_”...flinging their own feces at the team as projectiles, De Loys and company responded by shooting at the creatures with their guns...”_ *Well that certainly escalated quickly!*
Delaware Dave fucking loser who is too scared to go on a real adventure so he reads those books at the library.... Mississippi Jack was a drunk and wasn't even half the man his brother was but the real hero history has forgotten is Colorado Carl now that was a real man...lol
@@doctorrussia Translations are often inaccurate and change over time. The fact remains that slavery is in the bible and is allowed under God's alleged laws.
No don't worry, I wasn't dissing David Attenborough at 3:28. I was doing the opposite, I was praising him for being a person that's probably actually worth of the title of being an "Indiana Jones". I love the guy and the other scientists I listed as they actually did contribute to scientific understanding unlike some of the other people I mention in this video. It went by super quickly and my editing there was pretty bad for timing. My bad. Also to the people saying I'm a PC Liberal Snowflake for just merely mentioning racism and its relation to this story (yes I have gotten a bunch of comments like this): Are you serious? I was actually pretty confident a lot of what was said in this video was pretty well accepted by most people... but here were are. It just seems like people are looking to get offended quite frankly. The racism of George Montandon is an integral part of the story and like it or not his views are necessary to understand the cryptid. Montandon's theories were made primarily for racial reasons rather than scientific (which is probably the reason why he fabricated evidence in the first place). His theories are so intertwined in racism that its difficult to separate the two. I did a lot of research for this video and just wanted to talk about the full story. If you are just going to complain then please just go somewhere else as I'm not too interested. If you had a criticism with the length, I will take your criticism into consideration for next time, I understand if you felt like I dwelt on it too long. My bad if I made it sound preachy as that wasn't my intention. I guess I might have been less dramatic and done and phrased this a little differently in hindsight. I guess all of this is a learning experience and I'll definitely keep some of your criticisms into consideration in the future. Also for people talking about the claim that Piranhas and Electric Eels don't kill people, I guess you could find isolated and rare reports of deaths, but they are so rare and require such specific conditions I wouldn't even count them. They definitely aren't anywhere close to how Percy described them.
TREY the Explainer Don't take it personally. With potlical climate as it is people on both "sides" are losing there minds over the smallest thing. Video was good.
Yeah, I see what you mean, man. It's ridiculous and I never really had to deal with it until now all of a sudden. It's stupid that merely mentioning and somewhat criticizing racism makes me a crazy Liberal in the eyes of some people. I was just trying to make a super depressing topic somewhat more tolerable. anyways thanks!
If someone actually agrees with Montandon's beliefs I would genuinely be at risk of death by laughter. Not even 21st century racists and neonazis can be dumb enough to believe in hologenesis, right?
@@applebeesbarandgrillmenu4695 when it comes to a animal that is clearly strange or eccentric it's just the circle of retardation to kill it for no reason, you could probably profit of just taking a photo of the fucking thing let alone capturing it.
Good work Trey, here's some more information that truly bangs the last nail into this cryptid coffin. In 1999, the July-August edition of the Venezuelan scientific magazine Interciencia published a letter sent in 1962 from Doctor Enrique Tejera to the editor Guillermo José Schael of the magazine Diario El Universal: […] "This monkey is a myth. I will tell you his story. […] Mister Montandon said that the monkey had no tail. That is for sure, but he forgot to mention something, it has no tail because it was cut off. I can assure you this, gentlemen, because I saw the amputation…[]. Who is speaking here in 1917 was working in a camp for oil exploration in the region of Perijá. The geologist was François de Loys, the engineer Dr. Martín Tovar Lange. De Loys was a prankster and often we laughed at his jokes. One day they gave him a monkey with an ill tail, so it was amputated. Since then de Loys called him “el hombre mono” (the monkey man). Some time later I and de Loys went in another region of Venezuela: in an area called Mene Grande. He always walked along the side of his monkey, who died some time later. De Loys decided to take a photo and I believe that Mr. Montandon will not deny it is the same photograph that he presented today. [in 1929 Montandon presented the Ameranthropoides in a public lecture]. More recently during a visit to Paris my astonishment was great visiting the Museum of Man. On top of a monumental scale, filling the back wall, there was a huge photo with the caption: “The first anthropoid ape discovered in America.” It was the photograph of de Loys, beautifully modified. The plants were no longer visible in the background, and it was not possible to understand on which kind of box the monkey was sitting. The trick is done so well that within a few years the monkey will be over two meters high […]. Finally, I must warn you: Montandon was not a good person. After the war he was executed because he betrayed France, his homeland." Sincerely, Your friend Enrique Tejera. As for de Loys, he continued his geological career and in 1926 he joined a Turkish Petroleum Company. In 1928 he became a fellow of the Geological Society of London and went off to Iraq to study the local geology and the possible oil reserves to be found in the region. Sowing his wild oats, he contracted syphilis, returned to the town of Lausanne in France ( edit: Switzerland) where he died young, on October 16, 1935.
TREY the Explainer It's a little sad though. When i was very young, I came across Bernard Huevellmans "On the track of Unknown Animals". This one I was SURE was a real critter ( Not a blurry photo or an anecdotal account). Sadly, it seems all of them will remain unknown as they probably never existed in the first place.
“After (the skull) became corroded from being used as a salt container” man I be washing my hands and stuff all the time and throwing away food I drop on the grand and these dudes putting their salt in a skull. Damn
Yeah, well, if thoroughly cleaned, there's not much that could happen. If you look through historical records, you'll stumble across tools, including forks and spoons made of bone. Given that a skull has a natural shape of some kind of vessel, it's not that far off. However, why would they have used it for that? Did they carry the salt in their bare hands before? Something in that story just doesn't add up
Yeah, really sounds fishy that they'd treat such valuable evidence that way to a point of damaging it. It's just as suspicious as "the dog ate my homework" alibi. And just as the video stated, the photograph looks a little shady too
7:58 I love how in this diagram it isn't even the Europeans who are shown as the most advanced but the Malay. Europeans apparently developed from devil hounds, what the Hell?
@@CyclicDiscipline8 I just want to say I found this channel and it has been such a sigh of relief. I am deeply interested in deep sea creatures and to find a channel that covers that with honesty is exciting enough, but then to cover even more topics AND have a community that aligns with my sense of humor is just amazing.
I've seen a wild spider monkey before and its easily one of if not the coolest animals i have ever seen because they're so human like and have such long limbs.
Trey the explainer is said to be the rarest cryptid of all. Since he is believed to actually exist but no photographic evidence that shows his face has been shown
7:58 I love how the European, American and Malay all have pretty much the exact same skull but because of one tiny little feature they just said “nope. different jaw length, totally different species”
I'm no expert, like at all, but I think I may have some insight. In paleoanthropology, when differentiating very similar species like homo sapiens and homo neanderthalensis, for instance, they look for "suites" of differences. it helps if the species has a very unique trait, such as the occipital bun of Neanderthals. No human has been recorded to have had a real occipital bun. This feature, along with other differences, forms a "suite", or series, of traits that define one species from the other. That being said, paleontologist and paleoanthropologists are constantly switching things around as they evaluate and reevaluate new and old materials. Genetic makeup is another part of what helps us define more modern species. This can't be used for dinosaurs, obviously, though. At the end of the day, paleontologists really just have to be very discerning and use all given information to come to the best, most logical conclusion about species and phylogeny. @kyrab7914
As a brazilian myself I could state something: piranhas can swarm a man and leave one's bare bones in less than 20 minutes. Gargantuan anacondas could be just augmented(yet existing) jibóias, which can measure up to 15 to 20meters. Everything else is very much far-fetched but these ones can be true. Great video, may E.L. Wallace bless you abundantly
@Pragmaticist I am native from Manaus, Amazonas (Amazon) and fishers use animal flesh to fish piranhas in the river, and from my experience in fishing here, just a single piranha can bite the top of a finger with ease. (it happened to my grandma by the way)
Despite having the most amount of military victories than any other modern country, and beating the Brits on several occasions. Dont really know where the whole "French Always retreat" thing came from, but they were the frontline in WW1 and didn't get any meaningful support in WW2.
Check out the size of an anaconda they found in a mine in south America somewhere, can't remember where exactly but those cock suckers did exist and the native populations had to deal with them
Very interesting video although I do have to say that Electric eels can and have killed people. However you are right that it isn't their shock alone that kills. It's usually the shock knocks a person out or paralyzes them and they drown before they can recover.
Has anyone else noted that the De Loys' Ape was described as looking more human than most of the other proposed progenitor ape species, despite giving rise to what the proposers thought was one of the very much least human races?
I don’t have anything interesting to contribute here. I just really like your videos and wanted to add to your audience engagement analytics. Thanks for the awesome channel!
Piranha attacks is something "common" but death by thoses attacks are rare, and usually happens to small childs. In recent years there are 2 cases, both small grils one was 5 the other 6.
Actually an electric eel cannot kill alone but if you are unfortunate enough to trip into a partially dried pond full of a dozen or more you could die from heart palpitations and there's only a dozen of these incidents because the natives are a little too smart to get shocked to death
it’s crazy people are offended at the mere mention of racism existing, it’s a thing, it’s often a part of understanding historical context thanks for the video, never heard this story before
It sure is crazy... Lmao Nah, seriously. Racism needs to die. But, it is sadly a big part of our history. But, hopefully it won't have to be in the future.
The idea that someone is 'racist' and therefore wrong no matter what is absurd. Leftists will pour shit on every great man of history if his views aren't politically correct in 2018. Fucking NPCs.
