not for long! we just saw they still have some blankets of their hair so that means there dna is still there! so in a few years we could bring em back... or combined their dna with a t-rex to make extra floofy yutyrannus
You know, if we succeed to do it once without genetics, we should be able to do it again at the time of genetic manipulation ^^ Just cross breed some very fluffy dogs between them, select the more fluffy and after some generations, you will get a wool dog :D
“Every dog has its purpose.” My old ass Chocolate Labrador: *farts himself awake at 3am and then barks at a dark corner of my room for ten minutes because he thinks someone is trying to break in*
I actually have a carolina dog myself. I live in the south and she was found in the woods after a hunter had unfortunately killed her mother. she is without a doubt one of the most intelligent and interesting dogs i’ve ever interacted with. i barely even had to train her, she just knows what to do, somehow. and she has a ton of weird personality quirks that i’ve never seen another dog have, like loving fireworks, being gentle with small animals, and protecting both me and my cats constantly. a great companion and so so sweet. you can definitely still tell that she’s a wild dog though from her behavior which i think is really cool. i
I have one too! My friends say she’s the weirdest dog they’ve ever met. Does yours shy away from pets, but have a “safe area” where she loves to cuddle? Mine won’t hardly let you touch her until you sit on the couch, then all 60 lbs of muscle are keeping her firmly on your lap 😂. She truly treats us like we’re her pack mates, and communicates SO clearly. Love my Pippin
Fully agreed. My Carolina Dog is weirdly smart compared to any other dog I’ve known. She learns things very quickly, she is obsessed with being around me, despite an insane prey drive has been incredibly gentle with cats and small children. Walking with her at night is such an interesting experience, whenever we walk she’s always on edge, on constant lookout. But at night it’s interesting how we both pay attention to different things and rely on each other. We see differently, hear differently and she pays just as much attention to me as I do to her. The only thing that’s difficult is that she is keen to run off after anything, she always comes back, which I trust her to do given that she hates it when I so much as leave her in another room in the house, I just don’t want to trust her to not be hurt by rabid animals or find coyotes or potentially violent dogs, or even confused people. She’s so fast, so athletic, leaps through the air with ease. The only thing that’s a bad fit is that she HATES being in the car. So it’s unfortunately challenging to take her places. She loves to explore new areas but is incredibly anxious about getting there. I’m so thankful that I’ve had an opportunity to know her.
@@migue24 @Simon Holm Poulsen Ik this mite sound sarcastic but rlly? I never knew that I thought sun breeds were just like that I never knew it kame from inbreeding or a low quality breed I thought naturally sun had those bulging eyes and shook like a Xbox controller.
Back in he nineties I was part of an archeological team that found a dog burial in New Paltz New York that predated Christ by 1000 years. It had grave offerings and was buried with care. It was a tiny little thing and always made me wonder about the breeds we have long forgotten
You live my fantasy life. I'd love to pick your brain. I'm a teacher but firmly believe I should have been an archeologist. I'm good with the low income.
@@TheTeacher520tiktok I’m not sure where you live but explore around with the local colleges. VERY often competent people can volunteer at local sites. It can be tough work but it is rewarding and always educational. Shovelbums as we are affectionately called are usually a fun bunch. Take a look for Summer field schools. If you find one, they are usually in the summers and then you have a certification.
@@TheTeacher520tiktok Might be worth mentioning that with the advent of Lidar technology, Archaeology is going to need more workers. In the Americas alone you guys just used lidar to uncover about 400+ unknown Mayan cities and towns buried out there. The ammount of stuff still buried is astronomical, so there will likely be more opportunities to enter the field in the oncomming decades. Its also never too late to start,
I’m just here acknowledge that everyone in this comment thread is so positive, friendly, and helpful. I personally have no interest in becoming an archeologist (I am more of an arm chair history person), but this thread made me happy. @Rebekah Sutton follow your dreams girl!
"Chihuahuas functioned as hot water bottles" I had to rewatch that segment like 3 times before I noticed the pot sculpted to look like a chihuahua lmao
that pot isn't supposed to look like a chihuahua, it represents a Xolo, that is the hairless dog that appears in the movie Coco haha. The Xolos where considered to be related with the god of death and were supposed to guide their owner in their way to the Mictlán (the aztec's underworld) they were also used as hot water bottles because they are always very warm (i have one, so i can tell this part is true)
Jim Stouffer they also shake. So it quickly subsides the ache within any body part you’re having trouble with quicker when applied. Just some knowledge I learned from medic school. We had a segment on chihuahuas. Surprisingly, they’re still used today! In ancient times, they were commonly issued as a remedy for ache, heartache, and heartbreak. And to my knowledge, the Indians would use them as signals, holding them up to the sky on a cold night starry night. The chihuahua would then initiate its ever so famous, “bark” sequence and howl into the night. That’s one of the many ways the Indians communicated with each other! They’re also great for extracting poison. Their snappy bite retracts the poison from any wound it was previously injected in.
Had a dingo for 13 years, was a good dog, but he was wild af once you took him into the woods. He would literally wonder off for about a mile or more, and would show up 5 mins after you called him. He loved camping.
@@Gh0stdawg70 we kinda freaked out the first few times, but then he just always came back lol. There’s no wolves in our mountains, so he didn’t have to worry much.
Better than my beagle, nose to the ground and you had a good hour long chase on your hands until he found all the shit he was smelling xD. No way in hell I could catch him until he was about 12 years old, and Im 6'2. Max was a master smeller.
I know a Native man who actually had a wolf as a "pet" when he was growing up. His dad knew a man who lived in the woods and fed the wolves, so when he was mourning the death of his previous dog his dad brought him to that man's house. The young wolves ran up to investigate and one of them stayed when the rest left, having chosen him. The wolf came home with him and was fiercely loyal to him, and no one else (much to his dad's annoyance.) Occassionally he would go missing and the dad would send his son to the area they knew thw wolf pack lived to call him back home, because he didnt listen if the dad went. He was an incredibly smart and loyal dog, eventually learning what bus stop he would return from school at and waiting for him every day around the time the bus came, which everyone else was uncomfortable with, lol. He also refused to stay inside at night to sleep. And when a neighbour called to complain about the wolf howling at the moon at night, the dad was like "well what do you want ME to do about it?? It's a wolf, it's going to howl."
That's pretty funny and cool. It's a huge flex to have a real Wolf as your "Dog" similar to having a Tiger or Crocodile as pet (which shockingly many people do. Seriously the Pet tiger population almost rivals the wild one 😂). It's also much more dangerous than having a Dog since Dogs are specifically bred to be pets. Wolfs can be pretty aggressive and potentially deadly as a Pet so if you have one you better make sure you treat them double well. Misraising a wild Animal as a pet can be a death sentence and it's always risky.
My sister had a majority wolf dog she rescued as a puppy from a very abusive owner. The wolf’s name was Taker. If he liked someone he’d steal an object from them and add it to his little hoard. He stole my gloves; I was so honored. He would also come up to lay on the bed with me when I napped, which really surprised my sister. He was very gentle, though he did kill her chickens if given the chance. From what I’ve read and studied about wolves, they are only aggressive with owners who don’t know how to treat them or who are abusive. Wild or otherwise, wolf attacks are very rare, so rare that figuring the likelihood is impossible. You are far more likely to be killed by your pet dog.
@@sharonkaczorowski8690 yeah, this friend's dad was on the abusive side in some ways. Including putting down his dogs (with a gun) without talking to him first. If I remember correctly it was because they were getting old? Because the friend said he had told his dad that he would do the same when he got to be elderly. I mean obviously he didn't kill his dad, but he was absolutely heartbroken and betrayed about it because he is the kind of person to see his pets as being as much a part of the family as his husband. They're like his children now, and he didn't feel much different about it when he was young, either. But there's a lot of intergenerational trauma that people in oppressed racial groups go through, especially Native people in Canada. The last day school (residential school) closed in the 90s, and those tended to be incredibly abusive. So while I do not agree with what his dad did, I can understand that it was related to his own traumas that made him calloused. And I'm very proud of my friend for not continuing that cycle and remaining a kind-hearted person who makes everyone, including animals, feel safe around him. I myself am white and have had to put a lot of effort into working on my own intergenerational trauma to avoid hurting others the same way I was hurt, so I understand that it is NOT an easy thing to do.
Who knows how many of these contacts were made in the past. Looking at history of Americas as "pre and post contact" is wrong in my opinion. It is said in the video itself that precontact dogs originated from north east Asia, much like the human settlers. So it is already a contact made waaaay before the Europeans even had a civilization as we know it (somewhere between 15 and 30 thousand years ago)
Is It really? Tasmanian devils have a transmissible face cancer, where as Duncan Idaho and one of his descendants were able to move at near light speed.
Hi TREY!! I´m southamerican, from Chile, actually, and I can tell you that we have chickens prior to Spanish arrival, this are " las gallinas Araucanas". Here, Mapuche people have three breed of chicken, the Koyonka, for example, (is the more known), you can recognize them because their eggs (egg shell, for being more accurate) are blue or green, and for not havin´ feathers in their tail. Today still exist, are very common in here, my family, actually, raise them. I hope this was useful, at least a little bit. Ps: sorry for my bad english: Pss: I love your videos! I hope you keep doing them even in this pandemic times, and please, take care.
