@bruceownsu Yea, It Needed Haard Bastterds, Mate ! No Room Fer Pommy Pooftahs ! My little ID pic is me holding my 1st Grandson, in Addy, S.A. We're Irish, so we don't really have Any Spiders that can bite, nevermind Kill the Shit Outta Yah ! And St.Patrick fucked out All the Snakes and we've got 1 or 2 kindsa tiny lizards - in Very specific locations. But I was more worried about an "invasion" of Big M/fkin Bats into the side of the Botanical Gardens & Park nearest the Zoo !! Wee Bats I can deal with, but when the Feckers get to be the Size of Gulls, I'm feckin' Off Home !! Trouble is, living in a Seaside resort town, the frickin' Gulls have been eating Human Fast Food for years! Now these M/Fkrs are the size of Albatrosses !! AND Have Very Little Fear of Humans - they're scared of Dogs the size of our Samoyed, husky size. Still I'd take them over wee sneaky bastard spiders that want to bite yer ballbag ! I'd still like to go back to 'stralia and get about a bit more. Adelaide, Sydney and a day in Perth aren't enough! And our wee Aussie came home with his Mum & Dad when he was two, because even with 3 jobs, they couldn't afford to live on the edge of the CBD, pay for a Chilminder, Kindergarten, then School & with Medical & Dental Care to pay for, when the offer of a better paying job for him and lots of Aunts and Grandma's & Grandpa's to look after No.1 Grandson ! But they'd several years in Australia and never regretted living & working there. Adelaide is a lovely City and has everything you would want in a place to live. And the Wine country around it - with the amount of Free samples you do well not to get pissed up all day !! But Life wouldn't be Life without twists and turns and change, but I'd still happily go live in Oz land for good ! 👍☘POD 🐨🖖 YOU & YOURS STAY SAFE & WELL MATE 😷😉🖒 .
@Hidden Woodsben : What is typically considered beautiful or handsome is more of a social construct than anything. Everyone has at least a slightly different preference, some far more extreme than others. But society produces trends and fashions that have nothing to do with what individual people really are attracted to when not influenced by the desire to _fit in_ socially.
Have you ever been to a zoo, looked at a large ape and thought "damn that thing would toss me like a ragdoll". Now imagine an ape the size of a subaru forester.
I am so happy to see this channel grow! It is rare to see such niche and fascinating channels become popular, and it's so cool to be along for the journey :)
of course they were talented. they picked the best person to make it. like if you wanted to put up a mural on the side of your house, you dont just let anyone do it right? you find the best person to do it and have them paint it. and its extra impressive because they didnt have art school and classes that teach how to draw accurately
Salads are a much relatively recent breed and not wuld plants. They haven't existed when these cavepaintings where made. However plants are deicted in paintings. Also meat rarwly is depictwd kn these paintings bht hunt is. These paintings tell stories about humans and what they did more than what they ate. For thsr you can look at plaque at the teeth and stomach content, there you won't just find meat.
go the congo,theres dinasaurs there,& in the u.s,maybe europe,still kicking,,the old knights,were sent out,in france,ect,to kill ''dragons'',IE,,dinasaurs..a trip in 2006,?.went to the congo,to find emtebe,,they did,then ran.hippo,s stay away from them,but there plant eaters with attitude..theres a pic of a shot,terradactyle,in the early 1900,s.or late 1800,s.with 7 or 8 men,holding it up..
@@diggitydoo5836 My dad worked at a quarry. He operated a crane that was really a dinosaur. Mr. Slate was having trouble replacing him at the quarry when dad retired.
@@paxmule I really did see one. My husband saw it too. Not kidding. I wish I didn't see it honestly. Kinda messed up my thinking. We were on a cliff overlooking the Puget Sound at Pt Defiance park and we saw it flying to the bank up a ways from where we were standing into the trees. I said: what is that? he said: I don't know. I said: it looks like a pterodactyl. Look at it's head, look at that tail. It is huge. Then he said: it cannot be, they are extinct. I said...but we are looking at one right now. He said: get the boys in the car...NOW. (I got the boys in the car.) It happened. Other people have reported seeing pterodactyls too.
Sometimes I think about what our ancestors experienced living in in the world like that. the love, the pain, the fear, hunger, and the strive to survive. Its absolutely crazy.
Puts things in perspective hey? It's a good practice to consider these things when we even begin to start thinking about moaning over something trivial.
Actually pure hunter-gatherer societies wherever and whenever they occur tend to struggle *less* to acquire food, are aggressively egalitarian and usually have much more fun and happiness than agricultural or pastoral societies. They have no ownership, hierarchy, paternity, inheritance or slavery. Even in the 1800s for instance, people raised modern then lost and taken in by hunter gatherers who are later "rescued" by their culture would generally run away to rejoin the hunter-gatherers. While hunter gatherers treated as lifelong guests of European royalty prefer to return to hunter-gathering and feel it is a richer lifestyle. Hunter gatherers have abilities we would consider preternatural in terms of senses. They only have a baby every 5 yrs while post-domestication people have babies every year. Imagine only needing to "work" several hrs a day. They're lives are just superior to those in civilization.
@@DogsAreCool-di7sv they were going extinct on a last remote island when the egyptians were building the pyramids, that's quite close if you think about it
The way some people talk, it may be the not so distant future that we can see some of these creatures...I’m just finding out that “deextinct” is really a thing...
We should also appreciate the amazing animals that are still alive today. Elephants, dolphins, lions, etc. Imagine, they might go extinct one day and humans thousands of years in the future might think of them the same way we do about these toxodons and mammoths and so forth.
North America: has mammoths and large bears Europe: has mammoths and large Lions. Africa: has larger elephants and large carnivores. South America: has giant sloths and large cats. Asia: has largest primates and large Lions Australia: cheetah crocodiles
@@aurasky518 lol what a loser🤣😂 loser and still maintaining an ignorance if I may add and some believe that darwinism is a form of racist....I just had uh..argue with some guy about that...he's just telling about religion and he told that darwinism is a form of racist
@@AntonioInnocente I hope you one day learn that there are wonderfully amazing tools which allow us to see *so* much more about the world around us than our in-born tools like your eyes. Then maybe you'll see that the world is far more than what your eyes show you
@@AntonioInnocente using information about what we know of the physical world and creating an educated guess is in fact a conceptual tool, a method, something which has expanded our ability beyond our built in senses. The fact that you've interpreted what I've said as condescending says a lot more about the way you see the world than what I intended to convey. Now that I am happy to own as condescending.
Antonio Innocente Tbh you were condescending towards Aaron when you said you’re much more educated than him - you don’t know his educational background
More like burning the dead was a matter of survival burying just makes it slightly difficult for the animals to eat dead humans they would just dig it up.
mpetersen6 the natural world, ie non human, is very dangerous. Eat or be eaten basically. It,is only due to modern humans extreme numbers that we have been able to isolate ourselves from that. Should we find ourselves without our modern conveniences for a period of time, say less than a week, we’ll find out all about it
@@jandrews6254 I assure you I have no illusions about the violent nature of the natural world. Everything in nature is food for something else somewhere along the line. It's my opinion that part of the reason some people in Western societies think nature is warm and cuddly is to be laid squarely at the feet of Walt Disney. Projecting our own emotions and feelings onto other species is doing a disservice to them. Clearly my Golden Retriever has emotions. And has feelings. One thing he seems to clearly lack though is fore thought. He lives in the moment. Walt on the other hand through the films and TV shows his company produced imbued them with not only their own feelings but ours as well. Our good ones anyways. To some kid growing up in a densely urban environment the idea of nature being pure and good could be easy to justify against the unnatural squalor of an urban environment. Nature is neither good nor pure. It simply is. The species in it react to their environment and their instincts. That does not mean we as a species should treat all other species as prey or be willingly cruel. In the end what is more cruel. Taking down a deer with one shot or convulsing a cow, hoisting its hind legs in the air and slitting its throat. Either way the venison* or the beef ends up on somebodies plate. *I have no personal arguement with hunting. As long as if you kill it, you eat it. Hunting as merely a means to put a trophy on the wall and leaving the rest of the animal is the worst of human habits greed. Not that the animal will go to waste. The scavengers need to eat to. I once worked with a guy who went on a number of "dream" hunting trips. Northern Canada for Caribou. A trip to South Africa bow hunting. As he told it especially on the South African trip if you took a shot and hit what you where shooting at it cost the permit. Whether the animal was tracked and found or not. If found the guide service took the prime cuts for the camp menu. Their employees took everything else except the cape or hide if the hunter wanted it (the cape or hide being the only thing you could return home with in any case). Is that cruel. Maybe. But not as cruel as ivory or rhino horn poachers
mpetersen6. I happen to agree with you, although this can be a controversial subject. I wonder if the several people who have been mauled to death by bears in the past few years were influenced by them being presented as "warm and cuddly." I have long been a critic of Walt Disney's movies. In so many of them someone or something dies, while exuding powerful psychological emotions. I have made a sort of informal study of Disney movies, while trying to explain them to a psychologist friend. Bambi, of course, is an anti-hunting film. Pinnochio is purely pornographic. The powerful rejection and loneliness of Pinnochio, is what does the damage to the psyche of 6 year olds. Go to a theater where it is being shown, you will have a theater full of sobbing, heartbroken 6 year olds. Many young children I have been associated with, friend's, girlfriend's, nephews, nieces, almost all will have nightmares after seeing Pinnochio. I used to work on a hunting ranch. The owner was very adamant about how the wildlife was treated. The hunters were not allowed to kill anything, except their target animal, Deer, hog, turkeys or quail. After dressing the animal, the intestines and trim had to be taken to feeding stations for hogs and other scavengers. They were not allowed to kill snakes, coyotes, rats, etc. Therefore the ranch had a healthy ecosystem. Unlike some neighboring ranches. For me, I had rather come back with a photo of a beautiful animal to frame and put on the wall, rather than parts of a dead animal.
