americans for thousands of years. No Corn, Potatoes, Tomatoes, Chilis, or Cacao would likely exist

  • @thesenate1844
    @thesenate1844 10 месяцев назад +2804

    I'd like to see a scenario where the Mative Americans are immune to smallpox, or a lot more resistant. Say a strain got carried by Leif Erikson's expedition and had time to spread around and leave everyone adapted centuries later

    • @nielskorpel8860
      @nielskorpel8860 10 месяцев назад +185

      That is a cool one!

    • @92HazelMocha
      @92HazelMocha 10 месяцев назад +85

      That would be absolutely wild!

    • @Hugo-bn3pw
      @Hugo-bn3pw 10 месяцев назад +186

      This is the plot of the book "Civilizations" by Laurent Binet. A great read (altgough only in french to my knowledge)

    • @izuela7677
      @izuela7677 10 месяцев назад +143

      What would happen if the news got out that he found a new continent, instead of overlooked by everyone? Europe and America aware of eachothers existence 400 years earlier. Viking culture might have gotten a revival as they were the best ship builders at the time. But even with Viking long ships I don't think the European invasion and colonization would have been as large and quick. Pandemics would still be a thing though.

    • @nielskorpel8860
      @nielskorpel8860 10 месяцев назад +63

      @@izuela7677 And both continents have this mythical version of another world out there.
      The way that history would shake out would inform humanity of how they looked at first contact with alien life.
      So would first contact be violent, or peaceful. Maybe it is violent and full of conquest and war, but then again if any of the two was inspired to work together towards shipbuilding -- they knew it could be done by the vikings -- would have both a head start and a tradition that pushed towards peace.

  • @headsinger
    @headsinger 10 месяцев назад +528

    I think this video is important because it highlights the fact that indigenous people tamed this land and developed immensely important crops we now take for granted.

    • @hackman669
      @hackman669 10 месяцев назад +25

      Glad some natives are still here

    • @griggorirasputin6555
      @griggorirasputin6555 9 месяцев назад +10

      I feel like that should have been the whole video rather than a little thing at the end.

    • @mitchhannevurg3348
      @mitchhannevurg3348 5 месяцев назад +1

      the biggest part

    • @marcobelli6856
      @marcobelli6856 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@griggorirasputin6555than the Video would last 5 minutes

    • @griggorirasputin6555
      @griggorirasputin6555 5 месяцев назад

      @@marcobelli6856 No? he would just need to go into more detail.

  • @domesticonion8026
    @domesticonion8026 10 месяцев назад +1413

    In less than 20 years we've gone from believing that humans made it to the Americas in the last 15,000 years to now possibly over 100,000 years ago. That's an insane jump in understanding

    • @Blockhog
      @Blockhog 10 месяцев назад +177

      Actually, due to recent historical knowledge, caveman rode out on dinosaurs from the first human caves somewhere in eastern nebraska 65 million years ago

    • @domesticonion8026
      @domesticonion8026 10 месяцев назад +109

      @@Blockhog THATS HOW THEY BUILT THE PRYAMIDS!!!!💡💡🌎🌎🌎💡💡💡🌋🌋🌚

    • @andred1235
      @andred1235 10 месяцев назад +54

      There was a discovery in California in the 90s that gets minimal attention pushing possible human settlement in the Americas back 250,000 years.

    • @domesticonion8026
      @domesticonion8026 10 месяцев назад +20

      @andred1235 there are so many sites that all point to human settlement before the current 15,000 or even 23,000 for the White Sands footprints, I wonder why we haven't found any structures from those times.

    • @honeysauce5244
      @honeysauce5244 10 месяцев назад +44

      ​@@domesticonion8026 because the first time a structure was made that could stand the test of time for all that time was only first made only about 12,000 years ago.

  • @compatriot852
    @compatriot852 10 месяцев назад +4099

    Given no human life existed in the Americas, I would expect there would be some really interesting wildlife. Mammoths, Giant Ground sloths, etc never going extinct

    • @yourfriendlytaxonomist
      @yourfriendlytaxonomist 10 месяцев назад +591

      Changing climate probably still would have brought about the extinction of most megafauna.

    • @TheDanEdwards
      @TheDanEdwards 10 месяцев назад +568

      Ground sloths and giant tortoises probably would still be around, but the Mammoths may have been well along their way to extinction regardless.

    • @sinoroman
      @sinoroman 10 месяцев назад +52

      Given no human life existed in the Americas, I would expect there would be nuclear waste preventing human settlements

    • @Butter_Warrior99
      @Butter_Warrior99 10 месяцев назад +308

      @@sinoroman, Lmao wat?

    • @BBP-OMO
      @BBP-OMO 10 месяцев назад +110

      if we wanna fudge the numbers a bit we could even argue terror birds could still be around

  • @oththakom9327
    @oththakom9327 10 месяцев назад +1040

    Missed opportunity for Vinland given how it's abandonment was due to hostile natives. I remember reading a timeline years ago featuring vikings with North American Macrofauna as semi-domesticated pets. Followed by Spain having to deal with actual vikings attacking their shipping lanes with both groups having a sort of overlapping frontier.

    • @Voyager1excavation
      @Voyager1excavation 10 месяцев назад +47

      I know right that was my first thought

    • @elliotsilfwerbrand8036
      @elliotsilfwerbrand8036 10 месяцев назад +70

      Ye I was also dispointed that he didnt bring up the vikings

    • @martenkahr3365
      @martenkahr3365 10 месяцев назад +84

      The exact reasons for the abandonment of Vinland aren't conclusively known. What is known through genetic evidence, is native tribes in that area had children with people of European descent right around the time Vinland was abandoned. Could have been hostility and the settlers ended up captured and enslaved, true. Could have just as easily been a failed harvest season in the settlement and lack of support from the homeland leaving the settlers no choice but to join a native tribe to avoid death by starvation during winter.

    • @kevincronk7981
      @kevincronk7981 10 месяцев назад +44

      ​@@martenkahr3365we do have some stories from Vinland. And yes, they fought the natives. There is no question about that. Not sure how things changed but we do know some amount of those who survived ended up having kids with natives and that tiny bit of dna stayed an incresingly small part of the gene pool of the natives in the area

    • @leobastian_
      @leobastian_ 10 месяцев назад +7

      would also be a lot more interesting to have a native population that was only a couple hundred years old. The majority of population centers would probably still be costal, but there wouldnt be no people there at all

  • @dainbramage781
    @dainbramage781 10 месяцев назад +203

    The "Erase" function to make the scenario possible had me cackling. Well done, Cody.

    • @averyhazen8466
      @averyhazen8466 9 месяцев назад +4

      I cackled at him deleting Alaska 😂

  • @bigbo1764
    @bigbo1764 10 месяцев назад +136

    I think it’s perfectly reasonable to have an alternate timeline where the proto-Asians just look at the big ass glacier and say “yea let’s go back, there’s planets of good lands back in the steppe”.

    • @nrbmemes2414
      @nrbmemes2414 6 месяцев назад +3

      The steppes would've been somewhat similar to northern siberia in the ice age.

  • @greedtheron8362
    @greedtheron8362 10 месяцев назад +1142

    That aspect of crops that were domesticated by the native Americans always gets me thinking. What other plants are out there that we could have turned into a staple of our lives?

    • @the11382
      @the11382 10 месяцев назад +84

      If there are, we can jumpstart their domestication with genetic modification.

    • @the_tactician9858
      @the_tactician9858 10 месяцев назад +111

      I think rice fits that bill pretty well, at least for the regions it was cultivated in. It's filled with nutrients and can easily (under the right conditions) form a crop that can support an enormous amount of people.

    • @justinokraski3796
      @justinokraski3796 10 месяцев назад +21

      Maybe Stinging Nettles?

