The Prehistoric Remains Buried Under A Scottish Beach | Time Team | Odyssey

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 28 сер 2024
  • In 2005, a major storm eroded a dune next to the beach at Allasdale, Barra, exposing cists and human remains. The Team goes on a rescue-dig, before the site is lost to erosion forever. The team are joined by archaeologists Mike Parker Pearson and Keith Branigan, and animal bones specialist Jackie Mulville. Jackie McKinley investigates some well-preserved human remains, and potter Ursina Hack-Maclellan throws some pots using an experimental prehistoric style clamp-kiln.
    Odyssey is your journey into the world of Ancient History; from the dawn of Mesopotamia to the fall of Rome. We'll be bringing you only the best documentaries that journey into the mysteries and ruins of worlds long lost.
    Subsribe so you don't miss out!
    It's like Netflix for History: the world's finest documentary streaming service -- use the code 'Odyssey' to get 50% off your History Hit subscription!
    👉 bit.ly/3cX9hGo
    Follow us on Facebook: / odysseyancienthistory
    Odyssey is part of the History Hit Network. For any queries, please contact owned-enquiries@littledotstudios.com

КОМЕНТАРІ • 916

  • @ginna461
    @ginna461 2 роки тому +921

    I wish I had studied Archeology instead of Nursing. I wish I was there. I’m now 81. All I can do is study and be enthralled. Love this show.

    • @loisfolk5492
      @loisfolk5492 2 роки тому +46

      I agree archeology over nursing. We have this show to enthrall us. Getting me through old age. No time for this when younger. ✌️🖖

    • @sandrastevens2793
      @sandrastevens2793 2 роки тому +49

      Me too. I am a nurse but love history. Would have loved to go on a dig. I am 72.

    • @brendastolecki4755
      @brendastolecki4755 2 роки тому +40

      @@sandrastevens2793 History museums around the world have 'digs' amateurs can volunteer, to go on. I am 65 and that is on my Bucket List. Lol, I know, I need to hurry before I get older. Here in the US, they are doing digs in the cities to see how the new settlers lived. Of course any mounds that existed have since been destroyed. Some were documented some were not. I wish they would do "Native American villages", but most have been built over by now. The US is the youngest nation on the earthand does not have the rich history that Britain, Europe or the rest of the world has. I know it does exist, but it is all "pre-caucasian man" and they have no idea where to look for it - or there is no interest to search for it; unless it is 'stumbled upon'. Modern man 'loves' the Native American and any history of them here in Ohio. But, there are memorials to slaughters, also. So hippocritical.....
      there are actual 'indian statues' scattered in one community where they would 'portage' or carry their canoes from 1 river to the next to go farther north or south. In the same community I read a historical account of where and when the last 3 remaining indians were shot at by 2 white men. 2 were killed, the 3rd escaped. They collected money for the 2 scalps. No mention if they were buried. I also read that Native Americans never scalped or raped until the whites came to this continent. That never existed in their culture. But THEY were the 'SAVAGES'. It just brings tears to my eyes. White men were they same around the world; invading, massacres, rape, slavery, dominance, destruction of culture, etc. Makes me ashamed of my skin color.

    • @awnutz
      @awnutz 2 роки тому +37

      @@brendastolecki4755 I understand your intent in your comment, but I don’t think it’s entirely accurate. Native Americans committed many brutal acts among themselves. Blaming Caucasians for all of the violence in the history of civilization is, well, racist. Archeology digs are expensive. My daughter was on the archeology team at James Madison’s Montpelier. She was “in the field” which meant she spent all day in the hot Virginia sun digging hard red clay and rock and sifting it all through a strainer hoping for a pottery fragment. Her boss, the archeology PhD, spent all of his time fundraising. Not exactly glamorous work. There is much land in the US that is not covered by cities at this point. The Montpelier restoration is all privately funded. I’m sure there are many digs that are also privately funded or perhaps associated with universities. You will probably have to pay to participate because these digs rely on such funding to continue.

    • @Shadowcthuhlu
      @Shadowcthuhlu 2 роки тому +9

      @@sandrastevens2793 you can always check out digs with universities close by. You may have trouble with the digging but I'm sure no one would complain about a volunteer making sure everyone stays hydrated and doesn't get heat stroke

  • @kami3000
    @kami3000 2 роки тому +45

    You not only learn a lot about history but as a non native English speaker you also learn a lot of bloody good words like smashing, cracking and jolly good. Words that my English teacher never would have taught me.