@@trla6505 Well, I´m gonna say, they taste similar, but better, the color inside is more orange than yellow, we think that's because they eat more insects, grass and worms than the one in factories. :)
@@ANTSEMUT1 That's our theory too, because archeologist here have found in the north and center-north of the country (in the coast) polinesian jewelry (Most probably Rapa-Nui by the disign), and we now our ancestors commerce with Incas and coast people, so is very probably that that's how we get chickens :)
My family is from the Mexican state of Chihuahua. I remember telling them I hated Chihuahua dogs because they were so mean and noisy with their annoying bark. My grandmother stated our ancestors chances of survival increased because of those bug eyed annoying Chihuahuas. She went in to say they were great at altering of a potential attack by bandits sneaking around the homestead. Being they were small they were harder to detect it shoot.
That’s fascinating! We had two chihuahuas when I was little. We had to rehome one after he bit an older woman, but the one we kept, Max, was a lovely dog, though he definitely had the stereotypical chihuahua traits. He was super protective of me though, being that I was the youngest
@@nickkings7881 if anyone is religious then evolution IS A FUCKING FACT AND HAHAH ADAM AMD EVE IS BULLSHIT SORRY WAKE UP AND ACCEPT REALITY THAT AFTER YOU DIE NOTHING HAPPENS STOP ACTING LIKE FUCKING CHILDREN!
Grew up with a Carolina Dog/American Dingo but we didn’t know what breed she was at the time. She was shy, pack-loyal to our family, playful, and super smart. Such a good girl. Found out about Carolina Dogs years after she had passed away and realized we had a super cool, ancient breed.
I had one too. She had the exact characteristics you describe. Got her from a shelter where animal control picked her up and arrested the owners for animal cruelty. They starved her. I adopted her but she was so thin I didn’t know what she was either until we got all her weight back on. Then a breeder identified her for me while we were talking. She was a wonderful dog and beautiful. The Northern Native Americans called them Song Dogs because they sing when they howl. I loved her so much.
I'm curious what our Bengals and savannahs will look like over time. I have a 19lbs Bengal named Loki and am curious to see how these breeds evolve with their totally new DNA from Asian Leopard cats and Servals.
basiclly same thing i said to the vet vet says: oooohhh what kind of cat is this me: looks confused its a cat vet: ya but what kind of cat me : i dont know its a cat and it goes moew vet: oh well thats pretty neet it has 24 toes me: ya well its dad is also its unchle so vet : ohh
@@keeganbulter4686 You pick out a heeler - and you better hope your heeler picks you back. I never wanted a herding dog. Mars had other ideas, he was supposed to belong to one of the kiddos here. I got picked. Never had one like him, he's more Little Brother than Companion Dog.
This is literally my favorite RUclips video; I find myself coming back here over and over, sharing the link, researching more, watching another Trey video, etc. . This is everything I could ever want from a piece of content
My aunt said that in our tribe, Skokomish, those who were royal or higher up wore the fur of a Skok dog. The most pitch black coat you would've ever seen
We adopted a very young yellow puppy who we were told was a lab mix. And now that she is grown we know she's a Carolina dog! I always refrain from telling people, to avoid being "that guy" but it's cool to see someone acknowledging them! Thanks for another great video Trey!
@@bipo819 I don't think I've heard of reverting a cancer cell back to what it was before it mutated. The DNA is essentially corrupted. Clone a cancer cell and you'll just be growing a cancerous tumor unfortunately.
My tribal elders tell me at least one of our dogs is still here. An ancient dog that always lived with us. Today it’s called the catahoula cow dog but my elders say it’s originally one of our Choctaw dogs.
I raised Catahoula cowdogs for a decade. Heard all the talk about Indian dogs being involved in the breeding, but never saw them behave much differently than any other curr. Now Queensland heelers are the most feral acting breed I've ever handled. Confirmed dingo blood in them.
I remember this video very will. I had just put this on in the background of doing stuff and then I heard u talking about CTVT. SCANDAL events like CTVT is literally one of my favourite facts of all time. This fact, and this video, is what set alight my passion for biology. I watched this video during a time when I had no idea what I wanted to be and do with my life. About a year later I had the worst summer of my life, but in that summer I analyzed what I liked, what facts and stuff I found the most interesting...and it was all mostly biology. Before the realization I had taken my first walk outside during that sad summer. I found a decaying fungus and thought to myself: "Hmm, I actually dont know anything about this organism." And ever since ive been invested in studying mycology as a hobby. Im now in the first year of my biology bachelor at university. Thank you TREY, u helped me find my passion with a video I originally thought sounded boring. Thank you, for changing my life for the better.
A little piece of information to add to this phenomenon is that dogs have a normal body temperature of 106°F. small dogs push that temperature a little higher than big dogs but that said because of the fact that the body temperature of dogs is higher than the body temperature of humans it makes them wonderful sleeping companions in cold and damp areas. Plus the love and body contact of a dog is emotionally and in an unproven way physically healing. The psychological security that an emotionally sensitive animal provides is invaluable.
I owned a Carolina dog he was left as a puppy under a farmers step as he was the runt of the litter, he sealed several home until my dad adopted him. He was wild but a good boy in the end, very family oriented, and alway willing to protect the neighbourhood kids as well as my sister and I from adults. He helped my neighbours toddler learn to walk by allowing the kid to hold onto his fur. We only learnt his breed after his death with a dna test. Anyway dogs are great.
Europe isn't its own continental plate, it's only Asia. That's how I see it. And I count India its own Continent because it does have a continental plate
@How To Vegan How very interesting to learn of your own personal definition of a continent that is different from the established one. Clearly you have brought something of value to this thread.
@@mexicanmuslim "Physiographically, Europe and South Asia are peninsulas of the Eurasian landmass. However, Europe is widely considered a continent with its comparatively large land area of 10,180,000 square kilometres (3,930,000 sq mi), while South Asia, with less than half that area, is considered a subcontinent."
Very proud owner of a Carolina dog, you can tell she’s still kind of wild in certain situations. She’s got webbed feet for swimming but also a broad chest, lean waist, and long legs for running. She’s definitely evolved to take advantage of her environment
I’ve got a Carolina dog too. Had to put 3 foot wire toppers on my six foot fence 😂. She still tried to get over to see the deer, so we cut holes in the back of it so she can stick just her head through. She’s truly got a mind of her own, never seen anything like it before.
interesting fact. traditionally, "dog" was originally the word for a male canine. "bitch" being the female equivalent. it's only in relatively recent times that the word dog has come to replace canine.
@@figjam9530 now in dog show speak “stud” is an unaltered male and “dog” is an altered male dog, and all the ladies are bitches. Equivalent to stallions, geldings, and mares for horses
Chihuahuas weren't just bred as "hot water bottles", they were bred to be mousers and rat catchers. Remember, as you pointed out, they didn't have domesticated cats to do those jobs.
hey there! just a little correction: the dogs that were used as water bottles by the aztecs were actualy the Xolos (the hairless dogs) because due to their lack of hair their body temperature is always high to keep them warm, so honestly they're the best breed of dog to hug if youre having cramps of muscular pain haha. they were considered sacred and closely related to the god of death and they were supposed to gide their owners safetly to the Mictlán (aztec's underworld) when they died. Thats why Xolos were very valuable (still are) and very symbolic to aztec culture (actually the pots that youre showing are supposed to represent Xolos). As a breed they are very protective and extremeley smart and often prefer being with humans than with other dogs.
Great presentation. Especially the explanation of cultural relativism. As a historian thats one of the biggest challenges i have when discussing things with people. They take their values and apply them to other across the globe/time.
lost two of my dogs this year.... if you have a female dog neuter them, don't believe leave me look up pyometra. Maybe my dog would've lived to be 16-18 or more who knows.
Sorry to hear It can be a devastating time My best mate passed away 2 years ago cry every time I think about him His best mate is 13 now she is pretty sick but still happy I don't want to think about that day other than she will be with her big brother again 😪😢😭
My Chihuahua Mr.Boss has served me as a very good mouse-hunting/bird-hunting dog (birds for food ofcourse) and yes, a great hot-water-bottle, -he's small but also very smart and sturdy, he used to help pull me through the snow when we would go out in the woods for hours, and up hills, he never got tired but i retired him from that because he was getting older and i am also bigger now. He's also very gentle if i tell him not to chase something and tell him to love it (for example, there was a baby gopher we took in, and even though we usually eat them and hunt them, he was gentle and didn't go into attack-mode, treating her with curiosity, more than a thing to hunt) -same with a little club-foot mouse i found hobbling along in our backyard, Mr.Boss was gentle to it whenever i took it outside with us on our adventures. (not that i would trust any dog like that, but Boss is super smart because i talk to him alot and spend alot of time teaching him context and right from wrong, and to be careful). My ancestors loved them (although i think they are a more recent dog to have where i am from? -i think the english explorers brought them) and they had been used as guard dogs for a long long time, against bears and other wild animals. They're protective, fast, and loud, so it's useful. Mr.Boss is a very good well-behaved one, he isn't mean in the slightest, and he knows when to shut up (unless he thinks we are being stupid and brushing his worries off) and i know for a fact all who have brat chihuahuas are just bad at raising them, like how someone might be bad parents who let their kids get away with anything because "oh my baby" and "oh they're cute i can't say no or be mad". They are good smart dogs and i am glad that they are not one of the ones that disappeared during history.
Many owners don't bother to train them. Large dogs are dangerous and break things and hurt people and are very loud. If you don't train them someone gets hurt. Smaller dogs like Chihuahua, they bark a little but you can put up with it. If they bite it doesn't hurt too much. They can't knock you over either. So most people don't bother to train simple things like that. Maybe won't even train them at all
The stuffed dog shown as a Salish Wool Dog is actually a Turnspit Dog called Whiskey. Turnspits were a European breed that were used in the kitchen to run on a wheel and turn the meat over the fire. They are now extinct.
@ForestofTooMuchFood If your referring to dogs, yes. Native American people, no. Plenty of Native AMericans left. More in the south than in the northern areas though.