    • @bustavonnutz
      @bustavonnutz 10 месяцев назад +199

      Dandelions. Every part of the plant is edible, they grow prolifically, & the roots could be naturally selected to be larger & starchier.

    • @sushirollthug
      @sushirollthug 10 месяцев назад +51

      dandelions and thistle, maybe

  • @tomtomtrent
    @tomtomtrent 10 месяцев назад +1615

    This was actually really interesting. A lot of people will disparage Native American peoples by saying that they didn’t contribute to the development of the US, but this really puts into perspective how much they contributed to the world. Almost like a continents-scale version of “It’s A Wonderful Life”

    • @richardarriaga6271
      @richardarriaga6271 10 месяцев назад

      Watching a Neo-Nazi wish away Native Americans and then watch mass starvation of the white race would be a sight.

    • @richardarriaga6271
      @richardarriaga6271 10 месяцев назад +73

      Also reminds me of that episode of Voyager where the Krenim Empire wiped a planet from all existence then get ravaged by a plague because their enemies had an antibody crucial to their survival.

    • @frankharzer6224
      @frankharzer6224 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@richardarriaga6271 Which episode is this?

    • @carnifex2005
      @carnifex2005 10 месяцев назад +14

      @@frankharzer6224 Pretty sure that is in Year of Hell Part 1 and 2.

    • @hughjass4736
      @hughjass4736 10 месяцев назад +3

      They didn't

  • @MegaMegatron15
    @MegaMegatron15 10 месяцев назад +437

    I feel like we're completely overlooking the Vikings. With no natives, they can penetrate Vinland (and even Greenland as there wouldn't be any people there either) in peace. They started Iceland from scratch and it would be similar here, assuming they can maintain contact. By Columbus, the Norse would be firmly established in the northeast, at least.

    • @Tsuruchi_420
      @Tsuruchi_420 10 месяцев назад +60

      And the Polynesians in the South West

    • @bg1052
      @bg1052 8 месяцев назад +50

      What made Vinland fail wasn't just the Natives. It was the fact that the European warm period came to an end around the 1300's. Not only did Vinland get colder and much harder to live in, but Greenland suffered as well, to the point that Vinland likely got cut off from Iceland and Norway. Likely leading them to starve and with no extra travelers ever coming to repopulate the area or at least bring food.

    • @MegaMegatron15
      @MegaMegatron15 8 месяцев назад +41

      @@bg1052 Maybe so, but considering Vinland's gentler climate it would've been a more attractive location for settlers. This gives the vikings there 300 years of peaceful settlement and way more resources than Greenland. Making a lasting colony more viable in Vinland than in Greenland.

    • @rtixboi4193
      @rtixboi4193 8 месяцев назад +6

      @@MegaMegatron15Mister, Labrador’s climate is fucking brutal.

    • @flyingorange4493
      @flyingorange4493 8 месяцев назад +1

      The Vikings did reach Greenland but they all died or migrated back to Europe by the time the Danes returned centuries later.

  • @jacobwillems8217
    @jacobwillems8217 10 месяцев назад +376

    I'd love to see your take on something that is kinda the opposite. What if the land bridge never went away and Asia was constantly connected to the Americas to this day?

    • @keithharper32
      @keithharper32 10 месяцев назад +35

      it sort of was. Siberian tribes did cross over into Alaska periodically. Just never in large numbers

    • @ericcampbell503
      @ericcampbell503 10 месяцев назад +56

      All of Turtle Island will bow before the Cree-Mongol Empire!

    • @greygryphon6881
      @greygryphon6881 10 месяцев назад +29

      Buuutt, what if there was more contact because of that, possibly bringing diseases earlier, so the natives had immunity before the Europeans arrived??

    • @jacobwillems8217
      @jacobwillems8217 10 месяцев назад +15

      @greygryphon6881 Exactly. Also though, what if the Native Americans had the same domesticated animals. Would they have been able to create more cities and civilization?

    • @warmachine5835
      @warmachine5835 10 месяцев назад +19

      @@greygryphon6881 yeah, I think the key part being not "what if there were 'temporary' connections" but rather a solid, contiguous, navigable connection and the Bering Strait just flat out didn't exist. That would be an interesting book-end to this video.

  • @glenmurie
    @glenmurie 10 месяцев назад +555

    I’d like to see your take on what would have happened if the Viking colonies had persisted in North America long enough to pass on metallurgy, domesticated animals, and diseases before giving up or being assimilated.

    • @sufjanwaleryszak1765
      @sufjanwaleryszak1765 10 месяцев назад +22

      He did a video a few years back about it.

    • @bjorntheviking6039
      @bjorntheviking6039 10 месяцев назад +27

      He said he was gonna continue that scenario in his greenland video. I'm still waiting, Cody.

    • @genericyoutubeaccount579
      @genericyoutubeaccount579 10 месяцев назад +53

      Part 1: The Vikings set up pagan colonies.
      Part 2: The vikings convert to Christianity and have to reinvade their colonies to set up the catholic church.
      part 3: The Scandinavians convert to Protestanism and have to reinvade their colonies to purge the heretical Catholics (this is what happened to Iceland).

    • @MetalKing1417
      @MetalKing1417 10 месяцев назад +14

      I'd like to point out that the Native Americans were very much aware of metallurgy long before the Europeans came.

    • @PowerTheGamer
      @PowerTheGamer 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@MetalKing1417Aware? I'm sorry, can you expand on that?

  • @MistahFox
    @MistahFox 10 месяцев назад +269

    The first human crossings into the Americas was an unbelievably impressive undertaking and feat of human resiliance and determination considering the technology of the time.

    • @jtgd
      @jtgd 10 месяцев назад +56

      Imagine migrating to a new continent uninhabited by anything you’ve seen, and being the first humans in a complex ecosystem and survive for millennia.
      It’s an impressive feat to naturally fit yourself into an ecosystem

    • @yoursleepparalysisdemon1828
      @yoursleepparalysisdemon1828 10 месяцев назад +17

      migration took place not by a few generations, but many. those in northern russia were like eskimos. cold culture.
      moving east wasnt a huge thing. still cold. then some start moving south. rhey hit sea or more land. and expansion is just a human thing.

    • @DMIwriter
      @DMIwriter 10 месяцев назад +29

      Not entirely on topic, but this reminds me that there's evidence that the Native Americans and Polynesians may have had regular contact and trade with each other. They share DNA and common words for certain goods, and they found a sweet potato (native to the Americas) in Polynesia that was dated to be pre-colonial

    • @mantamarsh1630
      @mantamarsh1630 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@DMIwriterfascinating!!

    • @rogueascendant6611
      @rogueascendant6611 10 месяцев назад +8

      @@DMIwriter Ikr?
      Why is this debated when we have the Polynesians to show that people back then moved fcking a lot! Look, the Polynesians sailed to New Zealand to the furthest Easter Island. Sure it was more like island hopping but the distance were 6,930 km across the Pacific Ocean. Prehistoric humans sailing from Siberia to North America shouldn't be that of a problem considering the short distance than compared to the long sea voyages the Polynesians ventured. The weird part about North America prehistoric humans that were found to be dated back before the glacial meltdown that paved the way of a Siberian crossing to Alaska is the evident fossils discovered in the Easter Seaborne instead the common perception in the Western side of the continent. This blows out of everybody expectations and yet this discovery wasn't covered in the media and researched papers at all. Conspiracy? Idk.... this just opens up another theory that instead of prehistoric humans coming from Siberia that would crossed to N.America before the glacial melting. It would be early humans traveling from Europe all the way to N.America Eastern coast via boats. Yeah I know this theory is a load of BS but human fossils found in the eastern side that pre-date the melting of glacier that would create a narrow corridor proved otherwise. So far all the experts are either in their usual debates or keeping a tight lipped for some reason.