  • @amandapittar9398
    @amandapittar9398 2 роки тому +277

    I’m a Scot who lives a world away in Aotearoa. I’ve done my DNA. I’m almost completely Celt & Pict. Some of my ancestry comes from the Isles. I loved watching this. I could almost smell the sea spray. I’m sure the climate would have been warmer in those times. Thank you for a great episode.😊

    • @suecastillo4056
      @suecastillo4056 2 роки тому +6

      That’s SO COOL!!! Lucky you dear heart! Thanks for sharing that!!!🤗😘❣️☮️

    • @turtleswim05
      @turtleswim05 2 роки тому +12

      Sounds like you got ripped off you can't test for celt because celt isn't really a race they are just guessing

    • @davidran9317
      @davidran9317 2 роки тому +4

      Feel what you feel if it make you feel good 💖🙏

    • @gregordonnaghchaid26
      @gregordonnaghchaid26 2 роки тому +10

      That's cool. I too have the ancestry. I'm of clan Donnachaid. It's a wonderful thing to research. It's in our being. I'm on the west coast of USA. Can't shake the need for the sea.

    • @opalfishsparklequasar8663
      @opalfishsparklequasar8663 2 роки тому +3

      So in New Zealand?

  • @archygirl1750
    @archygirl1750 Рік тому +7

    I'm an archaeologist in the southwestern United States. I LOVE my job, but I would give it up in a heartbeat and move to England, Ireland, Scotland, or Wales if I could be on a dig with this Time Team. Phil would be a whacking great dig partner.

  • @roba4295
    @roba4295 2 роки тому +158

    Time Team is the best.
    From presentation to investigation, I love being virtually taken to places I will never see, at times I'll never experience!
    The two children buried in the same spot reminds me of just how heart breaking life could be and, how often, before the advent of modern medecine particularly, that of the recent past.
    From often loosing children to a hard, short life full of other general hardships, how lucky we are to live here, in the future!

    • @SomeBuddy777
      @SomeBuddy777 2 роки тому +5

      So true! Agree completely.

    • @18Bees
      @18Bees 2 роки тому +8

      Agreed. And, channels like this make me feel better knowing that life comes and goes and while I'm here I should just enjoy it no matter how bad things are these days.

    • @bettysnowowl4881
      @bettysnowowl4881 2 роки тому +4

      I was raised in Colorado USA. We visited many a gold rush grave yard of s MN all mountain mining towns.
      A single town Caribou Colorado in a single year lost every baby and many adults to the flue. It broke my heart to see the head stones carved in stone by one person.

    • @18Bees
      @18Bees 2 роки тому +2

      @@bettysnowowl4881 life was brutal. We have it good these days.

    • @taffykins2745
      @taffykins2745 2 роки тому +1

      Since it was a mass grave, infanticide is a possibility.
      ua-cam.com/video/KsHGlXBfJfI/v-deo.html
      This link discusses the practice.

  • @tiandao8503
    @tiandao8503 2 роки тому +279

    As a potter I have to say that the method they used to make pots likely isn't the one shown in the program. They probably would have refined and conditioned the clay. There's a couple of ways to refine clay. One of them is to mix it with water and then use a basket to shift out the sand. Then, to condition the clay, they would have used about 20% grog (ground up pots), or shells that had been baked in a fire and crushed. That would have improved the workability of the clay and its expansion properties in the pit fire. Its important with a pit fire to make sure the pots are absolutely dry. One of the ways this is done is to put the pots in the center and build a small fire around them. Then, when the pots had warmed and were throughly dry, they would have placed old broken pots over them and built up the fire around that. This prevents rapid heating and cooling which would have resulted in cracking and breaking.

    • @lisamatthews890
      @lisamatthews890 2 роки тому +10

      Thank-you🦦Nice🦋

    • @GammerGurten
      @GammerGurten 2 роки тому +18

      The real learning is in the comments. Thanks for sharing.

    • @numerian4516
      @numerian4516 2 роки тому +7

      @@GammerGurten Too true.

    • @athena7042
      @athena7042 2 роки тому +5

      You sound like you know a lot more than the Time Team.

    • @jockmoron
      @jockmoron 2 роки тому +11

      Thanks for the knowledge imparted. The team work to a pretty tight timetable, so I suppose they "cheated" a bit by using some imported clay to demonstrate to the viewer you can fire clay in a fire pit - they would have know this I'm sure. They wondered if the inhabitants imported clay, but from what you tell us, they wouldn't need to have done this. That makes good sense. And although they tell us they had a comfortable life, it's all relative. It would have been hard enough.

  • @renewedrewilder830
    @renewedrewilder830 2 роки тому +56

    Great episode!
    1. The clay has to dry for a time before firing or it will blow apart. You might have had decent clay, but it was fired too soon.
    2. A burial covered with a skin or a rush may would allow for ancestral veneration as was mentioned, by having easy access to the bones once the soft tissue had decomposed. It's interesting, though, that her remains were not disturbed later, which might contradict the idea that remains were customarily exhumed and exhibited.
    3. The covered burial also suggests that these people had no dogs. If there had been dogs around, they would have needed to cover the graves with rocks to prevent scavenging.

    • @annk.8750
      @annk.8750 Рік тому +6

      Good catch about the lack of dogs! I didn't think of that.

  • @karenlocke7650
    @karenlocke7650 10 місяців тому +8

    This is amazing and wonderful. I can easily imagine being on that windswept sand, being there, cold, and delighted by what archaeologists are finding. I'm USian, 64, and have been a computer engineer, trained in geology though disability prevented me from pursuing it, and now an aspiring science fiction writer. But my experience is that most geologists I've been privileged to study under have more than a passing interest in archaeology as well, especially that which tells us about our ancient ancestors. Count me among them.

