I've got a few podcast interviews on Alaskan prehistory coming up, a video on the philosophy of archaeology, and a video on the collapse at the end of the Maya classic period. Be sure to subscribe!
Brilliant. I am thoroughly obsessed with the peopling of The Americas. This is a small channel, but if North 02 is onto you and enjoying the content then you're going places, fella. Well done!
My ancestors walked across that land bridge, lingered in Alaska for a while, and as the ice withdrew, they ventured further along the northernmost lands, eventually reaching Greenland. According to DNA evidence, my ancestors constituted the final wave of migration to Greenland. Our survival in this challenging journey relied on polar bears, musk oxen, and sea mammals. The mummies discovered in the Uummannaq area belong to my lineage, representing the late migrants who settled in that vast fjord.
Wonderful! as a resident of Alaska I especially appreciated this video. and I think you're really on to something with the idea of locating and searching more caves!
I've watched this several times and it still always shocks me how our species managed to explore and inhabit the most remote areas of the planet. inhabiting the northern siberia facing the artic ocean to the wide open berngian grasslands all within 30,000 years of leaving our home in (Warm) Africa.
@theluftwaffle1 - This is supposition on my part, but it doesn't make sense to me that African dwellers would store up their travel urges for two big migrations. There were no borders, toll booths, or passports in pre-history, so why not an ebb and flow of peoples - Africa to the Middle East and points farther away, then drifting back again?
This area and the Sahara desert are the two places with the were important discoveries remain to be made. Your map of possible caves is brilliant so you deserve a good audience - North American archaeology is still in it's infancy, even though it seems to be only a short period of human occupation. The bedrock work will be in the area you illuminate here, you quote 'Childs' Bravo. .
You’re so right about the Sahara… I can’t even imagine how much cool stuff is out there, I’d especially love to survey for Neolithic sites in some of the central massifs. Thanks for the kind words!
That was interesting and informative. I'm very glad North02 recommended this. I'm a big fan of his work and if this video is any indication then your work is on par with his.
I recently listened to a Dr. Sally Reynolds talk on the footprints in White Sands. She put forward the idea of looking at new migration models, even suggesting South America could have older sites. What are your thoughts on this? Thanks.
I am mildly suspicious of white sands, and sites older than 20k or so- I can’t say I know the site well enough to have a strong opinion - But the date is on the old end of what genetic evidence seems to allow, and the genetics seem to point to a soft preclovis coastal migration model, to my reading. I’ve also heard a lot of concerns from researchers about dating contamination at white sands, and the fuzziness of identifying footprints by excavation, with big journals like science and nature being much less excited to publish concerns about data quality than they are to publish the headline grabbing site report. I try to remain an agnostic though on the debate over the peopling of the americas, and I can imagine older founding populations that left only small traces in the genetic record. So I wouldn’t take my opinions as authoritative. Nor am I ready to dismiss white sands, I’m definitely open to new models that better accommodate the dates. Did she suggest any possible alternative migration models?
@@TheTel' Mildly suspicious', seems a good way to approach white sands dating, so far, but it looks like there is a whole lot of near future potential important information that is going to be further clarifying the site!
@@TheTel White Sands may offer encouragement for paying more attention to Northern Great Basin playa stratigraphy records, especially where tephra water-laid depositional layers could have laid down a fresh pallet for megafauna, and eventually humans, to have recorded their presence with trackways in the fine muds. There may be a lot of hidden stories in those fine mud layers. And, with the emerging sediment DNA science looming soon, new tools might allow cores of these deposits to clarify species presence/absence even w/o finding the actual trackways?
Interesting but not long enough. Please share more about this topic. People who are interested in this might also appreciate Ancient Americans and Indigenous North America, who have both done overviews on the peopling of the Americas.
I was reading obsessively about a site in Israel called Tel Qadesh and thought it would make a nice title. Definitely need to make some Neolithic and Bronze Age Middle East focused videos to live up to the name!
Oh also- a tel more generally is a raised mound, where people have been living so densely for so long that it raises the area above the surrounding landscape… just solid archaeological fill, sometimes dozens of meters high.
However, many coastal areas that had nearby glaciation may be subject to significant isostatic rebound. Perhaps, some low coastal shores 20KA have been raised up above the current shoreline?
For these sites to be buried so deeply, Planet Earth must be sucking hella mineral dust from nearby Space via her Gravitational Force. Not many have thought of that, have you?