I’ve noticed that the offense at the mention of racism tends to come from the further-right wing of politics most of the time. The general belief on that side is that racism is no longer a factor in the modern world and a lot of people over there really don’t like people claiming that prejudice based on race still exists.
The picture at 0:05 was captured by a trail camera about 35 miles from my camp near Bradford Pennsylvania. I saw something in those woods that I cannot explain what it was, but it was not a species I’ve ever seen since.
"Adventurers" have been embellishing the truth for as long as they have been out there. Marco Polo's village where there were people with alsatian dog heads is a great example.
If you go back as far as the first Spanish expeditions it gets more believable (as far as civilizations go not weird monsters) there is more and more evidence that there were lsrfe civilizations in the Amazon. Archeology is little more than than dogma and philosophy due to how little evidence they rely on, never forget that. Watch Graham Hancocks JRE interviews whether you agree with his ideas or not he highlights this heavily and the incredulous dogma in the archeological feild.
Blows my mind that people are angry at Trey for criticising and disproving racists. Believe it or not, racism is wrong, not just morally but scientifically, so in a discussion about racist scientific theories it isn't out of place to bring it up.
Montandon : Hey De Loy can i publish this in order to push my agenda? De Loy whispering consumed by flashbacks : only 4 came ....only 4 came back Montandon : I am taking this as a yes, ,,,c ya buddy
jody michaud yeah that one was interesting. Especially some weird claim that a juvenile version of the creature was killed and eaten by the villagers decades ago
Here are some ideas for Trey the explainer. For future videos: - cannibalism origines,causes and evidence in the pre historic world. - debunking the starchild scull. - greatest hoaxers of all time. Sure why not? - the philadelphia experiment is time travel even real??? - life in the Devonian seas. - paleprofile Sarcosuchus - life after the chicxulub impact. Hardly and videos on that on youtube. Most of them only about the impact.
On a side note, these old tales of exploration are so insane and fascinating to me at the same time. They left 20 and 4 returned and it's just regarded as like "meh".. you fought the jungle, animals, disease and violent natives and 16 out of 20 DIED.. some were KILLED in fights with natives.. what an crazy adventure and frankly traumatising.. but they didnt talk traumatic experiences like that back then.
Explorer: thanks for guiding us through the jungle again Natives: no problem Explorer: I’ll make sure to include how we met in my story I’m writing Natives: oh wow that’d be great! **[three months later]** 3:53
he wrote 'How to recognize a Jew...'" xD the title it s so over the top, it's the book eric cartman might have written XD . "guys, i found a jew in the brasilian jungle!"
Peter Fleming (Ian's less famous but equally entertaining brother), describes how he regularly paddled in pirana - infested streams and never once got bitten. This was during an unsuccessful search for the missing Peter Fawcett. The bizarre ending of Waugh's, A Handful of Dust, was another product of the Fawcett craze.
Yeah the whole theme with all these stories is that there’s always internal goals with the creatures wether it be publicity, money, religious reasons, or in this case racism
@@thundergun933 Because it gives scale to the actual body. If that crate is small crate then its a small monkey but if that crate is a larger crate...................
@Digicraftmon the Crystal Gem It´s a folklore creature from northern Canada, Alaska ... and it seems to terrify natives. Here´s a well made introduction: ruclips.net/video/9PuNKkpV-Pk/видео.html
@@kaptainkrampus2856 this is a great channel and video explaining it. I didnt notice anyone replied so thank you for sharing the video. Probably would have posted the same one honestly. People seem to understand concepts better with videos ot seems.
Yo trey there’s this dinosaur game called the isle and it has dinosaurs that surprisingly many people think are accurate,it would be awesome to hear your thoughts on the game,and personally I think you’ll love it because it doesn’t disrespect palaeontology.
I mean... that map has a "broad" definition of human- like- ape- cryptid. In europe (i'll stick to europe as i am unsure about the others) we can see on the map ice giants of nordic sagas and Grendel from the tale of Beowulf. Both are content of old legends, not historical sightings like bigfoot or the florida ape man. The map might've featured cyclopes and Goliath as well, as these come from equally uncertain legends as well.
I like how you point out the public views of the people who wrote those "historic" documents. They were extremely ignorant back then. That it's hard to believe anything they wrote.
Didn't an electric eel kill a horse before though? And Piranhas don't typically kill adults since adults know not to touch water with Piranhas but they do sometimes kill children.
@@blackhatves1075 It has happened with horses, and he claimed there have been adult humans killed by piranhas. Rare, but it has happened when people were in the water swimming.
It's like smoking..... Smoking doesn't kill you, But cancer does? The eel will shock you and you could drown or hit your head on a rock? If youve a weak heart or medical conditions, you could possibly have a heart attack and die..... It depends how you look at it? Do guns, bullets, or people kill people in shootings?
Didn’t an electric eel cause a death in one of the episodes of River Monsters? It charred a mans skin after he was thrown into a group of them by a horse right?
Movie plot: The alleged "missing links" that attack the expedition are a hidden society of old world creatures that are tasked to protect the crystal skull stolen by the expedition (as well as other precious artifacts of their culture) The theft of the skull and cold blooded murder of one of its sacred keepers places a curse on the expedition, causing them to slowly die off from increasingly disturbing and mysterious ways, leaving the "lucky" survivors to progressively descend into madness and lunacy, unable to tell what's real and what's fake
The most ironic bit about all of this 18/19th/20th century race theory stuff about the Native Americans is that the original conquistador accounts and Spanish interactions with Mesoamerican and Andean groups is pretty consistent in that they viewed them as highly capable, intelligent, and cultured people, moreso then the average person today thinks of those civilizations, even (as unfortunately the view that they were a bunch of "stone age savages" is still common). Of course, the Conquistadors had no qualms about massacring and exploiting these people, but they didn't at all view them as inferior or primitive: As an example, here's an account of Cortes describing workers from Tenochtiitlan, the Aztec capital, constructing a bridge: "They agreed to work at it viribus et posse, and began at once to divide the task between them, and I must say that they worked so hard, and with such good will, that in less than four days they constructed a fine bridge, over which the whole of the men and horses passed. So solidly built it was, that I have no doubt it will stand for upwards of ten years without breaking -unless it is burnt down - being formed by upwards of one thousand beams, the smallest of which was as thick round as a man's body, and measured nine or ten fathoms (16.8-18m) in length, without counting a great quantity of lighter timber that was used as planks. And I can assure your Majesty that I do not believe there is a man in existence capable of explaining in a satisfactory manner the dexterity which these lords of Tenochtitlan, and the Indians under them, displayed in constructing the said bridge: I can only say that it is the most wonderful thing that ever was seen. " You see similar praises of respect and impressiveness in regards to their cities, here's an excerpt from Bernal Diaz about Tenochtitlan itself: "Our astonishment was indeed raised to the highest pitch, and we could not help remarking to each other, that all these buildings resembled the fairy castles we read of in Amadis de Gaul; so high, majestic, and splendid did the temples, towers, and houses of the town, all built of massive stone and lime, rise up out of the midst of the lake. Indeed, many of our men asked if what they saw was a mere dream. And the reader must not feel surprised at the manner in which I have expressed myself, for it is impossible to speak coolly of things which we had never seen nor heard of, nor even could have dreamt of, beforehand..... After we had sufficiently gazed upon this magnificent picture, we again turned our eyes toward the great market, and beheld the vast numbers of buyers and sellers who thronged there. The bustle and noise occasioned by this multitude of human beings was so great that it could be heard at a distance of more than four miles. Some of our men, who had been at Constantinople and Rome, and traveled through the whole of Italy, said that they never had seen a market-place of such large dimensions, or which was so well regulated, or so crowded with people as this one at Mexico." Mind you, these accounts are accurate: Tenochtitlan had a population 200k and 250k, and covering over 1300 hectacres, making it in the tp 5 largest cities in the world at the time, and built on a lake with artificial islands and venice like canals and aquaducts, as well. And while Tenochtitlan was exceptional, to be sure, being the largest city in the Americas at this point (It still is: As Mexico city, though the lake is drained now), large cities, well kept cities were common (in fact, urban cities with state goverments had been the norm in the region for well over 1000 years by this point). Here's a discrption of the city of Tlaxcala, which while still moderately large with a population between 20k and 40k, wasn't nearly as exceptional as Tenochtitlan: "The city is indeed so great and marvellous that though I abstain from describing many things about it, yet the little that I shall recount is, I think, almost incredible. It is much larger than Granada and much better fortified. Its houses are as fine and its inhabitants far more numerous than those of Granada when that city was captured. Its provisions and food are likewise very superior... There are gold, silver and precious stones, and jewellers' shops selling other ornaments made of feathers, as well arranged as in any market in the world. There is earthenware of many kinds and excellent quality, as fine as any in Spain. Wood, charcoal, medicinal and sweet smelling herbs are sold in large quantities. There are booths for washing your hair and barbers to shave you: there are also public baths. Finally, good order and an efficient police system are maintained among them, and they behave as people of sense and reason: the foremost city of Africa cannot rival them." You see similar praises for the intelligence and moral character of the nobility and royalty of these city-states and empires (they even married into Spanish nobility in many cases after the conquest, again, showing how the Spanish viewed these as proper nations and cultures, not as savage primitives), their goldwork and featherwork (The Spanish even commissioned native featherworkers to make paintings of catholic iconography out of tens of thousands of iridescent feathers rather then paint, which was an indigenous artform used by many mesoamerican groups, a few of these still survive today and they are gorgeous) was well praised etc. It's only decades into the Colonial period where you start to see race theory first pop up, and the capabilities and accomplishments of native groups swept under the rug, in an effort to justify increasing exploitation and oppressing of native people.
