Ancient Apocalypse: Doggerland | Full History Documentary

2023 ж. 22 Шіл.
316 854 Рет қаралды

Ancient Apocalypse - The Akkadian Empire: • Ancient Apocalypse: Th...
Eight thousand years ago, a lush paradise, home to mammoth, deer, and societies of hunter-gatherers, connected Britain and mainland Europe-Doggerland. But this stone-age Eden no longer exists. It was wiped out by a single devastating event, leaving it hidden beneath the waves of the North Sea for nearly 8,000 years. Slowly, archaeology is revealing what life would have been like in this Mesolithic paradise. But also, how these people struggled to survive as their world was lost beneath the waves.
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  • What gets my goat is the fact that these humans were capible of making ornate harpoons and other thoughtfully made implements and were obviously intelligent, yet the makers of this documentary see fit to dress them in skins and raggedy shoe like coverings on their feet. Don't you think they would know how to measure and sew those skins and utilize fiber for clothing? Seriously.

    @ddz1375@ddz13759 ай бұрын
    • Exactly. The Chinchurro’s in the Atacama mummified their dead, made reed mats, sewed the bodies back together during mummification as to almost real life precision after the muscles and other body parts were removed (WAY before Egyptians started the practice) and sewed their clothing and that was 9000 years ago.

      @jennifermcmillan9518@jennifermcmillan95187 ай бұрын
    • they was not stupid like most arceoligist make them ,humankind are curiuse and so we make stuff

      @kocken421@kocken4217 ай бұрын
    • Well when they foun that man frozen from the era, that is ho he s dressed sorta

      @marynielsen9214@marynielsen92147 ай бұрын
    • Well the hides didn’t come on a bolt there was a lot of work turning fiber and skin to cloth and leather

      @maryanncrody4867@maryanncrody48677 ай бұрын
    • They wouldn’t have been precisely sewing their clothes. They just needed them to be practical. They would have been simply covered in hides and furs with bone pins to secure them.

      @Idococaine69@Idococaine697 ай бұрын
  • My pet peeve about documentaries like this is the hair & clothes they accord these ancient people. In a land of plenty like Doggerland, folks would have plenty of time & every inclination to fuss over their appearance. They would not all look like they've benn pulled through a hedge backward, 20 times! They would pay attention to making their clothes neat & symmetrical with touches of beauty in embellishments. Not whole untrimmed rabbit skins swinging off them at random, lol. City folk, with little practical experience in the natural world or physical common sense, becoming archeologists makes for some pretty amusing assumptions.

    @hensonlaura@hensonlaura9 ай бұрын
    • Try Googling “OTZI”. Saves any argument

      @barkershill@barkershill7 ай бұрын
    • The truth is… we don’t know squat, just plenty of speculation as always.

      @shawnsanborn2057@shawnsanborn2057Ай бұрын
  • Doggerland is not lost forever. It's just waiting for the next Ice Age to return.

    @barefoofDr@barefoofDr9 ай бұрын
    • You are right. Nothing is lost in the infinite universe. Even the energy created by the blink of an eyelash continues on forever. It just changes location and form.

      @bobdillaber1195@bobdillaber11956 ай бұрын
    • Aren't we already in the 4th Ice Age.....or something like that

      @juliemercer1458@juliemercer14586 ай бұрын
    • Call the Dutch,we will make a Doggerland-polder.

      @remcocraane3862@remcocraane38626 ай бұрын
  • It must've been absolutely terrifying for those early people.

    @PortmanRd@PortmanRd7 ай бұрын
  • An awe inspiring documentary that just shows that mother nature doesn't need mankind to create climate change,she can, and does, do it all on her own and always will.

    @johnbrereton5229@johnbrereton52299 ай бұрын
    • Maybe nature doesn't "need" humans to do it, but we are doing it nonetheless.

      @sharimeline3077@sharimeline30779 ай бұрын
    • @@sharimeline3077 No we are not, and it's a symptom of mankinds arrogance that believes they could.

      @johnbrereton5229@johnbrereton52299 ай бұрын
    • If the rapid deterioration of our climate (bleaching coral, disappearing islands and coastlines, extreme weather) isn’t human caused, it still behooves us to exert ourselves find ways to ameliorate it.

      @janeymitchell4675@janeymitchell46759 ай бұрын
    • @@janeymitchell4675 Yet another example of mankinds arrogance. The climate has been changing since the earth was first formed billions of years ago, and it will still be doing it when our brief existence on this planet ends.

      @johnbrereton5229@johnbrereton52299 ай бұрын
    • ​@@johnbrereton5229I'm with you, John, I also give all the shits what we do here on this beautiful heavenly planet

      @BobsUrAunt@BobsUrAunt8 ай бұрын
  • I found a piece of a fossilized tree in the Netherlands last week, its amazing to see this documentary!

    @rickkerts3802@rickkerts38028 ай бұрын
  • Geographers, etc, have mapped the rivers in Doggerland, directions lakes, THEY MATCH!

    @andreadietrich9889@andreadietrich98897 ай бұрын
  • My husband and I would talk about the gaps in civilization. I always said we would find out once we could see what's deep in the oceans. Technology finally caught up, and now we see just how advanced the people were...

    @jeaniLovesAnimals@jeaniLovesAnimals6 ай бұрын
    • Unless we have a major refreeze of sea water again, Doggerland is lost forever.

