On the Giza port I'm waiting for the other industrial uses of the port to be revealed. For example, the import area for the materials used to make the limestone/concrete blocks cast to build the Great Pyramid, or the facilities for import of say the granite beams of the Great pyramid or the gold and other objects to be placed in the tombs, not to mention the supplies etc used by the workers in their villages. A busy port. Also, I'm guessing that there has to be a major servicing road to the north of all the pyramids leading out of the port which accommodated sled traffic for the movement of beams and other objects to be brought into the pyramids up the lengthy ramps that went into the north entries of these structures. One road or a series of roads to the immediate north of Giza to accommodate service for the tombs, not referring here to the causeways leading up to the eastern faces of the pyramids. BTW the causeway for the Great pyramid skirts the cemetery in front of it, indicating that the eastern cemetery existed before the Great Pyramid was built. Thanks Laura!
Thanks, we can guess that large, sea-worthy vessels were used by their ancestors too, if you think the 'kelp highway' hypothesis has any merit, which I do. Also, two dug out canoes lashed together give a larger transportation area for cargo, animals, people etc, I believe the polynesian explorers and colonisers did something similar. I would love to see anyone put a cow in a canoe lol
In the northern Pacific rim, whether skin boats or log boats were used depended on availability. For instance, trees were at best rare if they existed at all in the Aleution Islands. The locals had no choice but to use skin boats. When they pulled them out of the sea, they turned them upside down to keep water from getting in and then raised them up off the ground by a couple of meters or so to keep dogs from chewing on them. They made a couple of different types of boats. Kayaks were used by single individuals for hunting whales, seals and whatever.They wore skin clothing that was watertight and they secured the bottom to the hole to keep seawater from getting into the kayak. They also made canoes for taking families to potlatches, which were intertribal meetings.
"4,700 years ago"? You got that wrong at the beginning: it was c. 4700 BCE, which is the same date as all the Eastern Iberian Neolithic settlement. However there were already Neolithic dates before those in Aragon, which were usually treated as "out of place artifacts" (i.e. some sort of error, treat with caution). This c. 5600 date proposed for the bridge's construction is still almost a thousand years before that but I would treat it also as "out of place artifact" unless more evidence is forthcoming. It's not impossible though: at least in Corsica there're some indications of pre-Neolithic settlement as well.
It’s absurd to think that skin boats came before trees. People recognized that logs float millions of years ago. Stone tools are also millions of years old. Digging out the top of a log to make it easier to sit on is superb ancient. Skin boats are extremely new in comparison .
Absurd? Science, carbon dating? Consider not all locales enjoy trees big enough to dig out. Birch. Aspen. For two. Bless your heart. What are your credentials, I wonder.
@@californianorma876 well, that’s the dumbest thing I have read in awhile.. I have a masters in archaeology. But you only need the intellect of a five year old to understand that simple technology comes first
Ynglinga Saga, Chapter 7 Odin had a ship which was called Skidbladnir, in which he sailed over wide seas, and which he could roll up like a cloth. Gylfaginning, XLIII “…Certain dwarves, sons of Ívaldi, made Skídbladnir and gave the ship to Freyr. It is so great that all the Æsir may man it, with their weapons and armaments, and it has a favoring wind as soon as the sail is hoisted, whithersoever it is bound; but when there is no occasion for going to sea in it, it is made of so many things and with so much cunning that then it may be folded together like a napkin and kept in one's pouch."
After iceage people come from somewhere to live in scandinavia. Some dna 🧬 tests says scandinavians partly comes from mediteranian, Turkey coast, maybe it was Svante pääbo who did reasearch ? I think the boats 🛶 look similar in different areas . And more…
Mallorca(Basques/Etruscans/Italo Celts) is the true Promised Land the origin of Rome and of everything for that matter.The truth doesnt care what you thunk I know this is the truth.
The bridge in the cave is wonderful. I would like to get a good look. Thanks for the great content Laura!
This video gets the Inuit seal of approval! Cheers from New Orleans
Amazing bridgework.
Love these subjects,thanks so much
Nice nice always a fun and informative journey megalith hunter.
Thanks 👍 enjoyed the new informations 🌹
Thanks for the share sister 🌹 nice very nice indeed 🤗 as always good vibes good info …..
Take care ✝️
Thank you.
Thank you!
Hi Fox! I hope you’re doing well.
@@barrywalser2384
I’m. Thanks.
Rock on!
Love your videos. Thanks!