this is super interesting, i never knew that. so what, even after that they decided "eh lets kill them all and destroy this beautiful civilisation :)" what trash... my heart aches
+it me: I mean, it's a little more nuanced then that, but for the Conquistadors, yeah, basically: The Conquistadors were motivated by greed and a desire for personal glory, and ostensibly a desire to spread Catholicism. Regardless of if they actually cared about the last bit, the fact that the native city-states and empires (Note that the Aztec empire, while hugely dominant and had conquered huge swaths of the region, was not the only political state in the region, so there's not a singular civilization: The city of Tlaxcala, which I mention above, for example belonged to a republic of the same name it composed with 4 other cities, and were enemies of the Aztecs, though they belonged to the samee larger ethnic/cultural group (The Nahua), but there were also plenty of non-Nahua states who such as the Tututepec empire down south which was Mixtec, or the Tarascan empire to the west which was Purépecha, etc ) were pagan provided the Conquistadors with an excuse to justify the conquest of them. But it's also not quite that simple: You have to remember that one of the most important factors in Cortes's success, alongside loads of insane luck (I cannot stress how absurd and contrived the string of events that allowed him to succeed are) and disease, was that he had the support of various native states: The Republic of Tlaxcala was their biggest ally, for example, and a variety of Aztec city-states flipped sides, and a number of independent ones joined the Conquistadors as well. So it's not as if the Conquistadors were acting alone. And while it's true that these states couldn't foreesee the disastrous consequences their actions would have on their world as they knew it, I don't think the Conquistadors or the Crown did ether, as I'll explain in a minute. Speaking of the Crown, though, it's worth noting Cortes's expedition was illegal and unsanctioned, they weren't terribly interested in widespread colonialism or the mainland yet. Once Cortes had toppled the Aztec empire and reported back, after deciding not to execute him (since he had just secured them a massive revenue stream by virtue of all of the Aztec's tributaries now sending their tribute to Spain, which is the very thing that convinced them and other European powers to pursue colonialism and to have it be feasible), they got interested, and their primary motivation was to rule over and profit from them: Remember how I said before how the royalty and nobility of native states married into Spanish nobility? Initially, much of existing mesoamerican culture and politics was kept intact, with "just" native religion being suppressed (I say "just" because that still meant the burning of nearly all native texts and dismantling of temples, which makes the Burning of thee library of Alexandria seem like spilt milk in comparison in terms of the amount of historical information and literary works lost), so at this stage it's not really accurate to say native civilization was destroyed: it could be argued that it was even a better arrangement for some of the Aztec's tributaries. Again, while the Conquistadors often continued to commit abuses as they continued to conquer city-states and empires across the region (as with the toppling of the Aztecs, however, native armies did the vast majority of the work, the Conquistadors would have lost to even only moderately sized states in the region if they were fighting alonee), you only really, truly saw the systemic dismantling of native civilization and culture decades later as diseases continued to decimate the native population and Spain was compelled to change up their imperial strategy from merely ruling over and collecting taxes from native states to outright exploiting them for slave labor and depriving them of rights and thee neear eradication of native social, political, and cultural practices. This is a very brief, rough summary, if you want more information I high suggest you take a look at this list of posts i've compiled on Mesoamerican history from Askhistorians here: pastebin DOT com SLASH HD7gdupT ; especially the "did_the_spanish_see_the_aztecs_as_racially..." link. I also have a personal booklist, mostly taken from suggestions from the above posts; but as it's unorganized, I haven't read all of therm yet, and as some of them are just stuff I thought seemed cool rather then recommendations from knowledgeable people, i'm hesitant to post it, but that's here: pastebin DOT com SLASH HD7gdupT ;Worth noting that there's also some stuff on the Andes (the region the Inca, Chimu, Wari Moche, Tiwanku, etc are from) both pastebins, not just Mesoamerica. FAMSI is also a fantastic resource, though it might be a bit hard to parse without some sort of foundational level of knowledge about the region's history. Mexicolore is easily digestible and has a lot of good, neat info, but there's some errors mixed in there since while it has a lot of articles written by experts, the site's owners themselves aren't historians, so as with FAMSI it might be better to read the askhistorians links first so you can have a foundation to know what seems suspect or not.
Jabberwockxeno, very interesting post. Unfortunately few people take the time to consider history for the nuanced and complex sequence of events and interactions it is. People prefer easy generalisations (often politically motivated) that too often butcher accuracy. I'll take a look at your links, thanks.
Jabberwockxeno really love both of your comments good stuff, I'm of mayan decent myself and I'm glad some people that arent myself know that the native Americans weren't just running around naked killing each other like most people think
Thank God Spanish came brought religion and meat and stopped the mass cannablesm of the my mesoamerican ancestors.Tho blood lust might be returning to Mexico.Hopefully the can be a Christian revival.
3:29 David Attenborough doesn’t pretend that he is discovering crazy new things. He just films amazing creatures to educate people. I loved watching his shows as a kid and still do
I'm new to the channel and am wondering if you've ever done a video on the missing 1800s Thunderbird photo. It's an interesting story that involves a lot of (potentially false) memories of people having seen a photo but no one can produce the original. A bunch of cowboys supposedly killed a very very large bird (some report it was a pterosaur but most seem to suggest it was a bird hence the connection to the Native American legend of the Thunderbird) and were photographed with it. Obviously the skeptic in me says the photo is likely a combination of bad memory and people believing the hoaxes are the real thing but I'd love to see if you could dig anything more definitive up on the subject or just give your take. Love the channel btw!
50% of the comments: If it's female, then why does it have plong? 30% of the comments: Commenting about all the people who were butthurt about the racism part. 20% of the comments: Actual people that got salty for some reason at the racism part.
The Nguoi Rung from Vietnam in legend would grab your arm and laugh till nighttime so people would wear bamboo on their arms so they could slip off and run away.
It's not "the el chupacabra", it's "el chupacabras" or "the chupacabras" (singular). "El" already means "the". In Spanish, unlike in English, the _s_ is required for it to mean "the sucker of goats"; "el chupacabra" would mean "the sucker of one goat". If you want to anglicize it, just call it the goatsucker.
Actually the freshwater eel is very dangerous; there’s a very good river monsters episode on it. They normally aren’t deadly- unless you are in low lands areas during a bit of a dry season (the reason being that may electric eels can end up amassing in a pond, which can be deadly.)
When I was receiving my anthropology degree one of the things our professors underscored time and time again was that early anthropology was just ethnocentric white Europeans looking for a scientific backbone for their preexisting white supremacy. What is very important to keep in regards to the "scientists" of the old days (not just in anthropology, but across studies) is that these weren't people practicing the scientific method or concerned with testing theories. These were scholars who received classical schooling that focused primarily not on physical sciences (which were thought of as lesser studies for uncultured losers;think of a business major looking down their nose at someone going to a trade school), but on literature and philosophies, which were considered the backbone of understanding humanity. The thought process wasn't "let's learn about different humans that have existed overtime and their behavior and cultures", it was "we know what different humans are and why they do things, let's collect evidence for why that is so". tl;dr old timey social scientists had very unreliable scientific beliefs and loved racism
Gao Rowan Yeah. Also, it was used to justify colonization. Seeing another group as less than you makes it morally easier to take over their land and exploit their people. The poem “White Man’s Burden” from the era is a pretty insightful poem about how they saw the natives as incapable children, waiting to be saved from “savagery” by Western powers.
Percy Fawcett lied about the lost light skinned race though.. Simply because thinking people of dark skinned nature during that time couldn't construct these magnificent structures, meanwhile calling them "savages"
Actually, within the myths and legends of many South American native cultures, their gods were often described as being lighter skinned. So yeah it could be racism from around that time, or it could be someone basing their idea of an advanced civilization on what the native people from those places told them their gods were like to try to make it seem like there was existing evidence of those same civilizations. Probably a bit of both.
chris stewart it is most likely that. although many cultures that had no contact with caucasians simply used lighter skin to portray that they were different than the average man.
"lighter skinned" is a pretty easy thing to explain without going screaming racism. if they lived in caves, less sunlight, lighter skin. Albinos have been thought to have magical powers by basically every culture at one point in time. the american natives came from siberia across the Beringia land bridge, meaning white or asian ancestry. earlier generations would thus have lighter skin tones. they could paint themselves with white or light colors to appear more god or ghost like. like we could spend all day coming up with reasons why that one group over there is slightly lighter than the other group or why the story described them as being lighter skinned than the group who told him the story.
Why is wendigo classified with the ape men? It’s original appearance looks more like a husk and are closely similar to Ghouls, which aren’t on the ape men map.
Probably simply due to the origins of what a wendigo started out as. A hominid like creature that was either once human, or something closely related to them. Being as many sightings of it are similar in both location and climate to ape men/bigfoot sightings, wendigo get classified as a sub-species of sorts would be my guess.
Digital Mystique The original appearance of Wendigos weren’t horned, that’s the modern day’s popular appearance, the original appearance were pale skinny figures with tight decaying looking skin. The location thing could be true, but wendigo spottings are mostly world wide besides just in North America. Oh well doesn’t matter too much just seemed odd it was listed as an ape man.
@@saulkage4223 I never mentioned anything about it's appearance distinctly. Obviously there will be misconceptions due to them being urban legends, much like how myths and religion changed throughout the years. That's besides the point though. Given it's a hominid bipedal like creature which can be found, or has been sighted in regions with bigfoot (Never said just the United States) we can attribute these similarities to it being classified with bigfoot.