@@allgodsnomasters2822 Turnspit dogs went out of fashion because it's cheaper to hire FOB immigrants and black sharecroppers when economies of scale were in effect.
Having had a teacup Chihuahua who was only only about twice as big as my fist, I can attest to being stuck often with wonder at her very existence.You must be mindful of them underfoot and to not sit on them but they are amazing and loving - and protective,in a futile way only we humans see it being, for to her she saw herself as a raging wolf at the doorbell ring!
Something to keep in mind is that these genetic studies can often have issues that get corrected over time as new information is better understood. Many high blood quantum native Americans were told they had ancestry from all over and very little Native American markers not that long ago with the human genetic testing. Each year, more info is added and more new markers are recognized, and the higher blood quantum’s are now starting to be recognized for what they are. It is possible these ancient breeds and many other dogs have higher amounts of pre-contact dna than it seems at this moment, and this may be corrected as more data emerges.
@@snakeeater0224 lmao, it's chill, tracking your heritage is mostly a hobbyist thing and let's all embrace our diverse origins from brave people's from all over who braved harsher and colder climates to reach where we are today.
It makes sense if the original dogs came over a landbridge (or various ways) from the “old world” to the “new world,” that they would have genetically been marked as European and have European DNA.
I love my border collie so much. She truly is very intelligent. She knows she’s the second leader in my house next to my mom before I moved in. She keeps my brothers from fighting and any confrontations from escalating too much. She’s very motherly to us, nurturing and protective and she also kinda knows how to communicate lol. She knows how to lead me to things or place or paw on me to get my attention, she sometimes increases the force behind her paw if I ignore her😂😂😂😂
@@supernova9563 i just took that test and I got ENTJ-T But I wouldnt say that the description of that personality type fits me ... like at all xD I just like to plan things ahead and think opinions should be backed by facts 🤣 but the test for some reason thinks Im a leader now?
An Euro American woman that worked for my Tribe that became a close friend for the rest of her life. She wrote her thesis on Washington State Tribal Hair Dogs regarding her discovery of "The Salmon Fluke", Rivers with certain parasites were fatal when eaten by dogs. Not all rivers are home to salmon with these parasites. Hair Dogs were only present among Tribes on rivers that salmon did not have those particular parasites. She hoped to identify genetic survivors of these Hair Dogs and collected samples of dog hair from various sources. Over the years she obtain one or two strands from Tribal Artifacts gifted to her when she shared her research with the owners. I miss her... 💙
"This cancer has effectively become a unicellular, asexually reproducing pathogen, despite technically being a dog." *checks to ensure I'm not on a SCP reading channel*
Ignorance is bliss. I had to check what a "SCP reading channel" is. BTW, clonally transmissible cancers aren't even unique to dogs. E.g., Look up [Tasmanian] Devil facial tumour disease (DFTD).
Some kind of animals related to jellyfish have also become single celled pathogenic parasites, I thought you might like to know this just because of how wild the animal kingdom is.
The image of the stuffed ''salish wool dogs'' is actually the turnspit dog, and the specimen's name is Whiskey. Turnspit dogs were used in the United Kingdom not so much as a companion but as a way to keep the turnspit running and cooking food, and often they'd throw hot coals into the wheel to make them run faster :( They went extinct as soon as automation came in and their owners didn't want to continue breeding and keeping them as pets. Sigh. Humans, ay?
Hearing about that story of HeLa and now “Chad” has given me some serious William-Birkin-from-Resident-Evil-2 vibes, especially during that segment in the game, where the protagonists are roaming through those sewers and have to fight those G-Young/G-Adult enemies.
Trey: "So good were these dog-hair blankets that some say they could be as valuable as a human slave." Me: _"I really hope that's not a recent quote."_
When I was a kid, we had a Chihuahua named Tinkerbell. The most vicious little ankle biter, and a known terror in the neighborhood. She would chase off German Shepherds and Great Danes, jumping up to threaten their private parts. I swear, she was part Honey Badger. One day, I was walking home and I see the mailman hurdling hedges in a panic. There was Tinkerbell hurdling right behind him. So funny. Land Piranhas.
@@Valchrist1313 that was a myth resulting from there being a law against sheep theft in england, but none against bestiality at the time so, claiming that was what they were doing the would be thieves that were discovered managed to escape punishment
WOW 😲 that took a turn that couldn't be expected. The whole thing was totally fascinating, but the bit about the cancer took it up a notch & left me flabbergasted. Oh, the irony of it all. 😆 Thanks muchly for such a great presentation. You gave us a comprehensive & in-depth analysis of the subject without getting bogged down with the details. That'll do pig. 😄
@@someguywithatomahawk8058 according to the research cited (and this was back in 2010 so the number has gone up) it would equate to ~1,733,250,000 men were directly related to him. No study has been made to trace his female offspring(would require to find his matrilenial line, eg his mother or sister and trace the mitochondrial dna)
there was a creepypasta called like the Dogworld or the Dogscape or something like that which just takes a similar spooky concept to the next, horrifying level
I remember seeing part of some documentary late one night back in the day... there are (or at least in very recent history) cultures that still eat dog mean obviously. But there was one in particular that stood out in my mind. It was one where they valued dogs as strong/loyal/skilled companion of sorts. They raised the dog, took care of them (usually named them), treated them well... for several years. Then there was a specific point in time where they would kill the dog and consume it. It was a solemn occasion. They spoke to one of the older kids in the family who talked about how they were sad and would miss the dog but they understood it to be an honor to have such a loyal and brave creature to become a part of them or something along those lines. I've heard that other cultures that practice cannibalism have a somewhat similar take on their specific practice of consuming the flesh of a loved one who has passed away. This world is still a wildly diverse place.
you cant do that geneticlly its impossible. look at the dingo and the african wild dog and explain that those were originally wolves. pr even better, a hounddog. you cannot force nature to start making up shit my point, a wolf was never turned into a sharpei there had to have been many breeds of dog in the past.it is illogical to think there are more sloth vstieties than dog
@@MrDarkoKos well too bad I guess but humans did. We wanted something to remain like a puppy and we succeeded Have your heard about a pig dog or a half dog? Nature ain't even mad bro
@@sintia12c what? look at the laat 500 years pf dogs. none have turned into new breeds looking nothing like the originals. how many pugs have become giant, or wolflike?
MrDarkoKos well let’s see Hmm A giant dog breed: A English mastiff (I big pug doggo) A wolf like dog: Idk mate prob a *wolfdog” but I prefer huskies because I have one But if you really want something out there try “pig the dog”. He sure is something 😂😂
my grandma's chihuahua was a lapdog to the bone. she was very warm and very happy to cuddle. once i got older i was able to just fully pick her up and cradle her in my arms like a baby and she would close her eyes and snooze. she died not too long ago but i grew up w that little dog and i will always love her
The Salish Wool Dog shown at 5:32 and subsequently after is actually a Turnspit Dog named Whiskey. Turnspits were a breed used in the Old World to evenly cook meat by running on a wheel rigged up to a spit. This particular Turnspit seemed to be well-loved as her taxidermied body was buried with flowers and other items.
Yes! I saw that photo and I was like, that’s a turnspit dog! My dog is a long bodied, short legged, black and white, crooked leg dog and I always call her a turnspit dog
“Here we have the malamute, the Inuit sledge dog, the Greenland dog, the Chihuahua of course, and the.....” *Squints hard at xoloitzcuintli* “.....hairless ones...”
Hi I am from Canada and after watching your video I can say with 100% that my rescued dog is a Carolina dog. I thought she was a mutt, but she has all the same traits, looks, and behaviours. She also has the thicker patch of fur on her back, same tail. Thank you for your very interesting video it made my day.
I had a Carolina dog growing up. That patch on their back looks almost like a Lions mane. It took us awhile to figure out if he was a Carolina dog. Best dog I've ever had. Incredibly intelligent.
BTW, the chihuahua is not the "hot water bottle dogs". The dogs used that way are called xoloitzcuintli or Xolo (pronounced cholo) is used as an easier name to say. They are much bigger than chihuahuas. About the size of a cocker spaniel. They are also called the mexican hairless dogs. Dogs body temp is around 102 degrees F. Four degrees higher than humans and with no hair that heat transfers directly to the skin of the person they are helping. My mom had one and she would sleep with it around her neck to relieve pain so she could get a good nights sleep. When she got the dog the docs said it was most likely her last year. She got the dog and lived another 12 years until the dog passed away. They are not pretty dogs but they are loyal and very warm.
@@signaturerush A purebred one might but I almost got one once from a rescue shelter. They're no more expensive than any other breed there and while you can't guarantee they're 100% purebred I'd much rather my money go somewhere like that.
In a very heavy duty scientific paper from about four years ago they stated the aside from Eurasian Dogs that it seemed Chihuahuas and Xolos represented two separate split split offs from from wolves. I don't know how accurate or true that was but it certainly seemed real technical and scholarly.
"doc, my arm hurts"
"apply a corgi once a day and come back in a week"
The same remedy is useful for heart aches too
so that's why Queen Elizabeth still lives
Most corgis are dumb as hell also they ugly
Plus a German Shepherd blanket is way better large dog that's smart and has a way wider range of emotions
@@kingkota2302 prefect for strapping to injuries. shepherds are too big.
Dude could you imagine a wool dog and how soft it’d be to hug? What a shame it’s gone
Pajamapants Jack i want a wool dog!
Forget mamoths and tasmanian tigers! We need sheepdogs!
Pedro Marcelino wooly sheep dogs? Sheep sheep dogs? Sheeper dogs? Sheep^2 dog? Double sheep dog!
