The Life on Lost Landmasses

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  • Опубліковано 12 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 325

  • @Dr.cozmore
    @Dr.cozmore Рік тому +165

    The thought of ancient humans sending us a message about what life looked like is really beautiful. Great video!

    • @acephas3
      @acephas3 9 місяців тому +1

      Good job, dude. Berengia is THAT place.

  • @beedrillbot121
    @beedrillbot121 Рік тому +424

    One interesting lost landmass I’ve found would be Middle Jurassic Florida. Not only was most of the northern part of the state above water as the early Atlantic opened, but the southern tip of the state, Florida Keys, and a sizable portion of the land from the Florida continental shelf were all above water and were all isolated from the rest of the continents. The island appears to have been of comparable size to that of Hatzeg Island. I can only imagine how many different species must have arisen from this unique environment. Before the waves claimed all of the animals that lived there. I doubt we will ever find any fossils of this truly lost landmass, especially since the only Triassic and Jurassic rock in Florida are part basement rock layer of the north eastern side of the state, also known as the peninsular arch.

    • @LimeyLassen
      @LimeyLassen Рік тому +11

      I wonder how Florida became populated by tropical species like alligators. Did they cross the sea, or go the long way round through Mexico?

    • @beedrillbot121
      @beedrillbot121 Рік тому +34

      @@LimeyLassen well alligatoroids had been in North America since the Paleocene, and the oldest species of Alligator is from Miocene North America, the two species of alligator from China and Southeast Asia are the exception to their range not the rule.

    • @LimeyLassen
      @LimeyLassen Рік тому +8

      @@beedrillbot121 That's interesting because tapirs have a similarly disjointed range.

    • @Ddub1083
      @Ddub1083 Рік тому +1

      if we havnt found jurassic aged rocks except in north eastern florida what are you basing your statements about the keys at that time on?

    • @beedrillbot121
      @beedrillbot121 Рік тому

      @@Ddub1083 there is a map of the globe made by Dinosaur Pictures org, setting it to 170 MYA you’ll see what I was talking about. Though the map shown of Middle Jurassic North America by this person: ua-cam.com/video/y2Qqslr5ytY/v-deo.htmlsi=nV5HAaWZVHKLm8eO does not feature an island of any kind. So for all I know the map made by Dinosaur Pictures . Org may be wrong.

  • @threebythestreet
    @threebythestreet Рік тому +210

    It would be interesting if you made a video called like "Fossils Lost To TIme" or somthing like that where you would talk about fossils that have been documented but no longer seem to exist like the S. aegyptiacus that was blown up during WW2, the maraapunisaurus fossil that people think disintegrated, or other possibly more ancient examples of people discovering fossils that are now lost to history.

    • @reddragoon7981
      @reddragoon7981 Рік тому

      How about some of the hominin specimens from China that were blown up by the Japanese navy during ww2?

    • @xRhamnusia
      @xRhamnusia Рік тому +4

      Try make it yourself, it’s a good idea:)

    • @threebythestreet
      @threebythestreet Рік тому +6

      @@xRhamnusia Thanks man. I am just worried that I dont have the time.

    • @陳嘉宇-y4q
      @陳嘉宇-y4q Рік тому +4

      Isn't there one important human skull fossil that sank to the sea floor ?

    • @Victoriaghh
      @Victoriaghh 10 місяців тому

      ​@user-lq4ct6dr5m You're right, it's an unfortunate when valuable treasures are lost!! ❤

  • @Mars-ev7qg
    @Mars-ev7qg Рік тому +109

    One of the least talked about lost land bridges is the one between India and Sri Lanka. It's a really interesting feature of the last ice age that deserves more attention.

