When my late mother was growing up she lived on a farm with a nearby railway track. Transients would often come through and ask for food in exchange for odd jobs. Mom said they would roast unplucked chickens coated in clay/mud soil and when it harden they would crack it open the feathers would have stuck to the clay and chicken was roasted to perfection.
40:58 the comment, "there´s a great sense of relief among the archeologists", along with the video footage (the smile on the face of that guy while filling up the bucket!) had me giggle!
lovely cheeky british humor. i wish we had more of that kind of stuff in the states... probably why i watch a lot of british comedians and only a handful of american ones
Yeah, if only this show was giving credit to the Time Team group who spent the money and did the dig. But it's not, this Timeline group is a rip off just getting advertising and Patreon money. They are blatantly claiming this is their dig and it is not!
This has got to be one of the best episodes ever, and we've seen - and we've seen them all, at least once! From the human foot prints to the aurochs print, and the feast looks amazing! We'll be watching this one again, I'm sure.
Thank God for RUclips. I couldn't watch this show when it was on. Turned into my favorite show after it was taken off the air. Thanks to RUclips I am able to watch the 20 years of time team plus specials. Had anyone watched the new time team? If so, any good?
Despite of it all-- The hardships of digging, collecting data, knowing where to look, where to dig, getting information as much as possible, in sometimes such horrible, unpleasant, untidy, at times, quite dangerous situations-- You only have three days to do it.. 😄😄😄 my favorite line in every Time Team show.. ❤️
As I am watching the archeologists wallowing around in the mud, I am reminded of a line from a favorite movie ... "Dennis! There's some lovely filth down here!"
the footprints being preserved under water really blows my mind, having just the right conditions to cover them up so that they could be uncovered and separated without damaging them
7,000 years ago….. Grog is like “okay start walking that way and we can compare our footprints to the older ones. “ Stone Age Tony “what is that going to tell us?”
The British banter is awesome. Like old Shakespeare. "I'm impressed with how delicately you handle that apparatus" she jests. "Indeed, I am a very delicate chap really!" He retorts.
Take if from a potter.Dry the block dry,quick smack from a mallet.Take the shards and slake them, decant out the fines with water, run a series of mesh screens with the effluent.You will not break anything and you will not loose artifacts.
I believe they want to know the superposition of the artifacts if they can (aka the layer in which they occur so they know which ones are older, which are younger, etc). Edit: jk I got to the cement mixer part lol
Dry it may damage some of the remains. The change in humidity and salt conditions can break some flints, pottery, bones, sells and wood, if they are very, very lucky and find some.
There are special rubber boots used by Thames mudlarkers to walk on mucky surfaces, almost like snow shoes. I hope you can get some for future excavation.
he was doing fantastic work there, incredibly interesting site, and incredibly challenging, even for the younger folks. hats off to him. id love to see the amassed knowledge that his research and findings have taught us about our past
I love this so much!!!! This is such a cool save - I'm glad its being cared for. Sea archaeology seems super sketchy from what I know! I am starting to wonder how frequently time team shows up at random doors while filming....
I remember one where the site they were investigating was larger (or in a slightly different place) than they were expecting. They had to go knocking on people's doors to ask if they could dig holes in their gardens. A few people agreed to that!
I LOVE HISTORY!!! I'd love to watch anything about one of the first humans and I can't wait til we see and learn about our oceans that are of 70% of our planet yet we know lk 10% at most of it..that means we know NOTHING of our plantet
It was great to see you find out the types of foods they were living on thousands of years ago. And create that marvelous feast. It would have been nice to show a bit more of the final dishes. Would have loved to see them crack open the clay with the fish inside. I guess your cameramen were too hungry and wanted to get tucked in before you greedy archeologists scarfed the lot. LOL
Finds 2 pebbles, some seeds, and foot prints. "Yep, this is proof that cavemen were here 7000 years ago. They used these rocks as stone weapons to hunt these seeds."
Upstream the flat lands turned into flood plains Ref Usk 2020/1 with no food to forage so autumn and winter is a sensible time as The Severn full of food...love this...
Those Mesolithic people would be like : Wait a minute... you can go anywhere, eat anything, and do anything you want... and your spending your life looking at my 7,000 year old footprints?
It's interesting that Brigid was wearing a Maori greenstone pendant. I'm sure she would have found a lot of similarities between the British mesolithic and way of life of the early Maori .
