The Perplexing Prehistory of the Sahara

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  • Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @NORTH02
    @NORTH02  Год назад +149

    What would you guys like to learn next?

    • @Pouncer9000
      @Pouncer9000 Год назад +16

      I'd like to learn more about horses drawn by chariots? (14:55):)

    • @peyxander
      @peyxander Год назад +6

      Renowned explorer's discoveries of ancient humans

    • @rring44
      @rring44 Год назад +27

      The beginnings of animal husbandry and maybe even how we domesticated various cereal grains.

    • @Helmann9265
      @Helmann9265 Год назад +30

      1: south America prehistoric life in the amazonas
      2: the The origins of humans in the Pacific Ocean. Polynesians, Polynesia. (Maori?) Do they originate from South America? or on the side of the Far East (from China) 🤔
      3:" Ubeidiya site" in Jorden Valley makes me curious 🧐 (Cenozoic---> Pleistocene era)

    • @hannahdixon8365
      @hannahdixon8365 Год назад +6

      id love to learn more about the travel of different species, esp overseas, and how they did it. it fascinates me how much work must have gone into it or how long it wouldve taken compared to today

  • @dondidotchi
    @dondidotchi Год назад +492

    I live in algeria and now I'm in a city called tindouf and its in the Sahara.. This region is not well studied

    • @naponroy
      @naponroy Год назад +33

      I've been over on the other side of the Mauritanian border. How is it in Tindouf? Is it safe for travel? Is French widely spoken?

    • @dondidotchi
      @dondidotchi Год назад +47

      Oui tu peux utiliser le français ici
      And about safety yeah it is safe even though its a sensitive place cause of the borders and all that sahraoui and Moroccan case
      You are welcome here the locals are very welcoming

    • @csx3180
      @csx3180 Год назад +41

      ​@@naponroyit's miserable, absolutely nothing to see, and you can't travel freely, since the area is given to the POLISARIO front by Algeria, it practically aims to be a mini (imaginary) temporary sahraoui state, it's being investigated for human rights violations such as torture and killing of countless voices that protest the state or caught trying to escape to the moroccan controlled Sahara, You can find info online about the topic, give it a try Sametime

    • @naponroy
      @naponroy Год назад +26

      @@dondidotchi Like I said, I have been on the Mauritanian side, and it was very friendly. The desert somehow has such a beautiful draw. Thanks for the welcome

    • @naponroy
      @naponroy Год назад +10

      @@csx3180 Where do you recomend I look online? Like I said before, the Mauritanian side was said to be dangerous but it was really ok. You really think it;d be dangerous to go there?

  • @Glassgothgirl
    @Glassgothgirl Год назад +483

    No worries about video output. You're investing in your academic development right now, and that in turn means enhanced content for us later! This is a fascinating video and I'm glad you brought up acceptance of **Natural** climate change at the end. The lessons we should be learning now is not to mess with the planet on such a level. Deserts are as important as lush forest in terms of diversity. Enjoy your time in Italy and happy studies!

    • @scottconlon5124
      @scottconlon5124 Год назад +16

      If we can destroy I assume we can create

    • @eliteventurer62
      @eliteventurer62 Год назад +9

      Extremely heart warming to see positive and encouraging comments.

    • @xLILxWANGx
      @xLILxWANGx Год назад +3

      Yes be told what to think not how! I mean learn!

    • @ThursonJames
      @ThursonJames Год назад +4

      “It wasn’t ‘natural’! The ancient Atlantans did it, even though they also didn’t exist!”
      Should’ve been all caps, but I couldn’t bring myself to do it…

    • @renato7184
      @renato7184 Год назад +3

      ​@@scottconlon5124 Destroy is a lot easyier than create

  • @iamb34
    @iamb34 Год назад +61

    This is not only beautiful but soothing, your videos are the best when you’re walking or in the bus or whenever, it’s basically a high quality audiobook
    Keep up North!

    • @daylightbright7675
      @daylightbright7675 Год назад +1

      I...well yes I suppose you would be "in" the bus. Jeez even though I'd always say you're "on" the bus, that really doesn't make a lot of sense when you actually think about it lmao

    • @florentineeffect
      @florentineeffect Год назад

      @@daylightbright7675typical Redditor 🤣

    • @daylightbright7675
      @daylightbright7675 Год назад +2

      @@florentineeffect I'm saying that it makes more sense to say it that way when you think about it? We say "in the car." Why tf do we say ON the bus? Are you riding on the bike rack or up on the roof? No, no you're not. English is weird

  • @marjoriejohnston3038
    @marjoriejohnston3038 Год назад +67

    I love the ancient rock art that leaves us a flavour of the times.

    • @oneshothunter9877
      @oneshothunter9877 Год назад +13

      I live in Greenland, and recently I've been carving both elephants and rhinos on cliff walls here, preferably near the inland ice.
      Wonder what people will think if my carvings are found some thousands of years from now. 😁

    • @perceivedvelocity9914
      @perceivedvelocity9914 Год назад +4

      ​@@oneshothunter9877 I wonder what future generations will think of modern monuments. For example Mount Rushmore in the US. Imagine coming across that if you didn't know why it was put there.