@@futur3ndings651 Fun fact, Wendigos aren't urban legends, they're actually more of a mythological thing, more comparable to a centaur than a sasquatch. Also, they were described, visually, by native north Americans as more along the lines of zombies, giants and ogres (among other things, depending on the region) - there's basically little resemblance to Bigfoot and all that jazz.
Dude, the way you talk about the racism and late XIX century "science" is awesome. Thanks for your honesty and understanding. Greets from South America!
I read the title and I thought this was youtube recommending me a stoner metal song called De Loys' Ape by a band called Cryptid Profile
Great comment! Now I want this band to be formed and the song to be made.
Me too I thought it was a song I was gonna add it to my playlist
I genuinely thought that
That sounds badass
Cryptid Profile is a fucking great name for a band
Strange creatures: throws their shit at people
Old scientists: *SHOOT IT*
Ur profile name is perfect
@@gunk4876 likewise good sir
@Sensible Otter throw my shit at it
@Sensible Otter yes, in a zip lock bag
Yup in Vietnam it's common for apes to throw rocks and feces to then catch a bullet. Monkey see, monkey do. 🤷♂️
Thank you for not putting creepy and unsettling music in this video
Yea ,I hate those channels I just wanto learn
He has 666k subs☹️
Coward
But he did
Whats your problem with birds chirping? Lmao don’t you go outside?
i like how they all have these cool ancient sounding names and then there's just "swamp ape"
And the samsqautch
@@Iexcon you mean saxquatch
@@Pearg0ld you like jazz
The Australian one sounds like when I step in a lego
Well then you read the actual translations and its just more monke names lol
My country has the Amomomongo and the translation is more Monke shit
_”...flinging their own feces at the team as projectiles, De Loys and company responded by shooting at the creatures with their guns...”_
*Well that certainly escalated quickly!*
What would you have done?
@@stanstanstan2597 pew pew the poo slingers
Like Jimbo and Ned on SouthPark. Smh n lol
Never poo-poo a poo-poo!
Explorer immunity, it looked like he had a dung, I mean gun.
Nothing better than cracking open a cold one with De Loys
*Attempts to get beer in its mouth and it falls over instead*
Can we use that ape's head as a cup?
Liam $10 de loys is a rouge beast man
Damn its a gurren lagann fan
Let’s hear it for De Loys!
Indiana Jones's unwanted brother: "Mississippi Jack"
You ever heard of Delaware Dave??? He....well.....is found at a county library reading choose your own adventure books. Great guy!
Delaware Dave fucking loser who is too scared to go on a real adventure so he reads those books at the library.... Mississippi Jack was a drunk and wasn't even half the man his brother was but the real hero history has forgotten is Colorado Carl now that was a real man...lol
Florida Frank
Kansas Francis
@The Muckler I think you're referring to Virginia Johnson.
y’all in the comments fr upset about him mentioning racism, despite it being one of the most important parts of the story around the ape.
Hi Jesus
@YOU BETTA PICK UP THA SOAP MY NIGGA! no we have free will you can choose to follow or not
@YOU BETTA PICK UP THA SOAP MY NIGGA! The hebrew text doesnt translate to that
@YOU BETTA PICK UP THA SOAP MY NIGGA! disappointed in my peers
@@doctorrussia Translations are often inaccurate and change over time. The fact remains that slavery is in the bible and is allowed under God's alleged laws.
Danny DeVito is the most advanced species of human
*the Trash Man awakens*
Danny DeVito is the ideal male body. You may not like it, but he is what peak performance looks like.
+TREY the Explainer
*Pillar Man theme from Jojos intensifies
"AY YAI YAII YAAII!!!"
MAGNUM D🅾️NG
Only a species with a wit as keen as his would understand the complexities of celebrating someone's death with champagne.
No don't worry, I wasn't dissing David Attenborough at 3:28. I was doing the opposite, I was praising him for being a person that's probably actually worth of the title of being an "Indiana Jones". I love the guy and the other scientists I listed as they actually did contribute to scientific understanding unlike some of the other people I mention in this video. It went by super quickly and my editing there was pretty bad for timing. My bad.
Also to the people saying I'm a PC Liberal Snowflake for just merely mentioning racism and its relation to this story (yes I have gotten a bunch of comments like this):
Are you serious? I was actually pretty confident a lot of what was said in this video was pretty well accepted by most people... but here were are. It just seems like people are looking to get offended quite frankly. The racism of George Montandon is an integral part of the story and like it or not his views are necessary to understand the cryptid. Montandon's theories were made primarily for racial reasons rather than scientific (which is probably the reason why he fabricated evidence in the first place). His theories are so intertwined in racism that its difficult to separate the two.
I did a lot of research for this video and just wanted to talk about the full story. If you are just going to complain then please just go somewhere else as I'm not too interested. If you had a criticism with the length, I will take your criticism into consideration for next time, I understand if you felt like I dwelt on it too long. My bad if I made it sound preachy as that wasn't my intention. I guess I might have been less dramatic and done and phrased this a little differently in hindsight. I guess all of this is a learning experience and I'll definitely keep some of your criticisms into consideration in the future.
Also for people talking about the claim that Piranhas and Electric Eels don't kill people, I guess you could find isolated and rare reports of deaths, but they are so rare and require such specific conditions I wouldn't even count them. They definitely aren't anywhere close to how Percy described them.
TREY the Explainer I love your work
Thanks!
TREY the Explainer Don't take it personally. With potlical climate as it is people on both "sides" are losing there minds over the smallest thing. Video was good.
Yeah, I see what you mean, man. It's ridiculous and I never really had to deal with it until now all of a sudden. It's stupid that merely mentioning and somewhat criticizing racism makes me a crazy Liberal in the eyes of some people. I was just trying to make a super depressing topic somewhat more tolerable.
anyways thanks!
If someone actually agrees with Montandon's beliefs I would genuinely be at risk of death by laughter. Not even 21st century racists and neonazis can be dumb enough to believe in hologenesis, right?
I’m no expert... but I don’t think he killed the “female”
BULLSHIET EXPLANATION #332: That's its ovipositor
@BIGGIE How many layers of sarcasm are you on right now? Are you ODing? Do I need to call a medical professional?
My head hurts, too many layers
@@AkerCW Please take sarcasm responsibly and contact your closest physician immediately
Michelle it’s just an enlarged clitoris, hyenas and several other ape species have the same thing
I hate how whenever there is something new or interesting on earth humans automatically resort to “KILL IT!”
Fight or flight baby it’s the circle of life
@@applebeesbarandgrillmenu4695 when it comes to a animal that is clearly strange or eccentric it's just the circle of retardation to kill it for no reason, you could probably profit of just taking a photo of the fucking thing let alone capturing it.
@@starscreamofvos mmmm tasty burger
Human instinct is to kill what we dont understand. Kinda the reason we are a species today but in the era of discovery it was a kind of draw back.
@@eve1054 just like aot ep9
Good work Trey, here's some more information that truly bangs the last nail into this cryptid coffin.
In 1999, the July-August edition of the Venezuelan scientific magazine Interciencia published a letter sent in 1962 from Doctor Enrique Tejera to the editor Guillermo José Schael of the magazine Diario El Universal:
[…] "This monkey is a myth. I will tell you his story. […]
Mister Montandon said that the monkey had no tail. That is for sure, but he forgot to mention something, it has no tail because it was cut off. I can assure you this, gentlemen, because I saw the amputation…[].
Who is speaking here in 1917 was working in a camp for oil exploration in the region of Perijá. The geologist was François de Loys, the engineer Dr. Martín Tovar Lange. De Loys was a prankster and often we laughed at his jokes. One day they gave him a monkey with an ill tail, so it was amputated. Since then de Loys called him “el hombre mono” (the monkey man).
Some time later I and de Loys went in another region of Venezuela: in an area called Mene Grande. He always walked along the side of his monkey, who died some time later. De Loys decided to take a photo and I believe that Mr. Montandon will not deny it is the same photograph that he presented today. [in 1929 Montandon presented the Ameranthropoides in a public lecture].
More recently during a visit to Paris my astonishment was great visiting the Museum of Man. On top of a monumental scale, filling the back wall, there was a huge photo with the caption: “The first anthropoid ape discovered in America.”
It was the photograph of de Loys, beautifully modified. The plants were no longer visible in the background, and it was not possible to understand on which kind of box the monkey was sitting. The trick is done so well that within a few years the monkey will be over two meters high […].
Finally, I must warn you: Montandon was not a good person. After the war he was executed because he betrayed France, his homeland."
Sincerely, Your friend Enrique Tejera.
As for de Loys, he continued his geological career and in 1926 he joined a Turkish Petroleum Company. In 1928 he became a fellow of the Geological Society of London and went off to Iraq to study the local geology and the possible oil reserves to be found in the region.
Sowing his wild oats, he contracted syphilis, returned to the town of Lausanne in France ( edit: Switzerland) where he died young, on October 16, 1935.
Thank you so much for this information, I really appreciate it as the info on this one was super hard to find :)
TREY the Explainer It's a little sad though. When i was very young, I came across Bernard Huevellmans "On the track of Unknown Animals".
This one I was SURE was a real critter ( Not a blurry photo or an anecdotal account). Sadly, it seems all of them will remain unknown as they probably never existed in the first place.
Thank you graphite, very cool!
graphite
Very cool indeed! Thanks for Sharing
graphite
Same here, of all the cryptids, this always seemed to most probable to me. I almost feel sad to know the most probable truth.
“After (the skull) became corroded from being used as a salt container” man I be washing my hands and stuff all the time and throwing away food I drop on the grand and these dudes putting their salt in a skull. Damn
Yeah, well, if thoroughly cleaned, there's not much that could happen.