Usually I am not huge fan of Phil Harding, but he gets me on board every time he talks about flints. That's a passion that deserves admiration. As do all the people who are really digging for these flints. Stewart Ainsworths work is also always amazing. How do you learn to know what was landscape like 5000 years ago?
He could trim his fingernails.........i have watched every episode of time team, and enjoyed them all. all of these shows at least 20 years old. google-- timeteam
@@dsloop3907 After so many episodes watched, I've got over the fingernails. There are more scary things in the soil, so I consider his fingernails as some kind of self defense.
It's cool to want to believe this Theory of wet footprints in the mud are from so long ago but it's gonna have to take a lot more proof to get me to believe.
@@BoingBB rain and erosion? You take a asphalt driveway. Rain, sun, and erosion, it is going to look like a stone driveway in 30 years. Then there is the scientific philosophy of global warming, keep that grant money coming in I will say anything.
What is the urgency to examine the recovered blocks of mud? Given the limited amount of time, it would make sense to recover as much as possible and then "excavate" it at leisure. Once it is safe on dry land, there is no need to rush.
Tony conveys it a little weirdly I think. Each time they visit a site that is being eroded, the narrative almost makes it seem like they've been brought in three days before doomsday. The situation is more likely to be: this site will disappear in the coming years, and TimeTeam's schedule is three days, as usual. Therefor there is only the rush to make a nice archeology program in three shooting days. You want to have some finds to show the viewers, rather than having them watch people lug mud around for an hour. I suppose one could argue they could cut the footage of moving and excavating together. But that's probably more of a hassle then they're prepared to make out of it.
I just realized after seeing her on Time Team for years I find something very appealing and quite fetching about Brigitte. I wish she had a way of seeing these comments since next time I go to England I would look her up.
@@alphabetsoup1557 - LOL! Yeah, right, I could show her my collection of Civil War mini-balls...lol. I realized I had misspelled her name: it's Brigid, not Brigitte. So please forgive me. Yes, indeed, I've been watching that girl for 20+ years...I have no idea what she looks like now.
I like how this show goes places people have worked for years, decades, probably even centuries in some cases, yet think they will find a lot in 3 days.
And yet that show brings in a lot of manpower to support small archeologic societies and projects, and possible funding, and renewed local interest in the whole matter. All that is very valuable.
Actually the artist is probably not far off with his depiction of mesolithic clothing. At sites in other places from the paleolithic and mesolithic they’ve found jewelry that looks like you could buy it in a modern department store. Fashion do be like that.
a dress cut in the side like that but long in the front and back would offer mobility but still protection from the elements. thats the whole reason many longer dresses have a slit, is to actually be able to walk.
I sort of suspect that the reason why dogs beg, is that after thousands of years of interacting with humans, in some sort of Pavlovian response, they expect to be compensated for their work in tracking animals, and that behavior is engrained in the modern domestic dog as a result of this long standing partnership between man and dog.
That's interesting, but also very misguided and unsuccessful. "Similar" by what measure? Other breeds created without the same intentionality bear a similar resemblance.
Oh man, there is something magic about some english people digging earth trying to find historical items and speaking with this beautiful language.. lol
A great insight into the lives of people who were living in the mesolithic age. I think the cut of the dress drawn in the picture is both modest and practical. A full dress, either long or short would impede movement and give no covering when a woman is crouched or sitting. The split in the sides allows for free movement and also provides a cover for modesty.
many years ago,when i was a young Chef, we wer doing -Poussin - (small chickens), stuffed with wild rice and baked in a clay -cover- , like it was done here with the fish...
Tony could of been a gentleman and helped Brigid out of the mud. No, he’s too cynical. I love it where Brigid and the young boy made foot prints together. So cool.
It’s not gone forever. Oceans warm, eventually another ice age comes, oceans fall. It may be another 20-30 thousand years. But 4ever is much longer than that.
Tony and this team are an absolute gem. I quite enjoy this type of program, but few make me laugh right out loud like this one.
When my late mother was growing up she lived on a farm with a nearby railway track. Transients would often come through and ask for food in exchange for odd jobs. Mom said they would roast unplucked chickens coated in clay/mud soil and when it harden they would crack it open the feathers would have stuck to the clay and chicken was roasted to perfection.
Now that is pretty cool that's the first I ever heard that thanks for sharing
Oh that would be great not to have to pluck the chicken.
I would have to starve lol
Hedgehogs were cooked in that way too. Haven't seem many around this year.
You'd lose all that lovely fatty skin though.
