When the Sahara Was Green

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  • Опубліковано 26 вер 2024
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    The climate of the Sahara was completely different thousands of years ago. And we’re not talking about just a few years of extra rain. We’re talking about a climate that was so wet for so long that animals and humans alike made themselves at home in the middle of the Sahara.
    Big thanks to Fabrizio De Rossi for the reconstructions of the Sahara past and present. Check out more of Fabrizio's work at / artoffabricious
    Produced in collaboration with PBS Digital Studios: / pbsdigitalstudios
    Super special thanks to the following Patreon patrons for helping make Eons possible:
    Anthony Callaghan, Anton Bryl, Jeff Graham, shelley floryd, Laura Sanborn, Henrik Peteri, Zachary Spencer, Chandler Bass, Richard Ohnemus, Joao Ascensao, Andrey, Ben Thorson, Marcus Lejon, Ilya Murashov, Nathan Paskett, Jerrit Erickson, Merri Snaidman, David Sewall, Gabriel Cortez, Jack Arbuckle, Kevin Griffin, Robert Noah, Philip Slingerland, Todd Dittman, James Bording, Eric Vonk, Robert Arévalo, Esmeralda Rupp-Spangle, Jon Monteiro, Missy Elliott Smith, Jonathan Wright, Gregory Donovan, Miles Chaston, Michael McClellan, PS, Maria Humphrey, Larry Wilson, Hubert Rady, John Vanek, Tsee Lee, Daisuke Goto, Gregory Kintz, Matt Parker, Tyson Cleary, Case Hill, Stefan Weber, Betsy Radley
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 4,1 тис.

  • @markcloutier873
    @markcloutier873 2 роки тому +548

    I worked in the Libyan desert in 1980. There, about 280km south of the gulf of Sirte near Zilah we saw a larger area of hundreds of petrified trees. Many sections were a few feet in diameter and several feet long and tree rings were perfectly preserved. The petrified wood was a shiny black rock, very heavy.

    • @FloozieOne
      @FloozieOne 2 роки тому +6

      Did you by any chance bring some back with you? It would certainly have been beautiful and held the incredibly ancient rings if polished.

    • @RE-gf7lr
      @RE-gf7lr Рік тому

      @bina nocht no they cant

    • @myztroogeegibson3568
      @myztroogeegibson3568 Рік тому

      That's a baobab tree for sure...

    • @waryaawariiri1812
      @waryaawariiri1812 Рік тому +5

      My sister, husband and two kids moved to Sirte, Libya, in 1986. They were teachers and moved from Mogadishu, Somalia. She had two daughters born in Sirte.
      She now lives in Europe.

    • @markfox1545
      @markfox1545 Рік тому +7

      ​@@waryaawariiri1812- and...?

  • @eurlnov1324
    @eurlnov1324 3 роки тому +926

    I am from the Algerian desert, it's a wonderful place and we have huge amount of underground water, it's so quite and pure that you feel so relax the time slow down and your soul calm down

    • @nziom
      @nziom 3 роки тому +6

      Ahla!

    • @Templar07
      @Templar07 3 роки тому +3

      @@nziom Alhan*

    • @adamisaac4685
      @adamisaac4685 3 роки тому +8

      California will be like this desert soon.
      The earth is changing again.

    • @ahmedkarpous2358
      @ahmedkarpous2358 3 роки тому +3

      Beautiful

    • @inkyboi685
      @inkyboi685 3 роки тому +18

      @@Templar07 Algerians tunisias morrccons say ahla not ahlan

  • @In_TheMoonlight
    @In_TheMoonlight Рік тому +209

    My favorite part of all this is that so much of the evidence came from the work of ancient artists. Pretty beautiful to know that humans have always been making art :')

    • @TellenJones
      @TellenJones 11 місяців тому +1

      Legend has it that Sahara area was indeed green but got destroyed during the Atlantis destruction.

  • @dudea3378
    @dudea3378 3 роки тому +61

    This is the most humbling channel out there. Every time I watch one of your videos I'm reminded of how my lifetime is but a mere blip in my time.

  • @tristansmith8824
    @tristansmith8824 4 роки тому +2138

    Anyone else getting weirdly emotional about the people living in the Green Sahara and how the world they knew is just gone now? Imagine taking a person from there and showing them their home 5,500 years later. The grass, the animals, the beautiful lakes, the villages they grew up in, all gone, replaced by sand and rocks.

    • @davidritz94
      @davidritz94 3 роки тому +198

      To bad ancient man didn't do anything to stop global warming

    • @chriszelez7970
      @chriszelez7970 3 роки тому +68

      @@davidritz94 And neither can modern man. Wake up, he just told what happened.