  • @Enyavar1
    @Enyavar1 10 месяцев назад +154

    Part 2:
    What about the Vikings? They meet no Skrälinger resistance, and were assumedly better prepared for winter. Timeline 1: They return home and spread the news; Northern Europe gets a colonisation headstart. Timeline 2: Vinland gets cut off and they develop independently.
    Also: What about the Megafauna? I _know_ that you covered Megafauna in another video already, so I assumed it would be a factor here.
    Also: No gardening civilization in Brazil! The jungles would be truly untamed, there'd be no terra preta.

    • @howardlanus8467
      @howardlanus8467 9 месяцев назад +13

      The Vikings would probably not last very long in Vinland. Part of the reason they failed was because there wasn't any immediate returns on their investment. Gold, silver, jewels, and slaves were much more profitable than fur, lumber, and wine-grapes.

    • @Enyavar1
      @Enyavar1 9 месяцев назад +22

      @@howardlanus8467 The Norsemen didn't settle in Greenland and Vinland to make a quick buck. They set up shop in Greenland because after centuries of good times in Iceland, there had been some droughts and misery.
      They were subsistence cattle farmers and _still_ managed to return meager tributes to the king in Norway occasionally. Between the 980s and 1450s they were present in Greenland... without the Skrälingers, that means there is enough time and room to find some promising places all over the NA coast.
      And since Greenland really struggled with climatic changes since the 1400s, at some point Vinland loses contact with Iceland/Norway. The Norse settlements would have been on their own all the time, anyway.
      If all Greenlanders eventually evacuated for Vinland around 1400, that means ~6000 people in NA.

    • @sirsir8163
      @sirsir8163 9 месяцев назад +1

      What Video did he cover the megafauna in

    • @howardlanus8467
      @howardlanus8467 9 месяцев назад +5

      @@sirsir8163 he made a mention of them in What if South and North America never connected, basically geeking out over the idea of Conquistadors fighting giant terror birds.

    • @Enyavar1
      @Enyavar1 9 месяцев назад

      @@sirsir8163 quite some time ago, look them all through for likely candidates.
      _For sure, there was megafauna mentioned_ in the Green Antarctica video.
      But I think the topic came up in the background half of another America-video too. Not in the scenario though, IIRC. Could have been one about "what if they had had more domestic animals"?

  • @wastedchicken91
    @wastedchicken91 10 месяцев назад +47

    I feel like an important angle to consider with the highly Catholic Spanish finding the Caribbean first is the religious angle. I feel like it would be an easy connection to make that this uninhabited, lush land they happened across is Eden itself. The presence of humanity in our timeline removed the possibility of making that connection (Adam and Eve being cast out being the primary reason). I absolutely feel like that would impact how the region is explored, colonized, etc.

  • @er00ic
    @er00ic 10 месяцев назад +139

    I'm really glad you brought up the point about crops, it's easy to take for granted now, but food supplies are just so vital for maintaining civilization.

  • @SirAntoniousBlock
    @SirAntoniousBlock 10 месяцев назад +180

    AlternateHistoryHub: _'This creates a distance that is too great for hunter gatherers to sail across'_
    Ancient Polynesians: Challenge accepted. 😏

    • @fullmetaltheorist
      @fullmetaltheorist 10 месяцев назад +17

      How tf did they even make it to Madagascar back then?

    • @nielskorpel8860
      @nielskorpel8860 10 месяцев назад +1

      Ah yes, good point.

    • @ycantiusegeorgiantextforhandle
      @ycantiusegeorgiantextforhandle 10 месяцев назад +23

      @@fullmetaltheorist there's theories that the discovery was accidental through being blown off course whilst trading in Arabia and East Africa. That or the sailors went through an unconventional route. It's most likely that the island was settled after it was discovered this way.
      Some theories say they were shipwrecked and just remained there, which I think is unlikely because even if they were shipwrecked, they knew how to make boats and go home.

    • @erraticonteuse
      @erraticonteuse 10 месяцев назад +19

      There's some evidence the Polynesians made contact with the Inca a couple times, like the way the Vikings made it to North America: not impossible, but difficult to maintain contact.

    • @ishill85
      @ishill85 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@ycantiusegeorgiantextforhandle You know how to cook, do you know how to build a stove? You can drive, can you build a car? Ship making may be simpler, but not by enough that a shipwrecked crew from one boat can necessarily reliably do it. Particularly if they're in a new land with different kinds of trees and plants. Gonna take a lot of trial and error to figure out what to make the hull or the sails from. The amount of specialization in ancient cultures is undersold sometimes i think.

  • @davidpumpkinsjr.5108
    @davidpumpkinsjr.5108 10 месяцев назад +35

    I just got back from visiting Mayan ruins in Mexico and this kind of blew my mind.
    I also wonder if the vikings would have abandoned Vinland. Sure, it was far away, but with no Skraelings to deal with, they might have been more motivated to stay.

  • @phillipbell4394
    @phillipbell4394 9 месяцев назад +20

    I think the most alien part of this thought experiment is really just what the Amazon rainforest would even look like without indigenous people because we really have no way of knowing truly to what extent people actually cultivated it which I think is super fascinating.

  • @firehearto0872
    @firehearto0872 10 месяцев назад +430

    I wonder how the early Viking settlements would have fared in this timeline.

    • @Sigma_Male_Anti_Female
      @Sigma_Male_Anti_Female 10 месяцев назад +39

      The same. They would've just left sooner.

    • @dennisgray2704
      @dennisgray2704 10 месяцев назад +20

      They still starve to death.

    • @supersleepygrumpybear
      @supersleepygrumpybear 10 месяцев назад +8

      Not well at all without Inuit knowledge

    • @basedsigmachad1353
      @basedsigmachad1353 10 месяцев назад +84

      @@supersleepygrumpybear The Vikings lived in Greenland for 200 years before the Inuit ever got there, not sure what this mystical "native" knowledge was supposed to do for them. If anything the Inuit were responsible for the death of the Viking colonies in Greenland

    • @Sigma_Male_Anti_Female
      @Sigma_Male_Anti_Female 10 месяцев назад +11

      @@basedsigmachad1353 So Canada becomes a Norwegian colony?

  •  10 месяцев назад +29

    Love these videos that basically just say "What would happen? Not this. Apart from that, dunno"

  • @thogthemighty7960
    @thogthemighty7960 10 месяцев назад +69

    Even I, a student in evolutionary anthropology, have always questioned the Ice-Free Corridor as the first route the Paleo-Indians took from Alaska into Canada. Humans are smart, and really good at problem-solving, and canoes are pretty ancient technology.

    • @hurgcat
      @hurgcat 9 месяцев назад +7

      yeah, it seems dicey to us today but I would imagine those people who made the voyage were tough as freaking nails and desperate for a new way of living. I try and not doubt the human spirit and the unbelievable ability of our species to ram its head against a problem until its solved. generational learning is really op

    • @jiwuwuw
      @jiwuwuw 7 месяцев назад +1

      yeah i dont know if its a theory or anything but jst look at polynesians, they managed to explore most islands on the pacific 3000 years ago by themselfs

  • @gyrrgibbs305
    @gyrrgibbs305 10 месяцев назад +26

    I got overly excited when you brought up the crops because I have thought of this before. In uninhabited Americas, the uncultivated varieties of these plants may not even exist as the whole ecosystem would be dramatically different without human influence.

  • @andrewgalati3406
    @andrewgalati3406 10 месяцев назад +85

    No no, dont sell yourself short, you have a point. In fact this video *emphasizes* just how important the culture, history, and advances Indigenous Americans are to the history of the world and our modern civilization. - Nice Work

  • @LA_______
    @LA_______ 10 месяцев назад +98

    Tbh after you mentioned it, i would like to see a video about if horses never made it to eurasia. The differences would be so insane

    • @boobah5643
      @boobah5643 10 месяцев назад +14

      Considering horses were an important animal for the Indo-Europeans, and pretty much everybody from Europe through Asia Minor, parts of Persia, and into India and even China, are descended from those people. It's not a bad question, per se, it's just that outside of early Egypt and maybe Mesopotamia you don't get much of anything recognizable.