  • @StacyL.
    @StacyL. 2 роки тому +59

    Whenever they find tools I get excited. It's bringing the past back to life! My ancient ancestors walked and lived in ancient Scotland and England. It's amazing to see how they lived and how their legacy still lives on.

    • @18Bees
      @18Bees 2 роки тому +1

      Encourages me to live my life to the full

    • @sr2291
      @sr2291 2 роки тому

      Me too!

  • @MoltenHelium
    @MoltenHelium 2 роки тому +47

    This is really a timeless series... The quality of it is great... Wouldn't have realized this was over 17 years old if it wasn't for the computers they showed.

  • @deepsouthNZ
    @deepsouthNZ 2 роки тому +26

    Absolutely love time team, r.i.p. Mick, Robin and Victor

    • @lazer2365
      @lazer2365 2 роки тому +1

      Somebody will dig them up in years to come.

  • @kleeham3262
    @kleeham3262 2 роки тому +12

    Over 24 years ago I told my husband I wanted to visit there. Shows like this help to ease the anxiety pf thinking I never will .

  • @HawkBit9231
    @HawkBit9231 2 роки тому +16

    I love Time Team! They helped me discover my love for history! I used to watch this show with my Dad in the 90s when I was a little kid!

  • @debbieandmarc
    @debbieandmarc 2 роки тому +30

    Love the expression, "It's always a tad blowy here."

    • @annk.8750
      @annk.8750 Рік тому

      When I visited the Orkney's, the rather chubby local guide told us that because so they don't blow off the islands, "We're all seal-shaped. That's my story and I'm sticking to it!" 😄

  • @melissaclifford8398
    @melissaclifford8398 Рік тому +5

    I visited Barra for a few days almost thirty years ago. How lovely to see people have been enjoying themselves there for thousands of years.

  • @suecastillo4056
    @suecastillo4056 2 роки тому +35

    I LOVE TIME TEAM!!! They are the best!!! Thank you for putting this on!!!♥️☮️‼️🥰

  • @bethbartlett5692
    @bethbartlett5692 2 роки тому +25

    Whoever selected the Music/Drums for T Team, knew/knows their business

  • @lazer2365
    @lazer2365 2 роки тому +12

    A gripping episode.
    These ancient people living their lives on this remote island.
    Fascinating.

    • @Nellsbells79
      @Nellsbells79 Рік тому

      Absolutely

    • @karenglenn6707
      @karenglenn6707 Рік тому

      It may have not seemed as remote to them back then as it is to us now. What would they have been remote from? They probably were not aware of the remoteness at all. Fascinating thought.

  • @manuelkong10
    @manuelkong10 2 роки тому +17

    the sea levels being Much lower back then....makes me think that the village continues out, under the water....
    I didn't want to watch this one, but I did and am Very glad for it...one of the BEST episodes
    very thought provoking

    • @Draw1ng_Staars
      @Draw1ng_Staars 2 роки тому +1

      That’s EXACTLY what I was thinking, there’s multiple burials but only one round house? There has to be more that were apart of they’re pack underwater!!

    • @whatsaht2117
      @whatsaht2117 2 роки тому +1

      45:40 he says the sea might have been a kilometre or even more away at the time these people were around

  • @user-rp8xi6zq3c
    @user-rp8xi6zq3c Рік тому +1

    We’ve been enjoying your family’s adventures, we’ve been gardeners for decades and enjoyed your various successes in the garden, Johns ability to conceptualize building projects is wonderful. Your children, Caruso and Sawyer melt our hearts, we look forward to coming along with you every week. Thanks much

  • @stephenblakely4463
    @stephenblakely4463 2 роки тому +8

    I just love ancient British archeology. These docs are so fascinating

  • @erinobrien8408
    @erinobrien8408 2 роки тому +7

    My favourite TTs are the ones done on the remote islands!!! They're so full of atmosphere, history and fascination that I just feel I'm being wrapped in a warm blanket of comfort.

  • @bjw4859
    @bjw4859 Рік тому +6

    These shows are just amazing to watch, in another life this is what I would be happiest doing.

  • @graceamerican3558
    @graceamerican3558 2 роки тому +74

    When they buried that woman- with the pillow under her head - (to me) it shows love. I think it was her husband and family. It might have been covered by her children.

    • @tinaloflin7181
      @tinaloflin7181 2 роки тому +6

      That woman really touched me. There was love in that burial site, I feel.

    • @lesleymcshanemitchell9651
      @lesleymcshanemitchell9651 2 роки тому +3

      Or her Mother

    • @kasperkjrsgaard1447
      @kasperkjrsgaard1447 2 роки тому +3

      The way she’s placed reminds me of the danish peat sacrifice “Tollundmanden”.
      He was placed like that too. She could have been sacrificed.