    • @davidritz94
      @davidritz94 3 роки тому +145

      @@chriszelez7970 you think i was serious? Hello, smell a little sarcasm, or do I need to spell it out? Come on

    • @robertlemaster7525
      @robertlemaster7525 3 роки тому +56

      @@davidritz94 paleolithic man should have stopped driving gas guzzling SUV's lol! Too bad the didn't have paleo AOC, she would have saved them!

    • @chrisaustin9949
      @chrisaustin9949 3 роки тому +133

      @@chriszelez7970 Yes we can. The reason the Sahara warmed up and cooled down is because of Milanovich cycles which cause glacial periods and warm periods. Problem is, today we are suppose to be cooling off, not warming up. By now we should be headed back into a glacial period but we are not. That is due to man made CO2 based global warming.

  • @Chemson1989
    @Chemson1989 4 роки тому +4221

    Can't wait "When the Amazon Was Green" vid.

    • @ryancappo
      @ryancappo 4 роки тому +96

      But was it ever a desert?

    • @fabianpanter850
      @fabianpanter850 4 роки тому +458

      It will be soon...

    • @GoldenBoyDims
      @GoldenBoyDims 4 роки тому +197

      If the Sahara became green again the Amazon would turn into a desert and vice versa

    • @cdemr
      @cdemr 4 роки тому +80

      @@GoldenBoyDims Are you sure about that?

    • @priyazu4000
      @priyazu4000 4 роки тому +52

      DimsThe Immortal According to what source?

  • @Ystrly
    @Ystrly 4 роки тому +396

    Actually its getting even drier! I live on the coast of northafrica it's quite rainy in the winter, but my grandmother told me it used to be alot more rainier and they used to dig only a meter in the ground to find fresh water, now you need to dig atleast 10 meters to find it

    • @Findyification
      @Findyification 3 роки тому +13

      in mycountry itsreverse now we gettingflood more often

    • @Ystrly
      @Ystrly 3 роки тому +39

      @@Findyification share some of your rain with us guys 😁

    • @Humaidan.
      @Humaidan. 3 роки тому +29

      In Saudi Arabia it started getting greener than before but still rains are less than 7 days a year

    • @zorankalina6100
      @zorankalina6100 3 роки тому +29

      We should "teraform"...deserts of globe...no real nead to teraform/make green/ the Mars.
      Sure..even Mars if possible....but Sahara ..first👍🌞⛱🎉🍀🙌

    • @laaaliiiluuu
      @laaaliiiluuu 3 роки тому +21

      Climate is always changing all the time, both short term (seasons) and long term. Life has proven to be a master of adaptation though so life will go on. Just keep adapting. :)

  • @FloozieOne
    @FloozieOne 2 роки тому +185

    The rock artist were really artists. The detail and dedication it took to carve those drawings into solid rock is astounding and awe-inspiring. One question though; one picture is of a human and a giraffe but it looks as though the giraffe is eating from the human's hand. Would it be possible to train a giraffe to do that? I mean not in a zoo or place where the giraffe had access to its normal diet and didn't need to depend on humans for food. In any case the scene is so peaceful and gentle it almost makes tears.

    • @TheHothead101
      @TheHothead101 Рік тому +38

      The moment was probably so astounding that it had to be recorded

    • @SuedeBoy69
      @SuedeBoy69 Рік тому +6

      What if humans were actually a lot taller than we are now. But back then it was normal, so they didn't make a big deal about it and feeding a giraffe out of our hands meant we didn't have to reach very high, and the giraffe didn't have to bow very low. Imagine!

    • @aluminiumknight4038
      @aluminiumknight4038 Рік тому +14

      I wouldn't be surprised if some communities domesticated giraffes

    • @BlueRidgeBubble
      @BlueRidgeBubble Рік тому +18

      ​@@SuedeBoy69 Humans were shorter than we are now.
      We sre trending higher heights now.

    • @carlchapman4053
      @carlchapman4053 Рік тому +5

      Humans can tame any animal the question isn't IF we can do it but WHY would we do it? However as many cultures have tame elephants for heavy lifting I could see giraffes being used as scout animals with a harness on it's back allowing someone to climb up and see clearly across long distances. Or simply as a meat animal, that long neck is all muscle, the rest of it is just a bigger version of horsemeat and because it grazes on trees it won't compete for the lower grasses that goats and oxen would eat.

  • @gerardzandvliet2857
    @gerardzandvliet2857 4 роки тому +483

    Fascinating how we are only here for a very short time, but can still know what the world looked like long ago. To me it's reassuring that these cycles exist

    • @kgallchobhair
      @kgallchobhair 2 роки тому +8

      To me it's unnerving that these cycles exist. If the climate can change so much just from volcanoes, plants, or slight changes in sunlight, imagine what we can do.

    • @TechnoMinarchist
      @TechnoMinarchist 2 роки тому +28

      @@kgallchobhair We aren't even remotely as powerful as the things you listed.