If you look through historical records, you'll stumble across tools, including forks and spoons made of bone.
Given that a skull has a natural shape of some kind of vessel, it's not that far off.
However, why would they have used it for that? Did they carry the salt in their bare hands before? Something in that story just doesn't add up
Maybe after washing your hands you should pick up an English book.
@@zoesdada8923 Maybe after you put down your english book you should pick up a salt skull.
"Hey Henry, where's that salt container?" "Hmm not sure, just use that priceless rare unknown creature skull" "k"
Yeah, really sounds fishy that they'd treat such valuable evidence that way to a point of damaging it. It's just as suspicious as "the dog ate my homework" alibi. And just as the video stated, the photograph looks a little shady too
Look at the feet, this animal, if the pic is even real, evolved to live in trees, no way it's walking around with those feet
@@portpebble don't know if your bieng sarcastic or not
No I’m being serious they look like hands
@@Captianmex1C0 lmaooo
@@portpebble plz tell me your joking and know primates have handlike limbs on they're back legs
@@Captianmex1C0 That depends which primate species you're referring to.
Monke: Evolved
Hooman: devolved
Google translates this to
"Mind: Evolved"
You're on to something 🤔
Monke: evolved
Mind: evolved
SUS
Translation: "Mind: Evolved"
Therapist: Don't worry, De Loy's Ape isn't real, it can't hurt you.
De Loy's Ape:
Underrated comment Number 228,918,091,78
Damn right it's fake
UN-Capital best comment ever
I don't understand - are people actually scared of this image? It's just a dead monkey. Not even a creepy over-exposed photo.
7:58 I love how in this diagram it isn't even the Europeans who are shown as the most advanced but the Malay. Europeans apparently developed from devil hounds, what the Hell?
oh sweet
I think we all knew it. Deep down inside.
@@CyclicDiscipline8 I just want to say I found this channel and it has been such a sigh of relief. I am deeply interested in deep sea creatures and to find a channel that covers that with honesty is exciting enough, but then to cover even more topics AND have a community that aligns with my sense of humor is just amazing.
@@CyclicDiscipline8 I am trying to say “your comment made me laugh” but I am drunk and tired.
pRoUd tO bE mAlaYsIaN
It’s a Barn Owl, yet again
You mean a basking shark?
You mean *c a r c a s s*
Donald Donahue You're an idiot, it is a part of a boat
No it’s part of a bridge
IT'S E.L. WALLACE-
I've seen a wild spider monkey before and its easily one of if not the coolest animals i have ever seen because they're so human like and have such long limbs.
She said do u love me, I told her im only monky
monke
Monke
monke
-oogway
I only love banana and bugs I’m sorry
@That’s one smug wojak mens ?
Trey the explainer is said to be the rarest cryptid of all. Since he is believed to actually exist but no photographic evidence that shows his face has been shown
Science suggests that he may actually be a barn owl.
Really? My evidence supports him being a decomposing basking shark.
He must be a undiscovered Basking Owl
He's obviously an avian dinosaur
no, he’s my cousin😂
i wonder if the one guy didn't talked about it for 9 years because he realized that this might have been murder if he declares the monkey to be human
Well they considered non-whites as subhuman at the time and probably wouldn’t be charged with manslaughter.
@Veonnj Caines What a way to ruin a discussion!
@Veonnj Caines youre subhuman
@Veonnj Caines The hell bro?
@Veonnj Caines Why do you think so?
7:58 I love how the European, American and Malay all have pretty much the exact same skull but because of one tiny little feature they just said “nope. different jaw length, totally different species”
Tbf, I often wonder at paleontological species differentiation, esp in partial specimens.
I'm no expert, like at all, but I think I may have some insight.
In paleoanthropology, when differentiating very similar species like homo sapiens and homo neanderthalensis, for instance, they look for "suites" of differences. it helps if the species has a very unique trait, such as the occipital bun of Neanderthals. No human has been recorded to have had a real occipital bun. This feature, along with other differences, forms a "suite", or series, of traits that define one species from the other.
That being said, paleontologist and paleoanthropologists are constantly switching things around as they evaluate and reevaluate new and old materials.
Genetic makeup is another part of what helps us define more modern species. This can't be used for dinosaurs, obviously, though.
At the end of the day, paleontologists really just have to be very discerning and use all given information to come to the best, most logical conclusion about species and phylogeny. @kyrab7914
They said they killed the female and male ran away, but it seems like it has a pp?
lmao excellent point!
that's a good point
It's a trap
@@dasplaudagei6060 oh i see a men of culture
It could just be a big clit, like what hyenas have
A scientific study has found that Trey the Explainer videos have a direct connection with a person’s happiness the day of the upload
#Facts
r/totallytruefacts
#ScientificallyProven
Cap N Crunch Go away...douche!
Source? XD
As a brazilian myself I could state something: piranhas can swarm a man and leave one's bare bones in less than 20 minutes. Gargantuan anacondas could be just augmented(yet existing) jibóias, which can measure up to 15 to 20meters.
Everything else is very much far-fetched but these ones can be true.
Great video, may E.L. Wallace bless you abundantly
@Pragmaticist I am native from Manaus, Amazonas (Amazon) and fishers use animal flesh to fish piranhas in the river, and from my experience in fishing here, just a single piranha can bite the top of a finger with ease. (it happened to my grandma by the way)
Jeremy Wade debunked man eating piranhas. They're mostly harmless to people.
All the French know is retreat & defeat.
Despite having the most amount of military victories than any other modern country, and beating the Brits on several occasions. Dont really know where the whole "French Always retreat" thing came from, but they were the frontline in WW1 and didn't get any meaningful support in WW2.
Check out the size of an anaconda they found in a mine in south America somewhere, can't remember where exactly but those cock suckers did exist and the native populations had to deal with them
Very interesting video although I do have to say that Electric eels can and have killed people.
However you are right that it isn't their shock alone that kills. It's usually the shock knocks a person out or paralyzes them and they drown before they can recover.
Has anyone else noted that the De Loys' Ape was described as looking more human than most of the other proposed progenitor ape species, despite giving rise to what the proposers thought was one of the very much least human races?
Irony!
He is evidence proves he is the last surviving Aegisuchus-Achillobator hybrid from 1995
sorry wrong comment -.-'
Darren Kelleher cute >:3
No one else like this comment
8:06. Bottom left. So they evolved from branches?
Yo 😂
LMAO WHAT
Lol we wuz branches 😂 gotta make do with what we got
No.... They came from trees/fruits. Please look careful next time you speak.
The branch people
Genuinely terrified of this image as a child, saw on Arthur c Clark's show.
🤣🤣🤣 holy shit me too
Arthur morgan?
same
Remember seeing it in a book as a child, would always quick flip to the next page
@@sotis1756 no way? Me too
I don’t have anything interesting to contribute here. I just really like your videos and wanted to add to your audience engagement analytics. Thanks for the awesome channel!
Thanks Hank Hill!
I have nothing to answer to you...
I read that as Hank Hill so I think you DID have something to contribute.
i love how the one in indonesia is just called "short man"
Pendek!
Suggit
We indonesians name stuffs with literal meaning, lol.
Eh jiran sebelah! 😆
@@rizkyantoni3948 roti bakar
That's me!
De Loy's ape they did you dirty !!!
You have an impressive weiner
@@miniwaern lmaoo true tho
@@miniwaern in the video he said they killed the female, that's a long pussy.
Damn bruh I'm glad you alive bruh
Trey uploaded, time to put everything else down and watch
Joe Turner I agree with you my brother
;)
3:43 River Monsters has shown that electric eels and (definitely) piranha have killed people.
Piranha attacks is something "common" but death by thoses attacks are rare, and usually happens to small childs. In recent years there are 2 cases, both small grils one was 5 the other 6.
@@sklerp386 he clearly wasnt saying that
@@Sealclubber420 Maybe he was, I just noticed that the comment was edited.
@@destroymennardshippers1701 the plot thickens lol
@@sklerp386 Bruh, they meant to say that Piranhas have very rarely killed full grown adult humans. Is it really that hard to understand? smh
Cryptid Idea: Do three Great Horned owls in a trench coat.
Don't forget a baseball cap and sunglasses
Then one Harpy Eagle in a smoking jacket.
That's not a husky,,, that's three pugs in a trenchcoat!!
Swap the trenchcoat for a suit and you have Slender Man
Actually an electric eel cannot kill alone but if you are unfortunate enough to trip into a partially dried pond full of a dozen or more you could die from heart palpitations and there's only a dozen of these incidents because the natives are a little too smart to get shocked to death
What ever you say electric ee....... I mean Cameron Graves.
it’s crazy people are offended at the mere mention of racism existing, it’s a thing, it’s often a part of understanding historical context
thanks for the video, never heard this story before
It sure is crazy... Lmao Nah, seriously. Racism needs to die. But, it is sadly a big part of our history. But, hopefully it won't have to be in the future.
Horrible Cunt did you even watch the video? The guy didn’t just say native Americans were uncivilized he literally was a Nazi
The idea that someone is 'racist' and therefore wrong no matter what is absurd. Leftists will pour shit on every great man of history if his views aren't politically correct in 2018. Fucking NPCs.
@@yobob591 So was the man who masterminded the US space program, so what?
I’ve noticed that the offense at the mention of racism tends to come from the further-right wing of politics most of the time. The general belief on that side is that racism is no longer a factor in the modern world and a lot of people over there really don’t like people claiming that prejudice based on race still exists.
The picture at 0:05 was captured by a trail camera about 35 miles from my camp near Bradford Pennsylvania. I saw something in those woods that I cannot explain what it was, but it was not a species I’ve ever seen since.