@Nilax Shirke No, the dinosaurs died out long before early primates appeared. Unless you mean "our ancestor before the ape" as in the primitive rodent-like mammals that actually did exist back then.
@@dislikeroftheinternet5499 you'd be surprised... Believe me, I was. I work in a law firm, grown ass adults, making a good living. Steal your yogurt with your name on it lol! Maddening! It's a jungle out there🤣
Imagine all the creatures that ever lived humans too. Imagine being able to peek into their world and see a moment of their life maybe how they died. There’s so much this world has been witness to and humans are just a very very small fraction of it.
We’re not even a Blink of an Eye in the Grand Scheme of Things. The earth is over 4.5 Billion years old, and Life first crawled out of the Primordial Soup 3.5 Billion years ago to become Land Creatures of all sorts, and they have never stopped Evolving. Consider the fact that Technology as we know it is only roughly 150 years old at best. Written history only does back 6,000 years as well. At the absolute Best, the oldest written history we know of only goes back to a measly 4,000 BCE. That’s it. The last ice age ended 13,000 years ago, and before that, the world is believed to have been entirely different. So much more oxygen and places like the Middle East are believed to have been vast Jungles and swamps and Savannahs.
@@imyourmaster77 A terrifying but fascinating sight indeed. Especially Megalodon. I have galeophobia extreme irrational fear of sharks so that would be scary as hell. What’s worst is I live in a beach town and I will not go in the ocean. I live in Va beach and my first name is Sandy last name Salter. This shit ain’t funny. Lol!
I actually remember when the events portrayed in the Apollo 13 movie happened due to the mispronunciation of Biloxi, MS by (I believe) Walter Konkrite. My grandparents, who largely raised me, moved to New Orleans, LA from Everett, WA in 1964. My granddad worked for Boeing and they had recently acquired a contract with NASA for their site in New Orleans East. I was very, very young, but for obvious reasons the Apollo 13 situation had the stress level in our home at maximum levels. I undoubtedly sensed it which is probably why I remember the occasion although I was barely two years old. I actually did not know that was what I was remembering until I saw the movie and the part with Biloxi which is really pronounced bill-ux-ee being instead pronounced bill-ox-ee. My grandma was so 'worked up' that she screamed at the TV, "It's Bill-ux-ee, you dummy!" I remembered that so clearly that when I saw the clip as an adult, I immediately knew where I had heard it and how remarkably young I was to remember it at all. In fact, I wasn't even two yet. Apollo 13 was in 1969, and I was born Dec 2, 1967. I believe it only happened because of the incredibly difficult time it was for the adults in my life.
When I get rich I'm building a shrine dedicated to my anceint ancestors for their ability to survive long enough to reproduce. I don't think I'd be able to survive along side these crazy critters let alone hunt them down for food. Thank you great great great x50 grandpa ooga booga for being an absolute unit, braving the harsh elements, surviving the beasts of the age and finding great great great x50 grandma. I salute.
@@Black_Metal 50 generations puts us around 1,000 years back. Also yes, I am aware 1000 years ago these creatures were already gone, but I also don't care enough to edit the comment.
The knowledge is absolutely incredible of some people. And then, the time and desire to create such an informative and visual video. Makes me realize that I should probably continue furthering my education about something I’m passionate about. Thank you Ben G Thomas! 😃
Well I guess a lot of people already made up their mind about what's the truth, and they might disagree with what is said in the video. I think it's better to always remember that we basically know nothing and that we might be able to learn something from everyone and everything, because only then our mind remains fresh and alert. A lot of people tend to lose that mindset though, myself included.
Just last year, my colleagues and I published the first Neanderthal fossil coming from Serbia - dated to around 100 kya :) I enjoyed your video very much! Keep up the good work!
Good video, I like how you distinguished between established facts and commonly accepted speculation about human evolution. Many videos are posted on the subject without making the distinction and it can be sometimes difficult to tell whether I'm hearing facts that are commonly accepted among actual scientific experts or presumptuous hypotheses based on insufficient evidence which are reported anyway for the sake of getting views
I subbed at around 4k subs last/a year before that, and man, I was really afraid it could end up like many of nameless channels who produce brilliant content, but just can't seem to please the algorhythm. It did grow. I'm so happy for you.
don't know general croc speed but I know current alligators can go basically from 0 to 10 mph instantly on land. They are sprinters that can get up to 15 mph. It's scary to imagine what speeds they could get up to with legs just a little bit longer.
Watching all these videos about extinct species makes me appreciate the world we live in today. Imagine if the Blue Whale becomes extinct. Its the largest animal to ever live, and its living in our time. Thats awesome! Also, watching all these videos I can't help thinking maybe there's too many of us(humans), and our behaviour is unnatural.
We are brainwashed to the point of delusional psychosis, as for population that is about to change dramatically. I’m a transistorized, transgenederized, transmogrified trans-human A corporatized, commercialized, industrial-strength consumer A goal setting, gym sweating, debt fretting freak A social climbing net-worker that’s always on heat I got my education, majoring in indoctrination Where they taught me to comply, to never question why And so I’m chasing an illusion, of success that’s a delusion That is sending me insane, exploding my brain And as we teeter on the brink, soon to be extinct I always wear a smile, coz' I'm living in denial. Collapse ruclips.net/video/mQhjqCd7Eec/видео.html There's No Tomorrow (limits to growth & the future) ruclips.net/video/VOMWzjrRiBg/видео.html
@ExON Norway. Hello, young Norwegian friend: Checkout the tale of the SS Essex and it's 'Moby-Dick' nemesis. Tragedy that there used to be 25+-meter-long male sperm whales.
Its numbers ARE increasing, thank God. A complete ban on hunting them was their salvation. Now, they "just " have to stay away from our plastic...😥🤦♂️😡😖
@@wilfred309 different "races" of people is a social construct with no biological evidence. What the op means is having different species of humans. Which is something entirely different
Whenever I walk into the woods I think about this. To think we battled our way out of there amongst all these crazy beasts just with our superior brains is crazy
Deadly manatees even today slaughter sea grasses by nom nom munching. We cannot escape violent animal nature, with those beasts still threatening our ocean lawns. When will humans conquer this blubbery terror
I don't know why but I am so facinated by how and where us humans evolved and evolved from. As well as animals too. If only we could go back in time and see these things first hand. I could watch or read about thes things for days. Thanks for the videos man.
Would you consider creating another different video similar to this? However, rather then it is based on your subscriber count you'd multiply it by a specific number so that we could cover more ancient eras within this planet. There's plenty of unique eras within this planet that are sadly out shadowed by others, by doing this you could cover these eras for a more specific audience. Congrats on reaching 100K by the way, this road is truly fantastical for many viewers within your channel. :) (still though, its your choice on the matter, I'm all right if you disagree with my statement).
I can see why they assume that tigers ran from gigantopithecus. However... leopards have been known to attack gorillas, and Asian elephants are afraid of tigers. The fist indicates that significant size difference between a cat predator and a great ape isn't as significant as we might think. The second is astounding. The only reason why elephants would be afraid of tigers, is if they have been prayed upon to a sufficient extent to develop an instinctive fear. Considering that tigers are lone hunters, that says a lot about their prowess. On a side note, crocodiles are also afraid of tigers, even _in deep water._ Anyway, even gigantopithecus was dwarfed by elephants. I also doubt that they were comparable to crocodiles in deep water. At most, gigantopithecus will have been ferocious enough that tigers didn't pray on them routinely. However, ferocious enough to scare a tiger... no.