Tony deserved an Oscar for writing something out of almost nothing on this one, but I fully enjoyed watching it!
40:58 the comment, "there´s a great sense of relief among the archeologists", along with the video footage (the smile on the face of that guy while filling up the bucket!) had me giggle!
lovely cheeky british humor. i wish we had more of that kind of stuff in the states... probably why i watch a lot of british comedians and only a handful of american ones
Phil to Tony : "You've got a low centre of gravity or what ?" :-D That one made my day !
Now they know how the French felt at Agincourt, trudging through the mud. what with the rain of English arrows and all.
I burst into laughter. Phil 1 and Tony 0 as he needs Phil's hand to save him, from sinking! Yeah to Phil
Have been non stop watching Time Team on Amazon, so GREAT to see Rads., Matt and Bridge, again on RUclips and Henry too!!!.
40:57 well done, camera guy. Well done.
... " a great sense of relief, among all the.. "
Plus. And an Englishman wearing posh clothes and a posh accent is running a cement mixer.
😂😂😂
So fascinating! I'm old now however I love learning. That place looks like it would smell horrible. Keep digging!! My fascination is rocks so...
I absoltly love this show. And Tony well I could love that guy for real. All his stuff is fun and educational.
Yeah, if only this show was giving credit to the Time Team group who spent the money and did the dig. But it's not, this Timeline group is a rip off just getting advertising and Patreon money. They are blatantly claiming this is their dig and it is not!
9,000 years from now some future archeologists will find their footprints and wonder wtf they were doing.
You are only supposed to say 6,000 years. Don't confuse facts. 9000 years BC plus 2000 years ad is 11,000 years. Don't confuse them
@@timmoles9259 wtf
Future archeologist: Hey! look what i've found, footprints of primitive archeologists... HahahaHahaha
The alien anthropologists will be doing the work. We done
This has got to be one of the best episodes ever, and we've seen - and we've seen them all, at least once! From the human foot prints to the aurochs print, and the feast looks amazing! We'll be watching this one again, I'm sure.
I miss Arthur's drawings. Such an incredible talent.
This is the first time I have seen Phil’s nails dirty! He digs and yet he always has clean nails! Not this time! Amazed!
Nobody is noticing he is wearing daisy dukes tho 😆
Thank God for RUclips. I couldn't watch this show when it was on. Turned into my favorite show after it was taken off the air. Thanks to RUclips I am able to watch the 20 years of time team plus specials.
Had anyone watched the new time team? If so, any good?
"What do you reckon we can do here, Mick?" "Well, let's DIG A TRENCH..." 😛
We have something similar here in Botswana but the foot prints are on rocks (huge prints)
That's amazing
If i had much money i would sure have visited it ...interesting though 😊
Got a pic to share?
I've read about these. Very cool.
The ones in Africa are much older than these spoken of in this video.
"well I'm a very delicate chap really" lol
You guys are so good at what you do.
Despite of it all--
The hardships of digging, collecting data, knowing where to look, where to dig, getting information as much as possible, in sometimes such horrible, unpleasant, untidy, at times, quite dangerous situations--
You only have three days to do it.. 😄😄😄 my favorite line in every Time Team show.. ❤️
As I am watching the archeologists wallowing around in the mud, I am reminded of a line from a favorite movie ...
"Dennis! There's some lovely filth down here!"
Informative and evocative. About the best archeology can achieve!
42:11 I've only ever heard that accent spoken by DLI lads, with a budgie on their bonnet and too-fast marching... 🤘
Love the details and the unique methods to find them.
That looks like a hellishly fun dig.
the footprints being preserved under water really blows my mind, having just the right conditions to cover them up so that they could be uncovered and separated without damaging them
If you find Phil's hat on the mud dig him up quick before the tide comes in.HA HA HA.
he's probably still there with scuba gear looking for more cow's teeth. he was quite excited at that
I absolutely love this show
always a beautiful show, with beautiful people
7,000 years ago….. Grog is like “okay start walking that way and we can compare our footprints to the older ones. “ Stone Age Tony “what is that going to tell us?”
The British banter is awesome.
Like old Shakespeare.
"I'm impressed with how delicately you handle that apparatus" she jests.
"Indeed, I am a very delicate chap really!" He retorts.
9:58 great example of how physically taxing archeological fieldwork can be
Take if from a potter.Dry the block dry,quick smack from a mallet.Take the shards and slake them, decant out the fines with water, run a series of mesh screens with the effluent.You will not break anything and you will not loose artifacts.