"Adventurers" have been embellishing the truth for as long as they have been out there. Marco Polo's village where there were people with alsatian dog heads is a great example.
If you go back as far as the first Spanish expeditions it gets more believable (as far as civilizations go not weird monsters) there is more and more evidence that there were lsrfe civilizations in the Amazon. Archeology is little more than than dogma and philosophy due to how little evidence they rely on, never forget that. Watch Graham Hancocks JRE interviews whether you agree with his ideas or not he highlights this heavily and the incredulous dogma in the archeological feild.
@@LosianOne Hancock is no expert. He speaks out of his level of expetise, which is nil.
@@LosianOne recommending JRE on an archaeology/science channel? C’mon...
Nah they’re real I work with one
It could always be a misidentification though
I've been in RUclips for a long time but this is the only video that none of the comments give info about what's video about
It's about a fake monkey species made by racists
Was this video recorded in the jungle?
All those damn bird sounds Lol
i am on a weed spree and this makes me all weird haha
Fr at first I thought that sound came from outside
He brought his laptop to Rainforest Cafe to work on this video.
Ee oo AAA aha! ( Chorus of jungle birds).
Blows my mind that people are angry at Trey for criticising and disproving racists. Believe it or not, racism is wrong, not just morally but scientifically, so in a discussion about racist scientific theories it isn't out of place to bring it up.
Montandon : Hey De Loy can i publish this in order to push my agenda?
De Loy whispering consumed by flashbacks : only 4 came ....only 4 came back
Montandon : I am taking this as a yes, ,,,c ya buddy
Do mokele mbembe next
jody michaud yeah that one was interesting. Especially some weird claim that a juvenile version of the creature was killed and eaten by the villagers decades ago
Creepy Closet. And they all died shortly after due to it being toxic apparently
KSound Kaiju Mokele-Mbembe was a Water/Poison type
Moon Blast. That'd equate to a better Tropius
Yes
Here are some ideas for Trey the explainer. For future videos:
- cannibalism origines,causes and evidence in the pre historic world.
- debunking the starchild scull.
- greatest hoaxers of all time. Sure why not?
- the philadelphia experiment is time travel even real???
- life in the Devonian seas.
- paleprofile Sarcosuchus
- life after the chicxulub impact. Hardly and videos on that on youtube. Most of them only about the impact.
On a side note, these old tales of exploration are so insane and fascinating to me at the same time. They left 20 and 4 returned and it's just regarded as like "meh".. you fought the jungle, animals, disease and violent natives and 16 out of 20 DIED.. some were KILLED in fights with natives.. what an crazy adventure and frankly traumatising.. but they didnt talk traumatic experiences like that back then.
Explorer: thanks for guiding us through the jungle again
Natives: no problem
Explorer: I’ll make sure to include how we met in my story I’m writing
Natives: oh wow that’d be great!
**[three months later]**
3:53
"He was a huge racist and anti-Semite..."
Yeah but they all were :/
"He wrote 'How to recognize a Jew...'"
Oh... Never mind then... Lol.
what do you mean "they all were"?
he wrote 'How to recognize a Jew...'" xD the title it s so over the top, it's the book eric cartman might have written XD .
"guys, i found a jew in the brasilian jungle!"
@@syrvys2691
I as a philosophy student, have this "idea" often, since I have to read a lot of racist, sexist, bullshit to get some good points.
@ButterScratch Oh well, you can't be liked by everyone.
@@florianxmerten at one point in Europe being able to "spot a jew" could save your life, especially if you're a Christian child
An electric eel has killed people and piranhas just very rarely
if you have ever watched river monsters you know that piranhas have killed people
I have and I’ve seen Jeremy swim with them a lot on the show
Thanks! Was Looking for this comment, I believed there were deaths related to them
@@camichiBichi But not as many as media would make you believe.
Actualy, piranhas dont kill, they eat already dead creatures. They make sure that the cresture is dead, but if the creature is alive, they dont eat it
Peter Fleming (Ian's less famous but equally entertaining brother), describes how he regularly paddled in pirana - infested streams and never once got bitten.
This was during an unsuccessful search for the missing Peter Fawcett.
The bizarre ending of Waugh's, A Handful of Dust,
was another product of the Fawcett craze.
Yeah the whole theme with all these stories is that there’s always internal goals with the creatures wether it be publicity, money, religious reasons, or in this case racism
I see you like porn to my friend
About your pfp
Go watch more anime porn
Warfoot Okay
Ruby Crescent-Rose Who doesn't?
Compelling argument, but one question remains:
How big is that crate?
Crate question
A most boxy question indeed.
Why do you care
@@thundergun933 Because it gives scale to the actual body. If that crate is small crate then its a small monkey but if that crate is a larger crate...................
@@5c0u53 it says how tall it is so you don't need it for scale.
Tell me lies
Tell me sweet little cryptid lies
Tell me lies
Tell tell me lies
Oh no no, you can't disguise
You can't disguise
No you can't disguise!
I would rather eat pies
Just gonna lay down and die
Don't make shaq-foot cry
Or else bullets will fly
I'm sorry but I don't get the jo-joke-
*I'LL SHOWER YOU WITH COCONUT CREAM PIES!*
Australia:Has ape named “Yowie”
Me Rn: *Oh no*
He has oversized Yowie hands
Don't worry I have the lizard man and florida's bigfoot the samsqautch
Didn’t even know that’s what we called our Sasquatch’s
@@hamoud8608 I thought it was (aka) the Florida Skunk Ape....
Them wily samsquantches!
@@hamoud8608 (guess I meant regarding Mistaken Gaming's comment reckon you're referring to the Yowie?)
Windigo is not a name for some sort of bigfoot (FYI)
@Digicraftmon the Crystal Gem the antlers were kinda a European adaptation I’m pretty sure but yeah pretty much.
@Digicraftmon the Crystal Gem It´s a folklore creature from northern Canada, Alaska ... and it seems to terrify natives.
Here´s a well made introduction: ruclips.net/video/9PuNKkpV-Pk/видео.html
Ah, that's where you are wrong. Sasquatch is a skin-changer who can morph into dogmen, wendigo, and thunderbird.
@@junglemoose2164 ummm no.
100% no.
everything you mentioned are in fact different things. They are from First Nations beliefs.
@@kaptainkrampus2856 this is a great channel and video explaining it. I didnt notice anyone replied so thank you for sharing the video. Probably would have posted the same one honestly. People seem to understand concepts better with videos ot seems.
Wait, they filled the skull with salt? Way to take care of that evidence.
Yo trey there’s this dinosaur game called the isle and it has dinosaurs that surprisingly many people think are accurate,it would be awesome to hear your thoughts on the game,and personally I think you’ll love it because it doesn’t disrespect palaeontology.
He follows The Isle on Twitter.
Please do the Wendigo next!!! I live in MN and I think I saw one when I was little, so I’d really appreciate a video on them. Thanks!🥰
You need to replace "windigo" with "grass man " in your map. Wendigos are a different story/myth/cryptid altogether.
Thank you! Came here just to say that.
I mean... that map has a "broad" definition of human- like- ape- cryptid. In europe (i'll stick to europe as i am unsure about the others) we can see on the map ice giants of nordic sagas and Grendel from the tale of Beowulf. Both are content of old legends, not historical sightings like bigfoot or the florida ape man. The map might've featured cyclopes and Goliath as well, as these come from equally uncertain legends as well.
Jennifer Stokes: It's altogether, not all together.
Plus he said eels didn't kill people. He was wrong about that also. And pirhannas have killed people.
Windigo is native American
Did anyone ever try to dispute Montandon by claiming that a missing link could not logically exist in the same time period as its descendant?
It did make sense. Could have just take different path.
Loser you deleted my comment 😂
Uhhh thats not necessarily how evolution works, chief
no it could be a situation like humans and chimpanzees, same ancestor but different descendants
@Benjamin S. how?
Would love to see a video about the thunderbird
Very popular ride, back in the '60's.
I like how you point out the public views of the people who wrote those "historic" documents. They were extremely ignorant back then. That it's hard to believe anything they wrote.
This channel is one of the best on RUclips!
Thanks man!
TREY the Explainer
Thank you for the reply!
no problem!
Cities & Skyscrapers I diss agree there is a Channel that hates on all the negros I like that one a lot
screw sleep daddy trey has uploaded
Daddy? 🤢😷
Jeremy Wade on River Monsters supports the occasional very rare human death by electric eel or piranhas.
Shocking!
THANK you
Didn't an electric eel kill a horse before though? And Piranhas don't typically kill adults since adults know not to touch water with Piranhas but they do sometimes kill children.
@@blackhatves1075 It has happened with horses, and he claimed there have been adult humans killed by piranhas. Rare, but it has happened when people were in the water swimming.
where have you gotten that people have never been killed by electric eel? They absolutely have
When? Both of you
there are very few cases of an electric eel being connected to the death of a human but an eel has never straight up killed someone
@@mushrooms5601 just because it’s not documented doesn’t mean it didn’t happen.
It's like smoking.....
Smoking doesn't kill you,
But cancer does?
The eel will shock you and you could drown or hit your head on a rock?
If youve a weak heart or medical conditions, you could possibly have a heart attack and die.....
It depends how you look at it?
Do guns, bullets, or people kill people in shootings?
I really almost thought he called David Attenborough a conman and I was about to get so pissed
Same!!! The other day I watched a doc on him so i was so confused 😂
I had to rewind and pause, I was so angry for a second
Cryptid idea: Do big cat cryptids! In UK and america and stuff. A cougar was once actually caught in Scotland, someone's released pet
Oh yes, PLEASE, I want that to happen! It'd be nice to hear about some mysteries closer to home!
that one cougar who fucked a hiker
Angel Miranda wHAT
UH OH ....STINKY!