Are there any theories of Atlantis (not the fake on in the movies but the one Plato described and depicted in Egypt) existing on this land bridge? Has the area been excavated under the sea? In mv opinion I think Atlantis refers to parts of the Land Bridge between Siberia and Alaska (26,000 yrs ago, the last glacial maximum or ice age) that were still present in Platos time (11,000 yrs ago) before being fully swallowed by the sea. Plato literally described it as a bridge or pillars or something. That is a sea bed/floor that has been untapped for research I think
It’s a pity, but no important Japanese sites has explained in this video though the oldest site of Footprints 23,0000 BP in New Mexico has found and now in debating. Proto-Japanese Sojin before Jomon had crossed the Tsushima Strait by watercraft in around 40,000 BP and their several site's evidence in central part of archipelago in 38,000 BP. has already found. Sojin had collected obsidian from far island more than 25km by boat. Thay had prevailed to northern vast area Hokkaido by around 35,000 Bp and probably continued to go up north along Kelp Highway to seashore of Beringia.
I definitely plan to make some videos about early Japanese prehistory. If you have any researchers whose work I should read, or sites I should learn about, let me know!
I've got a few podcast interviews on Alaskan prehistory coming up, a video on the philosophy of archaeology, and a video on the collapse at the end of the Maya classic period. Be sure to subscribe!
Hopefully with the help and development of LIDAR more sites will be found. Really enjoyed your video
Brilliant. I am thoroughly obsessed with the peopling of The Americas. This is a small channel, but if North 02 is onto you and enjoying the content then you're going places, fella. Well done!
Beautiful work thank you ❤
Very nicely put together. Clear, concise and interesting. I didn't want to miss a thing. You have such a wonderful speaking voice.
Berengian archeology has been the most fascinating area of archaeology for me, its my dream to one day study this area
If you’ve ever got more questions about archaeology up here let me know I’d be happy to give advice/info
The first video that I've watched of yours. Nicely done. I'm subscribing. Thank you. Keep up your good work
Just heard about the the Beringia Standstill and this is the first video in my search for it directly. Congrats on 1000 subs you deserve it.
My ancestors walked across that land bridge, lingered in Alaska for a while, and as the ice withdrew, they ventured further along the northernmost lands, eventually reaching Greenland. According to DNA evidence, my ancestors constituted the final wave of migration to Greenland. Our survival in this challenging journey relied on polar bears, musk oxen, and sea mammals. The mummies discovered in the Uummannaq area belong to my lineage, representing the late migrants who settled in that vast fjord.
Very good video, really sparks curiosity about this lost land.
Thanks!
Great to see a professional make a video we all can follow.
Great video. Clear and interesting. 10/10 would recommend.
Wonderful! as a resident of Alaska I especially appreciated this video. and I think you're really on to something with the idea of locating and searching more caves!
I've watched this several times and it still always shocks me how our species managed to explore and inhabit the most remote areas of the planet. inhabiting the northern siberia facing the artic ocean to the wide open berngian grasslands all within 30,000 years of leaving our home in (Warm) Africa.
@theluftwaffle1 - This is supposition on my part, but it doesn't make sense to me that African dwellers would store up their travel urges for two big migrations. There were no borders, toll booths, or passports in pre-history, so why not an ebb and flow of peoples - Africa to the Middle East and points farther away, then drifting back again?
Great content! Glad I found you through north02
This area and the Sahara desert are the two places with the were important discoveries remain to be made. Your map of possible caves is brilliant so you deserve a good audience - North American archaeology is still in it's infancy, even though it seems to be only a short period of human occupation. The bedrock work will be in the area you illuminate here, you quote 'Childs' Bravo. .
You’re so right about the Sahara… I can’t even imagine how much cool stuff is out there, I’d especially love to survey for Neolithic sites in some of the central massifs. Thanks for the kind words!
With the were most discoveries?
That was interesting and informative. I'm very glad North02 recommended this. I'm a big fan of his work and if this video is any indication then your work is on par with his.
Thanks a ton! I really appreciate it
Very nice channel you've got there my brother
Well done. Gotta feeling youre gonna catch fire bro
Fantastic video!
You vice is soothing 😌 great video new sub
So is his voice. ^_^ (I cannot speak for his vice.)
Great video and subject keep it up
The forest swallows everything up here. Could be artifacts all over the place but you would never know. Looking for caves is a good idea.
North02 sent me here. I`m glad he did. Your channel deserves a much larger audience.
200th sub, keep it up dude! Looking forward to check out the rest of your channel :)
Thanks!
Oh, thanks North 02, for this recommendation! I'm glad, for sure - well done!