    • @maxsmith8196
      @maxsmith8196 Год назад +4

      @@perceivedvelocity9914 I feel like at this point we have left behind way too much in the archelogical record to surprise anyone with what they find…

    • @samuraijackoff5354
      @samuraijackoff5354 Год назад

      @maxsmith8196
      If enough time past, a lot of the things we do will just disappear. The dinosaurs lived for thousands of years before us and we have only bones and some eggs. For us humans we only have recent things in the grand scheme of things, everything from before is hard to find.

  • @paulrward
    @paulrward Год назад +145

    The Circular Tools you show at 8:39 are quite well known to North American Anthropologists
    and Archaeologists - they are Hide Scrapers, used to remove the flesh and fat from animal
    hides without damaging the hides, prior to tanning.

    • @conniead5206
      @conniead5206 Год назад +1

      The disks seem too round to be an effective or efficient hide scraping tool. Do not look like other stone tools used for that either.

    • @atomic_bomba
      @atomic_bomba Год назад +7

      @@conniead5206Their rounded edges hide a very real sharpness. You can find examples of other circular hide-scrapers from prehistoric caves around Israel.

    • @ElGreaseMan
      @ElGreaseMan Год назад

      ⁠​⁠@@atomic_bomba I think Connie means that there is no flat or blunted portion/segment that would go into the palm during the scraping, therefore, the tools are “too round” to be effective. Maybe?

    • @atomic_bomba
      @atomic_bomba Год назад +1

      @@ElGreaseMan Not really. Appearances can be deceiving. Think of it like the lid of a can - round, but very sharp.

    • @ElGreaseMan
      @ElGreaseMan Год назад +1

      @@atomic_bomba Oh no, I'm fully aware of how sharp stones can be. Obsidian can be sharper than metal. What I'm saying is, imagine using the ild of a can as a cutting tool. All edges are razor sharp which leaves no edge to rest against the palm for more pressure. You'd have to use only the fingers to grip the tool.

  • @sharpiepenfinepoint
    @sharpiepenfinepoint Год назад +85

    Prehistoric art is probably my favorite thing, loved seeing so much of it!

    • @harrietharlow9929
      @harrietharlow9929 Год назад +7

      My late godson was enthralled with prehistoric art, especially cave art. I am, too. I especiay ove te art of caves such as Lasceaux andAltimira. They had a wonderful sense of techinque and perspective was incredible.
      One interesting development is that Neanderthals not ony produced cave art, but they were probaby the first cave artists in Europe. Paintings were found in caves in Spain that have been dates to about 65,000 years. this says that the artistic impulse has been with us for a long, long time now.

  • @Kadath_Gaming
    @Kadath_Gaming Год назад +64

    If you regreen the Sahara, you cut off the nitrate flow through the trade winds which precipitates out in the daily rainfall in the Amazon basin. So if you look back in time in the Amazon basin you find contemporary environmental retreat and civilisational spread at times when the Sahara is greener.

    • @mrbaab5932
      @mrbaab5932 Год назад

      Look at that latitude of the Sahara and the Amazon. The Sahara is up north and parallel with Florida, USA and Northern Mexico, while the Amazon is parallel to the Congo and Angola.

    • @4d4fastwitch454
      @4d4fastwitch454 Год назад +17

      @@mrbaab5932 hey stop making dumb comments on everybody’s posts, if you don’t know something go look it up before you speak because you are consistently wrong everytime you mind someone else’s business.

    • @4d4fastwitch454
      @4d4fastwitch454 Год назад +13

      @@mrbaab5932 what he said is true, the Amazon depends on dust from the Sahara.

    • @C-Farsene_5
      @C-Farsene_5 Год назад +9

      @@4d4fastwitch454 the amazon would still exist thanks to the rich rivers that flow from the andes and the general moisture just not in the same scale or size

    • @haotian9421
      @haotian9421 Год назад +2

      If the Amazon needs dust blown across the Atlantic, how do the rainforests of Australasia and Africa thrive so well? There doesn’t seem to be another comparable dust source that might fertilise those rainforests, and it seems unlikely that the dust would get blown right around the world to the Congo without getting dispersed or rained down to the ground?

  • @lastofmygeneration
    @lastofmygeneration Год назад +142

    When people try to say Ancient Egyptian civilization seemed to spring from nowhere, I try to communicate to them this completely ignores what we know about prehistory. It makes perfect sense they would congregate along the Nile after the inland lakes dried up. There is no doubt they learned some amazing strategies for survival while the Sahara was turning to desert.

    • @IsaacHarvison-mt5xt
      @IsaacHarvison-mt5xt Год назад +4

      No Egyptian new who they were they knew who lived around them at the time they pottery depicting different tribes and them 😂😂 they weren't dark skinned Africans

    • @lastofmygeneration
      @lastofmygeneration Год назад +29

      @@IsaacHarvison-mt5xt what exactly are you scoffing at here?

    • @romanpaladino
      @romanpaladino Год назад +33

      @@IsaacHarvison-mt5xt You shouldn't be laughing when you can't even write a coherent post.