On the Giza port I'm waiting for the other industrial uses of the port to be revealed. For example, the import area for the materials used to make the limestone/concrete blocks cast to build the Great Pyramid, or the facilities for import of say the granite beams of the Great pyramid or the gold and other objects to be placed in the tombs, not to mention the supplies etc used by the workers in their villages. A busy port. Also, I'm guessing that there has to be a major servicing road to the north of all the pyramids leading out of the port which accommodated sled traffic for the movement of beams and other objects to be brought into the pyramids up the lengthy ramps that went into the north entries of these structures. One road or a series of roads to the immediate north of Giza to accommodate service for the tombs, not referring here to the causeways leading up to the eastern faces of the pyramids. BTW the causeway for the Great pyramid skirts the cemetery in front of it, indicating that the eastern cemetery existed before the Great Pyramid was built. Thanks Laura!
Thanks, we can guess that large, sea-worthy vessels were used by their ancestors too, if you think the 'kelp highway' hypothesis has any merit, which I do. Also, two dug out canoes lashed together give a larger transportation area for cargo, animals, people etc, I believe the polynesian explorers and colonisers did something similar. I would love to see anyone put a cow in a canoe lol
In the northern Pacific rim, whether skin boats or log boats were used depended on availability. For instance, trees were at best rare if they existed at all in the Aleution Islands. The locals had no choice but to use skin boats. When they pulled them out of the sea, they turned them upside down to keep water from getting in and then raised them up off the ground by a couple of meters or so to keep dogs from chewing on them.
They made a couple of different types of boats. Kayaks were used by single individuals for hunting whales, seals and whatever.They wore skin clothing that was watertight and they secured the bottom to the hole to keep seawater from getting into the kayak.
They also made canoes for taking families to potlatches, which were intertribal meetings.
"4,700 years ago"? You got that wrong at the beginning: it was c. 4700 BCE, which is the same date as all the Eastern Iberian Neolithic settlement. However there were already Neolithic dates before those in Aragon, which were usually treated as "out of place artifacts" (i.e. some sort of error, treat with caution).
This c. 5600 date proposed for the bridge's construction is still almost a thousand years before that but I would treat it also as "out of place artifact" unless more evidence is forthcoming. It's not impossible though: at least in Corsica there're some indications of pre-Neolithic settlement as well.
Always awesome💯💯💯 Makes complete sense that they built boats out of skins. They were already wearing them!
It’s absurd to think that skin boats came before trees. People recognized that logs float millions of years ago. Stone tools are also millions of years old. Digging out the top of a log to make it easier to sit on is superb ancient. Skin boats are extremely new in comparison .
Absurd? Science, carbon dating? Consider not all locales enjoy trees big enough to dig out. Birch. Aspen. For two. Bless your heart. What are your credentials, I wonder.
@@californianorma876 well, that’s the dumbest thing I have read in awhile..
I have a masters in archaeology. But you only need the intellect of a five year old to understand that simple technology comes first
Ynglinga Saga, Chapter 7
Odin had a ship which was called Skidbladnir, in which he sailed over wide seas, and which he could roll up like a cloth.
Gylfaginning, XLIII
“…Certain dwarves, sons of Ívaldi, made Skídbladnir and gave the ship to Freyr. It is so great that all the Æsir may man it, with their weapons and armaments, and it has a favoring wind as soon as the sail is hoisted, whithersoever it is bound; but when there is no occasion for going to sea in it, it is made of so many things and with so much cunning that then it may be folded together like a napkin and kept in one's pouch."
👍👍👍👍👍
I still think you should have a separate video for each topic. What is the advantage of putting several disparate topics in one video?
After iceage people come from somewhere to live in scandinavia. Some dna 🧬 tests says scandinavians partly comes from mediteranian, Turkey coast, maybe it was Svante pääbo who did reasearch ? I think the boats 🛶 look similar in different areas . And more…
Any papers connecting the volcanoes in The Mediterranean with sea level rises?
❤
Also Ithink you should place the camera a bit higher.
Lower sea levels means higher concentrations of salt resulting in more buoyancy
Drills and ancient tech used sputtering techniques later the use of metals took on
May this comment soothe Your grim anger, o mighty Algorithm !
Mallorca(Basques/Etruscans/Italo Celts) is the true Promised Land the origin of Rome and of everything for that matter.The truth doesnt care what you thunk I know this is the truth.
YOU provide a value product in this space. Keep it up, blonde hottie.