Centuries from now archaeologists are going to be so confused when they find neolithic and other ancient items with styles from all over the world somewhere in the suburbs of the twin cities lmao
not really with even modern technology we can distinguish modern and ancient source of most things like bronze for example, i doubt people from the future with techniques and tools more advance than today's science will be confused by stuff like that
@Taras Berestyuk Juice actually. What you get out of the olives is mostly juice with oil only a comparatively small part of it. You have to collect the juice, and then leave it to sit for a while so the oil collects on top, so you can get rid of the juice under it. The juice is for the most part useless, and a significant cause for pollution around olive oil manufacturing. It also tends to stink.
Brilliant video. I love the fact that a culmination of tools needed to be created before this could be attempted and then they were all used. It clearly shows the intricacies of creating anything from scratch. It also helps to “shine a light” on the fact that information had to survive long enough between people to develop this technology. That alone says volumes about the human condition. Cheers!
@@keltondavis4559 while your method is simpler to communicate, is it really easier? I've tried doing what you suggest (I make a lot of candles) and your method requires a lot of time, and keeping wax hot. My method is one quick pour and it's done. You can even use a paper towel tube for the mould. The candles made by your method also don't burn as evenly.
@@kaitlyn__L well you have to keep in mind just how expensive a mould would have been for the ancient people to construct. They didn't have spare paper towel rolls lying around like we do today. And on top of that one person could be making hundreds of candle at once with this method by thing many strings onto a single stick.
I just noticed that the pot used to carry the glue is one of the first 3 andy made, kinda cool he kept it, despite it being much less nicer looking than the ones he’s made recently.
This is the most impressive video I've seen from you guys. I hope that everyone on your team feels the immense pride they deserve to feel. Thank you so much - what an inspiration you all are!
Andie(not sure if this is how you spell your name), if you hadn't already realized this, you should make the grooves on your pressing stone deeper and then pour a layer of wax in the grooves and on the part where the olive paste went so you can improve your yield.
I started working at a bronze art foundry when I was 14, and we would do a similar thing with wax! It was a family friend’s place, very traditional and most things were done by hand. An artist would sculpt from the wax and then wax vents would be attached. The whole thing got sealed in plaster with a wax cone sticking out so it would become a funnel, then fired in a kiln for ages... several days or more sometimes with the size of the pieces! Once the wax burned off, we would pack the moulds in sand and metal sheets to maintain pressure in the mould in case one cracked. When the bronze melted, we could pour it into the prepared moulds and let them cool a bit. While they were still glowing, we had a tradition of pouring some beer on each. Can’t remember why for the life of me. I will say, burning beer is a very interesting smell (kind of nostalgic now, actually). Once they cooled enough we would crack the moulds to reveal the pieces. Vents would be shaved off, pieces would be detailed and then the leftover bronze was always saved and reused. Some sculptures we did for city parks and buildings, universities, individuals, curious artists and really anyone else. Amazing experience but backbreaking work. Shovelling sand for six hours in a hot foundry can be a rough time, but it’s always worth the end results.
I love it. When I was very very young child, I saw the documentary at the Natural Museum of science, this was before television Karen said shows. You would go to the auditorium someplace, and watch a movie, with a commentator standing at a podium describing what you’re watching. They talked about lean lien to and Preventive cultures. When I got home, I walked down to the forest, I had my pocket knife that I wasn’t supposed to have without supervision, and I made a lien to. I discovered what it takes and how long it will take to build. After that I followed with experimenting with myself on anything I saw or read. I discovered how long does it really take to dig a hole without a shovel. What the problems are depending upon the soil content. I did it in sandy soil, to hard clay and rocky soil.
Amazing! Really proud of Andy. Watching him use tools he made to work on new projects is really satisfying. You can tell he is having to learn a lot to make the most out of what he's got! Great Job!!