    • @daimonhellstorm1763
      @daimonhellstorm1763 Рік тому +17

      Im from Sri Lanka .And our archeologist found hippo teeths ,lion jaws and some kind of elephant skulls from here .the thing is hippos and lions are non native animals to sri lanka .also the elephant skulls found not similar to sri lankan elephant .also we found early humans skeletons . The so called island was not an island in past .
      Also there is a rumor between our people big part of my country is under ocean

    • @seanhewitt603
      @seanhewitt603 Рік тому +2

      Yup, that's a bridge, but the Beringia was larger in square milage than England, that's not a bridge, it's land.

    • @Mars-ev7qg
      @Mars-ev7qg Рік тому +4

      @@daimonhellstorm1763 they also found tiger bones to. It's very interesting that there are no tigers in Sri Lanka today. Only leopards were able to survive once Sri Lanka became an island. No one knows exactly why tigers went extinct in Sri Lanka about 14,000 years ago.

    • @oreodepup
      @oreodepup Рік тому +2

      The land bridge existed in some capacity until the medieval period

    • @Mars-ev7qg
      @Mars-ev7qg Рік тому +4

      @@oreodepup that's true. Portions of the land bridge existed at least intermittently up until just a thousand years ago. It's a very interesting geological structure.

  • @LazyLizard2
    @LazyLizard2 Рік тому +74

    Wrangel Island, northwest of that Bering landmass, had last known mammoth population. In fact they were alive long after the pyramids were built.

  • @loopernoodling
    @loopernoodling Рік тому +20

    Just fyi, the author Stephen Baxter wrote a book set in the later days of Doggerland. It's called Stone Spring. Here's the Wiki blurb...
    Stone Spring is a 2010 science fiction novel by British writer Stephen Baxter. It is set in prehistoric Doggerland (renamed "Northland" in the novel) and focuses on the attempts of Northland's inhabitants to adapt to the rising sea levels slowly eroding Northland's coastline. It is the first part of a trilogy detailing an alternate history in which human efforts were able to prevent Doggerland from being flooded.

    • @alexriley3179
      @alexriley3179 Рік тому

      A game or movie/tv show set there could be really cool.

  • @mickeywhite2563
    @mickeywhite2563 Рік тому +9

    You could talk about anything and I'd listen enthusiastically. Your voice and speech pattern are soothing as well as attention keeping and it creates such an amazing vibe.

    • @anderewisp1
      @anderewisp1 7 місяців тому

      Thank you for saying it OP and thak you to the creator. I suffer short term memory loss. Ill wonder back and correct this most likely tomorrow. Passed out twice to this video.

  • @JohnGardnerAlhadis
    @JohnGardnerAlhadis Рік тому +48

    I'd love to see you do a video connecting mythological creatures with ancient fauna, and how ancestral memories may have inspired modern fantasy concepts (like goblins/monkeys, dragons/monitor lizards, etc).

  • @craigstephenson7676
    @craigstephenson7676 Рік тому +16

    Minor critique: recent archeological data has significantly challenged the beringia standstill hypothesis. We have now multiple archeological sites in the New World dating back over 20 thousand years, most notably a recently found set of human footprints in White Sands National Park which dates back to 21,000 to 23,000 years ago. The Beringia Standstill was likely true to some extent, but now we have convincing evidence that humans did not simply stay there. They likely used boats to travel along the coastlines in order to get past the glaciers. This is all very recent and subject to constant change, the footprints I talked about were most recently dated earlier this year, which is the only reason why we are any degree of certain they are that old.

    • @seanhewitt603
      @seanhewitt603 Рік тому

      So, the beringia was inhabited long term, and sent out colonists, that does not sound like a standstill population. That term is prejudicial anyways. Stability means the same thing. Sooooo, was Europe any better at responsible stewardship of a healthy, vibrant predator prey driven ecology that thrived right up until Europe infested the rest of the world?

  • @Onelegbutitsok
    @Onelegbutitsok Рік тому +24

    Your uploads make my day man. Truly a unique and original channel and I love your sense of humor. Keep it up!