    • @benjammin1212
      @benjammin1212 Год назад +10

      @@IsaacHarvison-mt5xt Err black pharaoh's ???

    • @Ahmedpsykosgutt
      @Ahmedpsykosgutt Год назад

      What?
      @@IsaacHarvison-mt5xt

  • @ordinaryman2299
    @ordinaryman2299 Год назад +47

    imagine all the great wooden monuments we will never know about ???

  • @sabrinaleedance
    @sabrinaleedance Год назад +16

    This makes so much sense that Egypt became the civilization it became, bc all of the people of the Sahara and their civilizations, culture, and technology mustve migrated to the Nile reigon when their homelands became uninhabitable

    • @rudynathan8852
      @rudynathan8852 3 месяца назад +1

      Fun fact: the nile river was formed after the sahara dried up

  • @HistoryTime
    @HistoryTime Год назад +147

    Loved this one. Nice work!

  • @smacky101
    @smacky101 Год назад +32

    Thanks for still putting time into these videos. They are always welcome even if we have to wait :)

  • @owellafehr5191
    @owellafehr5191 Год назад +32

    That rock art is amazing! I can't believe I've never seen pictures of any of it before. A lot of it is so stylistically unique from rock art in other parts of the world. I particularly love the giraffes at 10:01 and 10:05 and the crocodiles at 10:12.

    • @hildahilpert5018
      @hildahilpert5018 Год назад +3

      My late father was in Africa during WW2.He spoke about the cave paintings in the Lybian Desert.He was a flight crew chief and airplane mechanic.He spoke about flying over that area during the war, and you could see what looked like the remains of villages or towns from the Air.Asked if any archeologists had done excavations there.He said not that he knew of ,because of the difficulty getting to these areas.

    • @agent1821
      @agent1821 Год назад

      Mo

  • @oscarerikssonbrindbergs3572
    @oscarerikssonbrindbergs3572 Год назад +13

    Greatings from Sweden. I'm currentlly writing an appointment on human evolution and your ancient human series has been a great help. Love your videos, keep doing you.

    • @acaydia2982
      @acaydia2982 9 месяцев назад

      We didn’t really evolve as much as we interbred.

  • @JJ-fe1mx
    @JJ-fe1mx Год назад +14

    Huge fan of your content. I’m genuinely appreciative you take the time and put in so much effort.

  • @NextToToddliness
    @NextToToddliness Год назад +47

    Always appreciate the time and quality you put into these videos!

  • @brooklyna007
    @brooklyna007 Год назад +65

    Thank you so much for doing a video on the green Sahara. It is one of the portions of the Neolithic transition that is nearly completely lost to us. It is impossible to figure out where the Niger-Congo, Bantu, Guanches and Fulani civilizations trace back to without knowing what their interactions with the Saharan people were. I really hope we start getting clues like ancient DNA and archeological sites connected to cultures that still or exist or that we at least know more about.

    • @JayKahns
      @JayKahns Год назад +1

      They all likely trace back to the Garama, Mauri, and Meroe.

    • @brooklyna007
      @brooklyna007 Год назад +11

      ​@@JayKahns Those are some of the people that are very likely to be related to ancient Saharan peoples. But note that the histories for those people all start at least 4,000 years after the Sahara mostly dried up. It continued drying afterwards but most of it was done by 4,000-3,000 BC.
      For the Garama and Meroe we don't even know their language.The Mauri can't be tied to much else other than "likely Berber". And we don't know how these can be related to the Fulani and other south Sahel groups. There is hard disconnect in classical archeology, archeogenetics and linguistics when looking to the north and south of the Sahel. There is a missing history in the middle.

    • @4d4fastwitch454
      @4d4fastwitch454 Год назад +11

      West African civilizations also have input from cultures in the area of shum laka in northwestern Cameroon who arrived around 30,000 bc. There were also cultures in those regions that could smelt iron as early as 2300 bc and is also a place of independently invented ceramic technology and engaged in transcontinental trade in domesticated crops as far back as the 10th and 6th millennia, respectively.

    • @mrbaab5932
      @mrbaab5932 Год назад

      ​@@4d4fastwitch454There are only two examples of iron working dating back before 1000 BC with no examples of iron smelting sites or iron smithing sites. There are no examples of bronze smelting and working, which is easier than iron smelting. The two examples of iron knives are generally thought to have fallen into older depths of earth like creek beds. There needs to be more than two questionable examples to prove iron working. Maybe that will happen in the future.

    • @4d4fastwitch454
      @4d4fastwitch454 Год назад +3

      @@mrbaab5932 so what you mean to tell me is that you’ve been living under a rock?

  • @meechneek
    @meechneek Год назад +47

    Not only do I love it, as it contains of priceless knowledge. Your voice really calms me down, every time I watch new episode, I find it hugely relaxing, thank you! 👍👏👌

    • @paul6925
      @paul6925 Год назад +3

      A good narrator really helps. I have to turn some videos off because the voice is so annoying. Even if the content is good

    • @DakiniDream
      @DakiniDream Год назад +2

      Agree, the voice is awesome, i'm so tired about people screaming at me. ;)

    • @canchero724
      @canchero724 Год назад +2

      No loud bangs or sound effects too. It's such a blissful experience listening to these videos

  • @haiguizeify
    @haiguizeify Год назад +11

    Hey man, I just wanna say your style is great. It's very listenable - I can follow along with what you're saying while you drive, and the soft-spoken, slow paced speech is very relaxing. Your new mic is great (compared to earlier videos) and I'd recommend you keep using it. Keep it up man, I'm excited to see more!