I double sheep dog dare you!
not for long! we just saw they still have some blankets of their hair so that means there dna is still there! so in a few years we could bring em back... or combined their dna with a t-rex to make extra floofy yutyrannus
You know, if we succeed to do it once without genetics, we should be able to do it again at the time of genetic manipulation ^^
Just cross breed some very fluffy dogs between them, select the more fluffy and after some generations, you will get a wool dog :D
“Every dog has its purpose.”
My old ass Chocolate Labrador: *farts himself awake at 3am and then barks at a dark corner of my room for ten minutes because he thinks someone is trying to break in*
I don’t know your dog, but I love him.
This one actually made me guffaw out loud! Your dog sounds like good people 🐶💕
@Emma Lord ah, yes, farting at burgalars is a great deterrent 😂😂
@@nimblehuman He is the best boyo 🥰
@@endergamer7483 I’ll tell him, he’ll be very pleased 😊
I actually have a carolina dog myself. I live in the south and she was found in the woods after a hunter had unfortunately killed her mother. she is without a doubt one of the most intelligent and interesting dogs i’ve ever interacted with. i barely even had to train her, she just knows what to do, somehow. and she has a ton of weird personality quirks that i’ve never seen another dog have, like loving fireworks, being gentle with small animals, and protecting both me and my cats constantly. a great companion and so so sweet. you can definitely still tell that she’s a wild dog though from her behavior which i think is really cool. i
I have one too! My friends say she’s the weirdest dog they’ve ever met. Does yours shy away from pets, but have a “safe area” where she loves to cuddle? Mine won’t hardly let you touch her until you sit on the couch, then all 60 lbs of muscle are keeping her firmly on your lap 😂. She truly treats us like we’re her pack mates, and communicates SO clearly. Love my Pippin
I love rue to
Hey, my neighbour's dog loved to fetch firework crackers at new year's eve, bringing them to him just before they exploded.
Why is most tragic backgrounds automatically the sweetest, big hearted and most intelligent?
Fully agreed. My Carolina Dog is weirdly smart compared to any other dog I’ve known. She learns things very quickly, she is obsessed with being around me, despite an insane prey drive has been incredibly gentle with cats and small children. Walking with her at night is such an interesting experience, whenever we walk she’s always on edge, on constant lookout. But at night it’s interesting how we both pay attention to different things and rely on each other. We see differently, hear differently and she pays just as much attention to me as I do to her.
The only thing that’s difficult is that she is keen to run off after anything, she always comes back, which I trust her to do given that she hates it when I so much as leave her in another room in the house, I just don’t want to trust her to not be hurt by rabid animals or find coyotes or potentially violent dogs, or even confused people.
She’s so fast, so athletic, leaps through the air with ease. The only thing that’s a bad fit is that she HATES being in the car. So it’s unfortunately challenging to take her places. She loves to explore new areas but is incredibly anxious about getting there.
I’m so thankful that I’ve had an opportunity to know her.
So you’re telling me cancer technically made a dog immortal. That’s disturbing but also really interesting
Ikr Adam Sandler
Always some horny flipping Chad screwing things up
It made a human immortal too, look up Henrietta Lacks
also, deers.
That's pretty badass ngl
"Every dog has its purpose" *_Stare at pug_* "What are yours?"
Pug: _Painful wailing noises_
Now.....
Let's talk about the Shar Pei.
@@DjinnsĘnigma
Original shar pei, the one called "bone mouth" are really good dogs that look like a variation of pitbull
@@KanishQQuotes they were originally bread for eating.
I paused to video to rant about pugs... you took that from me! And instead gave me joy. I thank you, sincerely.
They were bred for human companionship. A pug's purpose is to be your friend.
"in the case of a sprain, gently apply chihuahua. The vibrations from their shaky nerves will also help."
Yea if you have a bad chihuahua breed. Im sure it also got big bulging eyes and lots of disease associated with it.
That’s called inbreeding, just cause you do that with your family doesn’t mean that you can let your Chihuahua do that.
if they don't bite you...
@@migue24 Buuuuuurn!!
@@migue24 @Simon Holm Poulsen Ik this mite sound sarcastic but rlly? I never knew that I thought sun breeds were just like that I never knew it kame from inbreeding or a low quality breed I thought naturally sun had those bulging eyes and shook like a Xbox controller.
Back in he nineties I was part of an archeological team that found a dog burial in New Paltz New York that predated Christ by 1000 years. It had grave offerings and was buried with care. It was a tiny little thing and always made me wonder about the breeds we have long forgotten
You live my fantasy life. I'd love to pick your brain. I'm a teacher but firmly believe I should have been an archeologist. I'm good with the low income.
@@TheTeacher520tiktok I’m not sure where you live but explore around with the local colleges. VERY often competent people can volunteer at local sites. It can be tough work but it is rewarding and always educational.
Shovelbums as we are affectionately called are usually a fun bunch. Take a look for Summer field schools. If you find one, they are usually in the summers and then you have a certification.
@@TheTeacher520tiktok Might be worth mentioning that with the advent of Lidar technology, Archaeology is going to need more workers.
In the Americas alone you guys just used lidar to uncover about 400+ unknown Mayan cities and towns buried out there.
The ammount of stuff still buried is astronomical, so there will likely be more opportunities to enter the field in the oncomming decades.
Its also never too late to start,
I’m just here acknowledge that everyone in this comment thread is so positive, friendly, and helpful. I personally have no interest in becoming an archeologist (I am more of an arm chair history person), but this thread made me happy. @Rebekah Sutton follow your dreams girl!
Agreed, never to late to start and what a nice bunch of people.
I tried to cover my chihuahuas ears so he wouldn't have to hear about his ancestors fate, but they are too comically large for his head
I choked on my noodle and dies after reading this
don't worry it looks like its pretty unlikely they were his ancestors anyway
@@Gekumatz chihuahuas got real big ears
@@PK-lo6ws fuck you
Yea but the bit about getting to cuddle a chihuahua for stomach ache was pretty sweet
"Chihuahuas functioned as hot water bottles"
I had to rewatch that segment like 3 times before I noticed the pot sculpted to look like a chihuahua lmao
Their foreheads store excess water
that pot isn't supposed to look like a chihuahua, it represents a Xolo, that is the hairless dog that appears in the movie Coco haha. The Xolos where considered to be related with the god of death and were supposed to guide their owner in their way to the Mictlán (the aztec's underworld) they were also used as hot water bottles because they are always very warm (i have one, so i can tell this part is true)
Maybe they mean their body heat was used for warmth on achey body parts.
Jim Stouffer they also shake. So it quickly subsides the ache within any body part you’re having trouble with quicker when applied. Just some knowledge I learned from medic school. We had a segment on chihuahuas. Surprisingly, they’re still used today!
In ancient times, they were commonly issued as a remedy for ache, heartache, and heartbreak.
And to my knowledge, the Indians would use them as signals, holding them up to the sky on a cold night starry night. The chihuahua would then initiate its ever so famous, “bark” sequence and howl into the night. That’s one of the many ways the Indians communicated with each other!
They’re also great for extracting poison. Their snappy bite retracts the poison from any wound it was previously injected in.
@@somethingwithbungalows Hilarious.
Had a dingo for 13 years, was a good dog, but he was wild af once you took him into the woods. He would literally wonder off for about a mile or more, and would show up 5 mins after you called him. He loved camping.
That would give me a heart attck lol babe! Wherez Rocko!!??
@@Gh0stdawg70 we kinda freaked out the first few times, but then he just always came back lol. There’s no wolves in our mountains, so he didn’t have to worry much.
Better than my beagle, nose to the ground and you had a good hour long chase on your hands until he found all the shit he was smelling xD. No way in hell I could catch him until he was about 12 years old, and Im 6'2. Max was a master smeller.
Sorry about your dog at-least you got good years with him hopefully mine lives long as well
Sorry for the late reply but are you in Aus or US?
I know a Native man who actually had a wolf as a "pet" when he was growing up. His dad knew a man who lived in the woods and fed the wolves, so when he was mourning the death of his previous dog his dad brought him to that man's house. The young wolves ran up to investigate and one of them stayed when the rest left, having chosen him. The wolf came home with him and was fiercely loyal to him, and no one else (much to his dad's annoyance.) Occassionally he would go missing and the dad would send his son to the area they knew thw wolf pack lived to call him back home, because he didnt listen if the dad went.
He was an incredibly smart and loyal dog, eventually learning what bus stop he would return from school at and waiting for him every day around the time the bus came, which everyone else was uncomfortable with, lol.
He also refused to stay inside at night to sleep. And when a neighbour called to complain about the wolf howling at the moon at night, the dad was like "well what do you want ME to do about it?? It's a wolf, it's going to howl."
That's pretty funny and cool.
It's a huge flex to have a real Wolf as your "Dog" similar to having a Tiger or Crocodile as pet (which shockingly many people do. Seriously the Pet tiger population almost rivals the wild one 😂).
It's also much more dangerous than having a Dog since Dogs are specifically bred to be pets.
Wolfs can be pretty aggressive and potentially deadly as a Pet so if you have one you better make sure you treat them double well.
Misraising a wild Animal as a pet can be a death sentence and it's always risky.
My sister had a majority wolf dog she rescued as a puppy from a very abusive owner. The wolf’s name was Taker. If he liked someone he’d steal an object from them and add it to his little hoard. He stole my gloves; I was so honored. He would also come up to lay on the bed with me when I napped, which really surprised my sister. He was very gentle, though he did kill her chickens if given the chance. From what I’ve read and studied about wolves, they are only aggressive with owners who don’t know how to treat them or who are abusive. Wild or otherwise, wolf attacks are very rare, so rare that figuring the likelihood is impossible. You are far more likely to be killed by your pet dog.