    • @chekhov4215
      @chekhov4215 10 месяцев назад +8

      I think he already did that one a couple of years ago

    • @lordpelagius5078
      @lordpelagius5078 9 месяцев назад

      ruclips.net/video/vFF3nRKoLWg/видео.html

    • @JRAS_
      @JRAS_ 8 месяцев назад +2

      we might as well live in a different planet tbh

    • @prcervi
      @prcervi 3 месяца назад

      in a fantasy story i'm writing i have gone the route of horses not existing, i just swapped in specialty bred goats
      how this happened is for the same reason there are telepathic flying fire breathing lizards that can grow to the size of small mountains and moderate levels of magic (only getting up to some 3rd - 4th dnd spell level stuff)

  • @GlaceonStudios
    @GlaceonStudios 10 месяцев назад +20

    Timestamps
    0:00 Knight Plush
    0:25 Intro
    3:32 So How Does This Even Happen?
    7:19 Spain Arrives
    10:29 Setting up a Footprint
    17:05 The Crops that Changed Everything
    19:06 What Was the Point of This Video?
    19:48 Outro

  • @wickedchild8501
    @wickedchild8501 9 месяцев назад +3

    I think this video is a good example of how much we owe natives

    • @a70770
      @a70770 9 месяцев назад +1

      Too bad the only thing that was given to them is genocide and disease

    • @norikofu509
      @norikofu509 8 месяцев назад

      This videos gives the idea of "Owning Land is meaningless if there were no one to tell you what to do with it"

  • @conserva-chan2735
    @conserva-chan2735 10 месяцев назад +429

    I'd kill for a vid on if the Sino-Soviet split never happened or was patched up in the 70s. It'd be awesome.

    • @GloryToComradeForster
      @GloryToComradeForster 10 месяцев назад +4

      Sounds cool!

    • @compatriot852
      @compatriot852 10 месяцев назад +2

      Sounds interesting

    • @azliaheaven2800
      @azliaheaven2800 10 месяцев назад +1

      sounds nice

    • @anarcho-pingu
      @anarcho-pingu 10 месяцев назад +4

      pls cody. this vid could save lives.

    • @doctorbobcat7123
      @doctorbobcat7123 10 месяцев назад +9

      in my opinion, It is really was Brezhnev's biggest failure (At least in terms of foreign policy) that he never attempted to reproach with Beijing. Considering he was more orthodox then Khrushchev who had alienated Mao in the first place, it probably wouldn't have been impossible in the immediate years after 1964. But hindsight is 20/20 and it probably wouldn't "saved" the USSR or anything.

  • @scurvydog20
    @scurvydog20 10 месяцев назад +55

    It is funny because if you read the journals the Spanish wrote they pretty much had to put a soldier on every corner to keep the tribes that the Aztecs were oppressing for sacrifices from ripping aztecs apart after the Spanish took over.

    • @regulate.artificer_g23.mdctlsk
      @regulate.artificer_g23.mdctlsk 10 месяцев назад +39

      They weren't mere tribes, they were rival city-states. Reminder that the Aztec empire is a tributary empire, composed of a Triple Alliance of city-states and dozens of subjugate city-states. The indigenous that allied with the Spaniards weren't just fed up with Mexica oppression (Mexica is what the people of the Aztec empire are called), they saw the arrival of the Spanish as an opportunity; they're trying to exploit the disruption of the status quo to take power for themselves. Of course, we all know it never went the way they wanted.

    • @Sig509
      @Sig509 10 месяцев назад +10

      yeah, this is often overlooked, mostly by revisionist, how many local native allies Spanish had (the siege of todays Mexico City could hapen only because tens of thousands of local allies)
      Those tribes hated Aztecs, and who wouldn't if you could be at any time hunted for human sacrifice.

    • @kestrel5895
      @kestrel5895 10 месяцев назад +3

      "tribes"

  • @SkittytheKid
    @SkittytheKid 10 месяцев назад +52

    This was an exciting take. I've been working on a story with similar concept and the lack of a pre-existing system and population to exploit is definitely making me re-think the timeline for colonization attempts. Also I love the "I'm erasing Alaska" bit lol

  • @jakevelasco4072
    @jakevelasco4072 10 месяцев назад +23

    Considering the colorful history presented by the various Native (North and South) American groups, alongside their interactions with European settlers, the removal of these natives from our timeline kinda gives of this dark tone, at least from an American like me). One thing I love about native Americans in human history is that we could understand and learn all sorts of different characters and their perspective on the land and life. The Incas, Mayans, and Aztecs were characterized by their empires, strong religious beliefs, and the impressive human feats of their time (ex. Temples, farms, cities, etc.). For the natives up north, they also held great religious and philosophical views (especially mythologies), alongside a significant respect to how they treated and personified their territories. With the nonexistance of these natives in the alternate reality presented in this video, all of that human character and achievement that these natives present just doesn't happen, no cities, no temples, not even camps, nothing. It kinda gives of this grim feeling, as spots that we know natives to inhabit are just a ton of black spots, unknown to the settlers struggling to get a footing onto this land (FYI, I bet the settlement where the pilgrims were at might have been another Jamestown without the native interaction). Id imagine this would make a good horror story, were a small group of explorers would try to explore the rest of the North American landmass, completely alone with only the wildlife and corn they interact with.
    Also RIP Alaska

  • @tobirivera-garcia1692
    @tobirivera-garcia1692 10 месяцев назад +156

    What would’ve happened with the polynesians? I recall that they traded with the Incas, so they could potentially have some decendents in this timeline on the mainland of South America. Also, what about the megafauna? Giant armadillos would be a terrifying sight to see for an unsuspecting European.

    • @vicenteabalosdominguez5257
      @vicenteabalosdominguez5257 10 месяцев назад +24

      There's also a fairly big chunk of evidence that South America was colonized first by polynesians, but Cody seems to stand with the "colonization exclusively through Alaska" train of thought.

    • @marcello7781
      @marcello7781 10 месяцев назад +53

      ​@@vicenteabalosdominguez5257 While there surely was some contacts between Native South Americans and Polynesians (around 1200 AD) in the same way as it happened with the Norse, I really doubt the "Native South Americans coming from Polynesia" theory, since Polynesians arrived to Rapa Nui and Hawaii between 500 and 800 AD, much later than the Bering Strait migration.

    • @hughjass4736
      @hughjass4736 10 месяцев назад

      Not the people above me actually believing in that pseudo science.

    • @theredreceivers
      @theredreceivers 10 месяцев назад +3

      No sweet potatoes for the Polynesians for one thing, which is an important crop

    • @irmaosmatos4026
      @irmaosmatos4026 10 месяцев назад

      @@vicenteabalosdominguez5257 Highly debatable

  • @PastorOfMuppets91
    @PastorOfMuppets91 10 месяцев назад +249

    I'm wondering how the Norse colonization would've gone in this scenario, I think it would be an interesting development.

    • @RocketHarry865
      @RocketHarry865 10 месяцев назад +4

      I think there may still be Inuit people as they are from post ice age migrations. Perhaps they gone further south than OTL as far as Queen Charlotte Islands in the west and Nova Scotia in the East

    • @OD71
      @OD71 10 месяцев назад +12

      @@RocketHarry865 well no because they migrated from siberia to alaska.

    • @Enyavar1
      @Enyavar1 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@RocketHarry865 Ayup, no Inuit in this scenario. If Humans could make it to the Canadian Archipelago and Greenland, then we get the whole Americas populated almost instantly.
      Inuit didn't necessarily live in the icy north because it was fun and giggles, they lived there because other people lived south of them.

