History of All Human Livestock

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  • Опубликовано: 15 апр 2024
  • History of All Human Livestock
    Welcome to our RUclips channel where we delve into the fascinating history of farm animals and their role in shaping human civilization. Join us as we explore the evolution of livestock farming, from the early domestication of animals to the modern-day agricultural industry. Discover the intricate relationship between humans and farm animals throughout history, and learn about the significant contributions these creatures have made to our society. From the ancient origins of animal husbandry to the advancements in genetics and farming practices, our videos cover it all. Join us on this journey through time as we uncover the fascinating story of farm animals and their enduring impact on humanity.
    Welcome to our channel dedicated to the study of humanities! We are a community of scholars and enthusiasts passionate about exploring the diverse fields of history, literature, philosophy, art, culture, language, religion, anthropology, archaeology, musicology, mythology, ethnography, aesthetics, social sciences, linguistics, classics, humanities education, humanistic studies, humanities research, and humanities writing. Our goal is to create engaging and informative content that inspires curiosity and promotes understanding of the human experience. Join us on a journey through time and space as we explore the rich and complex tapestry of human civilization. Subscribe to our channel to stay up-to-date with our latest videos and join the conversation in the comments section. Thank you for joining us on this journey of discovery!
    #history #foodhistory

Комментарии • 47

  • @faviangarza5192
    @faviangarza5192 Месяц назад +28

    This sounds like this was written by AI. She lost me when she said they used nylon blankets to cover sheets 😂

    • @patrickdaly8561
      @patrickdaly8561 Месяц назад +10

      As an animal science major, I saw many inconsistencies that had me questioning my education. But the mention of nylon made me feel better because I realized that they were probably wrong in the other things I was doubting.😅

    • @user-ew8ty7tw5r
      @user-ew8ty7tw5r Месяц назад +3

      Yep ai, not for another 1,000s years did we have nylon. 😂

    • @BugsNRoo
      @BugsNRoo Месяц назад

      That pulled me right out. Stopped watching at the mention of nylon. I'm not a scientist but I do know it was invented in the 20th century and is synthetic!

    • @alanpotter5919
      @alanpotter5919 Месяц назад

      ❤❤​@@patrickdaly8561

    • @thomasreto2997
      @thomasreto2997 26 дней назад +1

      Yes I turned it off after 1 minute

  • @deus22488
    @deus22488 Месяц назад +11

    Just saying Nylon was researched in the 1920s and not available to ancient romans. Not wise enough to differentiate all the facts from fiction, but people should be cautious taking info at face value from this source.

  • @DieLuftwaffel
    @DieLuftwaffel Месяц назад +15

    The Romans had nylon...Riiiiiiiight. AI is funny.

    • @NosaintPatrick
      @NosaintPatrick Месяц назад +1

      And I fart gold dust every 5 seconds

    • @artmosley3337
      @artmosley3337 Месяц назад

      @@NosaintPatrickmy i suggest a diet of beans, cabbage and broccoli…

    • @HollieMoodie
      @HollieMoodie 26 дней назад

      @@NosaintPatrick There are actually gold pills you can buy to poop gold. Maybe you can fart gold dust as well. :D

  • @user-jh8hl5dy7u
    @user-jh8hl5dy7u Месяц назад +5

    A steer is a male cattle that is neutered while still a calf and it's body morphology remains juvenile and resembling a cow. An Oxen is a male cattle that is neutered once it reaches adulthood and is large and muscular, neutered oxen have the strength and size of a bull but not the aggression due to zero testosterone.. BTW you forgot doves, pigeons, geese, guinea fowl, guinea pigs, rabbits, etc.

    • @user-ug5xr2gb6j
      @user-ug5xr2gb6j Месяц назад

      An ox is usually a steer (depends on the owner’s philosophy when it is neutered, there’s arguments around both either banding or cutting and at a couple days old or around 6+ months old) but technically could be any cow that has training as they are walked beside, usually on their left side, and given voice commands and tapped with a goad without any leads, halters, reigns or other devices. The Mormon pioneers yoked any cow (especially the family milk cow and beef steers) that could get wrestled into a yoke every morning to pull their wagons (only really the first pair in a team of oxen needs to be trained as the rest have no real choice but to follow). Technically among ox drivers, a trained steer is referred to as a “working steer” until he’s reached full maturity at four years old and only then would be referred to as an ox, but I think that’s fallen more by the wayside as their use in developed countries is obviously not common anymore. If you’re interested, you should check out Tillers International near Kalamazoo, Michigan.

  • @user-ug5xr2gb6j
    @user-ug5xr2gb6j Месяц назад +4

    There was actually a really interesting article written by I believe an archaeologist who made the argument that humans first domesticated sheep and goats (obviously way after dogs), and their first purpose was use as pack animals to move goods over rough terrain and mountains between two areas, and then their value in wool and milk production was realized due to living in proximity and observing them. This was evidenced by the fact that the wild populations in the regions, and around the time of their domestication were actually higher than at previous points in history, and so why would someone put more effort and energy into raising livestock for meat when going out and hunting them as you had for thousands of years before was only easier due to their being higher populations. Also, they noticed that around a mountainous area in that region, there was obvious trade of obsidian hundreds of miles away from where it originated, and the terrain was so rough that they couldn’t have gone over it with oxen as pack animals.

  • @johnsamsungs7570
    @johnsamsungs7570 Месяц назад +3

    Marine Turtles not Tortoises!