@@sharonkaczorowski8690 yeah, this friend's dad was on the abusive side in some ways. Including putting down his dogs (with a gun) without talking to him first. If I remember correctly it was because they were getting old? Because the friend said he had told his dad that he would do the same when he got to be elderly. I mean obviously he didn't kill his dad, but he was absolutely heartbroken and betrayed about it because he is the kind of person to see his pets as being as much a part of the family as his husband. They're like his children now, and he didn't feel much different about it when he was young, either.
But there's a lot of intergenerational trauma that people in oppressed racial groups go through, especially Native people in Canada. The last day school (residential school) closed in the 90s, and those tended to be incredibly abusive. So while I do not agree with what his dad did, I can understand that it was related to his own traumas that made him calloused. And I'm very proud of my friend for not continuing that cycle and remaining a kind-hearted person who makes everyone, including animals, feel safe around him. I myself am white and have had to put a lot of effort into working on my own intergenerational trauma to avoid hurting others the same way I was hurt, so I understand that it is NOT an easy thing to do.
bullshit
Ya there's no way you're "far more likely" to be killed by your pet dog than a fucking wolf.
"What happened to precontact dogs?"
They became postcontact dogs.
Fascinating..
Oof.
Who knows how many of these contacts were made in the past. Looking at history of Americas as "pre and post contact" is wrong in my opinion. It is said in the video itself that precontact dogs originated from north east Asia, much like the human settlers. So it is already a contact made waaaay before the Europeans even had a civilization as we know it (somewhere between 15 and 30 thousand years ago)
Ope! Nailed it!
Bruh
This chad dog thing is wilder than the plot of the entire Dune series
Lunarceas directed by David Lynch
@@TREYtheExplainer do you think Chad's DNA could be used to create a ghola (clone)? The cancer cells are technically living dog cells.
@@burnedtoast8047 I also now want David Lynch to direct a wacky-ass movie about the origin of chad dog
Is It really? Tasmanian devils have a transmissible face cancer, where as Duncan Idaho and one of his descendants were able to move at near light speed.
Like, with their bodies.
Hi TREY!!
I´m southamerican, from Chile, actually, and I can tell you that we have chickens prior to Spanish arrival, this are " las gallinas Araucanas". Here, Mapuche people have three breed of chicken, the Koyonka, for example, (is the more known), you can recognize them because their eggs (egg shell, for being more accurate) are blue or green, and for not havin´ feathers in their tail.
Today still exist, are very common in here, my family, actually, raise them.
I hope this was useful, at least a little bit.
Ps: sorry for my bad english:
Pss: I love your videos! I hope you keep doing them even in this pandemic times, and please, take care.
Woo, do the eggs taste like the white and brown ones?
That's thought to have been brought by Polynesian possibly the Rapa Nui/Easter Island some time during the 10th century.
@@trla6505 Well, I´m gonna say, they taste similar, but better, the color inside is more orange than yellow, we think that's because they eat more insects, grass and worms than the one in factories. :)
@@ANTSEMUT1 That's our theory too, because archeologist here have found in the north and center-north of the country (in the coast) polinesian jewelry (Most probably Rapa-Nui by the disign), and we now our ancestors commerce with Incas and coast people, so is very probably that that's how we get chickens :)
@@toriblackwood5920 ohh okey, okey thanks fo the fact
My family is from the Mexican state of Chihuahua. I remember telling them I hated Chihuahua dogs because they were so mean and noisy with their annoying bark. My grandmother stated our ancestors chances of survival increased because of those bug eyed annoying Chihuahuas. She went in to say they were great at altering of a potential attack by bandits sneaking around the homestead. Being they were small they were harder to detect it shoot.
That’s fascinating! We had two chihuahuas when I was little. We had to rehome one after he bit an older woman, but the one we kept, Max, was a lovely dog, though he definitely had the stereotypical chihuahua traits. He was super protective of me though, being that I was the youngest
Imagine going through the woods and rediscovering a breed of dogs
Like the Shnizzlehund
Any dogs in the woods would mate with coyotes and wolves and wouldn't be dogs anymore after few generations
@Millenial King the ppl will step in to breed w.these dogs
Imagine going through woods and saw native Americans releasing a pack of Chihuahuas from their backpacks to kill a Grizzly Bear
@@nickkings7881 if anyone is religious then evolution IS A FUCKING FACT AND HAHAH ADAM AMD EVE IS BULLSHIT SORRY WAKE UP AND ACCEPT REALITY THAT AFTER YOU DIE NOTHING HAPPENS STOP ACTING LIKE FUCKING CHILDREN!
"What breed of dog do you have?"
"CTVT cancer"
That is some nasty shit.
@@neobarbarus is that in human years or dog years lmao
@@anticksssDog years ofc
@@anticksss in human, mate
It's pretty wacky
Dude did you diddle your dog or something?
CTVT also stands for "Chad, the venereal terror"
Underrated
You glorious bastard!
new Soulsborne boss
Is that the new boss that came out?
Darrell_The_Cat ...or “terrier”.
Grew up with a Carolina Dog/American Dingo but we didn’t know what breed she was at the time. She was shy, pack-loyal to our family, playful, and super smart. Such a good girl. Found out about Carolina Dogs years after she had passed away and realized we had a super cool, ancient breed.
I had one too. She had the exact characteristics you describe. Got her from a shelter where animal control picked her up and arrested the owners for animal cruelty. They starved her. I adopted her but she was so thin I didn’t know what she was either until we got all her weight back on. Then a breeder identified her for me while we were talking. She was a wonderful dog and beautiful. The Northern Native Americans called them Song Dogs because they sing when they howl. I loved her so much.
Person: what breed is your cat?
Cat owner: Orange
I'm curious what our Bengals and savannahs will look like over time. I have a 19lbs Bengal named Loki and am curious to see how these breeds evolve with their totally new DNA from Asian Leopard cats and Servals.
I am an animal shelter worker with an orange cat and I approve this comment
basiclly same thing i said to the vet
vet says: oooohhh what kind of cat is this
me: looks confused its a cat
vet: ya but what kind of cat
me : i dont know its a cat and it goes moew
vet: oh well thats pretty neet it has 24 toes
me: ya well its dad is also its unchle so
vet : ohh
@ForestofTooMuchFood "Oh my god! They've killed Kenny...Again!!"
@@kennykelvin3980 Basically*, Meow*, Neat*, Uncle*
Sorry, my inner grammar nazi went wild seeing your comment.
My red heeler has dingo blood. And he's... interesting. Never had one like him. Apparently I'm his Emotional Support Animal.
Smart and anxious?
Cattle dogs aren't good house dogs, They are working dogs so need a lot of exercise or something to do
@@keeganbulter4686 He was sort of a rescue. We rescued the previous owner from him eating her apartment while he was still a puppy.
@@mommachupacabra That's good :). I've only ever owned cattle dogs but I live on property in Aus.
@@keeganbulter4686 You pick out a heeler - and you better hope your heeler picks you back. I never wanted a herding dog. Mars had other ideas, he was supposed to belong to one of the kiddos here. I got picked. Never had one like him, he's more Little Brother than Companion Dog.
"I diagnose you with headache. Apply this dog to your face."
Ikr?! Did they just rub chihuahuas all over themselves,?
"Remove when it stops barking."
"It's super effective."
@@NewNecro So, never?
Its funny because my Chihuahua-Terrier hybrids keep cuddling with us any time we sit or rest on the sofa.
This is literally my favorite RUclips video; I find myself coming back here over and over, sharing the link, researching more, watching another Trey video, etc. . This is everything I could ever want from a piece of content
Petition to use Chad's DNA to resurrect him as a clone, and make him answer for his crimes.
What if by doing this the Founder Dog aka Chad somehow evolved into a werewolf?
That's an added bonus :P
I wonder how viable(?) Chad’s DNA is now?
11,000 years and natural selection is selecting for only part of a dog.
Something something Fry's dog something something
Well seeing as cancerous cells DNA is mutated, it would be the world's ugliest dog.
My aunt said that in our tribe, Skokomish, those who were royal or higher up wore the fur of a Skok dog. The most pitch black coat you would've ever seen
Alaskan? I’m guessing from the art on your profile
@@shoechild6813 pnw actually
So Cruella DeVil was only appropriating Native American culture!
That's pretty cool, what was the culture and what were the gods that your tribe believed in?
@@allanrichardson9081 😂
Inuits: sees grizzly
Inuits: GO POCKET BEAR DOG!
Long ago native american, "I choose you, arCanine!"
Hol up r u telling me that the grizzly was carrying an STD and this STD is able to cross infect completely different species
Mullerornis oh
That makes a lot more sense
I wonder what dog had more chutzpah, the original Dachshunds or the Inuit Bear Dog?
This killed me 😂😂😂😂
We adopted a very young yellow puppy who we were told was a lab mix. And now that she is grown we know she's a Carolina dog! I always refrain from telling people, to avoid being "that guy" but it's cool to see someone acknowledging them!
Thanks for another great video Trey!
what is"that guy" in this context?
“And we know chad did.”
Eeeyy
Had to stop the video to laugh :D
Probably with that bitch Karen
Pre-contact dogs would be one of the best candidates for de-extinction cloning.
Yep, they lived not long ago, and would not propose as many problems as a wooly rhino or mammoth would. Nice thinking.
What if they can extract the DNA of that pre-contact dog from the cancer?
@@bipo819 I'm not sure but it sounds rather hard to be able to extract DNA from a cancer cell, and they would also need a surrogate mother.