@@AquaticSCP no they don't it would take too long, they mine it once and then they "unlock" it and buy it somewhere. i reckon they might just melt something made of bronze/copper tho
@@imperialofficer6185 I think they might've done one or two trips to a mine and got most of what they needed in a few trips, and they do recycle their bronze from tools that they made before when they break. I'd say they might've bought some but it's pretty unlikely that they buy or get more consistently
15:20 Poor genie get burn in that lamp... qwq RIP Also... This series is my favorite ^^ I learn a lot about our past time (i even try to make my own stone axe by myself based on this series... but... eh... its fail XD)
20 hours is pretty good, all things considered. Especially since you can reuse it multiple times and if you run out of oil and wick, you only need to redo that.
This video series is one of the best I've ever come across. It is amazing to see the evolution of human technology throughout the years. And even though I'm 33 years old and consider myself to be well educated, I'm still learning new things from these videos. Thank you HTME, for being awesome!
Very good job making the cast with lost wax, I’m very impressed. Clay has shrinkage, All clays are not equal. Through experimentation our bronze age ancestors would know where the clay is for each type of work or job. The sand is vital forgiving the mold structure. With what you have you did very very well and I’m pleased that you did not give up and that you were resourceful. By the way the mold was beautiful. Never forget, the apprentice the first time he does anything will not compare to the master who’s been doing it all this life. For the first time attempt excellent work
So that's where the wick in that style of lamp goes! I (and I'm sure several others) just accepted that that weird teapot-looking thing in Aladdin was a lamp, but never knew how it was supposed to provide light until now.
I would love to be a part of the team, but sadly live on the other side of the US. I have been doing similar things to you guys for about 2 years now. I made a homemade charcoal forge I used to make knives, a sword, and even tools for basic woodworking. I'm working on a charcoal kiln for pottery and have also been refining my own clay for my projects involving it. I've also made charcoal, homemade alcohol, and other various projects to do with past technologies and some more modern technologies. So far I've learned a lot about not just the drive that our ancestors had, but the drive I didn't know I had. Just yesterday I turned out a knife with a 8 inch blade in just an hour and a half not including grinding. I've been blacksmithing since before I discovered your channel, but it has helped me branch out into some other areas of study too. Keep up the great work and if you ever need help around south Alabama for any reason just know im here
The winner of the ancient Olympic games was awarded amphorea of olive oil, as it was so very useful and time consuming to make. Thanks, that was a fun vid.
I forgot how many subscribers you had so I went to look and I just said "Yeah, it's probably around 4mil" and then you only had a little more than a million, which is in now way a small number but you deserve WAY more. Keep at this series, we're all loving it so far! ♥️
The olive paste honestly looks somewhere between a vegetable-based hamburger substitute and something inedible 10:43 Analyse once again proving she has been an invaluable asset to the team
I think one thing a lot of people are missing, is that how much modern tech saves in produced value. The lamp in man hours was 230 alone, not to mention mining, refining, and more growing olives. Thinking how much tech has improved the value of an hour, that an hours effort can make for several days light in electricity, shows how trade and tech go hand in hand.
Install Raid on PC/Mac for Free clcr.me/4e18YK Start with💰50K silver and get a Free Epic Champion as part of the new player program
Im here befor the comments become what is known as an ocean
*NO*
No
No
No
Teacher: what do you want to be when you grow up?
Andy: I wanna be a professional caveman
😂
If all goes well, soon he'll be a professional Mesopotamian.
Grug no care
@@ezeytheepic4253 he already is
Hes really bad at this. He lost most of his oil. He kinda does it all half ass. Lol
This is still one of my favorite series on youtube.
Me, too!! I LOVE this channel.
Yes!
I agree. Ive always been into making every tool i can so this series is right up my alley. Plus i like the history.
Same
This guy doesn't have minecraft, so he just went outside instead. lol
RUclipsr with a solid viewer base.
*KNOCK* *KNOCK*
RUclipsr: "Who is it!?"
Door: "Raid shadow legends"
Get in
*Kicks door out of the frame from the inside*
Sad think is the game is pretty bad. All earned money they invest only to more ads.
Ahh the old pay to friking win game.
we'll give you $15,000 per video
youtuber: deal!