@Honudes Gai Even the biggest and strongest gorilla silverback fighting against a tiger would soon be a very, very dead gorilla. Tigers are not only big and strong, and not only equipped with teeth and claws, but their entire physical structure is adapted for the purpose of killing with minimal effort, and every lethal capability can be brought to bear simultaneously. A gorilla comes nowhere close to this. The silverback would have mortal injuries within the first second of contact, and be actually dead, or barely twitching with life, within another half minute, at most. Human ancestors were helpless against big cats until they developed the spear, and even then, with the early spears, a single man against a tiger would be much more likely to die than not, even if he wasn't surprised. A tiger would have a much better chance at surviving a surprise attack from a spear wielding man, than a spear wielding man from a tiger, even with the most advanced spears. In fact, a solitary man would have no chance of surviving a tiger attack. Of course, a large group of spear wielding men, deliberately tracking and hunting a tiger, will have the clear advantage. That's about what it takes, though. Ask anyone who works in tiger territory what the chance is of surviving a tiger attack, even armed with a gun, and they'll tell you "zero". You won't even see the tiger, until it has both teeth and claws in you, and then it's too late. Tigers are right to be afraid of us. We really are the most dangerous, as a species. However, as an individual, if you're on foot in tiger territory and not afraid of tigers, you're an idiot. Gigantopithecus, of course, wasn't a tool user. If it came to a fight between a gigantopithecus and a tiger, I'd bet everything I own on the tiger to win.
@@erikjarandson5458 tigers DO NOT hunt Asian elephants that's just not true. Being startled by a potential dangerous animal isn't uncommon either. That's why humans are still afraid of spiders even if it's not rational. So that doesn't mean they hunt them. A leopard is not taking on a silver back gorilla. just no. Maybe they hunt females and babies but not silverbacks Tigers that existed around that time would not hunt the king kong known as gigantipithicus. There's been no evidence to find any predators to them except maybe homo erectus. So yeah I would run too if the closet thing to king kong was after me
@@OrangeUtan1 I never said that tigers hunt adult elephants. I also never said that leopards hunt silverbacks. I said elephants are afraid of tigers, indicating a relatively recent evolutionary stage where, at the very least, tigers hunted elephant calves. My guess is that that stage is right now, but would have to look it up to say for sure. Then I said that a leopard would definitely be able to kill a silverback, meaning that a silverback would never attack a leopard. They'll instead mutually avoid each other, and at the most make displays. Since a leopard is several times faster than a silverback, it'll be quite at ease even within mutual sight of a silverback. Some humans are moderately afraid of spiders, and, indeed, there are spiders that can kill us, unless we get medical treatment. The analogy to elephants and tigers would be valid only if tigers actually kill adult elephants. I doubt that tigers hunted healthy, adult, male gigantopithecus. It would be needlessly dangerous for a lone hunter. However, I'm also completely sure that a gigantopithecus that attacked a tiger would end up dead, and the tiger would probably escape injury. You really can't underestimate the difference between a predator and a vegetarian. Tigers are built to kill large animals, quickly, safely, and with minimum effort, and they're built very, very well for it. They're built for that, the same way gigantopithecus was built for stripping tasty leaves off a plant. I'd say one or two kicks by the tiger's hind legs to the gigantopithecus' belly, and "King Kong" would be disemboweled. Literally. As in stumbling over its own guts. Unless the tiger decided to go for the throat. Or both. Cats are scary, big and small.
@@erikjarandson5458 man these tiger fanboys are almost as toxic as fans of certain superheroes. My point was humans are afraid of different irrational things because it's built into or brains. Toy clowns can't hurt us yet people are still scared of them. Elephants are also highly intelligent so the same would like go for them. Yes predators are built to kill things but like wise herbivores are built to defend themselves in someway. With gorilla's its with speed and power since they live on the ground. The same would go for the gigantopithicus. The whole point of their size and power is to defend themselves against predators like tigers. Infact silverbacks have been known to kill leopards not the other way round. They actually have a more powerful bite force than leopards (twice as powerful) and are 10x stronger than humans
Man, imagine the discoveries, documentaries and simulations we will have of our worlds past in say 30 years if we can keep the momentum at which you share it all you us.
@@chapellepullom8798 there is no possible way it could happen. There would be too little room with too much weight with just animals. But if you add in fish and plants (since they also couldn't survive the flood) its simply impossible
Still remember thinking "wow this channel needs more subscribers" when you were at a few thousand. Glad to see you're finally getting the recognition you deserve!
31:20 "...one of the most ancient human practices:" Thought you would say driving species into extinction haha! But indeed, art is a way more pleasant habit of ours
This video is so good. I'm an archaeology major in college and this is about a time period too ancient for me to study, which means this is all different and new info.
The conjecture on the Gigantopithicus has always annoyed me. There’s so little information to extrapolate from that has produced a huge body of guesswork.
aaron garrett You are right, but that's how science continues to find answers. Look at people 100 years ago and beyond. There was such little information about polio, fossils, alcohol, pasteurization, radium, etc. But it was a start. When those mysteries were studied and theories were formulated due to constant new information, things moved along (this never ends) and branched out to other areas, depending upon more discoveries. Things just get easier to understand, thanks to more accurate testing equipment such as microscopes, telescopes, etc. Concerning the prehistoric earth, there's always going to be more and more clues but it takes serious study to unravel the mysteries of such a massive amount of time. Guesswork is just the beginning of knowledge.
CampfireAddict I appreciate and agree with your comment fully. I still find the guesswork in this particular instance annoying. I don’t mind guesswork generally, just specifically in this instance... and in a few other cases where they find a molar and build a whole body from it. :o)
I think they’ve found a little more than the teeth, but the teeth can tell you a lot, especially if you know the general species since you can then infer general head shape, from there it’s pretty easy to guess for a size. Doesn’t help that a lot of the bones have been lost to ancient poaching and “medicines” since the teeth used to be ground for ancient remedies.
It's interesting to see that a few animal had rely on bamboo as their exclusive food source or necessary for their survival, giganpitecus, the panda, early chicken Probably a lot more, why ?
@@pumaconcolor2855 Before we domesticated them, they were from the bamboo forest in asia (that's probably why there is a chicken in the illustration of the thumnail), and their population would drop until, every 50years, with the bamboo floraison, the extremely high amount of food would make them breed like crazy and the pop would go up, and the cycle repeat That's the mecanism we exploited, our ancestor figured out that if you give a lot of food to chicken, they can produce egg as long as there is food because of that bamboo relationship
Brother u had beautiful knowledge. Thank you for serving paleontology via your channel. By d way I m law student and bcom graduate. But it's my ambition to become a paleontologist and artopologist but due some problems I choose commerce and law. Your show makes me to feel like I m doing or teaching paleontology.
Saved yourself waist of time. These "paleontologist" are feeding you fake news. The world is probably no older then 10,000 years. Yet these "sciencetist" says its billions of year old. LOL. What a joke.
if,,you became a palientologist,you would have to tow the line,only say what mainstream wants you to know..the smithsonian buries the truth in its vaults.if you went against them,you get no funds..its all lies..
Wow I actually didn't know that Czech Kras was that significant for reaserch of any paelolithic speacies. I live kinda close to the place on the photo. The clif on photo is specifically a quarry where many fosils have been found and is open for visitors to try finding some themselfs. Also you can see a opening to a cave system called Koneprusy caves (or Koněprušké jerkyně in czech). The caves are mostly open, too. Most unique find here (from archeological point, sorry geology and paleothology people) is the oldest human remains in Bohemia found till now. It is part of cranium of female dated to Magdaleinian calture.
i think its interesting how the most exciting anthropological, archaeological and paleontological discoveries are also pretty heartbreaking- like whole tribes dying at once, or mother animals dying in birth
It's terrifying - I think crocs, unlike carnivorous mammals, never learnt to fear humans, so a running croc would never be scared to hunt our ancestors.
18:50 The map shows how far south the ice sheet covered in Europe and North America 21,000 years ago, to me the most surprising is Russia/Siberia is almost completely ice free, WTF, of all the places to be mostly ice free SIBERIA!!!!