  • @tracicomstock6525
    @tracicomstock6525 2 роки тому +5

    So awesome! I am Cherokee and Scottish. I love this video!!# Thank you soo much!

  • @katzenkrapp
    @katzenkrapp 2 роки тому +11

    One of my favorite episodes. That huge wheel house is fantastic!

  • @m.m9973
    @m.m9973 2 роки тому +7

    I just want to say: you guys are the best!!!!

  • @martywanlass4774
    @martywanlass4774 2 роки тому +23

    Hopefully the interest shown in these documentaries will produce grants, and other monies to groups for continued research here. This is fascinating.

    • @TheBandit7613
      @TheBandit7613 2 роки тому

      They need to drop the forced time drama. "we have only two days to search the site before we must leave" sucks.

    • @katerinakemp5701
      @katerinakemp5701 2 роки тому +2

      @@TheBandit7613 unfortunately most of the archeologists are academics at universities, also some are on longtime digs Phil for instance has been excavating at Waterloo Site Hugomont Farm for years, sadly Prof Mick Aston & Victor are no longer with us. Hence 3 day digs.

  • @saddleridge4364
    @saddleridge4364 2 роки тому +9

    When I was in high school in the 60's, I wanted to be an archaeologist. My so called 'guidance counselor' said my math skills were not up to it. Being very young, he discouraged me. If only I had stubbornly persisted! I was able to go on one dig many years later and we uncovered a Native American hearth in PA. I loved it! Also, I am amazed at the size of the rocks that were laid down for the walls, how were they moved into place? Perhaps the different burials were due to some sort of hierarchy within the tribe?

    • @karenbartlett1307
      @karenbartlett1307 2 роки тому +6

      It's never too late to go back to school. A Bachelor's degree in archeology would only take 3-4 years If you need to complete your coursework for an Associate's (2-year, basic academics) degree first, they have grants for that which you don't need to pay back. You can take math courses to prepare for archeology if that's necessary (see a college academic counselor to find out what's needed.) They also have tutors in college to help you with difficult subjects. I engaged a tutor twice (undergraduate courses in geography and statistics) and it was free. I got my Master's at age 59. One never has to stop learning about what one is interested in. Barring being able to go back to school, even at night, you can go to the archeology department at the nearest university and volunteer to go on digs.

    • @jadepaulsen8456
      @jadepaulsen8456 Рік тому

      ​@@karenbartlett1307good advic

    • @jadepaulsen8456
      @jadepaulsen8456 Рік тому +1

      That is sad. Teachers can really destroy lives.

  • @adrianadacula4961
    @adrianadacula4961 2 роки тому +5

    We love you people of Scotland and God bless

  • @dennisroyhall121
    @dennisroyhall121 2 роки тому +2

    What finds from so little not to say minute indications for inspiration or encouragement! Dedication! Open-mouthed and agog, we can only salute and humbly so at and for the the utter dedication and devotion to the Cause / Motivation of This Great Team….I look forward to hearing/reading of some royal acknowledgement even Boris the Greek Classicist could/might expand his historical horizon to voice his admiration ( he would not be worthy of his Churchillian stance if he had none) to voice some worthy notes of praise in Parliament to the work of This Great Team!
    Heartfelt thanks to all who share admiration of this superb documentary, and with due gratitude to all who have rendered this film available for viewing on UA-cam.

  • @pookiebear9735
    @pookiebear9735 2 роки тому +77

    I felt, watching this, that I experienced some sort of genetic memory. I felt as though I had been there. I am 70, but a few years ago, my mother had our geneology professionally done . My mother's maiden name was Bruce, and our family on the maternal side was traced directly to Robert the Bruce, the king of Scotland. We are all tall and had dark auburn hair when we were younger. Oh, well, maybe I will get to Scotland in my next lifetime.

    • @UBERTAMMY
      @UBERTAMMY 2 роки тому +9

      Hello cousin!!! I, too recently discovered I am his descendant as well! My family is all very tall and most have red hair!

    • @pookiebear9735
      @pookiebear9735 2 роки тому +5

      @@UBERTAMMY Wow! Imagine finding a cousin on UA-cam!! Thank you for replying! Edit: I am 5'10", how tall are you?

    • @UBERTAMMY
      @UBERTAMMY 2 роки тому +8

      @@pookiebear9735 I am 6’ and I am female. I am related to RTB on my mom’s side and my dad’s. I am also related to many, many other royals as you probably are too. They intermingled so back then.

    • @pookiebear9735
      @pookiebear9735 2 роки тому +6

      @@UBERTAMMY My maternal grandfather was pure Scot. He was 100% Bruce! We have a book showing our tartan and crest. My son was 6'4" and built with a Scottish look to him. Edit: I am also female

    • @heatherasher4458
      @heatherasher4458 2 роки тому +5

      My moms maiden name is Bruce also,gonna go research stuff now 😅

  • @SomeBuddy777
    @SomeBuddy777 2 роки тому +29

    This was splendid. I thoroughly enjoyed this segment. Keep on diggin' and revealing the stories of lives and times gone by.