Welcome to htme, where we just have buckets of stones everywhere
And pretend to go back in time even tho they can't
Makes you wonder what he'll use the 5 pounds of fermenting olive mash for.
@@XepptizZ Olive beer/ale of course
@@XepptizZ he did say in the bread video that they're working on alcohol
@@XepptizZ
If they keep it long enough fossil fuels might be an option.
Well you know, sometimes you've just gotta go crush a couple thousands olives and make some lamp oil
Ya know
It be like that sometimes.
Man, I've been seeing you everywhere today.
It do be like that sometimes
To be fair, sometimes you just have to kill some megafauna.
Shout out to Annalise! She is has been an awesome addition to the channel and is very talented. She da real MVP!
Agreed, she is very intelligent
Exactly!! The quality of that mould though. Wow. So perfect.
yea, feels like the show should be called... "How to have the intern make everything"
@@matrimhelmsgaard he's an idea man and shes a doer, perfect combo for a business duo, she should het the acknowledgement she deserves though
she's a frickin hot carry
"LAMP OIL, ROPE, BOMBS?" "YOU WANT IT?" "ITS YOURS MY FRIEND AS LONG AS YOU HAVE ENOUGH RUBIES"
"SORRY LINK, BUT I CAN'T GIVE CREDIT. COME BACK WHEN YOU'RE A LITTLE, MMMMMMMM, RICHER"
*rupies
I was looking for this comment
@@BlastingRyan609*rupees
Centuries from now archaeologists are going to be so confused when they find neolithic and other ancient items with styles from all over the world somewhere in the suburbs of the twin cities lmao
Yeah thanks someone posts this on literally every video he makes.
not really with even modern technology we can distinguish modern and ancient source of most things like bronze for example, i doubt people from the future with techniques and tools more advance than today's science will be confused by stuff like that
@@Aleph-Noll it's a joke dude
What about the museums?
Troof
Fun fact: There would now (4'000 BCE) be about 7 million people, which is less than 1/1000th of today's world population.
4 million BCE? The population of modern humans or other human species. Well obviously we (modern humans) didn’t exist 4 million years ago
@@__prometheus__ how do you know?
@@__prometheus__ fek, meant 4'000 damn it
@@noahlangrehr597 fossil evidence of humans
RUclipsr: *exists*
Raid Shadow Legends: “It’s free real estate”
I can’t wait to see in like 20+ years when he makes a iphone from scratch
He would build the machines that make Iphone parts first
Omg right
and then apple sues him for producing a product that they no longer sell.
Jake Sangria thinking about it that’s kinda true, not in a way to insult him or anything
He already made an OG computer
0:28~ Glad to see the HTME intro again.
I really like this show its such a great idea
Really cool video and I liked the stats. 20 hours for all of that is a good quote🙂 hello from Germany
Ditto but how did you watch this yesterday lol?
54kr1 what I was suspecting
I can't even imagine how much time you put into the episodes, great job.
I know. It even makes me consider checking out Raid Shadow Legends.
I can. 23 hours for the lamp and a couple more for the production and editing.
A second groove should've been added to avoid wasting as much olive juice
Probably took hours to make the first one. Nuts to that.
@Taras Berestyuk I'm sure he does, but the guy in the video says juice to for some reason
Taras Berestyuk it’s considered juice at first there is still water in it
@Taras Berestyuk Juice actually. What you get out of the olives is mostly juice with oil only a comparatively small part of it. You have to collect the juice, and then leave it to sit for a while so the oil collects on top, so you can get rid of the juice under it. The juice is for the most part useless, and a significant cause for pollution around olive oil manufacturing. It also tends to stink.
Brilliant video. I love the fact that a culmination of tools needed to be created before this could be attempted and then they were all used. It clearly shows the intricacies of creating anything from scratch. It also helps to “shine a light” on the fact that information had to survive long enough between people to develop this technology. That alone says volumes about the human condition. Cheers!
Omg the last time I was this early humans used oil lamps
THAT IS *THE* CUTEST LAMP, special props to Annalise!!