  • @izackholmgren4686
    @izackholmgren4686 Рік тому +14

    It's always a treat when you upload. Banger video like usual.

    • @izackholmgren4686
      @izackholmgren4686 10 місяців тому

      Now this is an epic gamer moment. My man liked my comment. Big W

  • @goodbyesheesha
    @goodbyesheesha Рік тому +30

    Highly, highly recommend visiting the Beringia Centre in Whitehorse if you're ever out that way. They got a mummified wolf pup! And a mummified North American horse, which is extra cool.

    • @LittleWhiteRabbitB
      @LittleWhiteRabbitB 10 місяців тому

      I've lived in southern B.C./Alberta my whole life; I've always wanted to head north to visit the territories. I'll have to write this down, for whenever that may happen! (It's difficult without a vehicle, especially with how expensive air travel is in this country...)

    • @goodbyesheesha
      @goodbyesheesha 10 місяців тому +1

      @@LittleWhiteRabbitBAir North is actually pretty good; I want to say it was $350 round-trip with no extra luggage charge. I don't drive and that was fine around Whitehorse because it's a pretty small city you can navigate on foot. But I did have to snag a ride to/from Dawson City

    • @LittleWhiteRabbitB
      @LittleWhiteRabbitB 10 місяців тому

      @@goodbyesheeshaI'll have to look into it!

  • @darkonyx6995
    @darkonyx6995 Рік тому +68

    Honestly, you could make a video about prehistoric animals we know the appearance of! From the Pleistocene Cave Lion, Irish Elk, Wooly Rhino and others to Mezosoic Dinosaurs like Sinosauropteryx and Psittacosaurus!

  • @thespleenenator
    @thespleenenator Рік тому +8

    That quest master name drop, wow. The Budget Museum is the goated Dungeon Synth science channel, can't wait for the ecology of medieval Germany video with a Depressive Silence cameo.

  • @gabriellathos
    @gabriellathos Рік тому +3

    loved the dungeonsynth music in the background! really nice

  • @Kevin-hx2ky
    @Kevin-hx2ky Рік тому +12

    Man it would've been great if you were able to use pictures of fossils from Bandung Geological Museum. That place houses a lot of the fossil animals that were endemic here, including Megalochelys.

  • @alexcervantes3155
    @alexcervantes3155 Рік тому +13

    I think it's only this channel (and trey the explainer) that I authentically gasp when I see there is a new video. The corny jokes have me cackling like I do after meeting with an old friend after too long. Keep it up man, your content is golden.

  • @SpankyK
    @SpankyK 11 місяців тому

    Dude, this is some of the best content in UA-cam. Its educational but not pretentious and I appreciate that.

  • @eliforeal5261
    @eliforeal5261 Рік тому +6

    Great video! I'd love to hear you talk about Sahul as well! An interesting exchange of marsupials and placentals!

  • @jhonviel7381
    @jhonviel7381 Рік тому +4

    4:23
    The perennial grasses can be classified as either C3 or C4 plants. These terms refer to the different pathways that plants use to capture carbon dioxide during photosynthesis. All species have the more primitive C3 pathway, but the additional C4 pathway evolved in species in the wet and dry tropics. The first product of carbon fixation in C3 plants involves a 3-carbon molecule, whilst C4 plants initially produce a 4-carbon molecule that then enters the C3 cycle. Why are these differences important?
    These differences are important because the two pathways are also associated with different growth requirements. C3 plants are adapted to cool season establishment and growth in either wet or dry environments. On the other hand, C4 plants are more adapted to warm or hot seasonal conditions under moist or dry environments. A feature of C3 grasses is their greater tolerance of frost compared to C4 grasses. C3 species also tend to generate less bulk than C4 species; however, feed quality is often higher than C4 grasses.

  • @JOGA_Wills
    @JOGA_Wills Рік тому +9

    Doggerland "sadly enough, no dogs"... haha that got a chuckle outta me

  • @stormisuedonym4599
    @stormisuedonym4599 Рік тому +3

    There's something romantic about our early ancestors leaving a record of what they saw that we can use to inform our understanding of the species that did not survive our ascent.