  • @adelitavalle1852
    @adelitavalle1852 2 роки тому +21

    I enjoy it when the program has school students participate.

  • @jorgegonzalez-larramendi5491
    @jorgegonzalez-larramendi5491 2 роки тому +16

    great team! total archeological and practical coverage in one small plane load. blessed humans who remain in such islands.

  • @bobschenkel7921
    @bobschenkel7921 2 роки тому +26

    Good to see Michael Parker Pearson making an appearance. I have seen him in a few docs about Stonehenge and I was wondering if he was ever going to be on an episode of Time Team. He seems like a natural.

    • @annazaman9657
      @annazaman9657 2 роки тому

      I think he's in another TT episode as well

  • @justforfun765
    @justforfun765 2 роки тому +9

    Always fun to watch him full of energy

  • @caroldavis5877
    @caroldavis5877 2 роки тому +110

    Makes you wonder what's under the rest of the shoreline.

    • @wesleyfarris5614
      @wesleyfarris5614 2 роки тому +3

      Makes you wonder what can be recovered without the sensationalism.

    • @jeromebreeding3302
      @jeromebreeding3302 2 роки тому +1

      That island seems a desolate place for a settlement.

    • @dennisroyhall121
      @dennisroyhall121 2 роки тому +1

      @@jeromebreeding3302 Indeed: how did anyone get there? By shipwreck, how else, hardly by direct purpose surely? My guess: by wanton venture perhaps from despair to find something better from where they were, only to find this and without the strength or will to go on with their « wanderings » because of fatigue, passage of time, and general weakening or loss of hope and less of on the spot wherewithal items like trees, vegetation ie that elsewhere there might well be far less…

    • @kaarlimakela3413
      @kaarlimakela3413 2 роки тому +2

      This show first started with some letters from people who knew something interesting was just under the surface of their back gardens. And it was found, tessera from Roman floors, Anglo-Saxon pottery AND a flint used for all purposes.
      I'm jealous. If I ever came to the British Isles, I might never leave.
      I'd be all over with a metal detector! 😁

    • @bettysnowowl4881
      @bettysnowowl4881 2 роки тому +5

      Both people and weather have changed over time. What is really desolate and unacceptable for you and me may back in that Era somthing a four thousand year old person would find acceptable. Life was shorter and more brutal. Improving either one of these would be a win for these hearty ancestors.
      Being in a hard to find area, reduces the stress people were forced to live under increasing the age lived, and lowering the brutality they lived under.

  • @ktrayan1
    @ktrayan1 10 місяців тому +2

    I’m only 10 minutes in, but how exceedingly fascinating to find such evidence of the distant past! I wonder if they had ever been off the island, how many lived there together, what they did for fun, how exactly they thought of their gods; just how they would react if they knew hundreds of thousands of people have seen this episode that is all about them!! Also what their language actually sounded like, and if their descendants are still on Scottish land.

  • @jamesnicholson3658
    @jamesnicholson3658 Рік тому +8

    I loved this episode, especially the woman's burial. I like to hypothesize and I think the reason for the pillow and skin covering is both putting the dead to rest, and the skin covering instead of sand suggests to me they believed their ancestors would visit them, possibly they had ceremonies where they left food offerings outside like the Celts of slightly later years. Either way it was a beautifully preserved burial

  • @isaacstandridge9924
    @isaacstandridge9924 2 роки тому +4

    Love the energy Tony and Phil have. Keeps me watching.

  • @CaponeCabin
    @CaponeCabin 2 роки тому +12

    ❤from South Carolina !! Thank you so much for the upload! Love this program!

  • @joe-vl3nd
    @joe-vl3nd 2 роки тому +2

    Time Team Mick Phill and the gang got me interested in Archeology
    Still Am 2022
    Thx Lads

  • @lizzy66125
    @lizzy66125 2 роки тому +2

    Victors drawings...magnificent!

  • @updownstate
    @updownstate 2 роки тому +15

    I'm so happy you're back! Wouldn't it be great if there was a side-by-side program showing clay work, thatching and working bone? Everyone may soon need basic techniques of living.

    • @wewenang5167
      @wewenang5167 Рік тому

      THE INUIT IN ALASKA AND CANADA STILL USED WHALE BONES TO MAKE UTENSILS TILL TODAY.

  • @priscilla7179
    @priscilla7179 2 роки тому +6

    It's especially fascinating to me to learn details of how ancient civilizations lived daily lives. Mundane for them but fascinating to us who love archeology.

    • @25Soupy
      @25Soupy 2 роки тому

      And history.

    • @pauls3204
      @pauls3204 2 роки тому +1

      Half of them would be dead before reaching puberty, those who weren’t would be married (paired off ) as soon as they did !
      A girl would probably have her first child when she was approaching her 12th or 13th birthday
      35 years old would be ancient ! A 30 year old would probably know their grandchildren
      A 40 year old would possibly know their great grand children

  • @evaleyst
    @evaleyst 9 місяців тому

    What an exiting story! Especially for lovers of Scotland.
    The pottery broke in parts because the potters did not allow it to dry to the core. The steam of the remaining moisture inside blows the pots into pieces. It is due to the quality of the clay, too, because it would not allow to create a thinner pot. The thickness of the material multiplies the required drying time. 2 days are not enough by far.
    The sketched illustrations are excellent! Would like to know more.