      @marciaspiegel5280@marciaspiegel52804 ай бұрын
  • They should have listened to the all knowing teenage girl in the village upset that they have stolen her childhood

    @terrygreenhagen8784@terrygreenhagen87849 ай бұрын
    • 😂😂😂😂

      @barkershill@barkershill7 ай бұрын
    • HILARIOUS!!! 😂😂😂

      @mable5916@mable59166 ай бұрын
    • How dare they?

      @Xonid1@Xonid16 ай бұрын
  • Such an intriguing discovery, and the research was brilliant, using the oil sonar type scans! I am fascinated by Doggerland and it’s history.

    @karphin1@karphin19 ай бұрын
    • I agree with you, it a story from the myths of time, which is still telling more about our connected past

      @sifrost6869@sifrost68699 ай бұрын
    • Agree. I've been focused on this area for some time. Before the deluge but after the ice retreats. There are other documentaries of the people that lived in these areas.

      @freyatilly@freyatilly9 ай бұрын
    • @@sifrost6869 To nitpick - the phrase is “mists of time” not “myths of time”. 😐

      @dustydesert1674@dustydesert16747 ай бұрын
  • Such a refreshing British lecturer. She enunciates and doesn’t swallow consonants unlike her contemporaries.

    @carylhalfwassen8555@carylhalfwassen85556 ай бұрын
  • Superb. Always fascinated by Doggerland

    @freyatilly@freyatilly9 ай бұрын
  • Ocean levels rise and fall. Land rises up and subducts. It’s been much hotter in our past and much colder. Without taxation about it.

    @andrewblack7852@andrewblack78528 ай бұрын
  • I find it interesting that modern humans assume that ancient people must have been crude and ignorant.

    @markkubiak8296@markkubiak82969 ай бұрын
    • We have to assume ancient people were crude, and they were most certainly ignorant in the dictionary sense of the word. In fact only modern laws stop males inflicting themselves sexually onto females. Innuit peoples would throw psychopaths (kunlangeta) into the icy sea to drown. But what sort of person does it take to carry out that punishment? Brutality was the norm, and brutality will become the norm again over the course of a single day if society ever breaks down

      @VMM34@VMM349 ай бұрын
    • @@mikaelwallin1278 You've just vindicated my opinion; "*evolutionary* psychology." Thankyou. 😊

      @VMM34@VMM348 ай бұрын
    • @@mikaelwallin1278 The clue is in the term evolutionary 💋

      @VMM34@VMM348 ай бұрын
    • @@mikaelwallin1278 You made the case for the opposing team. Goodnight Mik

      @VMM34@VMM348 ай бұрын
    • @@mikaelwallin1278 Thankyou, I was going to say similar.

      @timfirth977@timfirth9778 ай бұрын
  • Each progression of mankind thinks himself superior to the last.

    @steve-fb1pz@steve-fb1pz8 ай бұрын
  • Doggerland has always fascinated me - I wonder how long it took to flood ? ...

    @roybixby6135@roybixby61359 ай бұрын
    • If it was a lower landmass and the water broke through the boundaries holding the sea back it would have flooded like a tsunami

      @fryertuck6496@fryertuck64969 ай бұрын
  • 23 and me said i was from doggerland. amazing. get your genes done you'll be surprised i bet. it seems my genes went to scandinavia and then back to great britain eventually. very interesting sunami. thank you

    @garychynne1377@garychynne13779 ай бұрын
    • I too had my genotype done first with the National Geographic Society study, I was a very early adopter seeker of knowledge of our ancestors. . They sent a report that my maternal genome was from Doggerland. H1 After did 23 and me and they never mentioned that area again.

      @TamaraJohnBlue@TamaraJohnBlue9 ай бұрын
  • The fact that they started to break up the peat tells you they found stuff there before.

    @noeraldinkabam@noeraldinkabam7 ай бұрын
    • That’s what I was thinking.

      @jerdonsbabbler3515@jerdonsbabbler35157 ай бұрын
    • Fishermen have been finding artifacts there such as antlers, pieces of wood etc, as long as they have been fishing the Doggerbank.

      @kasperkjrsgaard1447@kasperkjrsgaard14476 ай бұрын
    • I know.

      @noeraldinkabam@noeraldinkabam6 ай бұрын
  • great documentary but there was one key feature that was skipped. and that is the counter-effect of the "Post-glacial rebound". as the Ice age ended and the ice-sheet over Scandinavia melted away an enormous pressure was removed from that land and over the millennias rised "dramatically" in geological terms, and some places as much as 50mm on a year. but as the pressure was removed and the land started to rise this had an impact on the land surrounding where the ice had been because if something had been pressed down, something have to go up to compensate... and what was pressed up the most was Doggerland. and now as this gets reversed, you get land that sinks so much you could register it from year to year... then combined that with the rising sea-level. this added with that Doggerland while it had it's hills and rivers etc, it was not made of any solid ground... or more simply, it's like Denmark was just extended all over to UK. so Doggerland was doomed even without the Storegga tsunami, because the water was more or less washing over this sand and silt-based land like a tsunami already, just in very very very slow motion.

    @brrebrresen1367@brrebrresen13677 ай бұрын
  • An absolutely facinating documentary. Doggerland, where flood myth meets reality...

    @marjorie6573@marjorie65737 ай бұрын
    • Which flood are you counting as myth?

      @alexanderespada8871@alexanderespada88716 ай бұрын
  • very very interesting as fascinating!