LE MONKE
REJECT HUMANITY. RETURN TO MONKE
Ride wife, life good
@Nothing In Particular Kill wife!
Wife gone... life sad.... regret
Didn’t an electric eel cause a death in one of the episodes of River Monsters? It charred a mans skin after he was thrown into a group of them by a horse right?
De Loys: *De Loys ape exists*
Montandon: It‘s free real estate
Movie plot: The alleged "missing links" that attack the expedition are a hidden society of old world creatures that are tasked to protect the crystal skull stolen by the expedition (as well as other precious artifacts of their culture)
The theft of the skull and cold blooded murder of one of its sacred keepers places a curse on the expedition, causing them to slowly die off from increasingly disturbing and mysterious ways, leaving the "lucky" survivors to progressively descend into madness and lunacy, unable to tell what's real and what's fake
Wow
The most ironic bit about all of this 18/19th/20th century race theory stuff about the Native Americans is that the original conquistador accounts and Spanish interactions with Mesoamerican and Andean groups is pretty consistent in that they viewed them as highly capable, intelligent, and cultured people, moreso then the average person today thinks of those civilizations, even (as unfortunately the view that they were a bunch of "stone age savages" is still common). Of course, the Conquistadors had no qualms about massacring and exploiting these people, but they didn't at all view them as inferior or primitive: As an example, here's an account of Cortes describing workers from Tenochtiitlan, the Aztec capital, constructing a bridge:
"They agreed to work at it viribus et posse, and began at once to divide the task between them, and I must say that they worked so hard, and with such good will, that in less than four days they constructed a fine bridge, over which the whole of the men and horses passed. So solidly built it was, that I have no doubt it will stand for upwards of ten years without breaking -unless it is burnt down - being formed by upwards of one thousand beams, the smallest of which was as thick round as a man's body, and measured nine or ten fathoms (16.8-18m) in length, without counting a great quantity of lighter timber that was used as planks. And I can assure your Majesty that I do not believe there is a man in existence capable of explaining in a satisfactory manner the dexterity which these lords of Tenochtitlan, and the Indians under them, displayed in constructing the said bridge: I can only say that it is the most wonderful thing that ever was seen. "
You see similar praises of respect and impressiveness in regards to their cities, here's an excerpt from Bernal Diaz about Tenochtitlan itself:
"Our astonishment was indeed raised to the highest pitch, and we could not help remarking to each other, that all these buildings resembled the fairy castles we read of in Amadis de Gaul; so high, majestic, and splendid did the temples, towers, and houses of the town, all built of massive stone and lime, rise up out of the midst of the lake. Indeed, many of our men asked if what they saw was a mere dream. And the reader must not feel surprised at the manner in which I have expressed myself, for it is impossible to speak coolly of things which we had never seen nor heard of, nor even could have dreamt of, beforehand..... After we had sufficiently gazed upon this magnificent picture, we again turned our eyes toward the great market, and beheld the vast numbers of buyers and sellers who thronged there. The bustle and noise occasioned by this multitude of human beings was so great that it could be heard at a distance of more than four miles. Some of our men, who had been at Constantinople and Rome, and traveled through the whole of Italy, said that they never had seen a market-place of such large dimensions, or which was so well regulated, or so crowded with people as this one at Mexico."
Mind you, these accounts are accurate: Tenochtitlan had a population 200k and 250k, and covering over 1300 hectacres, making it in the tp 5 largest cities in the world at the time, and built on a lake with artificial islands and venice like canals and aquaducts, as well. And while Tenochtitlan was exceptional, to be sure, being the largest city in the Americas at this point (It still is: As Mexico city, though the lake is drained now), large cities, well kept cities were common (in fact, urban cities with state goverments had been the norm in the region for well over 1000 years by this point). Here's a discrption of the city of Tlaxcala, which while still moderately large with a population between 20k and 40k, wasn't nearly as exceptional as Tenochtitlan:
"The city is indeed so great and marvellous that though I abstain from describing many things about it, yet the little that I shall recount is, I think, almost incredible. It is much larger than Granada and much better fortified. Its houses are as fine and its inhabitants far more numerous than those of Granada when that city was captured. Its provisions and food are likewise very superior... There are gold, silver and precious stones, and jewellers' shops selling other ornaments made of feathers, as well arranged as in any market in the world. There is earthenware of many kinds and excellent quality, as fine as any in Spain. Wood, charcoal, medicinal and sweet smelling herbs are sold in large quantities. There are booths for washing your hair and barbers to shave you: there are also public baths. Finally, good order and an efficient police system are maintained among them, and they behave as people of sense and reason: the foremost city of Africa cannot rival them."
You see similar praises for the intelligence and moral character of the nobility and royalty of these city-states and empires (they even married into Spanish nobility in many cases after the conquest, again, showing how the Spanish viewed these as proper nations and cultures, not as savage primitives), their goldwork and featherwork (The Spanish even commissioned native featherworkers to make paintings of catholic iconography out of tens of thousands of iridescent feathers rather then paint, which was an indigenous artform used by many mesoamerican groups, a few of these still survive today and they are gorgeous) was well praised etc.
It's only decades into the Colonial period where you start to see race theory first pop up, and the capabilities and accomplishments of native groups swept under the rug, in an effort to justify increasing exploitation and oppressing of native people.
this is super interesting, i never knew that. so what, even after that they decided "eh lets kill them all and destroy this beautiful civilisation :)" what trash... my heart aches
+it me: I mean, it's a little more nuanced then that, but for the Conquistadors, yeah, basically: The Conquistadors were motivated by greed and a desire for personal glory, and ostensibly a desire to spread Catholicism. Regardless of if they actually cared about the last bit, the fact that the native city-states and empires (Note that the Aztec empire, while hugely dominant and had conquered huge swaths of the region, was not the only political state in the region, so there's not a singular civilization: The city of Tlaxcala, which I mention above, for example belonged to a republic of the same name it composed with 4 other cities, and were enemies of the Aztecs, though they belonged to the samee larger ethnic/cultural group (The Nahua), but there were also plenty of non-Nahua states who such as the Tututepec empire down south which was Mixtec, or the Tarascan empire to the west which was Purépecha, etc ) were pagan provided the Conquistadors with an excuse to justify the conquest of them.
But it's also not quite that simple: You have to remember that one of the most important factors in Cortes's success, alongside loads of insane luck (I cannot stress how absurd and contrived the string of events that allowed him to succeed are) and disease, was that he had the support of various native states: The Republic of Tlaxcala was their biggest ally, for example, and a variety of Aztec city-states flipped sides, and a number of independent ones joined the Conquistadors as well. So it's not as if the Conquistadors were acting alone. And while it's true that these states couldn't foreesee the disastrous consequences their actions would have on their world as they knew it, I don't think the Conquistadors or the Crown did ether, as I'll explain in a minute.
Speaking of the Crown, though, it's worth noting Cortes's expedition was illegal and unsanctioned, they weren't terribly interested in widespread colonialism or the mainland yet. Once Cortes had toppled the Aztec empire and reported back, after deciding not to execute him (since he had just secured them a massive revenue stream by virtue of all of the Aztec's tributaries now sending their tribute to Spain, which is the very thing that convinced them and other European powers to pursue colonialism and to have it be feasible), they got interested, and their primary motivation was to rule over and profit from them: Remember how I said before how the royalty and nobility of native states married into Spanish nobility? Initially, much of existing mesoamerican culture and politics was kept intact, with "just" native religion being suppressed (I say "just" because that still meant the burning of nearly all native texts and dismantling of temples, which makes the Burning of thee library of Alexandria seem like spilt milk in comparison in terms of the amount of historical information and literary works lost), so at this stage it's not really accurate to say native civilization was destroyed: it could be argued that it was even a better arrangement for some of the Aztec's tributaries.
Again, while the Conquistadors often continued to commit abuses as they continued to conquer city-states and empires across the region (as with the toppling of the Aztecs, however, native armies did the vast majority of the work, the Conquistadors would have lost to even only moderately sized states in the region if they were fighting alonee), you only really, truly saw the systemic dismantling of native civilization and culture decades later as diseases continued to decimate the native population and Spain was compelled to change up their imperial strategy from merely ruling over and collecting taxes from native states to outright exploiting them for slave labor and depriving them of rights and thee neear eradication of native social, political, and cultural practices.
This is a very brief, rough summary, if you want more information I high suggest you take a look at this list of posts i've compiled on Mesoamerican history from Askhistorians here: pastebin DOT com SLASH HD7gdupT ; especially the "did_the_spanish_see_the_aztecs_as_racially..." link. I also have a personal booklist, mostly taken from suggestions from the above posts; but as it's unorganized, I haven't read all of therm yet, and as some of them are just stuff I thought seemed cool rather then recommendations from knowledgeable people, i'm hesitant to post it, but that's here: pastebin DOT com SLASH HD7gdupT ;Worth noting that there's also some stuff on the Andes (the region the Inca, Chimu, Wari Moche, Tiwanku, etc are from) both pastebins, not just Mesoamerica.
FAMSI is also a fantastic resource, though it might be a bit hard to parse without some sort of foundational level of knowledge about the region's history. Mexicolore is easily digestible and has a lot of good, neat info, but there's some errors mixed in there since while it has a lot of articles written by experts, the site's owners themselves aren't historians, so as with FAMSI it might be better to read the askhistorians links first so you can have a foundation to know what seems suspect or not.