  • @Badger1776
    @Badger1776 2 роки тому +33

    “I feel very nervous about walking about on all this archeology”
    As he sprints around all this archeology

  • @michaelransom5841
    @michaelransom5841 2 роки тому +7

    beautiful place to look at... would hate to live there

  • @rodfranc1
    @rodfranc1 2 роки тому +21

    One of the best episodes! So much findings!

  • @katelaloba8243
    @katelaloba8243 2 роки тому +5

    How amazing to meet our ancestors. Those who came before.

  • @sherryrector2275
    @sherryrector2275 2 роки тому +6

    Love finding the history and lifestyle of ancient times.

  • @NorwayT
    @NorwayT 2 роки тому +71

    Of course Ciste is pronounced Kiste! That's what we call a coffin in Scandinavia: Kiste, pronounced and spelled just like that, and the E at the end would in English be pronounced something like (Kis-)teh. I hadn't seen this episode before, and it was one of the best! Thanks Odyssey for taking us on this odyssey! 👍

    • @rodfranc1
      @rodfranc1 2 роки тому +1

      So annoying Scandinavian and Norwegian people always claiming the origins of everything in Europe...

    • @IBENF
      @IBENF 2 роки тому +9

      Frank, here is the Dutch version: kist (sing.) and kisten (pl).

    • @runningtwenty-one6407
      @runningtwenty-one6407 2 роки тому +8

      And some German, too: It's Kiste (pronounced kiste), which just means box. So it just might be a common Germanic word.

    • @aaronvancoillie1088
      @aaronvancoillie1088 2 роки тому +4

      ​@@runningtwenty-one6407 Actually it is a word with Latin origin, tracing it's way back all the way to "cista".

    • @NorwayT
      @NorwayT 2 роки тому +3

      ​@@runningtwenty-one6407 When I wrote the comment yesterday, I thought so too. But it turns out that the word cist in the meaning "a neolithic or Bronze Age burial chamber typically lined with stone" was first used in 1804, but it may have had its origins in Egypt (meaning a basket where soft tissues in burials were kept to be carried of by the god Osiris), then via Ancient Greek κίστη became the Latin cista, meaning "a trunk, a chest, a casket". So, it's quite possible that kiste in the Germanic languages is a more modern word borrowed from Latin. Going back to the time of the Völkerwanderung the Germanic Peoples of the North wandered South and settled in the lands of the Roman, no doubt borrowing words from Latin. It's also possible that the word travelled North later with Christianity. The language of the RC Church was Latin, and we know it influenced the Germanic Languages with its Vernacular.

  • @soccerchamp0511
    @soccerchamp0511 Рік тому +5

    What an awesome episode of Time Team! It's so cool to see incredible finds from multiple eras. Now I'm curious if that "wheelhouse" was ever completely excavated.

  • @kathycarlson7947
    @kathycarlson7947 8 місяців тому

    When I was 8, 67 years ago, I wanted to be an archeologist. Nobody could help me. I had a good career, but these videos remind me of my original love. Thank you again for inspiring and delighting me.

  • @orlaoto5794
    @orlaoto5794 2 роки тому +11

    I find it curious that they reach for ritual and magic anytime they can't explain something. The stones from metal working used in the door to seal a roundhouse, for example. Any well positioned ruined stone building in the west of ireland would have the doorway sealed with rocks to make sheep-pens. I saw my dad and cousin do this on a field. The island had no trees; wood came from the sea or had to be purchased on the mainland. Every day they took the cows to the house for milking; the field wall had a narrow (cow sized) gap with a lintel. It took a minute to shift a few stones to open the gap. I was seven the first time I saw it; they entertained themselves enormously by sending me ahead to 'open the gate''...

    • @melanieshearman4678
      @melanieshearman4678 2 роки тому +2

      Ritual and magic makes much more sense in human nature than “OMG! It’s Aliens!”

    • @orlaoto5794
      @orlaoto5794 2 роки тому +1

      @@melanieshearman4678 No-one with any credibility or common sense resorts to aliens to explain their own lack of deductive reasoning.

    • @melanieshearman4678
      @melanieshearman4678 2 роки тому

      @@orlaoto5794 Exactly why I don’t watch The History Channel any more!

  • @phildalziel8625
    @phildalziel8625 2 роки тому +6

    One of my favourite Episodes!

  • @mchristiansen137
    @mchristiansen137 2 роки тому +70

    I do enjoy these Time Team shows. I have probably watched them hundreds of times over and over! I do have a question of sorts. They were talking about the poor quality of the clay they were using, saying there was more sand to clay ratio, which I do understand. But, the pots they found were up to 2500 to 4000 years old. Given the span of time, isn't it possible that back at the time pots were fired, the ratio of sand to clay was different? Second Question: Could it possible as well, that in order to fire the clay mold, they were placed in a separate "Dome" top, and a separate peat fire which was used to "funnel" the heat into the dome to fire the pots?