@@radcoon1610 True it wouldn’t be easy but probably can be done maybe not yet
@@bipo819 I don't think I've heard of reverting a cancer cell back to what it was before it mutated. The DNA is essentially corrupted. Clone a cancer cell and you'll just be growing a cancerous tumor unfortunately.
My tribal elders tell me at least one of our dogs is still here. An ancient dog that always lived with us. Today it’s called the catahoula cow dog but my elders say it’s originally one of our Choctaw dogs.
Catahoulas are cool 😎. But let us all continue to seek the Immortal Chad. ‘K? 🤦♀️😆😎
Is that the one they call the "yaller dog" (yellow dog) ??
My dog is half catahoula and nobody ever knows what I'm talking about when I say it
That's our state dog in Louisiana! I hear people use them for hunting, but I moreso see black/brown labs in my bend of the bayou lol
I raised Catahoula cowdogs for a decade. Heard all the talk about Indian dogs being involved in the breeding, but never saw them behave much differently than any other curr. Now Queensland heelers are the most feral acting breed I've ever handled. Confirmed dingo blood in them.
I remember this video very will. I had just put this on in the background of doing stuff and then I heard u talking about CTVT. SCANDAL events like CTVT is literally one of my favourite facts of all time. This fact, and this video, is what set alight my passion for biology. I watched this video during a time when I had no idea what I wanted to be and do with my life. About a year later I had the worst summer of my life, but in that summer I analyzed what I liked, what facts and stuff I found the most interesting...and it was all mostly biology. Before the realization I had taken my first walk outside during that sad summer. I found a decaying fungus and thought to myself: "Hmm, I actually dont know anything about this organism." And ever since ive been invested in studying mycology as a hobby. Im now in the first year of my biology bachelor at university.
Thank you TREY, u helped me find my passion with a video I originally thought sounded boring. Thank you, for changing my life for the better.
So then Aztecs how did you keep warm at night?
Aztecs: We snuggled with our Chihuahua's
They called them “techichi” but yes, that’s how I keep warm at night to this day 😂
So that is why chihuahuas are mostly known as coming from Mexico lol
Isabel Cast lol they are from Mexico that’s why😂
This is the way
Also Aztecs: * eat your still quivering heart atop a public building *
There was literally no way i could've predicted the turn this took
Unless you study Pre-contact dog diseases.
I am gobsmacked
Time to add sexually communicable cancer to the list of dooms-day scenarios...
Yeah I'm starting to have an existential crisis for the sake of dogs. It's so fucking deeep
@@speakZarathustra Cats still have to deal with something similar to that.
Anyone who has had a small dog can confirm the hot water bottle theory. I've always called mine a cordless space heater.
Mine are the only things keeping me warm in the winter in my unheated house.
It’s not just small dogs. Mines quite big but still insist on sleeping on top of you to keep you warm.
@@noisy_killjoy Same, plus it helps me sleep calmer when my dog sleeps on my legs.
Yup. Maltese.
A little piece of information to add to this phenomenon is that dogs have a normal body temperature of 106°F. small dogs push that temperature a little higher than big dogs but that said because of the fact that the body temperature of dogs is higher than the body temperature of humans it makes them wonderful sleeping companions in cold and damp areas. Plus the love and body contact of a dog is emotionally and in an unproven way physically healing. The psychological security that an emotionally sensitive animal provides is invaluable.
I owned a Carolina dog he was left as a puppy under a farmers step as he was the runt of the litter, he sealed several home until my dad adopted him. He was wild but a good boy in the end, very family oriented, and alway willing to protect the neighbourhood kids as well as my sister and I from adults. He helped my neighbours toddler learn to walk by allowing the kid to hold onto his fur. We only learnt his breed after his death with a dna test. Anyway dogs are great.
"Vaguely around here"
**Shows entire Eurasia**
So dogs are from Earth. Interesting. 🤔
Europe isn't its own continental plate, it's only Asia. That's how I see it. And I count India its own Continent because it does have a continental plate
@How To Vegan
How very interesting to learn of your own personal definition of a continent that is different from the established one. Clearly you have brought something of value to this thread.
@@RileyRivalle2 🤣🤣
@@mexicanmuslim
"Physiographically, Europe and South Asia are peninsulas of the Eurasian landmass. However, Europe is widely considered a continent with its comparatively large land area of 10,180,000 square kilometres (3,930,000 sq mi), while South Asia, with less than half that area, is considered a subcontinent."
Very proud owner of a Carolina dog, you can tell she’s still kind of wild in certain situations. She’s got webbed feet for swimming but also a broad chest, lean waist, and long legs for running. She’s definitely evolved to take advantage of her environment
I’ve got a Carolina dog too. Had to put 3 foot wire toppers on my six foot fence 😂. She still tried to get over to see the deer, so we cut holes in the back of it so she can stick just her head through. She’s truly got a mind of her own, never seen anything like it before.
Should’ve left them in the wild
I think we have one she is wild as shit 😅 she bit me twice just turned into me chasing and yelling at why she would do that 😅
Chad knew what he was doing. Leaving little horcruxes around
"Canines, or as I like to call them, 'dogs'" was too funny to me.
I instantly thought it sounded like something Trump would have said. "Most people don't know that canines can also be called dogs."
interesting fact. traditionally, "dog" was originally the word for a male canine. "bitch" being the female equivalent. it's only in relatively recent times that the word dog has come to replace canine.
@@figjam9530 yes, for very clear reason
Dough awgs
@@figjam9530 now in dog show speak “stud” is an unaltered male and “dog” is an altered male dog, and all the ladies are bitches. Equivalent to stallions, geldings, and mares for horses
Chihuahuas weren't just bred as "hot water bottles", they were bred to be mousers and rat catchers. Remember, as you pointed out, they didn't have domesticated cats to do those jobs.
They didn’t have domesticated rats or mice .
@@bernardhargraves527 False.
@@christopheraaron8299 I made the correction.
@@bernardhargraves527 Um, ok. Seems like a pointless change. Do you just like being a contrarian?
What is this argument about??
hey there! just a little correction: the dogs that were used as water bottles by the aztecs were actualy the Xolos (the hairless dogs) because due to their lack of hair their body temperature is always high to keep them warm, so honestly they're the best breed of dog to hug if youre having cramps of muscular pain haha. they were considered sacred and closely related to the god of death and they were supposed to gide their owners safetly to the Mictlán (aztec's underworld) when they died. Thats why Xolos were very valuable (still are) and very symbolic to aztec culture (actually the pots that youre showing are supposed to represent Xolos). As a breed they are very protective and extremeley smart and often prefer being with humans than with other dogs.
Hoy know alot bout dogs
Ooh, thank you fir the information!
@@nickvanzant835 only about Xolos because i used to have one
@@anapaomv7620 they are so pretty. I just learned about them and now I want one
@@DH-gq7bm they are!!! And they are amazing dogs with very human-like personalities ♡
Great presentation. Especially the explanation of cultural relativism. As a historian thats one of the biggest challenges i have when discussing things with people. They take their values and apply them to other across the globe/time.
that's because everyone is a bunch of sissies nowadays.
Trey: "Greenland populations of dogs survived disease"
me: *Flashbacks to Plague Inc.*
My 14 year old dog passed away last week. Give your dogs a hug for her!
lost two of my dogs this year.... if you have a female dog neuter them, don't believe leave me look up pyometra. Maybe my dog would've lived to be 16-18 or more who knows.
Our pets are not like family, they are family.
Heck dude I'm so sorry 😿
Sorry to hear
It can be a devastating time
My best mate passed away 2 years ago cry every time I think about him
His best mate is 13 now she is pretty sick but still happy
I don't want to think about that day other than she will be with her big brother again
😪😢😭
In the wise words of a penguin: “we killed them and ate their livers”
To be fair they probably mistook the chihuahua as a rat, killed it, and ate it so the met wasn't wasted.
Got yeah! There on a slow life boat to China! Up top boys!
@@WonderfulAkari This is disturbingly possible. Gross.
Well, fava beans and a nice Chianti don't really make a meal on their own.
that's how you get vitamin a poisoning.
My Chihuahua Mr.Boss has served me as a very good mouse-hunting/bird-hunting dog (birds for food ofcourse) and yes, a great hot-water-bottle,
-he's small but also very smart and sturdy, he used to help pull me through the snow when we would go out in the woods for hours, and up hills,
he never got tired but i retired him from that because he was getting older and i am also bigger now.
He's also very gentle if i tell him not to chase something and tell him to love it
(for example, there was a baby gopher we took in, and even though we usually eat them and hunt them, he was gentle and didn't go into attack-mode,
treating her with curiosity, more than a thing to hunt) -same with a little club-foot mouse i found hobbling along in our backyard,
Mr.Boss was gentle to it whenever i took it outside with us on our adventures. (not that i would trust any dog like that,
but Boss is super smart because i talk to him alot and spend alot of time teaching him context and right from wrong, and to be careful).
My ancestors loved them (although i think they are a more recent dog to have where i am from? -i think the english explorers brought them)
and they had been used as guard dogs for a long long time, against bears and other wild animals. They're protective, fast, and loud, so it's useful.
Mr.Boss is a very good well-behaved one, he isn't mean in the slightest, and he knows when to shut up (unless he thinks we are being stupid and brushing his worries off)
and i know for a fact all who have brat chihuahuas are just bad at raising them,
like how someone might be bad parents who let their kids get away with anything because "oh my baby" and "oh they're cute i can't say no or be mad".
They are good smart dogs and i am glad that they are not one of the ones that disappeared during history.
Many owners don't bother to train them. Large dogs are dangerous and break things and hurt people and are very loud. If you don't train them someone gets hurt.