  • @RecdactedYT
    @RecdactedYT 9 месяцев назад +9

    As a Native American, my honest reaction is 🫥

  • @MajoraZ
    @MajoraZ 10 месяцев назад +54

    Constructive commentary on some of the Mesoamerican stuff that comes up here: 9:19: The Map of the Aztec empire here is missing Sonouscuo/Xoconochco, which was a province in Chiapas. While maps of the empire do vary in HOW they depict territory in that area, (same for if Teotitlan is Aztec controlled as shown here) not showing any at all is erroneous. Also, the map solely showing Aztec territory is pretty misleading: Those enclaves had indepedent kingdoms and city-states, West Mexico and the Yucatan Peninsula had them as well like the Purepecha Empire, various Maya kingdoms, etc. On that same token, colonization of Mexico was only really starting with the fall of the Aztec, since all of these other states (and the states inside the empire which didn't cede to Spanish authority) wouldn't be conquered for centuries (though most were within a few decades).
    9:33: Jaguar knights weren't half naked with just pieces of Jaguar pelts: They wore full body warsuits called Tlahuiztli (and beneath it, gambeson armor vest/tunics known as Ichcahuipilli), made from a thick cotton base and a mosaic of tens of thousands of iridescent, glittering feathers arranged to make the jaguar spots (or other designs). While no Tlahuiztli survive, quite a few iridescent feather mosaic "paintings" with catholic imagery made by Mesoamerican artists do, and they're some of the most stunning pieces of art ever produced. Tlahuiztli warsuits (and tunic forms of it, known as Ehuatl) were incredibly high effort pieces of equipment, the sterotype of Jaguar knights being sort of conan the barbian warriors could not be more wrong. (Though there are some accounts asserting that commoners who entered the Jaguar order as opposed to nobles had to make do with warsuits made from actual Jaguar pelts: these would still be full body garments, though)
    9:16, 10:14, 10:24, 10:27: I realize you're trying to use royalty free and public domain images here, but just so people are aware, these are pretty poor visualizations of Mesoamerican cities and clothing. Much like how Jaguar knights had absurdly ornate warsuits and actual armor rather then just naked and with pelts, people had fine clothing and jewerly: There's a lot of fashion variation both between different civilizations and inside each one based on social context, but for the Aztec/Nahuas, rather then being mostly naked with just feather headdresses and the like, generally had men wore cloaks/mantles (Tilmatli), sort of like Greco-roman togas, while women wore baggy blouses and robes (huipil). For nobles, these would be richly colored and accented with floral, avian, geometric and mythological motifs and patterns, and wore with gold, jade, turquoise etc braclets and arm/leg bands, earrings and piercings; and fine feather tassels and other ornaments. If anything, actual Aztec fashion for women, especially with their hair buns/braids, looks closer to Japanese Geisha then anything most people think of when they hear "Aztec".
    Cities, too, had buildings which were covered in smooth stucco and then painted in massive frescos and murals, and which had sculptural facades and ornaments, carved reliefs, etc. Cities had a significant amount of infrastructure with roads, aqueducts, and massive suburban sprawls around the city centers. Stuff only looks grey and worn and sparsely sticking out of jungles today because of erosion and sites not being fully excavated. The art of Tenochtitlan at 10:10 and 9:22 are better. Also, only the coasts, and lowlands around the Isthmus of Tehuantepec and in the Yucatan Penisula were really jungle: Much of Central Mexico where the Aztec were at was temperate to semi arid hills, valleys, and plateaus.
    I've offered this in the past, but if you cover Mesoamerica more, i'd be down to send resources, information, accurate art and images I have permission to use, etc. Trey has my info.

    • @texasforever7887
      @texasforever7887 10 месяцев назад +4

      Not to mention the mention fuedal empire, the Aztec had just overthrown themselves a few generations earlier.

    • @hq4287
      @hq4287 10 месяцев назад +1

      Bump

    • @whoisjoe5610
      @whoisjoe5610 10 месяцев назад +4

      We got actual scholars here

    • @Tsuruchi_420
      @Tsuruchi_420 10 месяцев назад +6

      Also, really basic one, he called all eastern North American peoples hunter gatherers
      That's VERY wrong

    • @MajoraZ
      @MajoraZ 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@Tsuruchi_420 Oh I must have missed that, but yeah, the eastern US has a long history of town building societies.

  • @graham7784
    @graham7784 10 месяцев назад +105

    I see Cody is embracing his 40K side with this new plushie

    • @meneither3834
      @meneither3834 10 месяцев назад +9

      Sir that's a teutonic knight.

    • @Butter_Warrior99
      @Butter_Warrior99 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@meneither3834, Black Templar: Nah we claim him.

    • @asilkinder3609
      @asilkinder3609 10 месяцев назад

      @@Butter_Warrior99 Exterminatus on Jewish people ordered by Austrian Painter (Essheliarchy)

    • @nightlordAL
      @nightlordAL 10 месяцев назад +3

      For the Emperor

    • @2shadesofgray752
      @2shadesofgray752 10 месяцев назад +1

      Deus vult

  • @robertrobert7924
    @robertrobert7924 10 месяцев назад +61

    I really enjoyed this video. I think it was a great Alternative History. It also showed how corn, potatoes, and tomatoes affected the advancement of Europe; not to mention the rest of the World.

  • @oscar_eslava_
    @oscar_eslava_ 10 месяцев назад +3

    Hey man, you completely forgot the megafauna! What a shock to land on a continent full of mastodonts, giant sloths, glyptodonts, saber teeth tigers, you get the point. Maybe they'd have run extinct in a much faster way, but they'd surely have spiced things up for the explorers!

  • @Pre23sident
    @Pre23sident 10 месяцев назад +5

    I assume that Asia would be a lot more populated then it already is, there would be a lot more people in Siberia.

    • @al3xa723
      @al3xa723 10 месяцев назад +4

      What I was thinking

  • @orterves
    @orterves 10 месяцев назад +184

    As an idea it emphasises that the exploitation of a prosperous people was why the invaders succeeded - the fact that, had those people not laid the foundations of civilization, the invaders would have had nothing to exploit.
    Anything that gets people to think about the exploitation of labour by the greedy and undeserving is worth the time.

    • @gustavosauro1882
      @gustavosauro1882 10 месяцев назад +5

      Underrated comment

    • @GrammarNaziAUS
      @GrammarNaziAUS 10 месяцев назад +5

      Australia did just fine without the natives setting anything up, so I disagree.

    • @kingdomofbird8174
      @kingdomofbird8174 10 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@GrammarNaziAUSLook at their population numbers, and more, look at their numbers before the end of White Australia policy

    • @GrammarNaziAUS
      @GrammarNaziAUS 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@kingdomofbird8174 And? My point was that Aboriginal Australians did not set anything up for colonisers, as they were hunter-gatherers, and did not invent agriculture or animal husbandry.

    • @theredreceivers
      @theredreceivers 10 месяцев назад +14

      ​@@GrammarNaziAUSWe don't have any domesticated crops or animals from Australia either. From the Americas we have corn, potatoes, cassava, beans, tomatoes, sweet potatoes. Corn, potatoes, and sweet potatoes bolstered the populations of Europe and China especially. Without these crops he's right we probably would be a couple centuries behind in our technological advancement, it would have stalled the industrial revolution.

  • @mathieuleader8601
    @mathieuleader8601 10 месяцев назад +57

    the premise of an empty Americas would make for a great plot for an award winning sci-fi novel

    • @supersleepygrumpybear
      @supersleepygrumpybear 10 месяцев назад

      Even better: one day in 2036 everyone in North and South America vanishes. Basically, "The Leftovers" with a lot more geopolitics.

    • @leobastian_
      @leobastian_ 10 месяцев назад +9

      not even neccesary americas. just the setting of "an empty continent sized area" gives a ton of setting possibility

    • @nbewarwe
      @nbewarwe 10 месяцев назад

      @@leobastian_ In addition to a less populated, less developed Europe.