This invention opens up a whole new world of advancement
**Creates Olive Oil**
Gordon Ramsay would like to know your location.
HAHAHA so underrated.
Weirdly enough, I wanna make an oil lamp now.
You you're in xeno lol im PuRe/DuBs
I'm impressed you made it through that whole video without mentioning the irony of using wax to make oil. :-)
I don't follow.
@@Detson404 if you've got wax, you can make candles. Just get a clay mould, pour the wax in, insert a wick before it freezes again.
@@kaitlyn__L nah that's too hard just repeatedly dip a string into a car of molten wax no cast needed
@@keltondavis4559 while your method is simpler to communicate, is it really easier? I've tried doing what you suggest (I make a lot of candles) and your method requires a lot of time, and keeping wax hot. My method is one quick pour and it's done. You can even use a paper towel tube for the mould. The candles made by your method also don't burn as evenly.
@@kaitlyn__L well you have to keep in mind just how expensive a mould would have been for the ancient people to construct. They didn't have spare paper towel rolls lying around like we do today. And on top of that one person could be making hundreds of candle at once with this method by thing many strings onto a single stick.
Me: *Sees a new video on youtube*
RUclipsr: "Welcome back to a new video and todays sponsor is"
Me: "RAID SHADOW LEGENDS"
Raid: Garbage Legends. Best video ever
@@Gabriel-yd4bq yes
The only part of that game I like is they sponsor HTME
This came out so well!
It really did
Well yes
I wonder what the look on Annalise's face was when she realized that "video production assistant" job actually meant "neolithic living"
It's dark and my low calories make finding resources difficult. Good thing I have this LAMP. Found 2 WOOD.
@@AMRAMRS Yeah, that bit at the end where he's shaving a stick by fire light made me remember that game.
Andy: I need big rock
Big rock seller: for deceration?
Andy: yes
Actually uses big rock to make oil press base
*oil time*
@@nonimus6269 the U.S. military would like to know your location
@@garrettrector3953 *Death time*
I can't believe they turned Dr. STONE into a real thing!
lmao true
He is basically senku from dr.stone
Weebs will understand
I understand
Lol
100 percent
@@anvakathazit1102 ten billion percent
Him: r a I d s h a d o w l e g e n d s
Me: so anyways I started *skipping*
God bless right arrow!
I just noticed that the pot used to carry the glue is one of the first 3 andy made, kinda cool he kept it, despite it being much less nicer looking than the ones he’s made recently.
Wow. That lamp is seriously impressive
Id say a little too impressive. Less than 20 hours to grind in that finish by rubbing a stone on it....yup....sure.
You could say we are like *Moths* to a lamp with this video
Andy: I need a sponsor
Raid shadow legends:
I got you homie
This is the most impressive video I've seen from you guys. I hope that everyone on your team feels the immense pride they deserve to feel.
Thank you so much - what an inspiration you all are!
I know who I’m going to when the apocalypse happens.
Annalise?
Cody....
Annalise, Cody and Primitive Technology.
Play Raid: Shadow legends?
@Corwin Weber primitive technology lives in Australia so I hope your a strong swimmer 👍🏻
This Chanel always is wonderful and inspiring, keep up the great work
You guys are getting so good I love it :) please keep going this serie is really amazing !
This series has come so far from the first episode. From a stick to a lamp!
This is an amazing video, I never thought of you making an oil lamp🙂
"Lamp oil, rope, bombs? It's yours my friend; as long as you have enoug rubies."
**A WHOLE NEW WORLD*
Andy version
😂😂🤣🤣😆😆😅😅
Olives are literally my favorite food
mm yummo
Say sike right now
Try them with bananas and cheese together on a stick...
I wasn't aware that having a favorite food was a common figure-of-speech!
Everytime I smell olives I want to puke
Andie(not sure if this is how you spell your name), if you hadn't already realized this, you should make the grooves on your pressing stone deeper and then pour a layer of wax in the grooves and on the part where the olive paste went so you can improve your yield.