    @user-di1rl9zp4d@user-di1rl9zp4d5 ай бұрын
  • I wish this was 4 hours long

    @Marco-fn6kg@Marco-fn6kg9 ай бұрын
  • Ppl who lived back then were, unlike us, i touch with nature. They would have seen the animals flee long before the tsunami and they would have known to follow them. Just how the Sentinels survived the 2004 tsunami. It's just us modern ppl who rely on technology, that fails us, that allow ourselves to be devastated this badly by one. (Ofcourse, I understand that it would have been a huge catastrophe either way, but not nearly as much loss of human lives.)

    @nima9340@nima93408 ай бұрын
  • Great seeing Mary-ann Achota . 👧🏽 Saw her lectures on Stone age sites in Wiltshire

    @geraldstiling3735@geraldstiling37359 ай бұрын
    • Loved her on Time Team, she was a breath of fresh air.

      @paulkelly660@paulkelly6608 ай бұрын
    • Surely, with a temperate climate it must be considered that they possibly made ropes and perhaps clothing from fibrous plants. Fur and leather clothing woulhave been uncomfortable in the warm seasons.

      @maryosborne9952@maryosborne99523 ай бұрын
  • Thank You for upload that. One of my favorite docs of that series.

    @petelcek@petelcek9 ай бұрын
  • Not that long ago you could WALK to Briton it was at the end of the European peninsula AND the climate changed FASTER than current times and man had to adopt. Also, Doggarland was the best hunting lands where elites went to track and hunt. Though, I can image them bemoaning to the younger folk about how the Mammoths, Deer and game were much bigger in the "old" days.

    @scottfoster3548@scottfoster35489 ай бұрын
    • "Elites".. where are you getting this information from?

      @einienj3281@einienj32819 ай бұрын
    • Aka Atlantis

      @fuzzyspackage@fuzzyspackage9 ай бұрын
    • @@einienj3281 Forgive me I`ve read other info on Doggarland and its great conditions for big game at least traversing through if not living there. SO I "infer" that the elite hunter gather from each tribe tracked and hunted there AND would go back home to tell of the great beasts. Sorry a little hunter gatherer fantasy.

      @scottfoster3548@scottfoster35489 ай бұрын
    • ​@@scottfoster3548Yeah, sorry. I have a bit issues with mixing facts and fantasy, bc some people see your comment and take it as facts.. the biggest reason why I've started to dislike history channel and their "ancient aliens" etc programs.. they take one fact and assume whole stories around it, stating them as facts and people believe them at face value.. I've talked to so many people who do not belive anything anymore.. earth is flat and infested by aliens etc.. have to be careful when talking about this kind of stuff, you know..? 😅

      @einienj3281@einienj32819 ай бұрын
    • ​@@einienj3281ancient aliens no wonder your mixed up

      @johnmorgan8868@johnmorgan88689 ай бұрын
  • So basically “we” are the descendants of the lucky survivors… There was no written language so all we have is traditions that were preserved/ survived.

    @termlimitscom8739@termlimitscom87399 ай бұрын
    • Mostly you are not. You are mostly descendants of the murderers of old Europe. When people of haplogroup R1b crossed Gibraltar from North Africa (yes, yes, almost all Western European men have the Pyrenean mutation, so they couldn't have come from the East) and gradually started exterminating the original population, in particular male population. The sudden and brutal population change is known to scientists, they are just looking for excuses to justify it. They prefer to stick to outdated Kurgan theories, although R1a members were actually in Europe earlier and assimilated. Nothing has changed since those days, you are still the same.

      @annagaldova2777@annagaldova27779 ай бұрын
    • Nn

      @shawnmckenzie1627@shawnmckenzie16279 ай бұрын
    • Not exactly. There are Researchers who have followed back through the various written and oral histories, + applied current Modern Science findings, in Quantum Physics and Genetics, and these help offer a more accurate picture of us and our past. They do this adhering to the "Standards of Science and Research" which prohibits using a Theory as Fact. The "Mainstream Academics/Archaeologists" ignore what doesn't support their 19th Century Theory based Paradigm. If there's any particular interest, reply with your Q's and I will answer, if I can, and offer available Resource References. Beth Bartlett Sociologist/Behavioralist and Historian

      @bethbartlett5692@bethbartlett56929 ай бұрын
    • I wouldn't say directly. So much history and human migration has taken place since then.

      @freyatilly@freyatilly9 ай бұрын
    • Maybe not descendants from the lucky but hopefully we descended from the strong 💪 😂✌️

      @Damian-Church-NZ@Damian-Church-NZ9 ай бұрын
  • I just finished a novel about Doggerland.

    @duane9830@duane98306 ай бұрын
  • The best narrator ever❤

    @howtotieatie5845@howtotieatie58459 ай бұрын
  • Excellent documentary!

    @harrisonandrew@harrisonandrew9 ай бұрын
  • I've seen this documentary three times....jaw dropping every time!!! Thanks 💙🖖🌻

    @lunainezdelamancha3368@lunainezdelamancha33689 ай бұрын
    • I love the new info and docs about Doggerland. That ancient period of Europe and the UK is so fascinating

      @Andy_Babb@Andy_Babb9 ай бұрын
    • Me too. Love history and archaeology and boy are there some fantastic youtubers history with Cy, Peter Keller History Time, Fall of Civilizations, World of Antiquity with Dd. Dave Miano. No pseudo anything with these professionals. The best better than History, Discovery (they are embarrassing) channels and there are more, Content awesome, presenting, great6, narration, fab, And these people research!