  • @wolfspirit994
    @wolfspirit994 10 месяцев назад +7

    I find it funny that Cody finds this scenario strange considering he made a video about the moon being habitable

  • @thatotherted3555
    @thatotherted3555 10 месяцев назад +5

    Good take, good humor. Couple of tips in case they help: Taino is actually Taïno, or in Spanish, Taíno, meaning that it's three syllables, "tah-ee-no". Think of the vowels in "naïve". And around 3:20 you said "descendants" when you meant "ancestors"-this is fairly common, but it's confusing for someone like me who's into family history and word history. "Ancestor" is related to the Latin ante- prefix, meaning "before"; "descendant" depends on the conventional metaphor of a family tree representing the past as higher up and the present at the bottom, so that descendants actually _descend_ from those who came before, like apples falling not far from the tree.

  • @allesarfint
    @allesarfint 10 месяцев назад +7

    No tomato means no pizza, truly the biggest loss humanity could suffer.

  • @Templarkommando
    @Templarkommando 10 месяцев назад +106

    Here's an idea: What if Sun Yat-Sen hadn't died of liver cancer, and instead lived about 30 years longer?

    • @sigmascrub
      @sigmascrub 10 месяцев назад +5

      This one! 😃

    • @yoursleepparalysisdemon1828
      @yoursleepparalysisdemon1828 10 месяцев назад +2

      who is this man?

    • @shiny_teddiursa
      @shiny_teddiursa 10 месяцев назад +3

      he would have eventually invented war 2

    • @addisonwelsh
      @addisonwelsh 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@yoursleepparalysisdemon1828 Sun Yat-Sen was a dangerous man. The Qing were right to fear him.

    • @skylarschell7858
      @skylarschell7858 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@yoursleepparalysisdemon1828 He was an important figure in China during the early twentieth century. I don't know enough of the specifics, so have this link instead. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun_Yat-sen

  • @colekent4166
    @colekent4166 10 месяцев назад +15

    I think it would be awesome to see a video of what human history would be like without horses! Very different, but it would be cool to hear you think through it!

  • @jeffreyhunt1727
    @jeffreyhunt1727 10 месяцев назад

    Fantastic episode! It gives us a lot to think about

  • @altiarei
    @altiarei 10 месяцев назад +120

    It is actually becoming more commonly believed amongst anthropologists that ancient peoples may have also arrived in the New World via the Pacific Islands. That sounds hard to believe at first, but if you look at a map of the islands you'll see that they form a chain leading just 2,180 miles from the coast of Peru. In fact, I'm 1947 a Norwegian ethnographer named Thor Heyerdahl, actually said from Peru to Raroia in the Tuamotus after just 101 days.

    • @qhayiya252
      @qhayiya252 10 месяцев назад +33

      The Polynesians were quite impressive in their ability to find islands so them settling South America would be really possible without any real competition. If they are able to make it back with the directions then I'd see some king willing to settle people there

    • @suspicious241
      @suspicious241 10 месяцев назад +9

      I was looking for this comment i was wondering if anyone else also considered the idea that the new world might have been populated by Polynesian peoples. (albeit way later than in our timeline) so when the Spanish show up, the east coast would be empty but eventually when they get to the west coast there are farming taro and fishing and stuff.

    • @Whatismusic123
      @Whatismusic123 10 месяцев назад

      Sailed

    • @xwtek3505
      @xwtek3505 10 месяцев назад +2

      I think that's unlikely without at least Polynesian-level technology. And the people that populated Americas can't possibly be Polynesian since none of the numerous languages native in Americas are Austronesian. Compare it with Madagascar, while still being far-flung, the language is Austronesian instead of the expected Bantu.

    • @agilemind6241
      @agilemind6241 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@xwtek3505 Madagascar didn't have competition with another arriving group. It's quite possible that Polynesians similar to the hypothetical Spanish, arrived & colonized the south-western coast but then encountered the Berring-Straight peoples and were absorbed/altered by them. I mean the Inuit languages don't have much similarity with asian language families despite those peoples arriving in N America much later than these hypothetical Polynesians.
      I highly suspect it is a case of "yes, and" as it is most reasonable that population group that had the means to arrive while the continents was largely uninhabited did so, but that once the continents were continuously inhabited those populations diverged and changed through their interactions with each other far more than the populations they originated from. As the Amerindian languages are extremely diverse and do not support a single-common-origin language.

  • @oshentisei
    @oshentisei 10 месяцев назад +6

    "I'm removing Alaska" probably the greatest sentence ever said

  • @cheeseburgerspleen1539
    @cheeseburgerspleen1539 10 месяцев назад +1

    This was a great and well thought out video. Good job Cody, and very respectful to native people as their role in European colonization

  • @derorje2035
    @derorje2035 10 месяцев назад +5

    I once (more than 15 years ago) saw a documentary that claimed that inuit might have went from southern France to Newfoundland along the ice shore.
    They could have travelled by canoe (or something) during the day and slept on the ice at night. Seals and fish were already alive then, so there was plenty of food.
    That would imply that even when there is neither Kamchatka nor Alaska, people would still move to the Americas.
    Also you forgot somehow the Vikings who came to Northamerica. They even settled in Iceland (where nobody else lived). They could've settled in New England as well.

  • @AlternateHistoryHub
    @AlternateHistoryHub  10 месяцев назад +454

    Was going to bring it up but cut it out of the vid. Vinland would have failed anyway because it was so far away. No major Norse colonization, natives or not.
    This is one of those ideas where its so different this would be like a five part series of pure fiction. So apologies if I just cover the most basic stuff.
    Also check out Possible History. He's another alternate history channel I really like. www.youtube.com/@possiblehistory/videos

  • @gtaakuma4514
    @gtaakuma4514 10 месяцев назад +90

    The ecological impact this would have would be incredible to witness. Perhaps mammoths and giant ground sloths would still be around

    • @carnifex2005
      @carnifex2005 10 месяцев назад +3

      Not only that, the Earth itself may have been cooler overall with all of NA not being inhabited. The natives clear cut forests for their agriculture. It is surmised that with the native population collapse, more carbon dioxide was sequestered since forests overran those previous cleared out lands and may have helped continue the "Little Ice Age" that happened from 1300 to 1850. Now imagine two continents of old growth forest that hasn't been touched by human hands. It would clearly help cool down the Earth more than it did when Columbus went there.

  • @ShearDouchbaggery
    @ShearDouchbaggery 10 месяцев назад +8

    As someone who's entire career is based around food. Thank you for bringing up native American crops

  • @kaleeshsynth9994
    @kaleeshsynth9994 4 месяца назад +3

    Want an alternate history where horses never crossed the land bridge

  • @DustyGamma
    @DustyGamma 10 месяцев назад +49

    You forgot avocados! I love how those only still exist because of people.
    They were originally spread by giant ground sloths, and would have gone extinct when those sloths did. It's why the seeds are so big.

    • @ATBZ
      @ATBZ 10 месяцев назад +13

      Well without humans the sloths probably wouldn't have gone extinct.

    • @DustyGamma
      @DustyGamma 10 месяцев назад

      @@ATBZ Oh hey, you're right! Don't know why I got it in my head that them being megafauna was what killed them, but apparently they went extinct when humans showed up.
      I mean, I guess it was that they were megafauna that got them killed by humans... "Giant meat, we kill!"

    • @andrasfogarasi5014
      @andrasfogarasi5014 10 месяцев назад +8

      Not really a historically significant fruit though. Europe already had apples, pears, and grapes. Or if you wanted to get exotic, oranges. These were all easier to cultivate than avocados, and grapes could even be used to make wine.
      But even this is all ignoring the important fact that fruits are a luxury. Asking to consider the world would look like without a specific fruit is like asking to consider a world without the ball point pen. I mean sure, it would be slightly worse, but it certainly wouldn't change history.