  • @Soundofwindonsand
    @Soundofwindonsand 25 дней назад

    Every Black tail deer I ever met on the West coast is just waiting for someone to hand them an apple

  • @swohs100
    @swohs100 6 дней назад

    Did I miss the part about Rabbits?

  • @andrewkingjr.6356
    @andrewkingjr.6356 14 дней назад +1

    Even though I don't care for the AI narration, the information provide was great and for the most part accurate... Please just get a decent narrator, the AI mistakes are awful.

  • @glps6167
    @glps6167 16 дней назад +1

    "Livestock are the cornerstone of agricultural societies" (opening statement). That leaves out societies living of pastoral nomadism - and demonstrates the obvious limitations of AI in the ability ro understand history.

  • @alexanderguesthistorical7842
    @alexanderguesthistorical7842 6 дней назад

    You might want to look again at the dates you gave for the 'arrival' of cattle in the island of Great Britain. The excavations at the archaeological site at the Ness of Brodgar in Scotland UK have thousands of cattle bones, of what are thought to be long-horned cattle. The site is dated to 3000 BC, and the last 'feast' of cattle yielding a vast hoard of cattle bones that were discarded were at the final closure of the site which is dated to 2,400BC. This may well be evidence that there was another, independent, domestication of cattle in the British isles, which was later augmented by the influx of cattle from the near east.

  • @hatac
    @hatac 25 дней назад

    Finally someone that knows how to use AI art properly.
    There is an interesting story how sheep got to Australia. Misses MacArthur was an early agronomist. She realized that Marino sheep would work in Australia. Her Husband managed to fowl up a diplomatic conference on Gibraltar Spain. So the British government sent them to Sydney as a guard. Tasked with finding Marino's the British sea captain set off from Sydney for Britain. Meanwhile someone was trying to bribe the governor of Durban South Africa with stud Marino sheep. He had died before they arrived. His wife sent the animals to the abatjour. One of the sea captains spotted them and saved them from the butcher and got most of them alive to Sydney. These were stud breeding animals from the Spanish royal flock. $1000 per head selling for mere cents. The MacArthur's and Australia got rich.

  • @unclebear570
    @unclebear570 День назад

    Is the video accurate? A simple question with a simple answer. How many statements were given as absolute facts and how many were not?

  • @DustKingArchives
    @DustKingArchives Месяц назад +5

    Says domestication goes back thousands of years, but it actually goes back 10,000s of years. I’m pretty sure this is an AI script.

  • @myradioon
    @myradioon 4 дня назад

    You forgot Guinea Pigs. This was not ALL livestock.

  • @Rudyfachruddin
    @Rudyfachruddin 2 месяца назад

    Nice video ❤

  • @l.loganboswell1761
    @l.loganboswell1761 Месяц назад +4

    Just say BC no need to be so politically correct.

  • @katlynklassen809
    @katlynklassen809 Месяц назад +4

    Just call it livestock. Human livestock is a whole other things.

    • @patrickdaly8561
      @patrickdaly8561 Месяц назад

      Human livestock was common way before animal livestock.😅

    • @peaceleader7315
      @peaceleader7315 Месяц назад

      ​@patrickdaly8561 modern-day capitalistic economics have driven people to live in the suburbs and cities as intensive farming continues..hmmmm..

    • @HollieMoodie
      @HollieMoodie 26 дней назад

      Human livestock became illegal a couple of hundred years ago...

  • @tersta1
    @tersta1 27 дней назад

    This is a really good channel. I've subscribed. I love the channel name! Thank you for this content. I think it's important to show people that food doesn't come from cardboard boxes and plastic wrappers.

  • @cassidystillwell160
    @cassidystillwell160 Месяц назад +2

    Stopped watching after the comment at 6:06 about Romans giving their sheep coats of fitted nylon. @theartofbeinghuman your channel is a joke, did a human even review this before it was posted?

  • @bonerici
    @bonerici 2 месяца назад +6

    The best part is ancient Romans covering their sheep with spandex

    • @andyrickert1
      @andyrickert1 Месяц назад +2

      I kinda had to take the video with a grain of salt after that lol

    • @bonerici
      @bonerici Месяц назад

      @@andyrickert1 It feels like a simple human mistake which I will always forgive. It's just funny. The mistakes I don't forgive are using AI.

    • @andyrickert1
      @andyrickert1 Месяц назад

      @@bonerici exactly

  • @Ostinat0
    @Ostinat0 Месяц назад +1

    least depressing AI content

  • @krono5el
    @krono5el 26 дней назад

    Didn't all mammals pop out of in the Americas?

  • @BugsNRoo
    @BugsNRoo Месяц назад

    I am pretty sure this video is completely AI. The mention of Romans using nylon is completely bonkers. Hope nobody is watching this thinking they're learning something scientific!

  • @icenarsin5283
    @icenarsin5283 Месяц назад +2

    Roman nylon?🤣

  • @michaels4255
    @michaels4255 8 дней назад

    "Evolution traces the development of domestic goats through natural selection" - if by domestic the narrator means domesticated (as opposed to domestic as the opposite of foreign imports), then no, that would be wild goats, not domestic[ated] goats which develop through artificial selection.
    Artificial UNintelligence!

  • @tylercooper1551
    @tylercooper1551 17 часов назад

    Yeah, it's so lazy to use AI voice... do your own God damned work