@@ilvibos3512 Interesting observation, but Antarctica is significantly drier than Siberia and it has the planets largest ice sheet. The South Pole gets under 10mm precipitation (0.4 inch) per year. Much of northern Siberia today is permafrost so if it does get "quite hot in Siberia" it's obviously not hot enough to melt the frozen soil. Also the Ice Ages weren't uniform and different parts of the world's temperatures dropped at different rates than other places. In general the Northern Hemisphere got colder in comparison to the Southern Hemisphere.
@@1wor1d I can only go by observations in my freezer. Ice cubes in an ice cube tray EVAPORATE AWAY COMPLETELY leaving the bare rock underneath. Though the Arctic does not get as cold as the south pole. Maybe back then it did. . I believe what happens in Antarctica is that near the shores, the fresh water is froze up from the sea leaving the salt behind...as the ice forms above it. Basically the evaporation of the water vapor freezes instantly. I have not done that test in my freezer yet (it is a thought experiment right now) This would also give localized snow. That happens at the Great Lakes every winter.. They get more snow than areas farther away from the lakes.
I like that this is JAM-PACKED WITH INFO, moves at a brisk pace, and is still understandable. Here is used a clever innovation: to record the speaker talking at a normal pace, but in editing, to erase the usual pause between sentences. Bravo! It's a time-saver that recognizes how the modern viewer on a device can easily pause or jump back to catch details.
I'm so glad the channel has grown so much
ruclips.net/video/MJZjEtloG2Y/видео.html
@@KingJamesBibleBeliever-de9fy What this has to do with the comment
@Friendly Dragon
You think religious nut-jobs feel they need a reason to spam others with their nonsense? =)
Good content, this channel definitely deserves that 100k sub.
Of course australia has to come up with 20 feet long croc cheetahs.
Seems normal
If aliens land on Australia, they'll be running scared right back to their ship and never come back.
@@thatguy22441 lol.
As an Englishman,I wouldn't set foot in a country with so many vile spiders.
@bruceownsu Yea, It Needed Haard Bastterds, Mate ! No Room Fer Pommy Pooftahs !
My little ID pic is me holding my 1st Grandson, in Addy, S.A.
We're Irish, so we don't really have Any Spiders that can bite, nevermind Kill the Shit Outta Yah !
And St.Patrick fucked out All the Snakes and we've got 1 or 2 kindsa tiny lizards - in Very specific locations.
But I was more worried about an "invasion" of Big M/fkin Bats into the side of the Botanical Gardens & Park nearest the Zoo !!
Wee Bats I can deal with, but when the Feckers get to be the Size of Gulls, I'm feckin' Off Home !! Trouble is, living in a Seaside resort town, the frickin' Gulls have been eating Human Fast Food for years! Now these M/Fkrs are the size of Albatrosses !! AND Have Very Little Fear of Humans - they're scared of Dogs the size of our Samoyed, husky size. Still I'd take them over wee sneaky bastard spiders that want to bite yer ballbag !
I'd still like to go back to 'stralia and get about a bit more. Adelaide, Sydney and a day in Perth aren't enough!
And our wee Aussie came home with his Mum & Dad when he was two, because even with 3 jobs, they couldn't afford to live on the edge of the CBD, pay for a Chilminder, Kindergarten, then School & with Medical & Dental Care to pay for, when the offer of a better paying job for him and lots of Aunts and Grandma's & Grandpa's to look after No.1 Grandson ! But they'd several years in Australia and never regretted living & working there. Adelaide is a lovely City and has everything you would want in a place to live. And the Wine country around it - with the amount of Free samples you do well not to get pissed up all day !!
But Life wouldn't be Life without twists and turns and change, but I'd still happily go live in Oz land for good !
👍☘POD 🐨🖖
YOU & YOURS STAY SAFE & WELL MATE 😷😉🖒
.
This comment though lol
Congrats man! Real awesome video :D
Thank you so much! :D
Heyyyy Trey! Big fan bro
Collab vid when
Better make a crossover video👀
Shame there wasnt more owls or basking sharks
Only in Australia would you find a crocodile that doesn't swim.
And sprints... christ...
That's terrifying
😭
Lizards are fast, imagine that giant sprinting lizard
@@camj1419 crocodiles aren’t lizards
"with shorter legs and wider bodies" speak for yourself. that handsome prehistoric lad looks almost exactly like me.
I thought it was Eddie Rabbitt at first.
@Hidden Woodsben : What is typically considered beautiful or handsome is more of a social construct than anything. Everyone has at least a slightly different preference, some far more extreme than others. But society produces trends and fashions that have nothing to do with what individual people really are attracted to when not influenced by the desire to _fit in_ socially.
@Alexander Supertramp "beauty is in the eye of the beholder"
lmao my best friend looks just like that reconstruction. with the big eye ridge and everything hahaha.
:D
Have you ever been to a zoo, looked at a large ape and thought "damn that thing would toss me like a ragdoll". Now imagine an ape the size of a subaru forester.
"Damn, that thing would tear me in half like paper."
DAD5Draco right? They would look at the Rock or Schwarzenegger and think “oh, one of my children must have gotten sick and lost their hair”
Joe rogan
And as you look into their eyes and connect for a moment or two you feel humanity.
hippo potamus then they tear you apart like paper
I am so happy to see this channel grow! It is rare to see such niche and fascinating channels become popular, and it's so cool to be along for the journey :)
ruclips.net/video/MJZjEtloG2Y/видео.html
Paleo art is so incredible. You can truly see and almost feel how it was back then. Paleo artists are so damn talented.
of course they were talented. they picked the best person to make it. like if you wanted to put up a mural on the side of your house, you dont just let anyone do it right? you find the best person to do it and have them paint it.
and its extra impressive because they didnt have art school and classes that teach how to draw accurately
I've noticed there's no cave paintings of salads. Almost like they almost only ate meat
Salads are a much relatively recent breed and not wuld plants. They haven't existed when these cavepaintings where made.
However plants are deicted in paintings. Also meat rarwly is depictwd kn these paintings bht hunt is. These paintings tell stories about humans and what they did more than what they ate. For thsr you can look at plaque at the teeth and stomach content, there you won't just find meat.
I’d do anything for a time machine I don’t need to see dinosaurs the biodiversity of 100,000 yrs ago is beautiful and stunning
go the congo,theres dinasaurs there,& in the u.s,maybe europe,still kicking,,the old knights,were sent out,in france,ect,to kill ''dragons'',IE,,dinasaurs..a trip in 2006,?.went to the congo,to find emtebe,,they did,then ran.hippo,s stay away from them,but there plant eaters with attitude..theres a pic of a shot,terradactyle,in the early 1900,s.or late 1800,s.with 7 or 8 men,holding it up..
@@phantomwalker8251 There are still pterodactyls on earth. I saw one. There are others who have also. They are not totally gone.
In some Asian cities, sauropods are used for public transportation.
@@diggitydoo5836 My dad worked at a quarry. He operated a crane that was really a dinosaur. Mr. Slate was having trouble replacing him at the quarry when dad retired.
@@paxmule I really did see one. My husband saw it too. Not kidding. I wish I didn't see it honestly. Kinda messed up my thinking. We were on a cliff overlooking the Puget Sound at Pt Defiance park and we saw it flying to the bank up a ways from where we were standing into the trees. I said: what is that? he said: I don't know. I said: it looks like a pterodactyl. Look at it's head, look at that tail. It is huge. Then he said: it cannot be, they are extinct. I said...but we are looking at one right now. He said: get the boys in the car...NOW. (I got the boys in the car.) It happened. Other people have reported seeing pterodactyls too.
"Before dragging them into their dark caves for consumption." Sounds like me getting a snack at midnight.
GlinTaleo 😂
😂
Lmao
😂😂😂
😑
It's so cool how a cave man drew some something on a wall and confirmed and conveyed things to us 100,000 years later
I know, right?
And he would never know any of this would have happened
Nowadays humans can tweet while eating doritos sleeping on a couch
I'd like to know what kind of paint they used, the best paint I could buy only had a 10-year warranty.
@@benjaminfalzon4622 Sherman Williams, what else
Sometimes I think about what our ancestors experienced living in in the world like that. the love, the pain, the fear, hunger, and the strive to survive. Its absolutely crazy.
Puts things in perspective hey? It's a good practice to consider these things when we even begin to start thinking about moaning over something trivial.
@@VelcroKittie I wish I knew ruclips.net/video/VA0ruoKAnHA/видео.html
Actually pure hunter-gatherer societies wherever and whenever they occur tend to struggle *less* to acquire food, are aggressively egalitarian and usually have much more fun and happiness than agricultural or pastoral societies. They have no ownership, hierarchy, paternity, inheritance or slavery.