I believe they want to know the superposition of the artifacts if they can (aka the layer in which they occur so they know which ones are older, which are younger, etc).
Edit: jk I got to the cement mixer part lol
Dry it may damage some of the remains. The change in humidity and salt conditions can break some flints, pottery, bones, sells and wood, if they are very, very lucky and find some.
Lose*
There are special rubber boots used by Thames mudlarkers to walk on mucky surfaces, almost like snow shoes. I hope you can get some for future excavation.
I have just read that Victor passed away on the 10th of March, R.I.P sir.
How did this happen? I do not see any reports online.
@@k8eekatt he just got old, he was a proud 85 years old, Google his name you'll find the report.
he was doing fantastic work there, incredibly interesting site, and incredibly challenging, even for the younger folks. hats off to him. id love to see the amassed knowledge that his research and findings have taught us about our past
Makes his art work on these digs really invaluable history with beautiful artistry.
"narked" I'm always learning new words from Phil.
A very informative slice into life at that time. Brilliant episode
Love from the old lady in Texas may God bless you always and forever
I love this so much!!!! This is such a cool save - I'm glad its being cared for. Sea archaeology seems super sketchy from what I know!
I am starting to wonder how frequently time team shows up at random doors while filming....
They’ll be at your door before you know it.
I remember one where the site they were investigating was larger (or in a slightly different place) than they were expecting. They had to go knocking on people's doors to ask if they could dig holes in their gardens. A few people agreed to that!
@@BoingBB If I lived in the area I probably would let them just out of sheer curiosity! Unfortunately, I'm in the wrong country.....
@@Heothbremel Yeah, if they came knocking on my door I would certainly let them dig. I'd probably get a chair out and sit watching them too!
i love the shorts he chose to go with the rain boots
I LOVE HISTORY!!! I'd love to watch anything about one of the first humans and I can't wait til we see and learn about our oceans that are of 70% of our planet yet we know lk 10% at most of it..that means we know NOTHING of our plantet
Ignorant we are indeed
I had no idea Noddy Holder was also an archaeologist! Too cool!
Love this show I think Phil Harding is crazy cool 😎
40:57 "...a great sense of relief..." with that visual. CHEEKY!!
I love the whole Time Team, but Stewart has a special spot in my heart :)
Did anybody else catch the camera joke at 40:59? Haha!
He says “there is a real sense of relief among the archeologists” at the same time... it was an obvious joke
getting quite a giggle at that
It was great to see you find out the types of foods they were living on thousands of years ago. And create that marvelous feast.
It would have been nice to show a bit more of the final dishes. Would have loved to see them crack open the clay with the fish inside.
I guess your cameramen were too hungry and wanted to get tucked in before you greedy archeologists scarfed the lot. LOL
Love to see the Land Rovers in the background!!
45:02 The logo on his hat looks like what I used to put into a 45 RPM record to play on my 33 1/3 RPM record player. Dating myself? Yes, yes, I am.
Understood the reference 100%.
I might have a couple in a box somewhere...
Stay safe.
And think, if you would have been born in 33, You would have been 45 in 78.
@@Joeybagofdonuts76 That would have been a record.
Love the art work...
Thanks for posting
Finds 2 pebbles, some seeds, and foot prints. "Yep, this is proof that cavemen were here 7000 years ago. They used these rocks as stone weapons to hunt these seeds."
😂😂
Well.......they were pretty big seeds......in their defense .......🌯
@@darklynoon6847 vicious seeds, saber-toothed most likely.
@@paladro the fear would be palpable......the nightmare the poor children must have endured because of evil seed pack.....
@@paladro I’m now afraid to go to my garden out of the fear of getting beaten up in my own garden.......scary stuff......👀
Those shorts...dude must be really brave to wear them on camera ;D
Lol i was thinking the same thing dude is wearing daisy dukes
Totally the fashion when he was younger
He's got the legs for it...
that's phil for ya
archeologists are fearless.
Upstream the flat lands turned into flood plains Ref Usk 2020/1 with no food to forage so autumn and winter is a sensible time as The Severn full of food...love this...
My grandfather’s last name was Severn. 🤔
Fascinating!
I really loved the “Time Team” series.
“We have found the low walls of a roman villa, which indicates that romans were very short people.”