      @muffin6369@muffin63695 ай бұрын
    • EXCUUUUUUUUSE me LOL the great Pete KELLY NOT KELLER, Peter has two channels. I am telling you and I JUST found THIS channel. Enjoy!!!

      @muffin6369@muffin63695 ай бұрын
    • Who are the featured experts though? Do they have more to share on the subject or is this their only outing?

      @OldNavajoTricks@OldNavajoTricks4 ай бұрын
  • Fascinating videos and GREAT speakers!!! LOVE IT!

    @hagalazmultiverze3411@hagalazmultiverze34116 ай бұрын
  • Quality. Gratitude

    @dragonflydroneservices1021@dragonflydroneservices10214 ай бұрын
  • WOW! Thank you, Jon! What an awesome unexpected bonus! Exactly what I need at exactly the right time. ❤❤❤

    @christinekulper7824@christinekulper78244 ай бұрын
  • Well the sensible ones just went to high ground and became us !

    @grosvenorclub@grosvenorclub9 ай бұрын
    • Some of the others followed the smart ones, and now they rule the world?

      @arnehofoss9109@arnehofoss91099 ай бұрын
  • I can't get enough of Cheddar Man's reconstructed face; that sly smile and those clever eyes. What a marvellous blend of art and science that reconstruction is! Oh, the things those blue eyes have seen...sigh.

    @user-us1ft3go3m@user-us1ft3go3m2 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for this interesting video!

    @joosf@joosf8 ай бұрын
  • *Excellent doc on a very little known geo area!* thanks 🙂

    @frankhernandez6883@frankhernandez68835 ай бұрын
  • Great documentary, I think I may have unwittingly set a puzzle for future archeologists. In 1966 I was flying in a Bristol freighter to Holland when I dropped a florin, halfcrown & a few sixpences only to see them roll & drop through the floorboard gaps of the car deck through which I could see the north sea.

    @brianwaite6139@brianwaite61399 ай бұрын
    • I've done the same, deliberately. I have buried in various places around the world, things like Chinese coins in Minnesota, Roman coins in Arizona, Koala bones in Scotland, shards of Peruvian pottery in Moscow, etc.. I'm patiently waiting for their "discovery".

      @oldmanfromscenetwentyfour8164@oldmanfromscenetwentyfour81649 ай бұрын
    • what is the point of that? @@oldmanfromscenetwentyfour8164

      @AsTheWheelsTurn@AsTheWheelsTurn9 ай бұрын
    • Here in Australia we had given our young daughter a Roman coin for show and tell at school . We had bought it at Bath , an old Roman town in the UK . She lost it at school ! so we are waiting for somebody to discover it and state that clearly the Romans were in Australia well before the other europeans !

      @grosvenorclub@grosvenorclub9 ай бұрын
    • I found those

      @mustertherohirrim7315@mustertherohirrim73159 ай бұрын
    • ​@@oldmanfromscenetwentyfour8164 you think you're superior, but you're kind of dumb to think that woyld fool anyone, lol

      @hensonlaura@hensonlaura9 ай бұрын
  • Great video. Thank you.

    @sproutsrevil6508@sproutsrevil65089 ай бұрын
  • Excellent documentary 💯💯👏👏

    @chris.asi_romeo@chris.asi_romeo9 ай бұрын
  • You can see on maps covering the historic phases of the Baltic Sea that there used to be dry land all the way from Southern Sweden over Denmark and reaching to Britain. Coles was not the first one to discover this.

    @ing-mariekoppel1637@ing-mariekoppel16376 ай бұрын
  • Woaw! Thank you. It was wunderfull.

    @andreannegarant6346@andreannegarant63469 ай бұрын
  • The sea level rise at the end of the last glaciation/ ice age was of the order of 110metres and since then the sea level has fluctuated 0.5 metre. Given the early find at dogger bamk were trawled up by early small trawlers from shallow depths the north sea is very shallow at Digger bank.

    @damianousley8833@damianousley88339 ай бұрын
    • Actually sea levels in the Mediterranean have risen 1.4m since Roman times. The melting of the Himalayan glaciers have dropped the sea level in the Caspian Sea by about 75m in the same period (Alexander sailed his army to the borders of Afghanistan from Greece via the Black Sea and Caspian Sea).

      @allangibson8494@allangibson84949 ай бұрын
    • @@allangibson8494 How do melting Himalayan glaciers Decrease water levels in the Caspian Sea? They are quite a distance from each other. Also, the study that sent up alarms about melting Himalayan glaciers was found to be full of errors.

      @dustydesert1674@dustydesert16747 ай бұрын
    • @@dustydesert1674 The Himalayas northern glaciers used to drain into the Caspian Sea and the Caspian Sea used to drain into the Black Sea.

      @allangibson8494@allangibson84947 ай бұрын
  • It was informative and a great Archologist researchers documentary about ( doggerland ) under the North Sea 🌊...its crystallized thousand questions beneath Secularist minds.. thank you for your wonderful (Get.factual ) channel for sharing this remarkable scientific documentary

    @mohammedsaysrashid3587@mohammedsaysrashid35879 ай бұрын
  • How about the flood in Gilgamesh?