Even in the 1800s for instance, people raised modern then lost and taken in by hunter gatherers who are later "rescued" by their culture would generally run away to rejoin the hunter-gatherers. While hunter gatherers treated as lifelong guests of European royalty prefer to return to hunter-gathering and feel it is a richer lifestyle. Hunter gatherers have abilities we would consider preternatural in terms of senses. They only have a baby every 5 yrs while post-domestication people have babies every year.
Imagine only needing to "work" several hrs a day. They're lives are just superior to those in civilization.
Imagine we were still hunting and gathering still, that would be so ass...I guess we’d do it in big groups in case you run into a predator
@@rickwrites2612 False. Civilization is superior.
100k years ago. Feels like it was just yesterday.
And I don't think mammoths were running around on the earth yesterday
They lien about dates
@@DogsAreCool-di7sv they were going extinct on a last remote island when the egyptians were building the pyramids, that's quite close if you think about it
It was
Yeah just good'ol days
Imagine being able to go back in time and see all these creatures in the flesh .
The way some people talk, it may be the not so distant future that we can see some of these creatures...I’m just finding out that “deextinct” is really a thing...
Terrifyingly amazing to think about, right?
I would cry my heart out when seeing other humans, that shit is magical
We should also appreciate the amazing animals that are still alive today. Elephants, dolphins, lions, etc. Imagine, they might go extinct one day and humans thousands of years in the future might think of them the same way we do about these toxodons and mammoths and so forth.
Planet is not as old as Scientists Claim to believe because they did not prove it !!!!!!
North America: has mammoths and large bears
Europe: has mammoths and large Lions.
Africa: has larger elephants and large carnivores.
South America: has giant sloths and large cats.
Asia: has largest primates and large Lions
Australia: cheetah crocodiles
New zealand : CROCODILLES
Actually, the largest cats of all time lived in North America.
William Jordan hope you’re not talking about saber teeth because those were canines
@@moistsquid741 fossil record shows they were more like tigers today
@@moistsquid741 American lion.
Early humans had it so hard. Giant apes, giant land crocodiles. And yet, here we are, our lives end when the wifi isnt working.
Human didn't evolve
@@englishexpert1989 u know homosapiens is more then 300k years old
@@aurasky518 - I believe not in darwinism
@@aurasky518 agreed lol 😂
@@aurasky518 lol what a loser🤣😂 loser and still maintaining an ignorance if I may add and some believe that darwinism is a form of racist....I just had uh..argue with some guy about that...he's just telling about religion and he told that darwinism is a form of racist
Man I really wish I could just see what it was like back then. This stuff amazes me!! Incredible!!
Yep! They'd be the best last five minutes of your life. :)
@@AntonioInnocente I hope you one day learn that there are wonderfully amazing tools which allow us to see *so* much more about the world around us than our in-born tools like your eyes. Then maybe you'll see that the world is far more than what your eyes show you
Georgy Todorov they said “see”, you don’t know if they meant live in those times
@@AntonioInnocente using information about what we know of the physical world and creating an educated guess is in fact a conceptual tool, a method, something which has expanded our ability beyond our built in senses. The fact that you've interpreted what I've said as condescending says a lot more about the way you see the world than what I intended to convey. Now that I am happy to own as condescending.
Antonio Innocente Tbh you were condescending towards Aaron when you said you’re much more educated than him - you don’t know his educational background
Early humans lived in a dangerous world. Could it be the practice of burying their dead grew out of a need to keep pedators/scavengers away
More like burning the dead was a matter of survival burying just makes it slightly difficult for the animals to eat dead humans they would just dig it up.
mpetersen6 the natural world, ie non human, is very dangerous. Eat or be eaten basically. It,is only due to modern humans extreme numbers that we have been able to isolate ourselves from that. Should we find ourselves without our modern conveniences for a period of time, say less than a week, we’ll find out all about it
@@jandrews6254
I assure you I have no illusions about the violent nature of the natural world. Everything in nature is food for something else somewhere along the line. It's my opinion that part of the reason some people in Western societies think nature is warm and cuddly is to be laid squarely at the feet of Walt Disney. Projecting our own emotions and feelings onto other species is doing a disservice to them. Clearly my Golden Retriever has emotions. And has feelings. One thing he seems to clearly lack though is fore thought. He lives in the moment. Walt on the other hand through the films and TV shows his company produced imbued them with not only their own feelings but ours as well. Our good ones anyways. To some kid growing up in a densely urban environment the idea of nature being pure and good could be easy to justify against the unnatural squalor of an urban environment. Nature is neither good nor pure. It simply is. The species in it react to their environment and their instincts. That does not mean we as a species should treat all other species as prey or be willingly cruel. In the end what is more cruel. Taking down a deer with one shot or convulsing a cow, hoisting its hind legs in the air and slitting its throat. Either way the venison* or the beef ends up on somebodies plate.
*I have no personal arguement with hunting. As long as if you kill it, you eat it. Hunting as merely a means to put a trophy on the wall and leaving the rest of the animal is the worst of human habits greed. Not that the animal will go to waste. The scavengers need to eat to. I once worked with a guy who went on a number of "dream" hunting trips. Northern Canada for Caribou. A trip to South Africa bow hunting. As he told it especially on the South African trip if you took a shot and hit what you where shooting at it cost the permit. Whether the animal was tracked and found or not. If found the guide service took the prime cuts for the camp menu. Their employees took everything else except the cape or hide if the hunter wanted it (the cape or hide being the only thing you could return home with in any case). Is that cruel. Maybe. But not as cruel as ivory or rhino horn poachers
mpetersen6. I happen to agree with you, although this can be a controversial subject. I wonder if the several people who have been mauled to death by bears in the past few years were influenced by them being presented as "warm and cuddly." I have long been a critic of Walt Disney's movies. In so many of them someone or something dies, while exuding powerful psychological emotions. I have made a sort of informal study of Disney movies, while trying to explain them to a psychologist friend. Bambi, of course, is an anti-hunting film. Pinnochio is purely pornographic. The powerful rejection and loneliness of Pinnochio, is what does the damage to the psyche of 6 year olds. Go to a theater where it is being shown, you will have a theater full of sobbing, heartbroken 6 year olds. Many young children I have been associated with, friend's, girlfriend's, nephews, nieces, almost all will have nightmares after seeing Pinnochio.
I used to work on a hunting ranch. The owner was very adamant about how the wildlife was treated. The hunters were not allowed to kill anything, except their target animal, Deer, hog, turkeys or quail. After dressing the animal, the intestines and trim had to be taken to feeding stations for hogs and other scavengers. They were not allowed to kill snakes, coyotes, rats, etc. Therefore the ranch had a healthy ecosystem. Unlike some neighboring ranches.
For me, I had rather come back with a photo of a beautiful animal to frame and put on the wall, rather than parts of a dead animal.
I think we are still living in a dangerous world.. so much crime...
Our ancestors had to deal with some real life monsters. A land croc with long legs that ran down its prey? Yikes!
@Nilax Shirke
No, the dinosaurs died out long before early primates appeared. Unless you mean "our ancestor before the ape" as in the primitive rodent-like mammals that actually did exist back then.
Today we have a name for them - "TAX MAN".
speedy
@Nilax Shirke and what ancestors are those?
In a 1000 years some animals in 21st century will be considered ancient fossils like dinosaurs
I work with some of those people! They eat my food out of the refrigerator at work! 😂😂😂
Wtf? People still do that
@@dislikeroftheinternet5499 you'd be surprised... Believe me, I was. I work in a law firm, grown ass adults, making a good living. Steal your yogurt with your name on it lol!
Maddening! It's a jungle out there🤣
@Mr E 😂
@@dislikeroftheinternet5499 is is
Lol
So fascinating
Never stop doing what u do, it’s magical
Thanks!
You too, Joseph Stalin!
Its magical, lyrical, sexual like Stalin.
Btw, Joseph Stalin in Russian would be Иосиф Сталин not Йосиф
*scientifical
Does this stuff make anyone else sad? I wish we could have seen all these amazing animals!
I couldn't agree more 😔
sometimes it does. when i was younger i often fantasized of a timemachine, just to witness the awe inspiring history of life.
@@hiddenwoodsben don't...you would go back and accidentally kill even more species and then you know...the butterfly effect
If we can figure out time travel we will
@@ARO656 So are you saying humans rode T-rex's like horses ??
These videos are probably one of my fav, congrates on 100k man your growing fast
Imagine all the creatures that ever lived humans too. Imagine being able to peek into their world and see a moment of their life maybe how they died. There’s so much this world has been witness to and humans are just a very very small fraction of it.