  • @Peter-zv8cy
    @Peter-zv8cy Год назад +35

    The editing and the video quality is really good in this video. Great job!

  • @celestenova777
    @celestenova777 Год назад +22

    Fascinating video with the history of the changing landscape over thousands of years. Makes me wonder of future people, animals, plants etc and how they will evolve.Thanks for your work.

  • @AITrademarket
    @AITrademarket Год назад +20

    Thank you for another great video! And don’t worry about the frequency of the output. We are grateful for whatever you can do and indeed provide us. And that your videos are a much watched event in our household whenever they are released. I sometimes have to pause the video and look up the scientific terms you use (I studied economics and so I’m almost illiterate by scientific jargon standards LOL), but thank you nonetheless. Compelling!

  • @Joyride37
    @Joyride37 Год назад +10

    A green sahara and lower sea levels, wider coasts, the persia gulf being a river valley; how much more of our history is buried under sand and sea?

  • @cenedraleaheldra5275
    @cenedraleaheldra5275 Год назад +1

    I just love your calm voice with it intoxicating knowledge. Your wise evoking wisps of taunting questions. Enjoy your time in Italy. Thanks

  • @jeh5176
    @jeh5176 Год назад +5

    The Sahara has never been a barrier from Sub-Saharan Africa. Cave art shows that black people have always been in the Sahara.

    • @SeanMichael-yt4ps
      @SeanMichael-yt4ps Месяц назад

      Correct some are still there, but in smaller numbers for obvious reasons.

  • @williamromine5715
    @williamromine5715 7 месяцев назад +1

    This is the first time I have heard someone bring up the question of humans trying change the climate to keep it as it as it has been recently. That is a question that should be discussed rationally. Thank you for bringing it up.
    I have only recently found your channel, and really like it.

    • @swirvinbirds1971
      @swirvinbirds1971 3 месяца назад

      I don't know if I would say attempting to remove human made sources really qualifies as trying to keep it the same though.

  • @OriginalChicagoKrawZ
    @OriginalChicagoKrawZ Год назад +7

    Hey North02 . I've been a fan a your videos since I stumbled across them over a year ago and now I watch them as soon as I can when they are put on RUclips.
    I have recently learned a little bit about ancient Marsupials of Australia and New Zealand and think you would make an excellent video on them if you don't already have one in the works.
    That said Thank you so much for the wonderful informative videos you make for everyone to enjoy and learn from. I tell everyone I know about your channel when these topics come up and friends my age and older are blown away by your attention to detail and your drive to be thorough with all your information. Thank you so much and I can't wait to see and hear your take on ancient Australia and New Zealand. Arrivederci 🙋

  • @marjorie6573
    @marjorie6573 Год назад +1

    You cantinue to amaze me with the depth of information provided in your videos. Simply fabulous!

  • @thomasschwarz1973
    @thomasschwarz1973 Год назад +9

    Great perspective on climate. Thank you!

  • @nathanjohnson7624
    @nathanjohnson7624 4 месяца назад

    You are the best content creator on RUclips. I love you're videos. Thank you for making this available. You must put in so much work on these.

  • @grace7961
    @grace7961 Год назад +4

    This video is beautiful! Very relaxing to watch and informative!

  • @philosopherkink
    @philosopherkink Год назад +1

    Dude, I love the vibe of your conent
    I put headphones on, watch the sun set, and literally trip substanceless.

  • @cynthiashepherd7754
    @cynthiashepherd7754 Год назад +6

    Missed you. Great video. Some others I tried had great subjects but they spoke so fast I could not understand. Yours are perfect.

    • @stigcc
      @stigcc Год назад

      You can adjust the speed of the video. Some times I increase the speed and others I reduce it

  • @shablya
    @shablya Год назад +19

    Appreciate your work and fresh insight on this topic. I think a green Sahara could support a billion people if we still exist during the next humid period.

    • @stigcc
      @stigcc Год назад +6

      Sub Saharan Africa only supported 100 million people. Only after Europeans gave them their inventions (such as agriculture, animal domestication, modern medicine, steam engines, metallurgy etc) they could increase beyond that

    • @stevensoto1710
      @stevensoto1710 Год назад +3

      @@stigcc actually the population increased after the European countries gave them independence not inventions, also its more due to famine and a lower life expectancy which caused Africans to have more children to survive into adulthood. tho no one can argue that the Chinese helped the population grow faster within a shorter period of time due to the infrastructure and higher rate of living

    • @maureenamadasun8779
      @maureenamadasun8779 Год назад

      ​@@stigccStop lying. Subsaharans Already had Kingdoms and Iron since 1000BCE,Farming and And all u mentioned. Racist

    • @zynato2321
      @zynato2321 Год назад +2

      not european invention @@stigcc

    • @thiernosow11
      @thiernosow11 3 месяца назад

      ​@stigcc agriculture, metallurgy, medicine and animal domestication have been in west africa since 3000BC

  • @paul6925
    @paul6925 Год назад +23

    The art is quite beautiful and in a surprisingly naturalistic style. The flowing lines and overlapping legs are quite similar to early European art.

