Diving into the Past: Recent developments in underwater prehistoric archaeology in Florida

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  • Опубліковано 14 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 26

  • @SusanBroadstreet-z8e
    @SusanBroadstreet-z8e 11 днів тому

    Interesting content and good speaker. Enjoyed

  • @paulfreeman23000
    @paulfreeman23000 8 місяців тому +4

    Thank you for a very informative Video, this is important information to all who love our past.

  • @susanbroadstreet7077
    @susanbroadstreet7077 Місяць тому

    Excellent! Fascinating. Mostly new info to me. Want to learn more. Sure wish I could have participated when I was young. Too old now, I'm 80 yrs old now.

  • @tommygreist9560
    @tommygreist9560 6 місяців тому +1

    I live in Fl. Between the Aucilla and Econfina river and I found a cool spot with a huge circular stone withe a whole in the center,a square table or chair,chips and small quarries at the edge of a cypress hammock where they had unearthed stones that were mostly left......I did find a nice piece of chert...
    The skidders are destroying the site everey 20 years when they crop there pines...such a pitty...these things should be in a museum.....
    Awesome guest.

  • @ecosphere1015
    @ecosphere1015 11 місяців тому +1

    Fascinating and informative update on what is known about the earliest people in America. We can only study the earliest peoples by going off shore and into the water but the technology is quickly evolving to make this much more easily possible.

    • @cacogenicist
      @cacogenicist 5 місяців тому

      Off-shore in the Pacific Northwest would be the _very_ earliest, one suspects.

  • @Ceelilly
    @Ceelilly Рік тому +2

    Very interesting! Thank you.

  • @wesb123
    @wesb123 Рік тому +1

    Thank you for sharing

  • @qui-gonjay2944
    @qui-gonjay2944 7 місяців тому +2

    Those fishtail points from the Lake George site look very similar to some Clovis age points from South America

  • @patricknoveski6409
    @patricknoveski6409 2 місяці тому +1

    This all makes such common sense to me.
    Ive always wondered why no one had done this as all the coasts would have been under water. Hmmm.

  • @houseofsolomon2440
    @houseofsolomon2440 7 місяців тому +1

    The best understanding of the fluted 'notch' on the Clovis type point: it's formed to assist in the hafting (securing) of the blade onto the split (& shaped) end of a spear. This was accomplished by using thin cordage in conjunction with natural adhesives (tree resins).
    p.s. big fan of Dr Jessi Halligan ~

  • @destob9586
    @destob9586 6 місяців тому

    This is my dream doc
    thank you for sharing

  • @fldallyb
    @fldallyb 5 місяців тому

    The ivory rods that are pointed were most likely used for butchering large megafauna. we used similar pins when I was young to clean large elk when they could not be lifted. We have found these all over the rivers here in Florida especially around mastodon skeletons. Most likely people would use this to hold the skin back and pin it to itself so they could access the carcass.

  • @lesjones5684
    @lesjones5684 8 місяців тому +5

    He must have been to the smithsnonion if he lost his artifact 😂😂😂

  • @AvIsIoNINaDrEamR
    @AvIsIoNINaDrEamR 5 місяців тому

    Great video. I have a site that is untouched by modern humans. I have owned the worlds largest spring here in FL for 45 years. No one knows about this spring. It is known to go straight down 250' and that is all that is known. It has a large bog site on the spring run before the river.

  • @lele8874ify
    @lele8874ify 7 місяців тому

    Look up mystery sink or emerald sink in florida.

  • @kyledexheimer6548
    @kyledexheimer6548 18 днів тому

    snapping turtles would scavenge the dead people, I wouldn't think they'd dig through the cloth etc to get to the bodies.

  • @rogerdudra178
    @rogerdudra178 7 місяців тому

    Greetings from the BIG SKY. The YD it sounds like.

  • @cacogenicist
    @cacogenicist 5 місяців тому

    Come scan the now-submerged banks of the Pleistocene Columbia River channel. 😊 One suspects the Columbia would have been of interest to the very esrliest peoples in N America, as they made their way down the coast. 25kya sites possible? 30k, maybe?

  • @miZZW
    @miZZW 6 місяців тому

    Theory: maybe the ,"Ancient One's", of the now ,"America's",have always been the true native peoples. Instead of coming from another land, they could have populated near the coastlines of America's. As the water rose they moved inland and that's why all artifacts date back to a similar time.Well the same time at numerous locations around the America's which would be impossible if people's traveled from the same route to inhabit the America's.

  • @stephengent9974
    @stephengent9974 8 місяців тому

    It is fairly obvious if you want to haft a point, reducing the thinknesss would enable easier fixation. If you have made these weapons you would know.