I started working at a bronze art foundry when I was 14, and we would do a similar thing with wax!
It was a family friend’s place, very traditional and most things were done by hand. An artist would sculpt from the wax and then wax vents would be attached. The whole thing got sealed in plaster with a wax cone sticking out so it would become a funnel, then fired in a kiln for ages... several days or more sometimes with the size of the pieces! Once the wax burned off, we would pack the moulds in sand and metal sheets to maintain pressure in the mould in case one cracked.
When the bronze melted, we could pour it into the prepared moulds and let them cool a bit. While they were still glowing, we had a tradition of pouring some beer on each. Can’t remember why for the life of me. I will say, burning beer is a very interesting smell (kind of nostalgic now, actually).
Once they cooled enough we would crack the moulds to reveal the pieces. Vents would be shaved off, pieces would be detailed and then the leftover bronze was always saved and reused.
Some sculptures we did for city parks and buildings, universities, individuals, curious artists and really anyone else. Amazing experience but backbreaking work. Shovelling sand for six hours in a hot foundry can be a rough time, but it’s always worth the end results.
Olive this channel
Amazing comment! Oi’ll leave a like
Ilove this channel
I would be crushed If it closed
Ha nice
This lamp looks gorgeous for the way it was made.
...aaand presto, second and third shifts were born. :-D :-D
Man Annelise really is the backbone of this channel & project as a whole. you go girl
You're getting really good at casting! Well done!
I love it. When I was very very young child, I saw the documentary at the Natural Museum of science, this was before television Karen said shows. You would go to the auditorium someplace, and watch a movie, with a commentator standing at a podium describing what you’re watching. They talked about lean lien to and Preventive cultures. When I got home, I walked down to the forest, I had my pocket knife that I wasn’t supposed to have without supervision, and I made a lien to. I discovered what it takes and how long it will take to build. After that I followed with experimenting with myself on anything I saw or read. I discovered how long does it really take to dig a hole without a shovel. What the problems are depending upon the soil content. I did it in sandy soil, to hard clay and rocky soil.
When it gets warmer you should plant bamboo so you can skip some steps of wood working
Edit-nevermind
3:00
Love this channel, and adding Annalise Engelke gives it a great new energy. She really has heart
Thank you so much for all of the hard work you guys put into these videos. They're so awesomely educational!
You guys really outdid yourselves on the lamp XD
Can't believe the stuff you can cast now...
Literally never seen how those lamps work before
Amazing! Really proud of Andy. Watching him use tools he made to work on new projects is really satisfying. You can tell he is having to learn a lot to make the most out of what he's got! Great Job!!
You can tell he's also got great help!
Their search history be like: copper ore buy minnesota
Imperial Officer they mine all there ore
@@AquaticSCP no they don't it would take too long, they mine it once and then they "unlock" it and buy it somewhere. i reckon they might just melt something made of bronze/copper tho
@@imperialofficer6185 I think they might've done one or two trips to a mine and got most of what they needed in a few trips, and they do recycle their bronze from tools that they made before when they break. I'd say they might've bought some but it's pretty unlikely that they buy or get more consistently
15:20
Poor genie get burn in that lamp... qwq
RIP
Also... This series is my favorite ^^
I learn a lot about our past time (i even try to make my own stone axe by myself based on this series... but... eh... its fail XD)
20 hours is pretty good, all things considered. Especially since you can reuse it multiple times and if you run out of oil and wick, you only need to redo that.
This is so cool. Can’t imagine how much work went into it. Great job!
Episode 459: "HTME: Modern Nuclear Reactor"
That part is easy, its getting the fissionable material to fuel it that's the hard part.
Anything is fissionable if you try hard enough.
This video series is one of the best I've ever come across. It is amazing to see the evolution of human technology throughout the years. And even though I'm 33 years old and consider myself to be well educated, I'm still learning new things from these videos. Thank you HTME, for being awesome!