    • @asdf7290
      @asdf7290 2 роки тому +5

      is it not also possible that the clay could have been dissolved and the clay separated from the sand? it is not that hard to do.

    • @updownstate
      @updownstate 2 роки тому +1

      @@asdf7290 I've seen potters preparing 'raw' clay to get it ready to work and they have serious upper body strength.

  • @humanedane
    @humanedane Рік тому

    i truly enjoy the sense of humanity and empathy that is expressed by the archaeologists. its a lovely sentiment.

  • @lulububs
    @lulububs 9 місяців тому

    This is one of the best time team digs I have watched. And I feel I have watched most.

  • @stevenmiller5999
    @stevenmiller5999 2 роки тому +3

    Very awesome. I also love the slang terminology..I don't get out much

  • @lindabrown8421
    @lindabrown8421 2 роки тому +7

    Keith Branigan was one of my old professors at Sheffield University in the 70s. Sadly the university no longer has an archaeology department.

  • @kristic4472
    @kristic4472 2 роки тому +1

    Poor Pete, he's always getting burned...... ;-) Love this Time Team group!!

  • @HDCAMAN
    @HDCAMAN Рік тому +1

    One of the best shows on TV in a long time

  • @wernerkrautler8668
    @wernerkrautler8668 2 роки тому +6

    educational and inspiring. thanks to timeteam and tony.

  • @frantucker608
    @frantucker608 2 роки тому +6

    Pretty amazing! I love these videos! Thanks for posting!

  • @bonnielucas153
    @bonnielucas153 2 роки тому +2

    It's so incredible that something that old stayed unexposed so long in a windy, wet place

    • @lilyliz3071
      @lilyliz3071 2 роки тому

      Hope you’re still on UA-cam Bonnie, if you want to see something that was hidden then exposed look on UA-cam for videos of Skara Brae , it another Scottish site

  • @thingy54
    @thingy54 10 місяців тому +2

    I´m a Brit who has lived in Denmark for 45 years and the danish word for "coffin" is "kiste", pronounced "kiss-te". So Phil´s pronunciation for each separate burial site was both genericly and pronunciation-wise correct :-) Just out of interest - and I´m talking in general about all your programmes - what happens to these places when you leave them after your 3 days of intensive work? Are they just left as they are, do another archaeoligical team take over or does the local community step in to preserve the site/s........or something else? Seems such a pity (and waste of all that hard work and expertise) if thousands of years of history is abandoned to just disappear again. Love your program chaps!

  • @SwayinZombie
    @SwayinZombie 2 роки тому +5

    "you see, between Phil's legs that thin stain..." Bahaha these guys had a lot of fun filming this show.

  • @RobKoelman
    @RobKoelman 2 роки тому +54

    The clay they used in the experiment had to much sand in it to fire it into pottery. Suggested is that the original bronze age people had a local source of better clay (possible) or that good quality clay as imported (less likely I think).
    A possible method (?) of turning the sandy clay in less sandy clay could be by making a watery slurry of it and than letting it rest. The heavier sandparticles wil get to the bottom of the container with the slurry first, the lighter particals later. In this way you theoretically could get rid of part of the sand. This is the same method that the Romans used to get the 'laquer' for their terra sigillata pottery.

    • @athena7042
      @athena7042 2 роки тому +2

      Good thinking. I don't know who these people are or what their qualifications are. It seems odd that they just assumed some random clay that they found near the beach was the only option.

    • @margaretbruhn4376
      @margaretbruhn4376 2 роки тому +8

      @@athena7042 If the person who prepared the clay didn't have any knowledge of how to refine it it they probably didn't think of that. One big blind spot in a lot of historical studies is that the people who are looking at the evidence have no training in the skills that would be used to create the artifacts. They had no idea how Roman woman did their hair the way depicted in statues until a hairstylist took a good look at it.

    • @fokkerd3red618
      @fokkerd3red618 2 роки тому

      Sounds like you know your business.

    • @athena7042
      @athena7042 2 роки тому

      @@margaretbruhn4376 Time Team seemed pretty breezy.

    • @bwktlcn
      @bwktlcn 2 роки тому +2

      Lol, I hadn’t thought of this in years. My grandpa threw pots, but he passed away when I was 7. I remember him teaching about slurry, because I thought he was teaching his students to make furry pots. Wish our lives had overlapped longer so I could have learned the art from him.

  • @ebeaulieu813
    @ebeaulieu813 2 роки тому +3

    Beach front property, excellent view, a little chilly, no services, NO TAXES.