  • @Frimplus
    @Frimplus Рік тому +2

    Nothing makes me more excited then when budget museum uploads.

  • @Nightswarmer
    @Nightswarmer 10 місяців тому +1

    One of my greatest achivments in life was that there was a period in my life, where I told people I met online, that I was from Doggerland and managed to convince some people it was still a real place, using map pictures of it being an island outside the UK..

  • @Archer690Channel
    @Archer690Channel Рік тому +3

    it's quite amazing how not only there are so many familiar faces on these islands, but how far apart they are, from africa, to indonesia and north america the elephant family had quite a reign

  • @davidyemm7910
    @davidyemm7910 5 місяців тому

    Thank you for including all three. I learned something new today, much appreciated.

  • @sawyerwestbrook7105
    @sawyerwestbrook7105 Рік тому +2

    Your videos are so great and informative I look forward to every release!

  • @Galvatron102
    @Galvatron102 Рік тому +2

    I love the idea of using Shaqs as measuring units

  • @CL-kn1rq
    @CL-kn1rq Рік тому +3

    Epic video thank you, merry Christmas and a happy new year

  • @mikamekaze
    @mikamekaze Рік тому +2

    me seeing the video and just saying over and over in my head "doggerland... doggerland... doggerland..." until it came up, then actually cheering out loud

  • @efebrahim
    @efebrahim 6 місяців тому

    Dude, ur getting better every video. Please keep it up.

  • @davidsanz2158
    @davidsanz2158 Рік тому +24

    its interesting how the lions in Beringia were maneless, and native americans are beardless too! (most of them) I dont really know if there is a relation in that but i think about that a lot

  • @brunobruno5142
    @brunobruno5142 Рік тому +5

    Just today I was wondering about sundaland. Great video

  • @WAMTAT
    @WAMTAT Рік тому +4

    Can't believe this video was only 18 seconds long. Great job

  • @takenname8053
    @takenname8053 Рік тому +7

    Love learning about the lost!

  • @VanessaScrillions
    @VanessaScrillions Рік тому

    I'm grateful to you for this channel. Thank you for everything you do ❤

  • @ih8maya
    @ih8maya Рік тому +1

    thank u for yet another banger mr. the budget museum

  • @kalinmir
    @kalinmir Рік тому +2

    I absolutely love your narration.

  • @azayo6939
    @azayo6939 8 місяців тому

    I swear all this information just exits my brain as soon as it enters but that just means I get to rewatch all your videos until the information stays

  • @Ben-0
    @Ben-0 Рік тому

    Nice to see a new upload after two months of waiting.

  • @owellafehr5191
    @owellafehr5191 3 місяці тому

    Really cool to hear about Sunderland; it's a reminder that the whole world wasn't just ice and snow during the ice age.

  • @corvid...
    @corvid... Рік тому +1

    This was an incredibly interesting video that definitely sent me down a delightful research rabbit hole.. thanks for the great content

  • @thelittleal1212
    @thelittleal1212 2 місяці тому +1

    It also always comes to my mind that there once were a lot more Landmasses now gone from history.
    From island to countries, or heck, maybe even another possible continent (it’s an ambitious thought but who knows)

  • @aceundead4750
    @aceundead4750 Рік тому +3

    An interesting sequel to this video would be lost oceans/seas like the one that cut the U.S. in half

  • @KGTiberius
    @KGTiberius 9 місяців тому

    Excellent video! Keep up the great work.