7:31
proof that they ARE NOT in the past
Coca-cola can bottom left
Edit: Thank you for the heart
Edit: the heart is gone
I've been watching several of these videos now and I can firmly say they have a solid "How It's Made" vibe, but that's probably what you're going for.
LET THERE BE LIGHT!
Finally! I was dying to know when this video will come.
Go to 1:30 to skip the Raid: Shadow Legends advertisement.
This deserves more likes
The reset was a great idea!
I want this guy with me when the zombies come
Just gotta come up here to Minnesota first if you can handle the winter!
Very good job making the cast with lost wax, I’m very impressed. Clay has shrinkage, All clays are not equal. Through experimentation our bronze age ancestors would know where the clay is for each type of work or job. The sand is vital forgiving the mold structure. With what you have you did very very well and I’m pleased that you did not give up and that you were resourceful. By the way the mold was beautiful.
Never forget, the apprentice the first time he does anything will not compare to the master who’s been doing it all this life. For the first time attempt excellent work
ay
6000 years early~
So that's where the wick in that style of lamp goes! I (and I'm sure several others) just accepted that that weird teapot-looking thing in Aladdin was a lamp, but never knew how it was supposed to provide light until now.
It just occurred to me that the anime Dr. Stone is essentially what he's trying to do here. Neat.
I would love to be a part of the team, but sadly live on the other side of the US. I have been doing similar things to you guys for about 2 years now. I made a homemade charcoal forge I used to make knives, a sword, and even tools for basic woodworking. I'm working on a charcoal kiln for pottery and have also been refining my own clay for my projects involving it. I've also made charcoal, homemade alcohol, and other various projects to do with past technologies and some more modern technologies. So far I've learned a lot about not just the drive that our ancestors had, but the drive I didn't know I had. Just yesterday I turned out a knife with a 8 inch blade in just an hour and a half not including grinding. I've been blacksmithing since before I discovered your channel, but it has helped me branch out into some other areas of study too. Keep up the great work and if you ever need help around south Alabama for any reason just know im here
Everyone should watch the Anime Dr.Stone if they liked this Series
15:11
I'm surprised he didn't get copystiked for taking that scene right from the live action Aladdin
I feel kinda early ya know
Love you choose this, you can do so much with olives!
"gonna limit myself to tools of that era" Uses iron
The winner of the ancient Olympic games was awarded amphorea of olive oil, as it was so very useful and time consuming to make. Thanks, that was a fun vid.
I forgot how many subscribers you had so I went to look and I just said "Yeah, it's probably around 4mil" and then you only had a little more than a million, which is in now way a small number but you deserve WAY more. Keep at this series, we're all loving it so far! ♥️
Raid shadow legends more like garbage shadow legends
I love this channel, he is a normal guy make things like they did thousands of years ago.
This is a dope lamp, man. It looks like you snatched it straight from a museum.
This was very satisfying to watch.The lamp came out excellent.Brilliant!
The casting has gotten so much better and more complex! This is amazing!!
This episode gave me a Doctor Stone vibe, especially that light bulb scene!
Definitely the best thing I have seen you create yet that lamp is amazing
Okay this is so cool, seriously. I wasn’t sure about this channel after the reset but I’m sold. I love this so much
The incredible camera work at the end. Andy as Aladdin. Wow. So wonderful. 🙂👍🏻
The olive paste honestly looks somewhere between a vegetable-based hamburger substitute and something inedible
10:43 Analyse once again proving she has been an invaluable asset to the team
Good salvage on the lamp. That was so much work Analise did!
This is like watching Dr. Stone but as if Senku had never found Kaseki and had to craft everything by himself hahahaha🤣
I'm really impressed with how you guys have revamped the channel. The new series is so good!
8:00 Excellent use of Wilhelm Scream 👏👏👏
I think one thing a lot of people are missing, is that how much modern tech saves in produced value. The lamp in man hours was 230 alone, not to mention mining, refining, and more growing olives. Thinking how much tech has improved the value of an hour, that an hours effort can make for several days light in electricity, shows how trade and tech go hand in hand.
This channel is soo underrated.