I've missed Mick the most 💚
Those Mesolithic people would be like : Wait a minute... you can go anywhere, eat anything, and do anything you want... and your spending your life looking at my 7,000 year old footprints?
Oh. Would they be like that?
@@alphabetsoup1557 yes
Or they just might throw seeds at the intruders
It's interesting that Brigid was wearing a Maori greenstone pendant. I'm sure she would have found a lot of similarities between the British mesolithic and way of life of the early Maori .
Brigid is from New Zealand
Yes, Pounamo- a type of Jade. Sacres treasure.
Very Interesting...
Usually I am not huge fan of Phil Harding, but he gets me on board every time he talks about flints. That's a passion that deserves admiration. As do all the people who are really digging for these flints.
Stewart Ainsworths work is also always amazing. How do you learn to know what was landscape like 5000 years ago?
He could trim his fingernails.........i have watched every episode of time team, and enjoyed them all. all of these shows at least 20 years old.
google-- timeteam
@@dsloop3907 After so many episodes watched, I've got over the fingernails. There are more scary things in the soil, so I consider his fingernails as some kind of self defense.
Phil is the man. He’s the one who keeps me coming back to these episodes.
I only love bossy women. And that's what Time Team brought me. All them telling what they are known all about everything.
@@dsloop3907 Phil is a classic guitar player, hence his nails. You should have read comments too...
I find it amazing that the muddy foot prints weren’t washed away by the tide a 1000 years ago or got stepped on by some clammer.
It was marshland back then. The tide didn't come in that far. There would have been quite a lot of solid ground, even if it was a bit muddy. :)
It's cool to want to believe this Theory of wet footprints in the mud are from so long ago but it's gonna have to take a lot more proof to get me to believe.
@@BoingBB rain and erosion? You take a asphalt driveway. Rain, sun, and erosion, it is going to look like a stone driveway in 30 years. Then there is the scientific philosophy of global warming, keep that grant money coming in I will say anything.
40:58 That was done on purpose. A great sense of relief indeed.
I love Tony and this programming.
‘You can replace it with an exactly similar piece of flint’. Nick Barton. What is ‘exactly similar’? Lol
It's season 11, episode 8 in case anyone wondered.
What year then?...
@@jeffsmith2022 It was filmed in 2003 and first broadcast on 22nd February 2004.
What is the urgency to examine the recovered blocks of mud? Given the limited amount of time, it would make sense to recover as much as possible and then "excavate" it at leisure. Once it is safe on dry land, there is no need to rush.
Tony conveys it a little weirdly I think. Each time they visit a site that is being eroded, the narrative almost makes it seem like they've been brought in three days before doomsday. The situation is more likely to be: this site will disappear in the coming years, and TimeTeam's schedule is three days, as usual.
Therefor there is only the rush to make a nice archeology program in three shooting days. You want to have some finds to show the viewers, rather than having them watch people lug mud around for an hour.
I suppose one could argue they could cut the footage of moving and excavating together. But that's probably more of a hassle then they're prepared to make out of it.
I just realized after seeing her on Time Team for years I find something very appealing and quite fetching about Brigitte. I wish she had a way of seeing these comments since next time I go to England I would look her up.
I'm sure she'd love to hear from you.
@@alphabetsoup1557 - LOL! Yeah, right, I could show her my collection of Civil War mini-balls...lol. I realized I had misspelled her name: it's Brigid, not Brigitte. So please forgive me. Yes, indeed, I've been watching that girl for 20+ years...I have no idea what she looks like now.
Sorry but She's back home in New Zealand.
I like how this show goes places people have worked for years, decades, probably even centuries in some cases, yet think they will find a lot in 3 days.
And yet that show brings in a lot of manpower to support small archeologic societies and projects, and possible funding, and renewed local interest in the whole matter. All that is very valuable.
@@juliajs1752 ❤️ ~✿~❧~🌿~❧~✿~ ❤️
[Q] How does an Eskimo, build his home?
[A] E Gloos it together
Is the theme song available as a ring tone? How cool would that be?!?!
Love the footprints. Took a picture of this last night. Is it a footprint too? Once I figure out how to get it here.
Actually the artist is probably not far off with his depiction of mesolithic clothing. At sites in other places from the paleolithic and mesolithic they’ve found jewelry that looks like you could buy it in a modern department store. Fashion do be like that.
a dress cut in the side like that but long in the front and back would offer mobility but still protection from the elements. thats the whole reason many longer dresses have a slit, is to actually be able to walk.