    @junebyrne4491@junebyrne44919 ай бұрын
  • How does this tie in with periodic polar flips I wonder

    @raynabateman3715@raynabateman37159 ай бұрын
  • An interesting and detailed story. Thank you very much.

    @user-oe9xe8mv6t@user-oe9xe8mv6t6 ай бұрын
  • Here I am watching.

    @msaeed5961@msaeed59619 ай бұрын
    • Yea I fell into the same trap.

      @philipmcdonagh1094@philipmcdonagh10949 ай бұрын
  • AAAW! Putting in relation the land that used to feed humans and the sea that ffeds them now to present that beautifull harpoon story. I love it❤

    @andreannegarant6346@andreannegarant63469 ай бұрын
  • The whole dark skinned Cheddar man theory was debunked within about a week of the initial report. But documentay making melon farmers love to sensationalise.

    @ladoboyo5452@ladoboyo54529 ай бұрын
    • No it wasn't. Stop getting your facts from the Daily Mail.

      @sharimeline3077@sharimeline30779 ай бұрын
    • It was New Scientist magazine. Why on earth would you think I read it in the Daily Mail?

      @ladoboyo5452@ladoboyo54529 ай бұрын
    • In fact Cheddar Man is described morphologically as being "cold adapted". I.E. Long thin nose and light skin.

      @ladoboyo5452@ladoboyo54529 ай бұрын
    • @@ladoboyo5452 No. We don't know his exact skin tone but it was a darker color.

      @sharimeline3077@sharimeline30779 ай бұрын
    • Prove it.

      @ladoboyo5452@ladoboyo54529 ай бұрын
  • Excellent documenrary - infirmative & interesting

    @ChristopherBowly@ChristopherBowly3 ай бұрын
  • GREAT VIDEO, THANKS, SHARE SHARE

    @Watcher1852@Watcher18529 ай бұрын
  • Great info.

    @jacquelinevanderkooij4301@jacquelinevanderkooij43014 ай бұрын
  • Great video. Proving again, the more we know, the more questions we find to ask. Once a myth, now known.

    @michaelsmyth3935@michaelsmyth39359 ай бұрын
  • One my favourite documentary🫶🏼

    @streettalkwitherik-armas@streettalkwitherik-armas9 ай бұрын
    • Thanks for watching🥰

      @get.factual@get.factual9 ай бұрын
  • After all the cataclysmic catastrophes... humans have been lucky, to say the least, to have survived.

    @marlenemcgovern1045@marlenemcgovern10459 ай бұрын
    • For now lol

      @Andy_Babb@Andy_Babb9 ай бұрын
    • We can tell by genetics that humans and our direct ancestors "bottlenecked" more than once. Survived, but just barely.

      @sharimeline3077@sharimeline30779 ай бұрын
    • The ones that survived had the sense to RUN and HIDE!

      @oldmanfromscenetwentyfour8164@oldmanfromscenetwentyfour81649 ай бұрын
    • We reproduce fast.

      @fleetskipper1810@fleetskipper18109 ай бұрын
    • @@fleetskipper1810 Not really, we just reproduce often.

      @oldmanfromscenetwentyfour8164@oldmanfromscenetwentyfour81649 ай бұрын
  • Geweldige docu, loved it ❤!!

    @skyhigh1154@skyhigh11549 ай бұрын
  • It does sound like a fruitful and ideal land for hunter gatherers, but it doesn't sound any different to the pretty much the rest of europe during the same period

    @TM-ch3hl@TM-ch3hl9 ай бұрын
    • It wasn't separate from the rest of Europe at all of course. It's not really completely gone either. Shetland was a part of Doggerland and so was arguably the Netherlands, Denmark and the Fens.

      @tessjuel@tessjuel9 ай бұрын
    • And yet neanderthals were supposed to have died out due to competition for food. I just don't believe it given the entirety of Europe was so abundant in food

      @VMM34@VMM349 ай бұрын
  • You could find the same thing in America. The outer banks suffered the same fate. I've wondered for years why the 'experts' don't seem to understand that the story of Atlantis is a composite account of a historical event.

    @kevindouglas2060@kevindouglas20608 ай бұрын
    • The only connection to actual history that Atlantis may have is that it might have been inspired by the Minoans, but they were not at all contemporary to Doggerland. So, yes, it might (big fat emphasis on "might") be a fantastical account of a real event, but not of the sinking of Doggerland - which happened some 8000 yrs ago.

      @ScholarlyHermit@ScholarlyHermit14 күн бұрын
  • Just imagine, Göbekli Tepe had long existed prior to the inundation and destruction of Doggerland.

    @wiv2631@wiv26319 ай бұрын
    • And Bonkulu Tarla makes Gobeki Tepe look modern…

      @allangibson8494@allangibson84949 ай бұрын
  • I was interested in how all this was discovered and how it changed thinking at the time.

    @user-md9yv7jx2c@user-md9yv7jx2c8 ай бұрын
  • Climate change is mostly caused by orbital mechanics and continental drift. Doggerland was above water because we were in a glacial period. As the climate warmed into the current interglacial, it submerged, just like all the land in the Gulf of Mexico. The oceans rose about 80 meters at the end of the glacial period. What causes an ice age? We don't know.

    @lorenwilson8128@lorenwilson81287 ай бұрын
  • I believe I originate to people from Dogger after an Ancestry DNA determined I have inherited DNA mostly from England, but also Nothern Europe, and lesser from Ireland and Scotland, I can trace my leneage back 500 years to the Norfolk area.... I don't think families moved around much and as Dogger sank people moved to the nearest landmass!