Jabberwockxeno, very interesting post. Unfortunately few people take the time to consider history for the nuanced and complex sequence of events and interactions it is. People prefer easy generalisations (often politically motivated) that too often butcher accuracy.
I'll take a look at your links, thanks.
Jabberwockxeno really love both of your comments good stuff, I'm of mayan decent myself and I'm glad some people that arent myself know that the native Americans weren't just running around naked killing each other like most people think
Thank God Spanish came brought religion and meat and stopped the mass cannablesm of the my mesoamerican ancestors.Tho blood lust might be returning to Mexico.Hopefully the can be a Christian revival.
3:29 David Attenborough doesn’t pretend that he is discovering crazy new things. He just films amazing creatures to educate people. I loved watching his shows as a kid and still do
Yeah Big D is a legend. What is he making up?
Did you guys even look at anything besides his pic?
I'm new to the channel and am wondering if you've ever done a video on the missing 1800s Thunderbird photo. It's an interesting story that involves a lot of (potentially false) memories of people having seen a photo but no one can produce the original. A bunch of cowboys supposedly killed a very very large bird (some report it was a pterosaur but most seem to suggest it was a bird hence the connection to the Native American legend of the Thunderbird) and were photographed with it. Obviously the skeptic in me says the photo is likely a combination of bad memory and people believing the hoaxes are the real thing but I'd love to see if you could dig anything more definitive up on the subject or just give your take.
Love the channel btw!
Why ask? Just look through the channel. It's not that hard.
50% of the comments: If it's female, then why does it have plong?
30% of the comments: Commenting about all the people who were butthurt about the racism part.
20% of the comments: Actual people that got salty for some reason at the racism part.
You're hired! Official video statistician....unfortunately the position offers no salary, but it has reasonable job security. Haha
Any evidence or methods for your statistical analysis? The number of anti SJWs is pretty high
@@advancedlamb sqws are sqws for a reason.
really? nobody thinks that the 'female' ape having a long penis hanging between its legs isnt weird?
How did no one ever mention this fact?
@@10madcap Females having very long, full penises is something perfectly normal and acceptable in today's society!
“Flinging their nasty”
Cermit is quaking
Cermit is just getting ideas😭😂
The spider monkey on the left at 10:21 looks weirdly human. It’s beautiful & I love it
It looks like Mark Speer in Khruangbin
11:14 “could make an absolutely amazing movie” thanks for the idea!
Hollywood, are you listening??
Jungle (2017) is a similar film. Don't read anything about it, just watch it.
"Guys! I have an idea! Let's kill any new primates we find!"
-some guy
Animal collection in those days typically involved killing it. Where do you think all those animals in museums came from?
Yes!! More!! Feed me more Trey!!!
De Loys eating some strange plant and tripping for days carting around a rock calling it an ape skull would be a hilarious movie
The Nguoi Rung from Vietnam in legend would grab your arm and laugh till nighttime so people would wear bamboo on their arms so they could slip off and run away.
"Hey, that's a pretty funny workaround! LET ME LAUGH EVEN LOUDER! A HA HA HA!"
"Vietnamese god(s) damn it, I was trying to sleep..."
Sounds like some kind of black comedy premise you'd find on Robot Chicken or something.
That was a was a roller coaster of a sentence
Neat, I've never heard of this creature!
RAlexa21th Yep Nguoi means Person or Man and Rung means Jungle
I suggest the el chupacabra or the mokele mbembe. Save Bigfoot for a later video
Yeah the Chupacabra would be interesting. They depictions of it are quite varied
Merritt Animation
Chupacabras are just manged canines.
Your Moist Grandma yea they are.
It's not "the el chupacabra", it's "el chupacabras" or "the chupacabras" (singular). "El" already means "the". In Spanish, unlike in English, the _s_ is required for it to mean "the sucker of goats"; "el chupacabra" would mean "the sucker of one goat". If you want to anglicize it, just call it the goatsucker.
¿Shouldn't that be 'las chupacabras'?
Actually the freshwater eel is very dangerous; there’s a very good river monsters episode on it.
They normally aren’t deadly- unless you are in low lands areas during a bit of a dry season (the reason being that may electric eels can end up amassing in a pond, which can be deadly.)
River Monsters is the first thing I thought of when he said they'd never killed anyone. Glad to see I'm not alone!! (Also what a GREAT show)
Kellergie It really was the best
Skeebeep Boopeepeep agreed- highly underrated show.
I don’t even like fishing and Jeremy Wade made it cool
Indeed, for me Jeremy wade made fishing cool, and by extension made it my favourite show
River monsters may be my favorite show ever
Jeremy went to so many cool places seeking myths and legends in search of their origins
POV: you have 37 assignments due but you are watching this instead
Just found your channel and i'm now binge watching all your content it's fascinating and educational love it keep up the good work man
When I was receiving my anthropology degree one of the things our professors underscored time and time again was that early anthropology was just ethnocentric white Europeans looking for a scientific backbone for their preexisting white supremacy. What is very important to keep in regards to the "scientists" of the old days (not just in anthropology, but across studies) is that these weren't people practicing the scientific method or concerned with testing theories. These were scholars who received classical schooling that focused primarily not on physical sciences (which were thought of as lesser studies for uncultured losers;think of a business major looking down their nose at someone going to a trade school), but on literature and philosophies, which were considered the backbone of understanding humanity. The thought process wasn't "let's learn about different humans that have existed overtime and their behavior and cultures", it was "we know what different humans are and why they do things, let's collect evidence for why that is so".
tl;dr old timey social scientists had very unreliable scientific beliefs and loved racism
Gao Rowan Yeah. Also, it was used to justify colonization. Seeing another group as less than you makes it morally easier to take over their land and exploit their people. The poem “White Man’s Burden” from the era is a pretty insightful poem about how they saw the natives as incapable children, waiting to be saved from “savagery” by Western powers.
Ah, another fine example of our higher education system at work
isn't it just the same thing nowadays but with a different agenda being pushed?
ahh i see, a barn owl
Looks more like a basking shark tbh
You fools its obviously _manbearpig_
@@brenda4855 Manbearpig is just a basking shark
Its a ant lion obviously
Nanana it's obviously a whale
New subscriber! The more you know type I of channel, I love it!!
Please do gigantopithecus
That would be amazing!
Percy Fawcett lied about the lost light skinned race though.. Simply because thinking people of dark skinned nature during that time couldn't construct these magnificent structures, meanwhile calling them "savages"
Actually, within the myths and legends of many South American native cultures, their gods were often described as being lighter skinned. So yeah it could be racism from around that time, or it could be someone basing their idea of an advanced civilization on what the native people from those places told them their gods were like to try to make it seem like there was existing evidence of those same civilizations. Probably a bit of both.
chris stewart it is most likely that. although many cultures that had no contact with caucasians simply used lighter skin to portray that they were different than the average man.
"lighter skinned" is a pretty easy thing to explain without going screaming racism.
if they lived in caves, less sunlight, lighter skin.
Albinos have been thought to have magical powers by basically every culture at one point in time.
the american natives came from siberia across the Beringia land bridge, meaning white or asian ancestry. earlier generations would thus have lighter skin tones.
they could paint themselves with white or light colors to appear more god or ghost like.
like we could spend all day coming up with reasons why that one group over there is slightly lighter than the other group or why the story described them as being lighter skinned than the group who told him the story.
@@NoESanity In some places they kill albinos :(
yes, in some places they kill them and then eat their flesh in order to gain their magical powers. that place is called africa.
Why is wendigo classified with the ape men? It’s original appearance looks more like a husk and are closely similar to Ghouls, which aren’t on the ape men map.
Probably simply due to the origins of what a wendigo started out as. A hominid like creature that was either once human, or something closely related to them. Being as many sightings of it are similar in both location and climate to ape men/bigfoot sightings, wendigo get classified as a sub-species of sorts would be my guess.
Digital Mystique
The original appearance of Wendigos weren’t horned, that’s the modern day’s popular appearance, the original appearance were pale skinny figures with tight decaying looking skin. The location thing could be true, but wendigo spottings are mostly world wide besides just in North America. Oh well doesn’t matter too much just seemed odd it was listed as an ape man.
@@saulkage4223 I never mentioned anything about it's appearance distinctly. Obviously there will be misconceptions due to them being urban legends, much like how myths and religion changed throughout the years. That's besides the point though. Given it's a hominid bipedal like creature which can be found, or has been sighted in regions with bigfoot (Never said just the United States) we can attribute these similarities to it being classified with bigfoot.
@@futur3ndings651 Fun fact, Wendigos aren't urban legends, they're actually more of a mythological thing, more comparable to a centaur than a sasquatch. Also, they were described, visually, by native north Americans as more along the lines of zombies, giants and ogres (among other things, depending on the region) - there's basically little resemblance to Bigfoot and all that jazz.
They are! A eastern form of bigfoot found in the forests of North eastern America. Most come in white color phase.
I just wanted to say Thank You for the research that was required to do a respected video
I can't tell if this is sarcasm or you are serious
"Beware of the Sachmo"
"The trumpet player?"
"No, the monster!"
Kyle was this animaniacs?
Cryptid profile is basically meme review with cryptids
meme review + cryptid profile = cryptid review hosted by sventonosaurus.(the buildABetterFakeTheropod made after him)
Jesus, imagine if that guy's theory was true? That would be something like 7 species convergently evolving at the same time.
not only that but they'd evolve into a single species capable of creating fertile offspring
Dude, the way you talk about the racism and late XIX century "science" is awesome. Thanks for your honesty and understanding. Greets from South America!