    • @maxwellmain7809
      @maxwellmain7809 Год назад +2

      It is related. EEMH migrated into N. Africa about 30k ago, and- later- there was a migration from N. Africa into Spain and the UK. There are culturally similar finds and art in both regions, occuring at the same time, and even into today.

    • @paul6925
      @paul6925 Год назад +2

      @@maxwellmain7809 source?

    • @0rlanix
      @0rlanix Год назад +3

      @@paul6925
      i think he's talking about the iberomaurisians, they're the ancestors of the berbers (natives of north africa), they existed across the Iberian peninsula and north africa.

    • @paul6925
      @paul6925 Год назад +2

      @@0rlanix Could be. But 30k is around 10k early for Ibero-Maurusians. I don't think it's really settled yet where berbers came from

    • @maxwellmain7809
      @maxwellmain7809 Год назад

      @@paul6925 I mean even OLDER than the Ibero-maurusians. The earliest of the EEMH to migrate into N. Africa were cold-adapted. Some mixed w/native N. African groups, while others did not. The desertification of N. Africa (which has actually happened a number of times over human history) caused a transitioning of EEMH phenotype characteristics, to those better adapted to handle a dry desert (longer, thinner faces/longer noses, etc. Traditionally, these had been labeled as Med phenotypes (that would have possibly evolved just before 25kya, ya, so YES, it's true that it would would take place during the mesolithic/Epipalepaleolithic era) although EEMH, native N. African phenotypes, transitions between EEMH AND MED phenotypes, as well as mixtures between these various phenotypes (including later Ibero-Maurusian ones, that someone else mentioned), could still be found on their own as well. Keep in mind, too, that that's focusing strictly on face/body structures, whereas lighter skin/eye/hair color (even in EEMH) may have appeared later in Europe, and therefore made it's way into N.Africa via later migrations. Also, Neanderthals had some influence on groups that ended up in N. Africa, just to further muddy the waters.......

  • @lincolnyaco5626
    @lincolnyaco5626 Год назад

    to be--as usual--entertaining AND edifying.
    My thanx. Yr efforts are appreciated. You are an articulate and informed individual!!!
    I hope you enjoy creating these as much as I enjoy viewing.

  • @rorydonaldson2794
    @rorydonaldson2794 Год назад +19

    What a fantastic subject matter for a video. I didn't expect to see a video on the Sahara, but boy am I siked.

    • @NORTH02
      @NORTH02  Год назад +8

      Kinda crazy, my last 3 videos have more or less been about Africa whereas I usually do not cover it

    • @Helmann9265
      @Helmann9265 Год назад +6

      Indeed. Awesome one.
      P.s The Sahara sand crosses the Atlantic Ocean with wind and lands on the rainforest in Brazil and Amazonas area making fresh soil for the rain forest....

    • @NORTH02
      @NORTH02  Год назад +4

      @@Helmann9265 oooh a video on Brazil and South America is needed

  • @PaoloZero
    @PaoloZero Год назад +2

    It's always a pleasure to listen to you. Greetings from Sicilia

  • @draganjagodic4056
    @draganjagodic4056 Год назад +5

    Beautiful work as ever. Thank you so much.

  • @ignachioelsmith9053
    @ignachioelsmith9053 Год назад +8

    Quality over quantity is always welcome. Hope the studies are going. I wish you luck with everything. ☺

  • @kevting4512
    @kevting4512 Год назад +3

    “Humans painted realistically” shown in the midst of a coitus.
    Ah I see our ancestors taste in cultured art still lives on.

  • @420haxx
    @420haxx Год назад

    I always appreciate a NORTH 02 video before bed, so chill yet fascinating. Enjoy yourself in Italy !

  • @charlesjmouse
    @charlesjmouse Год назад +7

    Thanks for another excellent video... I hadn't put together until now just how short the last Sahara humid period was.

  • @TJSaw
    @TJSaw Год назад +2

    I wish I was a time traveller. I would’ve loved to have seen the progress of mankind over the millennia. Ancient history is so fascinating! Whole civilisations lost to time.

  • @korey15
    @korey15 Год назад +5

    Good video and research. You showed pictures of Napta Playa but I wish you would have gone more in-depth about its significance as one of the oldest astrological observatories in the world, also, The Tashiwnat Mummy is the oldest mummy to have been found in Africa, he comes from this same time period. These two finds have monumental implications for the origins of Nile Valley culture just like the stone burials you mentioned. Maybe for another video? Good luck with your studies.

  • @paulajmchugh
    @paulajmchugh Год назад +2

    I get so excited when you have a new video! Keep up the amazing work!