    @cosmicaudio4589@cosmicaudio45897 ай бұрын
  • Where's our priorities, we've mapped the entire surface of the Moon, mars and whatever else out there. And we've only mapped about 10% of the sea bed.

    @philipmcdonagh1094@philipmcdonagh10949 ай бұрын
    • That's because 1) it is currently impossible for humans to withstand oceanic pressure past a certain depth, putting piloted vessels out of the question. And 2) the materials and technology required to craft vessels capable of withstanding such pressure are OUTRAGEOUSLY expensive. The further up you are from Earth's surface, the less you are effected by Earth's gravity. To craft a vessel capable of exploring the deepest depths of the ocean is to craft technology capable of defying the laws of Earth's gravity, as it would either have to be sturdy enough to withstand millions of tons of pressure OR somehow be able to avoid the effects of gravity as it descends.

      @SuperWeenieHutJuniors@SuperWeenieHutJuniors9 ай бұрын
    • Because it's easier to go to space than it is to go to the depth of the sea.

      @sharimeline3077@sharimeline30779 ай бұрын
    • The entire sea bed has now been mapped to 100m resolution. The 10% figure is decades old.

      @allangibson8494@allangibson84949 ай бұрын
    • @@SuperWeenieHutJuniors 1. You are wrong. Here is why: kzhead.info/sun/o8Zump2nnIx5oGg/bejne.html and some years ago: kzhead.info/sun/YJyrj5FvcIWgo3k/bejne.html

      @arnehofoss9109@arnehofoss91099 ай бұрын
    • Don't no where you heard that.@@allangibson8494

      @philipmcdonagh1094@philipmcdonagh10949 ай бұрын
  • Doggerland and all the people and ecosystems associated with the recently named area now covered by the waters of the Channel/North Sea was imply a victim of Climate change. These places existed all over around the continental shelf where humans lived at the periods of the lowest sea levels during the peak of the Ice Age we are just exiting. As he sea level rose the people withdrew and we are still doing that now. We picked a bad time to develop our permanent civilization around the edge of the oceans. Sea levels are still rising.

    @zworm2@zworm29 ай бұрын
    • I see the opposite. The water is still receding, post flood.

      @user-gw6gj3is1j@user-gw6gj3is1j9 ай бұрын
    • @@user-gw6gj3is1j Depends where you live. Imagine Britain as a piece of floating wood. Glaciers piled up on Scotland. Scotland sinks England rises. Now the weight is off and england is sinking and Scotland is rising! Scots wae hae! They predict when the Greenland glaciers recede Greenland will rise dramatically. Isostacy - it's a wondrous thing! Cheers

      @zworm2@zworm29 ай бұрын
    • Sea levels have and will rise and fall for thousands of years and always will it's just nature, I live on a small island called England in the UK, we are loosing a lot of coastline and houses to the sea at the moment due to rough seas and bad weather, but all we can do is watch and try to find higher ground 😔

      @louisadigi8733@louisadigi87339 ай бұрын
    • @@louisadigi8733 land is a temporary feature of the oceans. It erodes and disappears. The natural state is water. It is like rock, paper and scissors....water always wins.

      @zworm2@zworm29 ай бұрын
    • Don't worry. We're re-entering the ice age very soon.

      @donna9679@donna96799 ай бұрын
  • so great history like a old Civilization of human thank you so much ❤❤❤

    @jaysonlozano7696@jaysonlozano76969 ай бұрын
    • thank YOU for watching us 👀❤‍🔥

      @get.factual@get.factual9 ай бұрын
  • Doesn't lidar work with water?

    @einienj3281@einienj32819 ай бұрын
  • I wonder if the inhabitants of doggerland blamed man made climate change for the flooding and destruction of their homeland ? "we need to ban camp fires and torches at night because they cause anthropogenic global warming" their zealots cried

    @kwanchan6745@kwanchan67459 ай бұрын
    • the "just stop fire" movement was slow walking migrations

      @robertbrodie5183@robertbrodie51839 ай бұрын
    • They also taxed everybody into poverty, because that would surely prevent climate change.

      @floydfanboy2948@floydfanboy29488 ай бұрын
    • How Dare you?!!

      @catherinearangie2311@catherinearangie23116 ай бұрын
  • Quite interesting. I keep telling my wife Indonesia was separated from mainland China around 10,000 BC, and she just rolls her eyes at me. I'd like a documentary like this one on Indonesia.

    @petermaxfield7343@petermaxfield73434 ай бұрын
  • Obvious where there are tree stumps then that had to be dry land.

    @deniserowley8549@deniserowley85497 ай бұрын
  • he says scientists have now discovered doggerland..........doggerland was known about... so long ago i forget...50, 60 70 years? its little misquoted facts like this, to make things sound ground breaking ... gobelitepe was 30 years ago.

    @TheMadmacs@TheMadmacs9 ай бұрын
  • 02:45 The folks of Doggerland might have liked the annual late fall coming of mass quantities of chum salmon. High protein, great nutrition, high calories, can be smoked for months of preservation. Great food through the winter. Unfortunately chum are a Pacific salmon.

    @billsmith5109@billsmith51099 ай бұрын
    • So why the hell would Mesolithic people from doggerland have liked pacific salmon? Being no where near the pacific.