    • @richardarriaga6271
      @richardarriaga6271 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@andrasfogarasi5014 Limes helped the Brits sail without getting scurvy

    • @boobah5643
      @boobah5643 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@richardarriaga6271 Yeah, but you can substitute any other food high in vitamin C. Admittedly, not all of them store as well.

  • @spacebar1008
    @spacebar1008 10 месяцев назад +5

    Ngl, being a native- this ain’t offensive Cody don’t worry. You’re a good man and we know you’re just out here spitballin alt histories so ur good, you get a pass for solving the native question úwù

  • @bigtonk9633
    @bigtonk9633 3 месяца назад

    Your videos are a modern treat

  • @mcmike3203
    @mcmike3203 10 месяцев назад

    Content has been going down recently but I will continue to watch for now

  • @shinjigaming7185
    @shinjigaming7185 10 месяцев назад +16

    As someone who mostly grew up in Indiana, Indiana without corn would be weird as heck man outside my neighborhood there was a cornfield

  • @Drheims
    @Drheims 10 месяцев назад +29

    Hey Alternatehistoryhub I developed this scenario a while back for a what if where Zealandia collided with sahul to create a continent called Sahullandia I wondering if you could talk about such a scenario in a future video. I even made a map of it if you needed a point of reference. Feel free to dm me if you would like.

  • @Boxaxel
    @Boxaxel 10 месяцев назад +4

    I was so confused when you said "why didnt spain colonise the south?" But then i realised you were talking about the southern part of usa not the actual south

  • @captmoroni
    @captmoroni 10 месяцев назад

    This was interesting. Thanks Cody.

  • @grimsdol4665
    @grimsdol4665 10 месяцев назад +163

    Id love to see a video about what if the Himalayan mountains didn't exist, geography shapes politics, and having no barrier between the 2 most populated nations ever would possibly be world changing

    • @aaronTGP_3756
      @aaronTGP_3756 10 месяцев назад +12

      You'd also need to get rid of the Tibetan plateau.

    • @sinoroman
      @sinoroman 10 месяцев назад +3

      i think some of these alternate histories are what althisthub wants as realities

    • @Sceptonic
      @Sceptonic 10 месяцев назад +33

      ​@@sinoromaneven with everything AltHistHub said in the video theres still weirdos like you wholl call him racist for making such a video

    • @p3zzer
      @p3zzer 10 месяцев назад +2

      this sounds interesting as hell actually

    • @MohammedAli-hl4mr
      @MohammedAli-hl4mr 10 месяцев назад +5

      for that to be the case south Asia would have to never bang into the rest of Asia and instead be a the largest island/smallest continent in the middle of otl Indian ocean.

  • @hereforya1941
    @hereforya1941 10 месяцев назад +6

    The food domesticated by the natives Americans are really important that sometimes we take for granted.

  • @charleslyonii3428
    @charleslyonii3428 2 месяца назад

    You have an interesting imagination Cody. And don't let anyone tell you different. Just keep on thinking on. I honestly admire your content man.

  • @rtpoe
    @rtpoe 10 месяцев назад +3

    One other thing to note - at least in North America - was that the natives pretty much cleared out the wilderness, leaving it fit for habitation. When the English showed up, one of the things that impressed them was how perfect the land seemed for their expansion and settlement (even with the natives in the way). With no native population, North America (on the east coast, at any rate) would have been primeval forest.

  • @ribspice1238
    @ribspice1238 10 месяцев назад +6

    Scenario Idea: What If Nobody Had Lived In The Old World?

    • @admiraloscar3320
      @admiraloscar3320 10 месяцев назад +1

      But humans come from Africa?

    • @regulate.artificer_g23.mdctlsk
      @regulate.artificer_g23.mdctlsk 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@admiraloscar3320 I imagine a scenario where, somehow, the prehistoric humans in the Old World keep dying off/aren't thriving there - the Old World is somehow too hostile for humans - but they thrive in the New World once they migrated there; the ones left in the Old World went extinct.

  • @Vaquita_Vibes
    @Vaquita_Vibes 10 месяцев назад +10

    It really was an interesting thought experiment. If we went even deeper and focused on how horses and camilids didnt cross over, literally every aspect of ancient humanity changes, The chariot, the mongles, sending messages over long distance, everything about humanity changes and leads to groups staying in just one are primarily. Basically my point is, look at his older video of no horses/camilids coming over to see the breath of this change.

  • @toeray5864
    @toeray5864 10 месяцев назад +6

    The Aztecs being absolutely hated by the other populations of Mexico helped the Spanish a lot. They weren't a lot better off once the Spanish were in charge but anything beats the threat of human sacrifice.

  • @davidmushal7862
    @davidmushal7862 10 месяцев назад +5

    Have you ever thought about doing one about what would’ve happened if the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth hadn’t been methodically dismantled by its neighbors (and crippled by its own rules)? I think your videos are excellent, and I’d love to see your take on this.

  • @CaptCKernel
    @CaptCKernel 10 месяцев назад +42

    No natives would mean Columbus would find a Scandinavian settlement in the Americas most likely, as they would have still made it to Newfoundland but would have had the untold vast amount of farmland they were forever seeking

    • @bullmoosevelt4495
      @bullmoosevelt4495 10 месяцев назад

      Those settlements were unsustainable and still would have either been abandoned or starved to death. Especially since they wouldn’t have the massive amounts of manpower and resources at their disposal to do this like the Spanish, British, and French did.
      In fact, there is no historical evidence to prove that the Scandinavians even knew they were in the New World. Most simply got lost and thought they were in Greenland.

  • @reillycurran8508
    @reillycurran8508 10 месяцев назад +40

    There's non zero odds it wouldn't even be called America. There's been some recent theorizing that the name might actually come from the "Amerrisque" mountain range in Nicaragua and Honduras.
    Basically the idea is these mountains are where *SOMEONE* told Columbus the gold they had came from, and so when people asked him where it came from, he said it was American Gold. Also apparently the attribution to Amerigo Vespucci was originally worded as a sort of "WELL WHERE ELSE COULD THE NAME HAVE COME FROM‽', implying that it was a guess made by folks who had already lost track of where the name had come from.

  • @table_pepper
    @table_pepper 10 месяцев назад +1

    Lot of Vinland comments out here which I agree with. Follow up would be nice. However, I'm more interested in your thoughts on the development of the earliest Eastern civilizations if those human populations persisted in Siberia/Manchuria and never crossed over into the Americas. Essentially how a proto-Beringian culture may have remained in that area and effected the later civilizations of ancient China, Korea, and Japan. Great video as usual!

  • @sassoy3370
    @sassoy3370 10 месяцев назад +3

    It would probably get settled by Vikings under Leif Erickson as they did in Greenland

  • @CoalCreekCroft
    @CoalCreekCroft 10 месяцев назад +7

    Wow. I went to high school in the early 70s so you can imagine the media presentations we were given. (All respect to fantastic books). Not my first rodeo with this channel but strikes me how much I'm learning or re-learning. While being thoroughly entertained. With a narrator good enough that I'd probably tune in to hear him recite his grocery list.
    Not as any boast but as now a semi-retired author/historian (vs just recalling high school), viewing this channel should rate college credits if not an entire course. Good job, AHH. ... (goes for Pointless Hub as well but going through THAT should earn a PhD. Just unsure in WHAT.)

  • @SomasAcademy
    @SomasAcademy 10 месяцев назад +8

    ~15:04 Very few of the native populations the French and English interacted with were hunter gatherers - a handful were, and none of them were as urbanized as some of the populations the Spanish encountered, but the significant majority of groups east of the Mississippi were agriculturalists.

    • @carnifex2005
      @carnifex2005 10 месяцев назад +3

      And a significant number were agriculturalists until the horse came around, and they they turned into hunter/gatherers again, just doing it by horse.

