2+ Hours Of Unbelievable Discoveries About Bronze Age Britain

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  • Опубликовано: 7 фев 2025
  • Join the Time Team across Britain on some of their most exciting Bronze Age digs. From a dive into a loch in the Scottish Highlands to uncover a man-made island, to one of the most important archeological 'wet-sites' in Europe, Flag Fen, where the soggy conditions helped preserve 3000-year-old buried timbers.
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Комментарии • 19

  • @DanOre-m2y
    @DanOre-m2y Месяц назад +2

    I enjoy Time with you thanks 😊 🖖👍🤠⛏️⚒️🇺🇸💯the Flint is Amethyst beautiful 😍

  • @cladqueen8054
    @cladqueen8054 Месяц назад +3

    Pure heaven

  • @Andrea.S.Alvey12
    @Andrea.S.Alvey12 Месяц назад +5

    I have to ask, but first please know I'm the product of the U.S. education system: Tony said the timbers are so well preserved due to the oxygen free water- but isn't water made up of two parts hydrogen to one part oxygen?

    • @eclecticjon1019
      @eclecticjon1019 Месяц назад +3

      I think it's different when it's oxygen in the air. I know things are preserved for potentially centuries underwater but as soon as they take them out, they start to rot and decay.

    • @woodyh4650
      @woodyh4650 22 дня назад +2

      There is no "free" oxygen in the water. The oxygen that makes up water is bound to the hydrogen, so no "free" O2. Think of an aquarium; without something to add oxygen to the water, the fish literally drown because there's no O2 dissolved in the water.

    • @user-he7wb5in9e
      @user-he7wb5in9e 16 дней назад +1

      “Oxygen free conditions at 2 meters below…” he did say it, what’s meant is: there is Less oxygen in water than being out of the water & on dry land. Great catch & good question. Hope that helps

    • @sharonrouleau-bryan1456
      @sharonrouleau-bryan1456 15 дней назад +1

      ​@@user-he7wb5in9ethat was a great answer to a good question... I'm also from the American school system and trust me I was like huh?? And asked myself that same question... lol. Thanks for ur help 🤘😊🤘😊

    • @leticiaduarte9840
      @leticiaduarte9840 12 дней назад

      ​@@sharonrouleau-bryan1456 Maybe you would be interested in search "bog bodies". Ancient people that had their bodies put in bogs. The lack of oxygen have them in such preservation they the original finders thought they were murder victims! It's very interesting archeology

  • @zbigniewkosior2517
    @zbigniewkosior2517 Месяц назад +3

    Finally I see aPhil with knee pad ,bless you all for amazing information.

  • @bettygreenhansen
    @bettygreenhansen Месяц назад

    Yippee!!!!

  • @woodyh4650
    @woodyh4650 22 дня назад

    "This Bronze Age symmetry", or "This Iron Age and Roman symmetry". How does Britain have so many symmetrical graveyards?😉 😂

  • @callmemonkh9020
    @callmemonkh9020 Месяц назад +2

    francis pryor seems to have APED the Theories of Mike Parker Pearson.. .

  • @JasonAndreoni-m2d
    @JasonAndreoni-m2d Месяц назад +2

    Anonymous member who is the president of the underworld but they don't love me anymore but I'm sorry for your loved by me ❣️

  • @BryantPP
    @BryantPP Месяц назад +1

    How would these things like charcoal and such last underwater in a Scottish loch for over 2k years, relatively still very near the surface?
    Odd.

    • @extendoduck
      @extendoduck Месяц назад +2

      That's due to a combination of factors.
      Charcoal is pretty inert to begin with. It's physically fragile, but other than that it doesn't break down or degrade over time. Very few animals or microorganisms will eat charcoal, and there isn't much life in lochs like that one anyway.
      There's also not too much water circulation. Even during a storm, only the very top layers of a loch that size are going to be disturbed.
      So basically it's an extremely stable material in a fairly stable environment.

    • @BryantPP
      @BryantPP Месяц назад

      @@extendoduck I understand the logistics of that, but it just seems strange that things that are older than Christ would be so close to the surface.

    • @bwilly4503
      @bwilly4503 Месяц назад +1

      I think I found your problem!
      Lol!

    • @pennymitchell8523
      @pennymitchell8523 16 дней назад +1

      ​@BryantPP .....as the story of christ is fairytales this is irrelevant

    • @BryantPP
      @BryantPP 16 дней назад

      @@pennymitchell8523 Yes, I agree with you. I do however think the 'teachngs' of Christ are beautiful. If only these evangelicals would examine them and take them to heart. Fat chance of that though.