I recently listened to a Dr. Sally Reynolds talk on the footprints in White Sands. She put forward the idea of looking at new migration models, even suggesting South America could have older sites. What are your thoughts on this? Thanks.
I am mildly suspicious of white sands, and sites older than 20k or so- I can’t say I know the site well enough to have a strong opinion - But the date is on the old end of what genetic evidence seems to allow, and the genetics seem to point to a soft preclovis coastal migration model, to my reading. I’ve also heard a lot of concerns from researchers about dating contamination at white sands, and the fuzziness of identifying footprints by excavation, with big journals like science and nature being much less excited to publish concerns about data quality than they are to publish the headline grabbing site report. I try to remain an agnostic though on the debate over the peopling of the americas, and I can imagine older founding populations that left only small traces in the genetic record. So I wouldn’t take my opinions as authoritative. Nor am I ready to dismiss white sands, I’m definitely open to new models that better accommodate the dates. Did she suggest any possible alternative migration models?
@@TheTel' Mildly suspicious', seems a good way to approach white sands dating, so far, but it looks like there is a whole lot of near future potential important information that is going to be further clarifying the site!
@@TheTel White Sands may offer encouragement for paying more attention to Northern Great Basin playa stratigraphy records, especially where tephra water-laid depositional layers could have laid down a fresh pallet for megafauna, and eventually humans, to have recorded their presence with trackways in the fine muds. There may be a lot of hidden stories in those fine mud layers. And, with the emerging sediment DNA science looming soon, new tools might allow cores of these deposits to clarify species presence/absence even w/o finding the actual trackways?
Awesomeness 👌🏻
Interesting but not long enough. Please share more about this topic. People who are interested in this might also appreciate Ancient Americans and Indigenous North America, who have both done overviews on the peopling of the Americas.
North02 sent me here and I'm glad he did
North 02 says, Hi!
What do you get the name of your channel name “The Tel” from?
I was reading obsessively about a site in Israel called Tel Qadesh and thought it would make a nice title. Definitely need to make some Neolithic and Bronze Age Middle East focused videos to live up to the name!
Oh also- a tel more generally is a raised mound, where people have been living so densely for so long that it raises the area above the surrounding landscape… just solid archaeological fill, sometimes dozens of meters high.
Most of our ice age history is 400 feet under water at the coasts.
However, many coastal areas that had nearby glaciation may be subject to significant isostatic rebound. Perhaps, some low coastal shores 20KA have been raised up above the current shoreline?
What music underscores?
Hugo Alfven’s legend of the skerries
Another one from the North 02 and also subscribing.... Onwards.
Very interesting. I always wish timelines could be matched up with the centuries and millennia which the Bible seems to indicate
The bible ???
Please, let's stay serious about this topic !!!
@@bogtrottername7001 lol
I missing living in Alaska
I dont recommend just barging into caves in the Alaskan wild
Certain large mammals might not appreciate it for sure
For these sites to be buried so deeply, Planet Earth must be sucking hella mineral dust from nearby Space via her Gravitational Force.
Not many have thought of that, have you?
After 2050, it will all be inaccessible . . .
. . . and Man will be thrust back to the Stone Age.
If he's lucky.
Are there any theories of Atlantis (not the fake on in the movies but the one Plato described and depicted in Egypt) existing on this land bridge? Has the area been excavated under the sea? In mv opinion I think Atlantis refers to parts of the Land Bridge between Siberia and Alaska (26,000 yrs ago, the last glacial maximum or ice age) that were still present in Platos time (11,000 yrs ago) before being fully swallowed by the sea. Plato literally described it as a bridge or pillars or something. That is a sea bed/floor that has been untapped for research I think
PPL! We need to get this dude up to 500 subs! Smash those buttons & feed the algo!! Lol ✌️ 💚 🌲 🤙
286 here. I collect American hand axes.
It’s a pity, but no important Japanese sites has explained in this video though the oldest site of Footprints 23,0000 BP in New Mexico has found and now in debating. Proto-Japanese Sojin before Jomon had crossed the Tsushima Strait by watercraft in around 40,000 BP and their several site's evidence in central part of archipelago in 38,000 BP. has already found. Sojin had collected obsidian from far island more than 25km by boat. Thay had prevailed to northern vast area Hokkaido by around 35,000 Bp and probably continued to go up north along Kelp Highway to seashore of Beringia.
I definitely plan to make some videos about early Japanese prehistory. If you have any researchers whose work I should read, or sites I should learn about, let me know!
Aztlan is Alaska
Ha du you know ?