  • @cleanerben9636
    @cleanerben9636 Рік тому +3

    I knew there was a land bridge but I never knew it was that thick

  • @KeithPrince-cp3me
    @KeithPrince-cp3me Рік тому +2

    Evidence of the mega tsunami in the north sea c.6200BCE caused by the Storegga slide has been found 50 miles inland in Scotland. Its also thought that the sea level rise that partially submerged Doggerland and cut Britain off from the continent came quite quickly around the same time as lake Agassis (have i spelled that right?) Burst its ice dam flooding into the Atlantic and this caused a sudden sea level rise making Britain an island. I live in east Anglia and often look out over the water thinking of the lost land that lies not that far under rhe surface, were the water to drop 20m Doggerland would start to reemerge, the north sea is actually pretty shallow as seas go.

  • @Muxoll-Rocks
    @Muxoll-Rocks 9 місяців тому

    Awesome video dude ❤

  • @owellafehr5191
    @owellafehr5191 3 місяці тому

    2:44 as a young kid, I imagined Beringia was just a super-long natural 'bridge' of rocks, maybe a few feet wide, like what Littlefoot & co use to cross over to an island in one of the Land Before Time sequels. XD So no, you weren't the only one who had a silly idea of it.

  • @k.5152
    @k.5152 Рік тому +1

    The music at the end was fantastic and I think you should use it more. Great video as usual!

    • @k.5152
      @k.5152 Рік тому

      specifically during the beginning of the sundaland bit

    • @scourge2668
      @scourge2668 Рік тому

      Its dungeon synth artist Quest Master, he linked their page in the description. Totally check them out!

  • @drivernephi1002
    @drivernephi1002 Рік тому +12

    *Graham Hancock wants to know your location*

  • @grousecorp1145
    @grousecorp1145 Рік тому

    Thank you for covering this :)

  • @bipedalcynodont962
    @bipedalcynodont962 Рік тому +1

    This video should basically be called "Eurasia used to have less islands".

  • @samdog166
    @samdog166 Рік тому +1

    Just imagine being the last people on doggerland. Assuming they didn’t drift on rafts to safety. And assuming the tsunami hadn’t wiped them all out. Even if the water Rosss but a couple of inches every generation. At what point do they realise they’re screwed? Or was it so gradual that they assume they’re always lived on a tiny island. And then the last family sitting with maybe one tree left. Perhaps Theyed freeze to death before the generation that’s feet were constantly wet. Maybe they made houses on stilts for a time, untill the waves grew and smashed them down. Likely they’d eat fish well up untill the end!

  • @bradsullivan2298
    @bradsullivan2298 Рік тому

    This video was so interesting! Thank you Budget Museum!

  • @reverseuniverse2559
    @reverseuniverse2559 Рік тому +2

    Victoria Australian coastline ( The great ocean road ) is a natural huge cliff drop along the southern coast that was once adjoining Antartica you can find Megalodon size, teeth and other marine fossils extruding out of the cliff tops. When you stand on the beach below, you cannot reach them. A cliff is a few hundred feet high in places.

  • @puretestosterone9614
    @puretestosterone9614 Рік тому

    Whoever makes your music is a Dungeon Synth hyper Chad!

  • @chewy99.
    @chewy99. Рік тому +1

    Yeah I keep thinking about what life lived on Zealandia and Antarctica when it was warmer and somewhat closer to the equator

  • @CL-kn1rq
    @CL-kn1rq Рік тому +5

    I'm on the same page, I just wish I could bring Sunderland, the Steppes and Syria together. That would bring together the land, the people and the story

    • @dubuyajay9964
      @dubuyajay9964 Рік тому

      Personally I'd like to see what the rl Antartic was like during the Eras mentioned in H.P. Lovecraft's "At The Mountains of Madness."

  • @schlopusmodangle
    @schlopusmodangle Рік тому

    Man going back to your first video your voice has changed a LOT!

  • @jacksonfurlong3757
    @jacksonfurlong3757 Рік тому +1

    Being in the Pacific ring of fire may have also helped Beringia remain glacier free.