We’re not even a Blink of an Eye in the Grand Scheme of Things. The earth is over 4.5 Billion years old, and Life first crawled out of the Primordial Soup 3.5 Billion years ago to become Land Creatures of all sorts, and they have never stopped Evolving.
Consider the fact that Technology as we know it is only roughly 150 years old at best. Written history only does back 6,000 years as well.
At the absolute Best, the oldest written history we know of only goes back to a measly 4,000 BCE. That’s it.
The last ice age ended 13,000 years ago, and before that, the world is believed to have been entirely different. So much more oxygen and places like the Middle East are believed to have been vast Jungles and swamps and Savannahs.
I would die to be able to dive in of the many prehistoric seas. It would be a slight to behold.
@@imyourmaster77 A terrifying but fascinating sight indeed. Especially Megalodon. I have galeophobia extreme irrational fear of sharks so that would be scary as hell. What’s worst is I live in a beach town and I will not go in the ocean. I live in Va beach and my first name is Sandy last name Salter. This shit ain’t funny. Lol!
@@imyourmaster77 Sandy for the Sandy beaches Salter for the salt in the water it’s my destiny to be ate by a shark. No thank you. Lol!
@@imyourmaster77 the amount of aquatic life you would see compared to now is beyond fascinating
Freaking Awesome! Congratulations!
Thanks for making such great content.
Thank you! :)
Crazy Cody's Creatures I love your pro pic
“The wacko Texas mammoth.”
I’m not complaining, that’s the best possible mispronunciation of the name Waco.
OkayGotIt Wrong!
I actually remember when the events portrayed in the Apollo 13 movie happened due to the mispronunciation of Biloxi, MS by (I believe) Walter Konkrite. My grandparents, who largely raised me, moved to New Orleans, LA from Everett, WA in 1964. My granddad worked for Boeing and they had recently acquired a contract with NASA for their site in New Orleans East. I was very, very young, but for obvious reasons the Apollo 13 situation had the stress level in our home at maximum levels. I undoubtedly sensed it which is probably why I remember the occasion although I was barely two years old. I actually did not know that was what I was remembering until I saw the movie and the part with Biloxi which is really pronounced bill-ux-ee being instead pronounced bill-ox-ee. My grandma was so 'worked up' that she screamed at the TV, "It's Bill-ux-ee, you dummy!" I remembered that so clearly that when I saw the clip as an adult, I immediately knew where I had heard it and how remarkably young I was to remember it at all. In fact, I wasn't even two yet. Apollo 13 was in 1969, and I was born Dec 2, 1967. I believe it only happened because of the incredibly difficult time it was for the adults in my life.
@John Davis it's a mispronunciation, but an understandable one. The correct pronunciation is {WAYco}.
If Waco wasn’t such a sh*t hole...
I heard someone pronounce Tucson as TUK-sen. Haha and he was American.
When I get rich I'm building a shrine dedicated to my anceint ancestors for their ability to survive long enough to reproduce. I don't think I'd be able to survive along side these crazy critters let alone hunt them down for food. Thank you great great great x50 grandpa ooga booga for being an absolute unit, braving the harsh elements, surviving the beasts of the age and finding great great great x50 grandma. I salute.
No I think it is around 400x Generations ago
Grandpa Ooga Booga 😂
so bascally about 150-300 years ago?
(I know its 1000 but i'm not going to change it, that just seems weird)
@@Black_Metal Your math is terribly wrong. 53 generations ago is way larger than just 300 years. 8 generations ago there was still slavery
@@Black_Metal 50 generations puts us around 1,000 years back. Also yes, I am aware 1000 years ago these creatures were already gone, but I also don't care enough to edit the comment.
The knowledge is absolutely incredible of some people. And then, the time and desire to create such an informative and visual video. Makes me realize that I should probably continue furthering my education about something I’m passionate about. Thank you Ben G Thomas! 😃
Continue furthering your education. By all means. Continue.
@@michaelmelamed9103 Daniel Boorstin wrote of the Creators, the Discoverers, and the Seekers. Seeking can lead to the 1st two outcomes.
Congrats on the 100k!
I'm struggling to understand why anyone would disklike this. Who has a problem learning something new?
Well I guess a lot of people already made up their mind about what's the truth, and they might disagree with what is said in the video. I think it's better to always remember that we basically know nothing and that we might be able to learn something from everyone and everything, because only then our mind remains fresh and alert. A lot of people tend to lose that mindset though, myself included.
Angry creationists and religious fruitcakes
❄️
Christians
There could be some incorrect information I guess. There's always the risk.
Your milestone is well deserved. I love this channel! Well done sir!
Bro wtf those human pics scared me 😭 why its eyes lookin at me like that
Just last year, my colleagues and I published the first Neanderthal fossil coming from Serbia - dated to around 100 kya :) I enjoyed your video very much! Keep up the good work!
I just looked you up. Very interesting research! Thank you for your contribution to science.
@@lilacmoon_0324 Thank you very much for taking the time to check out our research!
Sure! Good research needs to be recognized to continue to educate everyone.
Thank you for your work
There is no such thing as Neanderthal since human beings have been around more than 2 million years
This is one of my absolute favorite channels. I'm so happy to see it grow!
Gigantopithecus didn't go extinct.
They just went home.
Good video, I like how you distinguished between established facts and commonly accepted speculation about human evolution. Many videos are posted on the subject without making the distinction and it can be sometimes difficult to tell whether I'm hearing facts that are commonly accepted among actual scientific experts or presumptuous hypotheses based on insufficient evidence which are reported anyway for the sake of getting views
Don't be surprised by all the support! Your channel makes some of the best taxonomical content on RUclips. I am sure you will keep growing
*Let's get this channel past T-series, boys.*
We need more D-Class subscribers
@@sacrificialfetus4727 Every personel should be subscribed to Ben G Thomas.
Not in a 100.000 years I'm afraid
ben g series... anyone?
Doc Rivers What about G-Series?
I subbed at around 4k subs last/a year before that, and man, I was really afraid it could end up like many of nameless channels who produce brilliant content, but just can't seem to please the algorhythm. It did grow. I'm so happy for you.
I just discovered this channel a few minutes ago, but I'm already hooked. Definitely just got a new subscriber.
So you’re telling humans lived with running crocs😨
I too live in Africa
Crocs still run today.
don't know general croc speed but I know current alligators can go basically from 0 to 10 mph instantly on land. They are sprinters that can get up to 15 mph. It's scary to imagine what speeds they could get up to with legs just a little bit longer.
I grew up with gators, and they are explosively fast.
Valentin A
we ate 'em
Watching all these videos about extinct species makes me appreciate the world we live in today. Imagine if the Blue Whale becomes extinct. Its the largest animal to ever live, and its living in our time. Thats awesome!
Also, watching all these videos I can't help thinking maybe there's too many of us(humans), and our behaviour is unnatural.
We are brainwashed to the point of delusional psychosis, as for population that is about to change dramatically.
I’m a transistorized, transgenederized, transmogrified trans-human
A corporatized, commercialized, industrial-strength consumer
A goal setting, gym sweating, debt fretting freak
A social climbing net-worker that’s always on heat
I got my education, majoring in indoctrination
Where they taught me to comply, to never question why
And so I’m chasing an illusion, of success that’s a delusion
That is sending me insane, exploding my brain
And as we teeter on the brink, soon to be extinct
I always wear a smile, coz' I'm living in denial.
Collapse
ruclips.net/video/mQhjqCd7Eec/видео.html
There's No Tomorrow (limits to growth & the future)
ruclips.net/video/VOMWzjrRiBg/видео.html
Nigga are you trying to be Georgle Carlin lmao
@ExON Norway. Hello, young Norwegian friend:
Checkout the tale of the SS Essex and it's 'Moby-Dick' nemesis. Tragedy that there used to be 25+-meter-long male sperm whales.
@@normalizedinsanity4873 you forgot broke a** wanna be a rapper 😁
Its numbers ARE increasing, thank God.
A complete ban on hunting them was their salvation. Now, they "just " have to stay away from our plastic...😥🤦♂️😡😖
Congratulations! One of my favorite youtube channels, I'm looking forward. to your next videos :))
Imagine what it would be like if we truly had different races of humans around.
Lol, we do!
@@wilfred309 we really don't. Slightly different skin color isn't the same
@@msharp6887 seize pissing on science. Or don't, if that's your personal preference.
@@wilfred309 different "races" of people is a social construct with no biological evidence. What the op means is having different species of humans. Which is something entirely different
We would mate with them. Just like old times 😉
I’ve been bingeing on your videos- amazing! So well put together! Thank you!