      @sforza209@sforza2099 ай бұрын
    • @@sforza209 The salmon in the clip is a chum salmon.

      @billsmith5109@billsmith51099 ай бұрын
    • ​@@sforza209 isnt it obvious aliens provided space comutes between britian an pacific

      @robertbrodie5183@robertbrodie51839 ай бұрын
    • ​@@billsmith5109😂 well spotted

      @VMM34@VMM349 ай бұрын
  • So many different ancient lands drowned by rising seas around that era. When you're looking for a factual location for the lost paradise of Atlantis, you're sort of spoiled for choice.

    @tealkerberus748@tealkerberus7488 ай бұрын
  • @Get.factual could you please upload a documentary about Anglo-Saxon England.

    @silvershadchan4085@silvershadchan40859 ай бұрын
  • The flood in the Torah and the flood in the Bible are the same flood. It's the story of Noah in both books. Genesis and Exodus are two of the books from the Torah. There are others.

    @timcox7567@timcox75677 ай бұрын
  • CHECK OUT THE OLD OAK BOG TREE'S THAT GETS WASHED UP ON THE NORTHERN COAST OF IRELAND. OUT WEST COAST OF THE ATLANTIC OCEAN.

    @stephenkelly7397@stephenkelly73976 ай бұрын
  • excellent.

    @noneofyourbizness@noneofyourbizness9 ай бұрын
  • Great documentary, it was the Biblical flood stated in Genesis .

    @annenewton5403@annenewton54039 ай бұрын
    • What were you 100 years before you were born? Exactly and you'll be in the same place after you die😊

      @christophersell3497@christophersell34978 ай бұрын
  • must have been human caused,them cave men had too many cars 😏

    @stoneageart9965@stoneageart99659 ай бұрын
    • And don't forget the cow farts. Too many cows!

      @floydfanboy2948@floydfanboy29488 ай бұрын
  • No choice, We have to sacrifice some lands in Australia, if We want to recover Doggerland. Some vast inland regions of Australia are below the sea level, if We could just open some breach until them. ...! :P Lets go.

    @0371998@03719989 ай бұрын
  • Dogging is really making a comeback

    @AnthonyOMulligan-yv9cg@AnthonyOMulligan-yv9cg4 ай бұрын
  • Come on. Am I supposed to believe that they did not know about the Frisian islands? The Germans and Dutch have known about Doggerland for time immemorial.

    @zeideerskine3462@zeideerskine34629 ай бұрын
  • Wow, thank you for this documentary. This is absolutely fascinating. I wonder how this relates to Randall Carlson’s research in the United States to the great flood.

    @catgoyda4249@catgoyda42499 ай бұрын
    • Actually it does correlate worldwide with Randall's flood research in the Pacific Northwest, all happened around and during the younger dryas epoch which roughly lasted anywhere between 1200-2000 years or 11k-14k bce.

      @westho7314@westho73149 ай бұрын
    • I wish I was taught about this in school I might of been interested. History at school was boring..

      @natureisallpowerful@natureisallpowerful9 ай бұрын
    • ​@@natureisallpowerfulas the people said - go find Randall Carlson! I am obsessed with catastrophism, it makes so much sense. Find also Douglas Vogt

      @donna9679@donna96799 ай бұрын
    • How does this tie in with polar flips I wonder

      @raynabateman3715@raynabateman37159 ай бұрын
    • ​@@natureisallpowerful I know! I had 3 years of WW2 ? They tried to hammer it in us. Didn't work 😂😂

      @jacquelinevanderkooij4301@jacquelinevanderkooij43014 ай бұрын
  • Do you know that they found. In cheddar the found a man a direct. Ancestor. Of the cheddar man With his DNA. And he lived in cheddar al his life

    @gayeinggs5179@gayeinggs51799 ай бұрын
  • My ancestry goes back to Doggerland. My dad’s Y chromosome was traced back to these people.

    @ethovas663@ethovas6637 ай бұрын
  • I don't think it sank in one night though.. I want to go comb that beach in the Netherlands..

    @einienj3281@einienj32819 ай бұрын
  • I just love how so many documentaries use the exact same footage of supposed ancient hunter-gatherers. The clothing shown in those clips would not have protected people very well from cold.

    @sirridesalot6652@sirridesalot66526 ай бұрын
  • LOL!! The blonde with the very short hair makes me laugh every time she come onscreen! Her eyebrows coupled with her hair give her an aura of permanent astonishment!

    @phoenixrising573@phoenixrising5738 ай бұрын
  • As an individual focused on Sociology and Human Behavior I have a perspective that varies from the "Mainstream Academics/Archaeologists". They were every bit Modern Human as we are, yet they were not taught that only Physical is real, nor that their intuition was imagination. Thus they were fully aware + instinct engaged, and very pikely, like all the animal world that departs for Higher Grounds, they too would have sensed impending energies and moved to Higher Grounds. If not through intuitive instinct, they were alert to the wildlife having it and followed through having witness their gift of instinct, they paid attention to their surroundings. They were far wiser, adept at self preservation, and generally had a sharper Intelligence than the larger % of present era Humans, whom have been so influenced in their thoughts and thinking by the intentional propaganda of the "Powers that be" whom own the Media and use it as their tool for their objectives. Beth Bartlett Sociologist/Behavioralist and Historian

    @bethbartlett5692@bethbartlett56929 ай бұрын
    • We have been bred to be Docile, bereaved of our Earth empowerment. Easy to manipulate and control.