  • @posticusmaximus1739
    @posticusmaximus1739 Рік тому +11

    DOGGERLANDTIS

  • @Graveyard_Vibes
    @Graveyard_Vibes Рік тому +2

    Could you do a video on the legendary wooly dogs of the pacific northwest?
    I'm from this region and I find nobody knows about this coastal dog

  • @HammytheDevourer
    @HammytheDevourer Рік тому +2

    How is the ancient water buffalo with the big horns called?

  • @l0zerth
    @l0zerth Рік тому

    I would argue that those are not the only parties calling for these project expansions.
    There have been some groundbreaking results in related fields that may expand if they scale.

  • @Chewbaccafruit
    @Chewbaccafruit Рік тому +2

    This is literally the first time I have ever seen someone use the words "Younger Dryas" not in the context of ancient lost super-civilization woowoo

  • @scourge2668
    @scourge2668 Рік тому

    Quest Master!!???? On the budget museum UA-cam channel? Fuck yeah

  • @athiefinthenight6894
    @athiefinthenight6894 9 місяців тому

    bro really slipped antediluvian into the script and thought we wouldnt notice.

  • @joleebensonjoleeconfirmed0677

    Nah you should’ve made this video longer this was a banger

  • @raminagrobis6112
    @raminagrobis6112 Рік тому

    An opposite force at play during Pleistocene glaciation was the increased weight resting on the Earth crust. This resulted in a rise of ocean levels, which significantly counteracted receding levels due to decreased sea water. Upon and after thawing of inlandsises, a secondary isostatic decrease of sea levels occurred as a result of the release of weight over continental surfaces, leading to modern shorelines.
    A well-known example is Champlain Sea and other continental bodies of water that formed upon glacier thawing in the Midwest. These bodies of water disappeared largely as a result of isostatic readjustment.

  • @eversor10
    @eversor10 Рік тому +4

    Thought it was an ice bridge aswell

  • @dudotolivier6363
    @dudotolivier6363 Рік тому +3

    Stegodon IS a True Elephant genus, BUT an ARHAIC elephant.
    Not a all Modern elephant because being not part of the current, extant and modrn family.
    Hence justly we call justly the three extants species and their close extinct relatives Modern elephants.
    This vernacular term being base just on the fact that they survived to our current days, while the others not and justly why we call them Archaic, because they didn't survived to our days.
    If Stegodontid have survived to modern days, they would be also called equally as Modern elephants as well, not Archaic.
    It's like between our own human species and the others, even very close, extinct humans species.
    Our species is called Modern human just because it is the only species to reach modern times, while the others, its mother, sister and more older species are called Archaic human because they don't survived to modern times.
    Speaking of human btw, Homo sapiens, our species, appeared a very good time after Homo erectus became extinct.
    So the moment you said that modern humans, our species replace homo erectus is innacurate.

  • @Consistencyy
    @Consistencyy Рік тому

    Hey man, kinda random but is there another link for the music? Love the background stuff. Great video btw!

  • @rbynam9055
    @rbynam9055 Рік тому +3

    Could u make a video about plants? Or does anyone have recommendations where to learn more about them, I want to be a plant head.

  • @garyb6219
    @garyb6219 Рік тому +1

    I'd love to see a video about the La Brea tar pits.

  • @RafaCB0987
    @RafaCB0987 Рік тому +2

    Such unique places sadly lost to time

  • @felixstammer
    @felixstammer Рік тому +1

    Early humans, large hairy creatures, land slowly being swallowed up my the ocean….seems like Sundaland and Sunderland share more than just a name

  • @grantdickerson6103
    @grantdickerson6103 8 місяців тому

    video is a hidden slapper idk how i missed this

  • @Mutila236
    @Mutila236 11 місяців тому

    I am binging this channel. I never took an interest in this subject, but I visited the Natural History Museum in London and it sparked something in me. I know nothing about the topic, but if The Budget Museum would make a comprehensive video, I would definetly enjoy it ;)
    Edit: by comprehensive I mean like and overview, introductory, beginner-oriented video.