  • @rachelkingi898
    @rachelkingi898 2 роки тому

    Like Virginia Ganz, I too was a nurse and wished I had studied archaeology instead. I’m 74 now, and use my cell phone to watch programmes I missed when TTeam was on telly here. The most enthralling programme that was on NZ telly a few yrs back. Rachel Kingi🌈❤️✌️

  • @tinaloflin7181
    @tinaloflin7181 2 роки тому +3

    One of the most fascinating digs I've seen so far. Wow.

  • @davidcollins9512
    @davidcollins9512 2 роки тому +12

    Season 15, episode 3 "Bodies in the Dunes" - first broadcast 20 Jan 2008.

  • @jansenart0
    @jansenart0 2 роки тому +23

    I love the google maps satellite views of the Orkney Islands archaeology.

  • @melaniebeebe9178
    @melaniebeebe9178 2 роки тому +4

    I’m Scotch and Irish. I know most of my heritage but always wished I could meet any family I had left over there. I love these shows.

    • @pauls3204
      @pauls3204 2 роки тому +1

      Scotch ? Do you are made of whiskey and part Irish ?

  • @nolagirl7082
    @nolagirl7082 2 роки тому +18

    I’ve heard of the island called Barra before. I was watching a documentary on a child that had a past life in a White House on the beach on the island of Barra. They actually found the exact house the child used to live in his past life

    • @dmvrant
      @dmvrant 2 роки тому +4

      yes, I saw that! The boy was so sad when he finally realized his previous family was not at the white house. so sad, yet amazing.

    • @juansantos-lq2kz
      @juansantos-lq2kz 2 роки тому +1

      My past life was on Neptune! Much better than Earth.

  • @Jerbod2
    @Jerbod2 2 роки тому +5

    One of the best episodes!

  • @brendadickenson6743
    @brendadickenson6743 2 роки тому +1

    You can learn so much fromTime Team, so I watch over and over.

  • @f1s2hg3
    @f1s2hg3 2 роки тому +1

    Tony your show is best for history because you are making new history and how exciting is that?

  • @bethanya99
    @bethanya99 Рік тому +3

    this was so fun to watch! Thank you for sharing this little adventure with the world!

  • @tanksouth
    @tanksouth 2 роки тому +6

    Those folks lived off the grid.

  • @elisa8044
    @elisa8044 2 роки тому +1

    Fantasticly good! THANKS a LOT...

  • @taffykins2745
    @taffykins2745 2 роки тому +2

    Very interesting, thanks for the upload ☺👍

  • @zuzuspetals38
    @zuzuspetals38 2 роки тому +3

    One of the most exciting TT , in my opinion ✨

  • @shortribslongbow5312
    @shortribslongbow5312 2 роки тому +4

    Very interesting video, thanks for sharing this fascinating site.

  • @SherryRector
    @SherryRector Рік тому +1

    I had wanted always to be a archeologist. Never made it but kept my love of history. Maybe in my next life.

  • @chrisbassett8996
    @chrisbassett8996 2 роки тому +1

    in some ways it is quite sad that we have lost that awe and thought that things are magic. I love it when people have that child like excitement about things.

  • @Justforfun-wq7mr
    @Justforfun-wq7mr 2 роки тому +3

    This is a great episode.

  • @RissaFirecat
    @RissaFirecat 2 роки тому +3

    I love this! I took a DNA test, and I am English, Welsh, Irish, and Scots. I feel this like I lived there myself.

  • @WendyDarling1974
    @WendyDarling1974 9 місяців тому

    One of my fav TT digs of all time.

  • @verro9153
    @verro9153 Рік тому +1

    One thing they didn't talk about was that sea levels were much lower then, so they wouldn't have been right next to the sea. Most archeologists estimate that a lot of pre-historic evidence is likely underwater due to the sea rising.

  • @sheepdog1102
    @sheepdog1102 2 роки тому +3

    Excellent!

  • @mefford67
    @mefford67 2 роки тому +4

    *Endlessly fascinating…* 🤷🏻‍♀️
    *Stunning countryside!* 😍

  • @georgefrench1907
    @georgefrench1907 2 роки тому +1

    Fascinating episode. And thank you, thank you, thank you for toning down and mostly eliminating the overdubbed “music.” 👍👍

  • @billclisham8668
    @billclisham8668 Рік тому +2

    This episode hits close to home for me as my family originated about 90 or so miles from there on Harris. Those could be my relatives they are excavating..

  • @18Bees
    @18Bees 2 роки тому +3

    Loved this episode. And, that tooth! wow that's incredible!

  • @michritch3493
    @michritch3493 2 роки тому +4

    👍🏻And loved the bit at the end about clinging to a rock and doing nicely, thank you.

  • @virginiahutchinson7974
    @virginiahutchinson7974 Рік тому +1

    This was one of the best ever!

  • @paulcrombie9623
    @paulcrombie9623 Рік тому +1

    Thanks, I really enjoyed this post, I actually live in Wallsend, ad I have worked voluntarily at Fort Segedunum and the buddle Road site in Wallsend.
    I also did some of the fresco designs for the bathhouse at Segedunum, we had to paint as the Romans would have painted in their time, interesting that they had a use for artists in those days!