Smaller dogs like Chihuahua, they bark a little but you can put up with it. If they bite it doesn't hurt too much. They can't knock you over either. So most people don't bother to train simple things like that. Maybe won't even train them at all
The stuffed dog shown as a Salish Wool Dog is actually a Turnspit Dog called Whiskey. Turnspits were a European breed that were used in the kitchen to run on a wheel and turn the meat over the fire. They are now extinct.
When not working in the kitchen, they were also used as foot warmers for church goers.
this is why white people are cancelled lol
@ForestofTooMuchFood If your referring to dogs, yes. Native American people, no. Plenty of Native AMericans left. More in the south than in the northern areas though.
@@allgodsnomasters2822 Turnspit dogs went out of fashion because it's cheaper to hire FOB immigrants and black sharecroppers when economies of scale were in effect.
Spit roasts will never be the same.
where did they come from?
where did they go?
Where did you come from, Pre-contact Doggo?
Chad banged himself into immortality. Wow.
Wait till we have the ability to use the DNA of the tumor to bring back chad. CHAD IS BACK
He turned himself into a unicellular organism, and infected the conquerors! He lives on in his immortality!!
XD wat
Having had a teacup Chihuahua who was only only about twice as big as my fist, I can attest to being stuck often with wonder at her very existence.You must be mindful of them underfoot and to not sit on them but they are amazing and loving - and protective,in a futile way only we humans see it being, for to her she saw herself as a raging wolf at the doorbell ring!
"Chihuahuas appeared to have functioned as hot water bottles, relieving and dispersing pain to injured areas"
Bruh
A wild Chihuahua appeared! Throw poké ball now?
They have vibratory qualities also.
yeah that's what we use house cats for today.
It works, can confirm. My little mutt will sit on my legs and help with muscle spasms.
Bring the dog he has a headache
Something to keep in mind is that these genetic studies can often have issues that get corrected over time as new information is better understood. Many high blood quantum native Americans were told they had ancestry from all over and very little Native American markers not that long ago with the human genetic testing. Each year, more info is added and more new markers are recognized, and the higher blood quantum’s are now starting to be recognized for what they are. It is possible these ancient breeds and many other dogs have higher amounts of pre-contact dna than it seems at this moment, and this may be corrected as more data emerges.
Approximations get more precise as we advance our technology.
Well said….Europeans on the other hand, have high non indo european heritage.
I hate this micro aggression.
@@snakeeater0224 lmao, it's chill, tracking your heritage is mostly a hobbyist thing and let's all embrace our diverse origins from brave people's from all over who braved harsher and colder climates to reach where we are today.
@@snakeeater0224 micro aggression is such a pansy thing to say
It makes sense if the original dogs came over a landbridge (or various ways) from the “old world” to the “new world,” that they would have genetically been marked as European and have European DNA.
its midnight i have to go to bed
Trey: Hey wanna learn the history of dogs?
sure
The same is happening to me right now it's 11.30 pm here and I'm watching rather then going to bed lol
It's only 7pm down here
Exactly 7:00 here
It's 5 here
Me
I love my border collie so much. She truly is very intelligent. She knows she’s the second leader in my house next to my mom before I moved in. She keeps my brothers from fighting and any confrontations from escalating too much. She’s very motherly to us, nurturing and protective and she also kinda knows how to communicate lol. She knows how to lead me to things or place or paw on me to get my attention, she sometimes increases the force behind her paw if I ignore her😂😂😂😂
Moving my cursor over the heads of these ancient doggos, and telling them they were good boys.
You are a gentleman and a scholar
They were all good boys
Best boys
I want a wool dog :C
NO!
Some of them were good *girls*
10PM: One more video before bed
4AM: Dogs throughout history
Lmao its 4:14 rn 🤣🤣🤣🤣
yeah... its 7:38am right now...
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣same glad it’s not just me ❤️
it's 2:30am for me rn lmao
its 4:02 rn omfgg
my main takeaway from this is that all dogs, pre-contact or otherwise, are good boys and good girls.
yes!!
Except for good ol' Chad.
Indeed. And eating them is just wrong. Culturally approved by some or not.
@@DelaniaAndTheDogs The Aztec Mexica ate Chihuahuas like they were eating rabbits lol 🤣
Mr The Explainer this is maybe my favorite video of yours. I return to watch it often.
“Less than 2%”
:(
“More than 1%”
:)
I had a Carolina Dog, she lived to the ripe old age of 17 years.
She was a great dog and was very useful for killing pests.
RIP Bootsie 2003-2020
Rip bootsie
@@sillygoose42069 smokin that bootsie pack 🚬
@@slaydog5102 smoking ur moms püsšy
Rip bootsie. She is catching pests in heaven now
This will give me a lot of random facts to start conversations with at parties
whats your mbti
@@supernova9563 sorry my what?
Saskia R. your personality type haha
@@supernova9563 i just took that test and I got ENTJ-T
But I wouldnt say that the description of that personality type fits me ... like at all xD
I just like to plan things ahead and think opinions should be backed by facts 🤣 but the test for some reason thinks Im a leader now?
@@saskiar.7395 what site did you take the test on?
An Euro American woman that worked for my Tribe that became a close friend for the rest of her life.
She wrote her thesis on Washington State Tribal Hair Dogs regarding her discovery of "The Salmon Fluke",
Rivers with certain parasites were fatal when eaten by dogs. Not all rivers are home to salmon with these parasites.
Hair Dogs were only present among Tribes on rivers that salmon did not have those particular parasites.
She hoped to identify genetic survivors of these Hair Dogs and collected samples of dog hair from various sources. Over the years she obtain one or two strands from Tribal Artifacts gifted to her when she shared her research with the owners.
I miss her... 💙
"This cancer has effectively become a unicellular, asexually reproducing pathogen, despite technically being a dog."
*checks to ensure I'm not on a SCP reading channel*
Same dude.
Ignorance is bliss. I had to check what a "SCP reading channel" is.
BTW, clonally transmissible cancers aren't even unique to dogs. E.g., Look up [Tasmanian] Devil facial tumour disease (DFTD).
Some kind of animals related to jellyfish have also become single celled pathogenic parasites, I thought you might like to know this just because of how wild the animal kingdom is.
all I can think is the dog residue from undertale
No, this is the sort of shit you dont make up.
The image of the stuffed ''salish wool dogs'' is actually the turnspit dog, and the specimen's name is Whiskey. Turnspit dogs were used in the United Kingdom not so much as a companion but as a way to keep the turnspit running and cooking food, and often they'd throw hot coals into the wheel to make them run faster :( They went extinct as soon as automation came in and their owners didn't want to continue breeding and keeping them as pets. Sigh. Humans, ay?
Glad to see I'm not the only one that caught that!
Bloody hell what a horrific existence, poor animal.
It was a blessing, going by later description they were very much poor animals often they had joint issues and such from being so small
Its such a cute little dog!
I didn’t need to know this, christ.
So immortality through cancer. Well, I never thought of that
HeLa cells would interest you then :D
@@GreenMonkeyToaster now the question; can we clone Chad back, or is the DNA too damaged?
Hearing about that story of HeLa and now “Chad” has given me some serious William-Birkin-from-Resident-Evil-2 vibes, especially during that segment in the game, where the protagonists are roaming through those sewers and have to fight those G-Young/G-Adult enemies.
@@dark_fire_ice can we clone chad? Asking the real questions
Bumb out of interest
4:45 what's with the copy and pasting of the stones and foliage in the background? (They're only very very slightly different)???
Trey: "So good were these dog-hair blankets that some say they could be as valuable as a human slave."
Me: _"I really hope that's not a recent quote."_
When you comment stuff like this it just feeds our imminent down fall when the AI enslave us so they can create interstellar trade for alien dog hair.
I can send you my dogs hair. But don’t go off buying slaves!
Max Mustermann aww but ma!
Europeans:
How can you barbarians eat dogs?
Aztecs:
Ah, you've never met a Chihuahua have you?
Hernán Cortés: So you have chosen death.
ty it ant right but it made me laugh
When I was a kid, we had a Chihuahua named Tinkerbell. The most vicious little ankle biter, and a known terror in the neighborhood. She would chase off German Shepherds and Great Danes, jumping up to threaten their private parts. I swear, she was part Honey Badger. One day, I was walking home and I see the mailman hurdling hedges in a panic. There was Tinkerbell hurdling right behind him. So funny. Land Piranhas.
Maybe they were bred to be mean just to make it easier to eat them
@@Ken19700 Chihuahuas are also ranked more dangerous then pitbulls
The eating of dogs when dogs were also regularly companions seems kind of similar to me to European's relationship with horses maybe?
And the Scottish even took their sheep as lovers, I've heard!
@@Valchrist1313 that was a myth resulting from there being a law against sheep theft in england, but none against bestiality at the time
so, claiming that was what they were doing the would be thieves that were discovered managed to escape punishment
@@AnarchistMetalhead that is actually really funny.
LGtBT As a Scottish person that seemed to be a more Welsh stereotype that still holds up to this day (even though it was english propaganda).
@@Valchrist1313 I've heard, if you take them to the edge of a cliff, they push back harder.
WOW 😲 that took a turn that couldn't be expected. The whole thing was totally fascinating, but the bit about the cancer took it up a notch & left me flabbergasted. Oh, the irony of it all. 😆
Thanks muchly for such a great presentation. You gave us a comprehensive & in-depth analysis of the subject without getting bogged down with the details. That'll do pig. 😄
17:04 last week they announced that they pulled a puppy out of the permafrost in Russia. It’s suppose to be 50k years old or something
Clone it
Oh, thats so sad,...............................is it ok ?