    • @TheBudgetMuseum
      @TheBudgetMuseum  11 місяців тому +2

      I am actually working on something like this, but not on this channel. Stay tuned!

    • @Mutila236
      @Mutila236 11 місяців тому

      @@TheBudgetMuseum Great! Keep up the good work

  • @George_M_
    @George_M_ Рік тому

    According to the contrast between it's archeological record and its being populated only by flying and swimming families, New Zealand went fully under water for some million years.

  • @marioalejandrocamp
    @marioalejandrocamp Рік тому +1

    Shaq should become a standard unit of measurement.

  • @mastersjors
    @mastersjors Рік тому

    I would love to see and hear more about this time period.

  • @TheAngryPothead
    @TheAngryPothead Рік тому

    What's the name of the track that starts like 2:30 or so? Great work as always.

    • @scourge2668
      @scourge2668 Рік тому

      He linked the artist in the description. I love dungeon synth

  • @ArleneDKatz
    @ArleneDKatz Рік тому +1

    Well done !

  • @PresidentFunnyValentine
    @PresidentFunnyValentine 10 місяців тому +1

    This brings a good question to mind.
    How much water do I have to suck in order to bring back this landmass?

  • @skylarm2068
    @skylarm2068 Рік тому

    This video was amazing, and I THOUGHT I heard Dungeon Synth in the background.

  • @TimeTravelisBoring
    @TimeTravelisBoring Рік тому +1

    This was a cool video. I really enjoyed the topic. Would love to hear you talk about the whack-ass that is Lemuria.

  • @UnknowableThen
    @UnknowableThen Рік тому

    Glad you included a measurement for us Americans
    Roughly 4 meters in length: "?????"
    Or 2 Shaqs: "DAMN THOSE FUCKERS ARE HUGE"

  • @David-gh6vp
    @David-gh6vp 10 місяців тому

    Beringia may not have been "cloudless". It still borders the Pacific Ocean, after all, and would have had some considerable precipitation due to that. Field of lush grass and flowers survive very well in modern tundra conditions, as I witnessed after ~4 years along the Bering Sea coast. During my time there I got to walk up to those herds [ 7:29] of Walrus, which are fine creatures weighing in up to 3,000 lbs.

    • @TheBudgetMuseum
      @TheBudgetMuseum  10 місяців тому

      This is true: Beringia might have been on average wetter or swampier than the rest of the mammoth steppe.
      Very interesting to hear of your travels to the tundra!

  • @bobobo_bo_bo_bobo
    @bobobo_bo_bo_bobo Рік тому +1

    shaq measurements took me out ☠️

  • @al145
    @al145 Рік тому

    help me steppe-bison, im stuck behind a glacier

  • @kellenbigman
    @kellenbigman 7 місяців тому

    Imagine what we could possibly uncover were we to somehow excavate the area. All the potential discoveries.

  • @TheNagler
    @TheNagler Рік тому +1

    Doggerland is so cool.

  • @jonahsmedley3266
    @jonahsmedley3266 Рік тому +1

    I like using the very scientific measurement of shaqs can we please keep doing that thank you.

  • @SuperTurtle0
    @SuperTurtle0 Рік тому

    This is where I’m goin if if I get a Time Machine

  • @samuelruakere7728
    @samuelruakere7728 Рік тому

    Hey hes back.
    also could you make a video on nz fauna of pehistoric times

  • @chaytonsheargold3210
    @chaytonsheargold3210 Рік тому

    I liked this video before even watching it

  • @MaxwellLysle
    @MaxwellLysle Рік тому

    I thought that music was familiar. I love dungeon synth and Quest Master.

  • @alexisasheep6554
    @alexisasheep6554 Рік тому

    I'm going to request a part two for this video

  • @MandieKearns-Moore
    @MandieKearns-Moore 2 місяці тому

    It breaks my heart that you said epic when you meant epoch