10:10 this heyena looks like he's out of shape and having a midlife crisis
Perhaps some issues in the marriage.
A time when the fear of being munched was prevalent.
Whenever I walk into the woods I think about this. To think we battled our way out of there amongst all these crazy beasts just with our superior brains is crazy
@@joshlewis575 Would explain why humans have such bloodlustful tendencies and why we can be so malevolent.
@@joshlewis575 Imagine how bad it was in the jungles, savannahs and mountains.
Deadly manatees even today slaughter sea grasses by nom nom munching. We cannot escape violent animal nature, with those beasts still threatening our ocean lawns. When will humans conquer this blubbery terror
I don't know why but I am so facinated by how and where us humans evolved and evolved from. As well as animals too. If only we could go back in time and see these things first hand. I could watch or read about thes things for days. Thanks for the videos man.
Would you consider creating another different video similar to this? However, rather then it is based on your subscriber count you'd multiply it by a specific number so that we could cover more ancient eras within this planet. There's plenty of unique eras within this planet that are sadly out shadowed by others, by doing this you could cover these eras for a more specific audience. Congrats on reaching 100K by the way, this road is truly fantastical for many viewers within your channel.
:)
(still though, its your choice on the matter, I'm all right if you disagree with my statement).
Great idea :D
4:26 The Tiger is like "That's a whole lot of nope."
I can see why they assume that tigers ran from gigantopithecus. However... leopards have been known to attack gorillas, and Asian elephants are afraid of tigers. The fist indicates that significant size difference between a cat predator and a great ape isn't as significant as we might think. The second is astounding. The only reason why elephants would be afraid of tigers, is if they have been prayed upon to a sufficient extent to develop an instinctive fear. Considering that tigers are lone hunters, that says a lot about their prowess. On a side note, crocodiles are also afraid of tigers, even _in deep water._ Anyway, even gigantopithecus was dwarfed by elephants. I also doubt that they were comparable to crocodiles in deep water. At most, gigantopithecus will have been ferocious enough that tigers didn't pray on them routinely. However, ferocious enough to scare a tiger... no.
@Honudes Gai Even the biggest and strongest gorilla silverback fighting against a tiger would soon be a very, very dead gorilla. Tigers are not only big and strong, and not only equipped with teeth and claws, but their entire physical structure is adapted for the purpose of killing with minimal effort, and every lethal capability can be brought to bear simultaneously. A gorilla comes nowhere close to this. The silverback would have mortal injuries within the first second of contact, and be actually dead, or barely twitching with life, within another half minute, at most.
Human ancestors were helpless against big cats until they developed the spear, and even then, with the early spears, a single man against a tiger would be much more likely to die than not, even if he wasn't surprised. A tiger would have a much better chance at surviving a surprise attack from a spear wielding man, than a spear wielding man from a tiger, even with the most advanced spears. In fact, a solitary man would have no chance of surviving a tiger attack. Of course, a large group of spear wielding men, deliberately tracking and hunting a tiger, will have the clear advantage. That's about what it takes, though. Ask anyone who works in tiger territory what the chance is of surviving a tiger attack, even armed with a gun, and they'll tell you "zero". You won't even see the tiger, until it has both teeth and claws in you, and then it's too late.
Tigers are right to be afraid of us. We really are the most dangerous, as a species. However, as an individual, if you're on foot in tiger territory and not afraid of tigers, you're an idiot.
Gigantopithecus, of course, wasn't a tool user. If it came to a fight between a gigantopithecus and a tiger, I'd bet everything I own on the tiger to win.
@@erikjarandson5458 tigers DO NOT hunt Asian elephants that's just not true. Being startled by a potential dangerous animal isn't uncommon either. That's why humans are still afraid of spiders even if it's not rational. So that doesn't mean they hunt them.
A leopard is not taking on a silver back gorilla. just no. Maybe they hunt females and babies but not silverbacks
Tigers that existed around that time would not hunt the king kong known as gigantipithicus. There's been no evidence to find any predators to them except maybe homo erectus. So yeah I would run too if the closet thing to king kong was after me
@@OrangeUtan1 I never said that tigers hunt adult elephants. I also never said that leopards hunt silverbacks. I said elephants are afraid of tigers, indicating a relatively recent evolutionary stage where, at the very least, tigers hunted elephant calves. My guess is that that stage is right now, but would have to look it up to say for sure. Then I said that a leopard would definitely be able to kill a silverback, meaning that a silverback would never attack a leopard. They'll instead mutually avoid each other, and at the most make displays. Since a leopard is several times faster than a silverback, it'll be quite at ease even within mutual sight of a silverback.
Some humans are moderately afraid of spiders, and, indeed, there are spiders that can kill us, unless we get medical treatment. The analogy to elephants and tigers would be valid only if tigers actually kill adult elephants.
I doubt that tigers hunted healthy, adult, male gigantopithecus. It would be needlessly dangerous for a lone hunter. However, I'm also completely sure that a gigantopithecus that attacked a tiger would end up dead, and the tiger would probably escape injury. You really can't underestimate the difference between a predator and a vegetarian. Tigers are built to kill large animals, quickly, safely, and with minimum effort, and they're built very, very well for it. They're built for that, the same way gigantopithecus was built for stripping tasty leaves off a plant.
I'd say one or two kicks by the tiger's hind legs to the gigantopithecus' belly, and "King Kong" would be disemboweled. Literally. As in stumbling over its own guts. Unless the tiger decided to go for the throat. Or both. Cats are scary, big and small.
@@erikjarandson5458 man these tiger fanboys are almost as toxic as fans of certain superheroes. My point was humans are afraid of different irrational things because it's built into or brains. Toy clowns can't hurt us yet people are still scared of them. Elephants are also highly intelligent so the same would like go for them.
Yes predators are built to kill things but like wise herbivores are built to defend themselves in someway. With gorilla's its with speed and power since they live on the ground. The same would go for the gigantopithicus. The whole point of their size and power is to defend themselves against predators like tigers.
Infact silverbacks have been known to kill leopards not the other way round. They actually have a more powerful bite force than leopards (twice as powerful) and are 10x stronger than humans
Man, imagine the discoveries, documentaries and simulations we will have of our worlds past in say 30 years if we can keep the momentum at which you share it all you us.
"What are you doing Steppe Bison?? Owo" Congrats on 100k my dude!
im so proud of this channel, you've taught me more than my 10th grade ecologist ever had. congrats on 100k!
So,.. there really were dragons that lived in caves.
Thank God they didn't breathe fire!
Lukas Aurelius they did breathe fire
Yes and they could fly and Blow flames 🔥..... It was crazy....
Man, I’m glad you exist, I can learn the stuff I’m very passionate about
You deserve this, lots of hard * good work, congratulations.
Keep making GREAT video, WE will watch & support you.
Congratulations for reaching 100 thousand subscribers 👍
Thank you! :D
@@BenGThomas your welcome :)
Thank you for your hard work in the production of this excellent videography!
Gigantopithicus evolved into the species commonly known as Shaquile O’neal
:P
and the big show
Haha, slightly racist but funny all the same
@@donnix1796 how is that racist wtf....theres alot of people built like that
@@TheDevourerOfUniverses your comment wasn't racist but funny, just racist you racist
"Mammoths either died from way too much water, or not enough water"
Or they were freeze dried due to the results of Noah's Flood.
@@hubertwebb9869 Considering Noah's flood didn't happen, that's not a possibility.
@@hubertwebb9869 considering that did happen that is a possibility
@@hubertwebb9869 grow up. That religious crap did not happen
@@chapellepullom8798 there is no possible way it could happen. There would be too little room with too much weight with just animals. But if you add in fish and plants (since they also couldn't survive the flood) its simply impossible
one of the coolest channels on this site🔥🔥
Not far from my home I found a fossilized tree root from 350 million years ago it's very interesting just like this video
Cool. Where do you live?
@@erik-ic3tp Tennessee
@Unbreakable Patches I had no idea what it was at first had to show it to some paleontologist
@@stevarnamik2233 that's pretty cool!
@@stevarnamik2233 Are you from Tennessee?
Still remember thinking "wow this channel needs more subscribers" when you were at a few thousand. Glad to see you're finally getting the recognition you deserve!
Every kid I have I’m gonna end their names with “pithecus”
Middle name territory
Every kid I pump I'm gonna call Rapo Pithecus
@@boosie5501 that’s right
Billiepithecus
Sarahpithecus
31:20 "...one of the most ancient human practices:" Thought you would say driving species into extinction haha! But indeed, art is a way more pleasant habit of ours
*Younger Dryas* event, 13,000 years ago
Mother Nature has extincted infinitely more species than our species ever could.