  • @davewalter1216
    @davewalter1216 Год назад +5

    I liked the way you framed the discussion at the end. I always wonder if there really is some perfect climate that we should be conserving? The climate has changed constantly through this very long and highly variable Ice Age. People live in very different climatic zones today and always have, and probably most don't even understand that others experience different climate regimes from their own. How could one possibly balance all the different climatic needs of all the organisms living on Earth? Hubris - well known to the Greeks, but always ignored by those with a message.

    • @jandrews6254
      @jandrews6254 Год назад +2

      Winters cold enough to get in some skiing but not too long, because shovelling snow sucks.
      Summers warm enough to enjoy the beach but not too hot, because burnie
      Anything outside those parameters is “Climate Armageddon “ doom and gloom.

    • @something1600
      @something1600 Год назад

      We should just let the climate do its thing and stop causing man made climate change.

  • @hollymorris785
    @hollymorris785 Год назад +2

    Happy to see a new video from you, thanks!

  • @Andrea-rw9tf
    @Andrea-rw9tf Год назад +7

    Hey study, we appreciate the info you share! You have an awesome channel and I’ll continue to watch!

  • @john-ic5pz
    @john-ic5pz Год назад

    13:35 "... allowing individuals to become socially distinguished"
    Socially distinguished, What a phrase! 👍what an Excellent descriptor.

  • @JesseP.Watson
    @JesseP.Watson Год назад +19

    That was a truly beautiful piece of work good fellow. As an artist myself I never cease to be amazed by the incredible accuracy of the ancient's depiction of the animals around them, it so clearly exhibits highly sophisticated aesthetic sensibilities... not only accurate, but truly beautiful - those are drawn by eyes with great appreciation of their subjects. I recently released a short film on my channel here created over several months travelling the ancient and wild places of the British Isles which touches upon that more grounded viewpoint regarding the ever-changing climate you point towards here, I believe you may enjoy it.
    Thank you for that, a deeply intriguing pocket of history there, it makes me want to go and wander the Sahara (which may not be all that great a plan, but all the same... such a mystical place.
    All the best to ye, subscribed.

    • @winkiiiie
      @winkiiiie Год назад +1

      Talk about over analyzing something.. "highly sophisticated aesthetic". Not really what you would call sophisticated...lol and no we wont watch your video stop commenting that in every thread

  • @vlenzo5397
    @vlenzo5397 Год назад +1

    you gotta love the Blue bar Context

  • @daniell1483
    @daniell1483 Год назад +43

    I love your videos, North. What exactly is your area of study? You cover so much material, it is hard to pin down. Anthropology is my best guess, and if so, it honestly makes me consider studying the subject as well.

    • @trrblv3
      @trrblv3 Год назад +5

      He's made a q&a before he's like an IT major and this is just his hobby

    • @daniell1483
      @daniell1483 Год назад +9

      @@trrblv3 I think that makes the expertise all the more impressive, if accurate. Thanks for the info.

    • @NORTH02
      @NORTH02  Год назад +58

      Marketing major haha

    • @10Greencubs
      @10Greencubs Год назад +6

      @@NORTH02 Congrats man.
      This amount of knowledge you teach is a gift to society.

    • @07438724
      @07438724 Год назад +4

      @@NORTH02 I would have not bet that!

  • @Hollylivengood
    @Hollylivengood Год назад +1

    I love the little questions you raise at the end.

  • @johnhorton4089
    @johnhorton4089 Год назад +4

    Love learning about the Sahara

  • @baronvonjo1929
    @baronvonjo1929 Год назад +2

    I find it easy to say old ancient people drew these cave arts and to leave it at that.
    But then if I get in the zen or whatever and really start imagining it.
    Sounds so crazy how long ago it all was and how so many generations lived the same way for so long.
    The amount of progress we have seen in the past 1,000 years really is kinda a outlier.
    Imagining everything from the past just puts things in a weird perspective.

  • @EJD339
    @EJD339 Год назад +5

    I always wondered what kind of amazing artifacts there are in the Sahara. I’m sure it’s extremely costly to go look for stuff there

  • @4Beats4Me
    @4Beats4Me Год назад +1

    Wonderful artwork! They each read like an essay, Thank you!

  • @cam-1760
    @cam-1760 Год назад +15

    I love your videos! The idea that human caused climate change might be doing some good in all the bad it brings is really comforting. Thanks for making the videos they always make my day!

  • @koaladude1852
    @koaladude1852 Год назад +2

    I went to the sahara in march of 2022 , in the timimoon area of algeria. My uncle took us to a spot where there used to be water. We found so many fish fossils it was crazy. If you see this north 02 i can send you the pictures i took

  • @JustArtsCreations
    @JustArtsCreations Год назад +3

    Such a top top quality video. Really well done!

  • @thedeesus4249
    @thedeesus4249 Год назад +1

    I’m loving the choice of bossanova for your finale.

  • @owenhowever1958
    @owenhowever1958 Год назад +3

    thank you for another amazing vid!!!!

  • @chrisbflory
    @chrisbflory Год назад +2

    Worth the wait. Can’t ever click fast enough. Thanks.