@@jesushitler2000 uh......
@@jesushitler2000 *I agree. I hope that it was okay as well.*
*Anyone have a follow-up to this story, and also it's condition??*
_someone gets hurt_
aztecs: apply chihuahua directly to the affected area
chihuahua: 💕💕💕💕
The power of pure rage and annoyingness is what heals your wound
@@schloany4479 everytime I cry my chi instantly jumps up on me and licks my face. She never growls at anyone. Stop spreading bullshit.
@@aquastar4336 Stop getting pressed by one of the most over used jokes ever I bet you do cry a lot jesus
@@schloany4479 that was harsh
@@roxsauce7862 "Stop spreading bullshit" rightfully so my friend
Ghangis Khan: Most current living beings are related to me
???: amateur!
Ghangis: what you say!!!?
Chad dog: I SAID, "AMATEUR"!!
I would add human in there, most beings are NOT related to ghengis khan.
@@Dedjkeorrn42 I don't know man, Ghangis got around...
@@someguywithatomahawk8058 according to the research cited (and this was back in 2010 so the number has gone up) it would equate to ~1,733,250,000 men were directly related to him. No study has been made to trace his female offspring(would require to find his matrilenial line, eg his mother or sister and trace the mitochondrial dna)
I'm so glad this video mentioned CTVT. Witch is such a fascinating biological anomaly, as well as technically a "pre contact dog"
Chad the immortal cancer dog... There's a title for a creepypasta.
SCP-42086
@@morriskaller3549 I want to fuck scp-1471
there was a creepypasta called like the Dogworld or the Dogscape or something like that which just takes a similar spooky concept to the next, horrifying level
Oh shit dogscape is real
Tiss fant produce cancer immune dog people
We must bring back the wooly doggo
13:52 he's got a cute little doggy backpack/sledge type thing! hes helping his owners move! so cute! go ancient doggo! :)
Imagine casually passing by a dog like that with a little sledge pulling their owners light weight goods
teety woo it's a travois! No wheels, just two sticks tied at the top with a blanket in the middle. Pretty cool how they put them together.
ummm hes a dog slave
@@jeil5676 a little melodramatic there aren't you? Let's keep this in perspective..... lol
edit: I could be arrested? grow up you idiot hehe
@@teetywoo3156 you realize if you did that today you could be arrested. It is cute though hehe.
As a dog lover i really enjoy learning about all the puppers from all over the world!!
I remember seeing part of some documentary late one night back in the day... there are (or at least in very recent history) cultures that still eat dog mean obviously. But there was one in particular that stood out in my mind. It was one where they valued dogs as strong/loyal/skilled companion of sorts. They raised the dog, took care of them (usually named them), treated them well... for several years. Then there was a specific point in time where they would kill the dog and consume it. It was a solemn occasion. They spoke to one of the older kids in the family who talked about how they were sad and would miss the dog but they understood it to be an honor to have such a loyal and brave creature to become a part of them or something along those lines. I've heard that other cultures that practice cannibalism have a somewhat similar take on their specific practice of consuming the flesh of a loved one who has passed away. This world is still a wildly diverse place.
Human looks at wolf puppies.
""Let's keep you small like that"*
Nooooo. Grow them big and fooffy
you cant do that geneticlly its impossible.
look at the dingo and the african wild dog and explain that those were originally wolves. pr even better, a hounddog.
you cannot force nature to start making up shit
my point, a wolf was never turned into a sharpei
there had to have been many breeds of dog in the past.it is illogical to think there are more sloth vstieties than dog
@@MrDarkoKos well too bad I guess but humans did. We wanted something to remain like a puppy and we succeeded
Have your heard about a pig dog or a half dog? Nature ain't even mad bro
@@sintia12c what?
look at the laat 500 years pf dogs. none have turned into new breeds looking nothing like the originals.
how many pugs have become giant, or wolflike?
MrDarkoKos well let’s see Hmm
A giant dog breed:
A English mastiff (I big pug doggo)
A wolf like dog:
Idk mate prob a *wolfdog” but I prefer huskies because I have one
But if you really want something out there try “pig the dog”. He sure is something 😂😂
When he said "furry" it activated my fight or flight response
Hahahaha 🤠
@Grace Slagle disgusting furry sympathiser
@Grace Slagle imagine sympathising with furries and using the clap emoji
@Grace Slagle lets be real we both dont have to imagine that
@Grace Slagle id be worried if you werent already sick before encountering me
my grandma's chihuahua was a lapdog to the bone. she was very warm and very happy to cuddle. once i got older i was able to just fully pick her up and cradle her in my arms like a baby and she would close her eyes and snooze. she died not too long ago but i grew up w that little dog and i will always love her
The Salish Wool Dog shown at 5:32 and subsequently after is actually a Turnspit Dog named Whiskey. Turnspits were a breed used in the Old World to evenly cook meat by running on a wheel rigged up to a spit. This particular Turnspit seemed to be well-loved as her taxidermied body was buried with flowers and other items.
Yes! I saw that photo and I was like, that’s a turnspit dog! My dog is a long bodied, short legged, black and white, crooked leg dog and I always call her a turnspit dog
“Here we have the malamute, the Inuit sledge dog, the Greenland dog, the Chihuahua of course, and the.....”
*Squints hard at xoloitzcuintli*
“.....hairless ones...”
"I wish to live in every dogs' balls forevermore, woof."
-Chad, 9000BC
That’s fucked up. 🤦♀️😬
@@christinearmington You remind me of a 70 year old Facebook grandma
Does anyone know what the name of the background music that starts playing at 11:45?
Wolves:
Loyal, fierce, vicious, dangerous and wild pack animals that take down animals weighing in hundreds of pounds
Chihuahua:
*ANGR B E A N*
This will be my new name for them.
Chad:
cancer
Chihuahua: angry water bottles
Chihuahua= 50% tremble + 50% hate
My chihuahua thinks she is as good of a guard dog as a pitbull or rottie lmao
Hi I am from Canada and after watching your video I can say with 100% that my rescued dog is a Carolina dog. I thought she was a mutt, but she has all the same traits, looks, and behaviours. She also has the thicker patch of fur on her back, same tail. Thank you for your very interesting video it made my day.
if you're for real you should take a dna sample and breed more of those lol
I had a Carolina dog growing up. That patch on their back looks almost like a Lions mane. It took us awhile to figure out if he was a Carolina dog. Best dog I've ever had. Incredibly intelligent.
@ewok king if you domesticate one they can actually be really sweet.
source: I have one lol
@ewok king haha, and yeah she's such a sweetheart
@@aita2565 "actually"
BTW, the chihuahua is not the "hot water bottle dogs". The dogs used that way are called xoloitzcuintli or Xolo (pronounced cholo) is used as an easier name to say. They are much bigger than chihuahuas. About the size of a cocker spaniel. They are also called the mexican hairless dogs. Dogs body temp is around 102 degrees F. Four degrees higher than humans and with no hair that heat transfers directly to the skin of the person they are helping. My mom had one and she would sleep with it around her neck to relieve pain so she could get a good nights sleep. When she got the dog the docs said it was most likely her last year. She got the dog and lived another 12 years until the dog passed away. They are not pretty dogs but they are loyal and very warm.
Do these dogs cost a lot?
@@signaturerush In Mexico they're relatively common and cheap, but I'm not sure about the cost in other countries
@@signaturerush A purebred one might but I almost got one once from a rescue shelter. They're no more expensive than any other breed there and while you can't guarantee they're 100% purebred I'd much rather my money go somewhere like that.
I knew some cholos growing up
In a very heavy duty scientific paper from about four years ago they stated the aside from Eurasian Dogs that it seemed Chihuahuas and Xolos represented two separate split split offs from from wolves. I don't know how accurate or true that was but it certainly seemed real technical and scholarly.
Have you ever heard the wolf cry to the blue corn moooooon !?
Man that made my night. Great video, nice touch there at the end.
Alternate title: *Good boys and doggos you’ll never pet*
Good one!
Hey at least your ancestors might have
That is probably one of the saddest things I've ever heard....
Depends on if they have CCTV
We might be able to clone those wool dogs from surviving dog-hair blankets, the owners of the blankets permitting of course.
When your species gets ravaged by disease so badly that it becomes one.
Ahh.. Humans... Wait, you mean dogs? Lol...
@Keith M what eat dog meat sonny and shut up
Well, you know what they say: if you can't beat 'em, join 'em...
“The canines, or as I like to call it, a daug”
:d
Gotta love presidential quotes
@@zacherystafford I wondered if anyone else caught that.
son really went "a doagh"
Doge
What is the reference paper for the phylogenetic tree at 22:32?
So do we have enough DNA to potential make a clone of the extinct per-contact dogs in the future
Jurassic Bark.
Of course, use the ctvt cancer cells
@@awittyusernamepleaselaugh7481 Indoginus-Rex
@@alleghanyonce Tyranosauruff
@@awittyusernamepleaselaugh7481 oh no not again
Aztec: eats a dog*
Conquistadors: Fransisco *GET* *THE* *CROSS*
*AAAAAAAAAAAAA*
What about when they sacrifice the humans?
Spanish: Aw hell nah!
bring the coof
senka ajuiyak nopa iskuintli o tik kuaj yaljuaya
Also conquistadors: Well, we killed all animal in this land and there's nothing to eat this winter. Who wants a dog nugget?
The pre-contact dogs were like: *Pre-contact dog noises*
Woof
Shit man, you're right.
Mycel oooof
Thanks Bigfoot, very cool!
This is the type of history I wish I learned in school.
Now this is interesting and also something that I never considered before
@BLUE DOG that's lowkey racist my guy