      @andrewwelch1040@andrewwelch10407 ай бұрын
  • makes me laugh how this makes out this is something mysterious. We've known about this decades.

    @margaretwebster2516@margaretwebster25166 ай бұрын
  • The harpoon implement - could it be that a hunter had stabbed a big fish near the coast. Only for it to escape and swim away. A few years later, it died many miles away from the coast in the North Sea.

    @MatCendana@MatCendana9 ай бұрын
    • That is just one artifact. There are too many others to just dismiss Doggerland.

      @sharimeline3077@sharimeline30779 ай бұрын
    • Never read such a stupid comment.

      @Harvy500@Harvy5009 ай бұрын
  • The Cheddar man's skin tone shown here has been utterly debunked; it was made darker entirely for political reasons. The actual skin tone range that came from the analysis indicated that he was probably similar in appearance to, say, the range of people seen in modern Tunisia. Other than that, a fascinating and superb documentary.

    @ginojaco@ginojaco9 ай бұрын
    • "Ancient DNA" doesn't debunk anything, because "Ancient DNA" is not real DNA. It is a computer modeled hypothetical 'reconstruction' of a genome. No physical evidence whatsoever. You have been duped by racist into believing they are actually recovering millennia old DNA from bones. It's impossible. DNA in warm open air decomposes within a few years just like all other organic matter. Sometimes in anoxic conditions like the bottom of a lake or bogg, it can last a few decades. But even that's a rare exception.

      @companionelf@companionelf9 ай бұрын
    • 😂 No one did it for political reasons, you absolute shmoo. It has not been "debunked" at all. Stop getting your "facts" from the Daily Mail.

      @sharimeline3077@sharimeline30779 ай бұрын
    • At least Cheddar Man had blue eyes, so you can take comfort in the fact that he had some Aryan traits even if his skin was darker than you’d like. I’m so happy you were able to hang onto some of your racist delusions. Feeling better now Buttercup? Took a look at your channel, oof! I was not wrong. 😂😂😅

      @silvermainecoons3269@silvermainecoons32699 ай бұрын
    • @@silvermainecoons3269 🤣🤣 💯💯 I'm white you're white everyone everywhere in the past and present were and currently are all white. #JesusWasWhiteAF

      @knowjusticeknowpeace15@knowjusticeknowpeace159 ай бұрын
    • correct... they had to make him black to justify their false evolution theories

      @shaunsteele6926@shaunsteele69269 ай бұрын
  • The younger/dryas event happened in a very short time. Caused sea levels to rise about 400ft. In a matter of weeks.

    @tedecker3792@tedecker37929 ай бұрын
    • Uh the younger/dryas event was a brief(1,300 year long) return of cooling, then at the end the warming resumed. That didn’t cause sea levels to rise.

      @duncanidaho2097@duncanidaho20977 ай бұрын
  • The harpoon is from after the landmass was underwater, they were hunting whales, walruses over the sunken landmass

    @2coryman@2coryman7 ай бұрын
    • Too small

      @carylhalfwassen8555@carylhalfwassen85556 ай бұрын
    • Whale harpoons weren't used until millenia after this period. They would have been iron or steel tipped. These harpoon tips were made from deer antler.

      @michaelstamper5604@michaelstamper56043 ай бұрын
  • Trying to refute the great flood is much harder to do than accepting it and understanding why we have fossil fuels like we do.

    @ellaw356@ellaw3567 ай бұрын
  • Excellent video and commentary. Thank you. Now I have to find out if these people mated with the same types (Mesolithis? Did I get the name correct?), if they moved to a secure spot in England or Germany, and if they could have interbred with Neanderthals. I don’t know if I’ve got my timeline right there. I’m getting very sleepy, and it’s messing with my cognitive abilities. Curious to see if their DNA could have crossed with any other type “pre-humans”. It would be interesting to see, if they did, what kind of people might have been created from that, then to follow the travels of these people to see where and how that could be traced and compared with modern humans. Wouldn’t it be interesting if some of us are descendants of some of them. I’m in the U.S., but my ancestry shows that so many of my ancestors came from England, Germany, Denmark and, I believe, Norway. But I imagine they would have been long gone during the intervening years. Just a thought.

    @kgs2280@kgs22809 ай бұрын
    • Neanderthals died out some 40,000 ya, so unlikely the Dogger peoples would have met them. But other groups were in various places, so bound to have admired.

      @karphin1@karphin19 ай бұрын
    • Wow! GREAT INFO!😊

      @patriciabush4590@patriciabush45909 ай бұрын
    • I've heard modern humans have about 3 percent of Neanderthal DNA in our makeup

      @kellysouter4381@kellysouter43817 ай бұрын
    • Mesolithic is a time period, not a species of human.

      @Idococaine69@Idococaine697 ай бұрын
    • @@Idococaine69 Yes, I’m aware. I think that perhaps I was thinking of “people from the Mesolithic period”.

      @kgs2280@kgs22807 ай бұрын
  • Well,the fact that they are actually even finding oil and gas under the sea shoud already tell you enough that there used to be land there

    @martijn3015@martijn30156 ай бұрын
  • In our shipping forecast around UK we still use Dogged bank as a reference.

    @lgparker4726@lgparker47265 ай бұрын
  • I wonder if anyone lived where the landslide itself happened.

    @SamtheIrishexan@SamtheIrishexan7 ай бұрын
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