  • @cokemachine5510
    @cokemachine5510 Год назад +4

    There was a creek in the 70s i built dams and fished as a kid . Old timers at the time said they remember when the creek was a river, and before that back when the Indians ruled the land, it was a quarter mile wide river and marsh for 100 miles. I brought my wife back to show her where i played, and the creek was 2 inches wide and bright yellow 😔.
    Ice age moisture is vanishing quickly.
    That was, well 70s till now! Im i that old?

    • @rpbajb
      @rpbajb Год назад +4

      Me too. There have been many changes in Western Pennsylvania in my lifetime. There were feet of snow every winter that lasted for months when I was a kid in the 50's. The Ohio, Allegheny, and Monongehela rivers used to freeze over. People drove their cars out onto Lake Erie. Now we rarely get snow cover, even in the mountains.

  • @kalrandom7387
    @kalrandom7387 Год назад +2

    Always good to see a video of yours

  • @algodoodoo8839
    @algodoodoo8839 11 месяцев назад +3

    14:56 The image of the chariot. Is there a date for this art? I assume this predates the building of the pyramids? The wheel shown in the picture has spokes. Making it a sophisticated design. This seems strange since it is said that the pyramids were built without the use of a wheel. The earliest wheels would have been much cruder. Made of solid wood. Would this art predate the Sumerian culture? I heard that the Sumerians had a wheel, but I don't know if they had a spoked wheel.

    • @ChaouiNaïli
      @ChaouiNaïli 6 месяцев назад +1

      Much more modern indeed

  • @Bohnant
    @Bohnant 11 месяцев назад +1

    Outstanding documentary bro. Where are you studying? 👀

  • @DakiniDream
    @DakiniDream Год назад +3

    Nicely done video, beautiful pictures and overall views. Comments was also good.
    I'm still very grateful for less stressy video, and accurate content. These old stories around the aliens become realy tiresome over time, these people have no imagination with that. ;)
    Thankies !

  • @alannohlgren
    @alannohlgren Год назад +1

    Wow, North, it's surprising to learn that you're over here in Europe, next to me. I'm in France, but, like you, I'm still an American, at last. Good luck with your studies. I'm sure you'll do well.
    I've enjoyed your approach (anthropology, along with natural history, was always one of my favorite subjects during my university years), & look forward to more episodes of your fascinating & deeply thoughtful exploration of the rather large questions regarding our emergence from the long, dark , mysterious evolutions of our ancient histories, to our more recent pasts. In any case, North 02, you're my man, & I look forward to more of your deep dives, with your particular take & style. Merci!

  • @aj.a1845
    @aj.a1845 Год назад +6

    Great video and informative as always. Your voice is so soothing and a pleasure to listen too.

  • @v_nix
    @v_nix Год назад +2

    Thank you for another great video. I hope you'll enjoy your stay in Italy.
    Love from Belgium.

  • @ScottWorthington
    @ScottWorthington Год назад +3

    Outstanding as always.

  • @andrewlabat9963
    @andrewlabat9963 Год назад

    Another wonderful video to get us all thinking, in wonderment, our ancestors and the life they had to deal with.

  • @JohnVance
    @JohnVance Год назад +8

    Absolutely love the style and tenor of your videos

  • @someoneelse4492
    @someoneelse4492 Год назад +2

    Excellent video North, thankyou.

  • @nive7299
    @nive7299 Год назад +10

    There it is again :). Really well done video. I haven't watched all your videos lately but the many cave paintings in this one were amazing to see 👍

    • @ErikGsson
      @ErikGsson Год назад

      I got so sad when it got privated when i were like in the middle of it LUL

  • @maxcasteel2141
    @maxcasteel2141 Год назад +2

    Fantastic video! Seeing chariots and wheels on cave art kinda blew my mind. Also really like the questions you brought up, I think about that kind of thing too, like how polar bears are currently evolving their behavior to survive and go further south.
    A must watch channel for debunking ancient civilization conspiracy theories is Miniminuteman, his current series talking about the netflix ancient apocalypse show is top notch

  • @TheDocLamkin
    @TheDocLamkin Год назад +3

    Shenanigans, there were ancient advanced civilizations regardless of what your paid for education taught you.

  • @MrBubbaSkeeter
    @MrBubbaSkeeter 4 месяца назад

    This is my new favorite channel

  • @desmass1
    @desmass1 11 месяцев назад +6

    rock art from 10,000 -20,000 yrs ago depicts North Saharan Africans not North Asiatics africans.... even our rock art depcits the real people of our land

    • @DruNarayan
      @DruNarayan 5 месяцев назад

      What’s the difference? Is this like berbers vs bedouin?

    • @joalvarado8506
      @joalvarado8506 Месяц назад

      @@DruNarayanBerber are mixed with a substantial “sub-Saharan” (which is an unscientific term as Nilo-Saharan people have lived in the Sahara for thousands of years) component which they owe to their East African ancestors as corroborated by E-M35 and its many subclades as well as the Afro-Asiatic language family itself.

  • @Flintknappingadventures
    @Flintknappingadventures 2 месяца назад

    Appreciate your videos!