Thank you for mentioning Sivatherium, it's one of my favorite prehistoric mammals! Not enough people give prehistoric herbivores the love they deserve
27:00 this guy smiles like some disney character
Absolutely Fascinating Video!
This video is so good. I'm an archaeology major in college and this is about a time period too ancient for me to study, which means this is all different and new info.
The conjecture on the Gigantopithicus has always annoyed me. There’s so little information to extrapolate from that has produced a huge body of guesswork.
aaron garrett You are right, but that's how science continues to find answers. Look at people 100 years ago and beyond. There was such little information about polio, fossils, alcohol, pasteurization, radium, etc. But it was a start. When those mysteries were studied and theories were formulated due to constant new information, things moved along (this never ends) and branched out to other areas, depending upon more discoveries. Things just get easier to understand, thanks to more accurate testing equipment such as microscopes, telescopes, etc. Concerning the prehistoric earth, there's always going to be more and more clues but it takes serious study to unravel the mysteries of such a massive amount of time. Guesswork is just the beginning of knowledge.
CampfireAddict I appreciate and agree with your comment fully. I still find the guesswork in this particular instance annoying. I don’t mind guesswork generally, just specifically in this instance... and in a few other cases where they find a molar and build a whole body from it. :o)
I think they’ve found a little more than the teeth, but the teeth can tell you a lot, especially if you know the general species since you can then infer general head shape, from there it’s pretty easy to guess for a size. Doesn’t help that a lot of the bones have been lost to ancient poaching and “medicines” since the teeth used to be ground for ancient remedies.
It's interesting to see that a few animal had rely on bamboo as their exclusive food source or necessary for their survival, giganpitecus, the panda, early chicken
Probably a lot more, why ?
Yes .. I'm Curious too
Why don't you try it? You know..for science, and let the rest of us know the result.lol
Early chicken?
@@pumaconcolor2855 Before we domesticated them, they were from the bamboo forest in asia (that's probably why there is a chicken in the illustration of the thumnail), and their population would drop until, every 50years, with the bamboo floraison, the extremely high amount of food would make them breed like crazy and the pop would go up, and the cycle repeat
That's the mecanism we exploited, our ancestor figured out that if you give a lot of food to chicken, they can produce egg as long as there is food because of that bamboo relationship
@@manuxx3543 I did not know that, thanks for the answer.
Thank you for inviting me on this amazingly beautiful journey!🎬😁
Oh... So it's a promise of an awesome episode every milestone reached. I see what you did there, I like it, I'm on board.
It’s crazy how good cave art looks, these people where human af
Yep, this channel has got me hooked, and it's a pleasure to click on the "Subscribe" button. Wonderful illustrations, too, so rock on boys! ;-)
im so happy this video has been viewed so many times. gives me hope and optimism
Sad I was barred from learning any of this until my mid-twenties... Thank you for the videos.
Repressive religion?
Randall Carlson will blow your mind!
@Luckylarry911 silverstein A modern form of 'religion' of sorts then. How anyone could extrapolate racism from THAT is beyond me.
Ray Williams Jehovah Witnesses?
@@jaybirdjaybird9410 Nope, Run on the mill Fundamentalist Evangelical Christianity, the kind you find all over the midwest...
Big animals had a tough time back then. I suppose when an environment changes, small animals have a bigger advantage
Big animals usually procreate more slowly= fewer generations=slower evolution
Tmb Brand ever been near a lion or tiger? Terrifying what would do to a human.
Brown bears are maybe even more scary
I shall now make a brilliant remark: When you hungry you eat whatever you can get.
whoa
@victor soto
That's a really weird (and rape:y) comparison, even as a joke.
Brother u had beautiful knowledge. Thank you for serving paleontology via your channel. By d way I m law student and bcom graduate. But it's my ambition to become a paleontologist and artopologist but due some problems I choose commerce and law.
Your show makes me to feel like I m doing or teaching paleontology.
Saved yourself waist of time. These "paleontologist" are feeding you fake news. The world is probably no older then 10,000 years. Yet these "sciencetist" says its billions of year old. LOL. What a joke.
if,,you became a palientologist,you would have to tow the line,only say what mainstream wants you to know..the smithsonian buries the truth in its vaults.if you went against them,you get no funds..its all lies..
Such sweet, comforting music. Absolutely perfect for this show.
Excellent. Thank you.
Wow I actually didn't know that Czech Kras was that significant for reaserch of any paelolithic speacies. I live kinda close to the place on the photo. The clif on photo is specifically a quarry where many fosils have been found and is open for visitors to try finding some themselfs. Also you can see a opening to a cave system called Koneprusy caves (or Koněprušké jerkyně in czech). The caves are mostly open, too. Most unique find here (from archeological point, sorry geology and paleothology people) is the oldest human remains in Bohemia found till now. It is part of cranium of female dated to Magdaleinian calture.
Dude. Your voice is like velvet butter to my ears.
Homo Erectus: "I'm so lazy that I can't adapt. Oh well."
@Alexander Supertramp I know, right? Lol.
Yeah. I don't know if adapt adaquately describes what happened.
They have lived for 1 million years btw "lazy"
i think its interesting how the most exciting anthropological, archaeological and paleontological discoveries are also pretty heartbreaking- like whole tribes dying at once, or mother animals dying in birth
These are still theories ruclips.net/video/VA0ruoKAnHA/видео.html
*when your channel grows so fast 100k special is only finished at 133k *
xD
100,000 subscriber special video, and now you're almost at 500,000 subscribers! Damn son you've come a long way!
am i the only one that genuinely was shocked by how big and scary that land croc is? god damn im glad i missed living on the same earth as that thing
It's terrifying - I think crocs, unlike carnivorous mammals, never learnt to fear humans, so a running croc would never be scared to hunt our ancestors.
You've got another 60k subscribers in the last 3 weeks, and you totally deserve it. Keep the good work!
18:50 The map shows how far south the ice sheet covered in Europe and North America 21,000 years ago,
to me the most surprising is Russia/Siberia is almost completely ice free, WTF, of all the places to be mostly ice free SIBERIA!!!!
It was a dry steppe, not enough snowfall to form glaciers. And it gets quite hot in Siberia in the summer so that would melt any snow that would fall
@@ilvibos3512 Interesting observation, but Antarctica is significantly drier than Siberia and it has the planets largest ice sheet. The South Pole gets under 10mm precipitation (0.4 inch) per year. Much of northern Siberia today is permafrost so if it does get "quite hot in Siberia" it's obviously not hot enough to melt the frozen soil. Also the Ice Ages weren't uniform and different parts of the world's temperatures dropped at different rates than other places. In general the Northern Hemisphere got colder in comparison to the Southern Hemisphere.
@@1wor1d I can only go by observations in my freezer. Ice cubes in an ice cube tray EVAPORATE AWAY COMPLETELY leaving the bare rock underneath. Though the Arctic does not get as cold as the south pole. Maybe back then it did.
. I believe what happens in Antarctica is that near the shores, the fresh water is froze up from the sea leaving the salt behind...as the ice forms above it. Basically the evaporation of the water vapor freezes instantly.
I have not done that test in my freezer yet (it is a thought experiment right now) This would also give localized snow. That happens at the Great Lakes every winter.. They get more snow than areas farther away from the lakes.
Thank you for such an intelligent educational video. And it's very fun😊 to watch.
Ahh good job man, I remember being your first subscriber back in 1985.
1985 was exactly 20 years *before* youtube existed.
@@aylbdrmadison1051 no it's the truth, they'd perform it for us in the barn.
That's probably 10 years before he was even born 😂
we have not been here a long time. Imagine how life will be in 100.000 years
It's amazing that when I am shopping at Wal-Mart of other places, I see people who are similar to the ones depicted in this video.
Awesome video!
You should do a series talking about interesting extinct fauna of the different continents, trough different time periods
0:16 if only the fauna today was like this again.😭
"Due in part to the scarcity of mammoths."
And, y'know, the difficulty of taking down a MAMMOTH.
When you got to eat you got to eat 👍🏿
Well on the road to 1 mil🎉🎉🎉 574m atm congratulations man that is phenomenal
I like that this is JAM-PACKED WITH INFO, moves at a brisk pace, and is still understandable. Here is used a clever innovation: to record the speaker talking at a normal pace, but in editing, to erase the usual pause between sentences. Bravo! It's a time-saver that recognizes how the modern viewer on a device can easily pause or jump back to catch details.