I sort of suspect that the reason why dogs beg, is that after thousands of years of interacting with humans, in some sort of Pavlovian response, they expect to be compensated for their work in tracking animals, and that behavior is engrained in the modern domestic dog as a result of this long standing partnership between man and dog.
i suspect the lack of nutrition in dog kibble plays a big part as well
@@miguelmoreno-wo1lq I suspect it is just a dog trait as feral dogs still do that.
Brilliant.
They've retro-bred cattle to achieve an Aurochs similar beast called Heck Cattle.
That's interesting, but also very misguided and unsuccessful. "Similar" by what measure? Other breeds created without the same intentionality bear a similar resemblance.
They are describing a Swiss Army Knife (17:00)
Original Austin mini in the back round near Tony at 41:27
Oh man, there is something magic about some english people digging earth trying to find historical items and speaking with this beautiful language.. lol
Wtf are you on?
@@MrLoobu Don`t know, maybe I played many games and watched many movies, where all the archeologist's protagonists are English dudes lol
@@raf.nogueira I fully agree, in my mind God even has a fancy British accent, not that I’ve heard him, I just imagine that.
Glad you appreciate it 😊
Though this episode is truly Pre-History
'Rising sea levels'! I bet that if you were to go there today the sea level won't have risen one iota!
It's all worth it when you get to 19:23 and get a good look at Phil's shorts
Why only 3days!?never any extended period for something important?
A 4th day morning once for bones..
Phil is the man
A great insight into the lives of people who were living in the mesolithic age. I think the cut of the dress drawn in the picture is both modest and practical. A full dress, either long or short would impede movement and give no covering when a woman is crouched or sitting. The split in the sides allows for free movement and also provides a cover for modesty.
modesty, something stone age people were famously focused on in their day to day
@@freeaudiojungle4407 oh yes. Absolutely 😁
16:43 - "Exactly similar". >.
Sense of relief! Lol! Too good :)
Idk who this guy at the beginning is but I just fast forward thru whatever he always says. I’m watching time team don’t sell me some other stuff
many years ago,when i was a young Chef, we wer doing -Poussin - (small chickens), stuffed with wild rice and baked in a clay -cover- , like it was done here with the fish...
Gotta be a carved marine animal tusk out there some where. and things made of clamshell. and a beach boy's 8 track or somthing
Tony could of been a gentleman and helped Brigid out of the mud. No, he’s too cynical. I love it where Brigid and the young boy made foot prints together. So cool.
Equality is a bugger isn't it.
If he had helped some one would say that he was a mysogynist
The lock down has taken me yet to another weird video .
These videos are very interesting and are well worth the watch. Reijer Zaaijer has the best youtube channel for them.
I'm wondering how this video is "weird"...
Obviously the people camped there because there was good cell service! lol
They were mobile people ... so they had to rely on their mobile phones.
How else does one catch fast food?
Yeah M8 if they get lucky they may find the phone.........
Is the clay there, after being cleaned, good for pottery? Looks like it would be very good for pottery.
One Thing I noticed about the Foot Prints in New Mexico are the Length of the Toes.
The last Ice Age ended about 10,000 yrs ago, not about 9,000 yrs BC - Woopsy
It's not like the proof is etched in stone.
Oh, wait.
@@hashtag415 A goof I presume
@@hashtag415 You rarely find gem comments like yours on youtube. Made me snicker a bit.
@@Schmorgus
Where does one find them?
I'll go there instead.😅
Curious to know how this site has fared since this excavation.
Wonder if in testing out the foot prints in the mud, if anyone had animal skin foot coverings.
17:08 A beautiful moment ^_^
18:52 they only managed too salvage a tent!!? It'd be difficult if English was not your first lingo.
The kids making the footprints we're running around like that to avoid the stork sized 🦟🦟🦟 mosquitos
Everyone knows the story about the footprints.
They were made by the engineers when they came from Outer Space to seed the Earth.
THEY WERE MADE BY yo mama
@@jimneedham4640
Yo mama soooooo big
Her belt size is equator😋
this was the earth that they put together after the incident with the interstellar bypass, right?
@@ghomerhust Using wormholes that were made by the big nasty things from Dune...
If forensic microarcheology is back-breaking, then i must be Atlas himself.
A gal even says it's very enjoyable laster in the video 🥲
It’s not gone forever. Oceans warm, eventually another ice age comes, oceans fall. It may be another 20-30 thousand years. But 4ever is much longer than that.