  • @one_field
    @one_field Год назад +2

    Great video, don't worry about producing fewer if they're of this quality. It's important work you're doing, translating scholarly info into bite-sized layman's lessons. Bravo!

  • @yurigansmith
    @yurigansmith 4 месяца назад

    Thanks for this video! Your channel is super interesting in general! Very good work!

  • @HassanMohamed-jy4kk
    @HassanMohamed-jy4kk Год назад +3

    Why don’t you think about making a suggestion and creating a RUclips Videos that’s all about the history and evolution of the domestic animals from their wild animal ancestors on the next North 02 coming up next?!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️👍👍👍👍👍

  • @mikemarthaller8789
    @mikemarthaller8789 4 месяца назад

    Thank you for the hopefully thought-provoking discussion on the necessity of discussion in the long-term effect on our species
    We must discuss not argue about how the inevitable changes will affect us
    I often consider the concept of
    Be divided Be conquered

  • @Yora21
    @Yora21 Год назад +2

    By the rainfall definition, Iceland is not a desert.
    But in biological production, it very much is a wet desert.

  • @kma3647
    @kma3647 Год назад +1

    Extremely well done video! I very much appreciate the sources you provided at the end. As I listened, I noticed that you sometimes skipped over some of the climatological and ecological fundamentals and went straight to the advanced concepts. I've had the coursework to follow this, but perhaps your audience has not. Things like explaining why the thermohaline circulation is important and why interrupting it causes such a dramatic change in climate might only take 2-3 sentences, but it's important to understand. Some graphs of this and the precessional cycle that affected incoming solar irradiance would be very helpful in explaining how and why the monsoon patterns changed and continue to change cyclically. Lastly, I thought I'd ask if you knew much about similar changes in S. America, in the Amazon? I've read very little on the topic aside from recent LIDAR evidence from historical times. It might be worth a video if you have the data/expertise!
    Again, extremely high level content here! Professionally presented. I enjoyed it!

  • @Zebred2001
    @Zebred2001 Год назад +3

    Even online I find it nearly impossible to find a good series of maps that reconstruct the ebb and flow of the Sahara's extent in prehistory. This is very frustrating as I have a keen interest in this subject.

    • @truthseeker215
      @truthseeker215 Год назад

      Why ? I’m curious why do you have the interest ?

    • @Zebred2001
      @Zebred2001 Год назад +1

      @@truthseeker215 Simply because of the deep human antiquity of the Sahara and the difficulty of excavation there. I believe there is much, much more to uncover.

    • @truthseeker215
      @truthseeker215 Год назад +1

      @@Zebred2001 same I know. I read a paper about a year ago about how some dna extracted from some sites in the sahrah showed markers for african Americans like myself in America meaning that many many years ago I had ancestors that inhabited the areas and migrated in and out for many generations before going to west Africa.

  • @mysurrealsynapse
    @mysurrealsynapse Год назад

    This is gorgeous! The narration ASMResque and the presentation better than Tv grade productiona

  • @colinleat8309
    @colinleat8309 Год назад +2

    Thanks so much for this! I've always wondered what the reasons are for the Sahara. I didn't realize it is an on going process over geological time. Fascinating. I felt I was reaching when I considered the tilt of the Earth Axis. That never made sense. Good luck with your studies, and get out when you can. VERY terrible the new government. Best regards 🤘😁🖖🇨🇦

  • @ReekAhgod-hk3wu
    @ReekAhgod-hk3wu Год назад

    Thank you for all the information you give me . not just here. Everyday!

  • @MissRazna
    @MissRazna Год назад +3

    large animals were depicted rather than people because nothing people did was worth writing down back then. imagine if you and your people did everything the same for a thousand years. not a single thing that a single person did any one day would have ever been as impressive as a single stampede of aurochs. animals are just impressive to animals with imaginations

  • @justme8837
    @justme8837 Год назад

    I don't mind waiting on videos, they are always worth the wait. Congratulations on studying in Italy, it must be amazing. Take care.

  • @Where_is_Waldo
    @Where_is_Waldo Год назад +9

    I appreciate the shout out to World Of Antiquity. I would like to add that Stefan Milo and Miniminuteman also go into the subject of debunking alternate history claims and Miniminutemen is currently producing a series of videos debunking graham hancock's recent series on netflix.

    • @FreeManFreeThought
      @FreeManFreeThought Год назад

      History With Kayleigh as well. Remember when we all thought that they spread of the internet would spread info to kill these nutso ideas? How naïve we all were.

    • @cynthiashepherd7754
      @cynthiashepherd7754 Год назад +1

      Love Stefan.

  • @outlaw4a
    @outlaw4a Год назад +2

    Really like how you add sources.

  • @frances9099
    @frances9099 Год назад +4

    Louder volume please!

    • @Christian-wu3mp
      @Christian-wu3mp Год назад +2

      I legit could not understand him at all. I had to rewind multiple times and eventually gave up watching

  • @swirvinbirds1971
    @swirvinbirds1971 Год назад +1

    The rock art at 12:32 tells us some things just never change with us humans... 😂

  • @ottodasilva
    @ottodasilva Год назад +7

    Love your content
    keep it up