  • @Writer-Two
    @Writer-Two 10 месяцев назад +1

    Whoa that really was an awesome video!

  • @jaykubisanidiot8657
    @jaykubisanidiot8657 10 месяцев назад +1

    Honestly, this scenario deserves a second video...

  • @bastisonnenkind
    @bastisonnenkind 10 месяцев назад +9

    I totally forgot about the patatoes. Prussia and the Prussian army cold have never (not for a long time) became so powerful. I think they would have found ways to produce better crop, but it would have taken a long time. Enough to change the entire history from then onwards. (Japan and/or China comming out of their isolation periods before that and settling the west coast of NA)

    • @normanclatcher
      @normanclatcher 10 месяцев назад

      Don't forget the Polynesians. Kon-Tiki can make the trip, so all ya gotta do is sail it the other direction.

  • @jamessullivan317
    @jamessullivan317 10 месяцев назад +9

    I know others have mentioned it, but looking at the Pleistocene extinctions you can actually track them in near perfect sync with human migration patterns. Basically, the further away from Africa where every large animal evolved to deal with human predation, the more exctinctions of large animals occurred. Elephants and rhinos live in India & SE Asia still, and lions and hippos lived in Europe until late into human civilization (late as in Early Roman Republic I think)
    So with no humans reaching the Americas, even with a changing climate the conditions were and kinda are still similar to warm interstadials that Pleistocene fauna enjoyed, so there's a good chance the Americas would be a wild safari similar to Africa. Now the exploitation of *that* resource I'd love to see in a video!

  • @inferno_slayer
    @inferno_slayer 10 месяцев назад

    I requested this many many years ago. I dont take credit, but i am glad somebody decided to do this

  • @CocoHutzpah
    @CocoHutzpah 10 месяцев назад +3

    I guess I never thought about how powerful corn, tomatoes, and potatoes are. I've never grown potatoes before, but corn and tomatoes are so easy to grow that I've done it as a casual hobby before.

  • @josedimpleson3446
    @josedimpleson3446 10 месяцев назад +3

    I would love a part 2 or deeper dive into this great idea.

  • @X1GenKaneShiroX
    @X1GenKaneShiroX 10 месяцев назад +71

    What if Russia Won the Polish vs Soviet War?
    What if Russia Won the Estonian Independence War?
    What if Russia Won the Winter War?
    What if Inejirō Asanuma Was Never Assassinated?

    • @lionheart6176
      @lionheart6176 10 месяцев назад +14

      Russia did win the Winter war though
      On paper

    • @asilkinder3609
      @asilkinder3609 10 месяцев назад +8

      What if the white death Sniped Stalin

    • @fullmetaltheorist
      @fullmetaltheorist 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@lionheart6176 having to sue for peace against a country 50 times smaller than yours because they keep putting your soldiers in a blunt isn't much if a victory.

    • @boombler4320
      @boombler4320 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@fullmetaltheorist ironically enough the fact that they lost so many soldiers in the winter war was beneficial to them since suddenly Stavka realised that maybe incompetent officers and outdated tactics arent a way to win a war. Also it was the Finnish who wanted peace since by the end of the war the Soviets were actually pushing them hard and got most of the lands they wanted

    • @lionheart6176
      @lionheart6176 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@fullmetaltheorist as I said...on paper

  • @ekay8968
    @ekay8968 10 месяцев назад

    Another great one Cody my man, got the plushies on the 16th

  • @sleazymeezy
    @sleazymeezy 10 месяцев назад

    I'm just here cos Cody is just the best to listen to. I don't care about the topics, hell, I've watched transformers 5 review every night before bed since it came out. I appreciate the heck out of you bro :)

  • @jacobbaker7053
    @jacobbaker7053 10 месяцев назад +10

    Love you videos man, keep up the great work 👍

    • @Neko-ex1ce
      @Neko-ex1ce 10 месяцев назад

      I love them to

  • @bigpappa4041
    @bigpappa4041 10 месяцев назад +75

    I wonder how this would have effected Leif Erikson and other Viking’s voyage to North America, considering his brother, Thorvald, actually came into contact and fought with Native Americans in modern-day Canada.

    • @Dock284
      @Dock284 10 месяцев назад +17

      I don't think it changes much. Perhaps they have an easier time exploring further inland but they would still abandon the territory simply because of environmental and distance issues.

    • @theidioticbgilson1466
      @theidioticbgilson1466 10 месяцев назад +15

      probably would have stayed, since they wouldn't be chased out by aboriginal americans who thought the mouldy cheese they were given was poison

    • @oompa1274
      @oompa1274 10 месяцев назад +6

      They would have no enemies

    • @hya2in8
      @hya2in8 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@oompa1274they would still have the wilderness as an enemy

    • @skylarschell7858
      @skylarschell7858 10 месяцев назад +4

      I wonder if the Polynesians might have settled along South America's west coast.

  • @pear_bear
    @pear_bear 9 месяцев назад

    Darn! I missed out on the knight plush! I hope he brings it back some day. :(

  • @ravenlord4
    @ravenlord4 5 месяцев назад +2

    I think the bigger picture (no pun intended) would be the megafauna. They were hunted to extinction by the time that the Europeans arrived in the original timeline. In the new timeline, those explores and settlers would have had to deal with terror birds, dire wolves, mammoths, mastodons, saber tooth cats, etc. It would take a LONG time to try to get a toe-hold on the mainland.

  • @Hardrian_Hardrada_Cicero
    @Hardrian_Hardrada_Cicero 10 месяцев назад +3

    In the Civilization series, there is an option to have the world map set to what's called "Terra" of which the map would generate two or three continents, one or two of which would pack all of the civilizations, including yours, and then one continent (which is usually either big or small) would have nothing on it other than resources and such. As far as I know, in Civ IV, it'll usually just place barbarian settlements there for the player or opponent civ to take out but in Civ V, it is a completely empty continent and this is basically what that video reminds me of.

  • @constantinethecataphract5949
    @constantinethecataphract5949 10 месяцев назад +30

    My guess is that since there wouldn't be any people there would be no incentive to explore the land.
    No potatoes, no tomatoes, no corn. Because no guy existed to domesticate the wild version of those plants.
    No guys to tell the Europeans were the gold, silver and other resources are.

    • @92HazelMocha
      @92HazelMocha 10 месяцев назад +5

      Without horses there *might not be Europeans*

    • @constantinethecataphract5949
      @constantinethecataphract5949 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@92HazelMocha im operating under the scenario that that the horses crossed over but not people somehow

  • @gaberiddle4323
    @gaberiddle4323 4 месяца назад +2

    Dont forget that there would also be some extremely terrifying megafauna, such as the short nosed bear and giant ground sloth, that would most likely have still been there wothout early human influences. It would have been a truly alien world.

  • @Yzerbruh
    @Yzerbruh 10 месяцев назад +3

    The domestication of tomatoes is a point I find contentious. For a period tomatoes were grown as an ornamental plant, it's possible people might 'accidently' end up turning the wild tomato into a new possibly different crop, having them turn out more like grapes.
    I mean, vanilla was discovered by chance, so why couldn't it also happen to tomatoes.

    • @jasonreed7522
      @jasonreed7522 10 месяцев назад +3

      I think his main point with that segment was to highlight just how much effort the natives put into domesticating these crops.
      And without that effort maize would still just be a lame wild mountain grass that is not worth farming when you already have Wheat & Barley.
      Although it does make you wonder what other plants are currently barely edible that have the potential to be delicious if we put the time into making them delicious.
      And something he didn't get into is the possibility that some of these pro-crops may have not even existed in the alternative ecosystem of the new world that did not experience the same human interventions. (Human hunting and competition is believed to have pushed most american mega fauna to extinction, even if not singlehandedly, atleast as a contributing factor.)