    • @atlantic_love
      @atlantic_love 2 роки тому

      This current "cycle" you think of it as, isn't a cycle at all. It's a man-made global catastrophe. The only way possible the word "cycle" could apply is if it means the end of mankind.

    • @russellbrown6888
      @russellbrown6888 2 роки тому +17

      @@atlantic_love The warming we're experiencing is a natural phenomenon, not human-made specifically. The glaciers at the north and south poles expand and retreat every few hundred thousand years. Human activity has sped things up, but the planet will start to cool again eventually as its orbit changes. That's the cycle they're talking about, and it's not something we can alter.

    • @atlantic_love
      @atlantic_love 2 роки тому +8

      @@russellbrown6888 We won't be around to see them cool. So all we can do is try and fix the things that we have done and are doing that are HEAVILY CONTRIBUTING to global warming. No need to try and deflect or play spin doctor or fight over words.

  • @DavidRokon
    @DavidRokon 4 роки тому +1019

    A video idea: The evolution of grass, it's crazy how recent it is in comparison to a lot of things with how much of the planet it and related plants cover now.

    • @gelgamath_9903
      @gelgamath_9903 4 роки тому +108

      The evolution of grass also had a huge impact on the evolution of mammals. That's why almost all large land animal are grass eating mammals.

    • @maan7715
      @maan7715 4 роки тому +122

      Its always"disappointing" when documentaries about early dinosaurs show grasslands. It must've been pretty interesting and different with ferns everywhere

    • @Destroyer4700
      @Destroyer4700 4 роки тому +12

      Grasses are not recent. There's evidence to show that grasses were around up to 100 million years ago.
      This article is from 2005.
      www.newscientist.com/article/dn8336-fossil-dung-reveals-dinosaurs-did-graze-grass/

    • @DapremiumBearZ
      @DapremiumBearZ 4 роки тому +28

      Enigmatic Destroyer comparatively, 100m years is pretty recent

    • @pansepot1490
      @pansepot1490 4 роки тому +26

      gnargoyl “recent” if we are talking about rocks. In terms of animal evolution it’s a lot. Most of the dinosaurs we know and love are included in that timeframe.

  • @j.z.5678
    @j.z.5678 4 роки тому +179

    Sometimes wish I had a time machine to see all this kind of stuff first hand 😩

    • @mccari09
      @mccari09 4 роки тому +17

      I’d go back in time and put modern day items in places archaeologists will find them just for the lolz

    • @dpeasehead
      @dpeasehead 3 роки тому +1

      @J. Z. I'm glad I'm not the only one with that wish.

    • @kimberlykv4313
      @kimberlykv4313 2 роки тому +1

      I'm coming with! Let me grab some batteries to record everything.

    • @laurenmanzi5183
      @laurenmanzi5183 2 роки тому

      @@mccari09 same

    • @andrewloretta4523
      @andrewloretta4523 2 роки тому +1

      Just wait until we get in heaven 😊

  • @dpeasehead
    @dpeasehead 3 роки тому +53

    We should be forever grateful to those unknown ancient rock painters for giving us moderns the closest thing that humans have to a time machine. So far.

    • @kyjo72682
      @kyjo72682 5 місяців тому +2

      In a sense this kind of redefines what should be considered a "recorded history", which traditionally starts with the earliest writing systems around 5-6 thousand years ago. The earliest cave art comes from cca 45 thousand years ago, and there are some claims about non-figurative cave art as far back as 64 thousand years ago.

  • @syd-fp3bv
    @syd-fp3bv 4 роки тому +665

    I’m from mauritania and gonna tell u the sahara is growing and expanding most part of my country used to be green only the north side was part of the desert but it keeps coming down

    • @samirbedahoudi963
      @samirbedahoudi963 4 роки тому +74

      Same here in mali I used to live in the desert area of mali in a small town

    • @inotaarto8719
      @inotaarto8719 4 роки тому +56

      Take it back guys! You can do it, grazing is the key

    • @adrianponcearena3081
      @adrianponcearena3081 4 роки тому +82

      I thought the green wall initiative was working 😕

    • @protercool8474
      @protercool8474 3 роки тому +84

      Desertification is illegal and deserters will be killed on sight

    • @haninditabudhi6574
      @haninditabudhi6574 3 роки тому +31

      Can u pls tell sahara to go back to the north side again? Thanks 👍

  • @peetscoffeelover
    @peetscoffeelover 4 роки тому +3148

    Many years later: When the Sahara was a desert.

    • @user-th8nx4cp7w
      @user-th8nx4cp7w 4 роки тому +306

      Also many years later: When the Amazon was green

    • @Xanderfied
      @Xanderfied 4 роки тому +197

      Or ”When the Sahara, and Amazon weren't nuclear wastelands.

    • @Once800-
      @Once800- 4 роки тому +64

      Or before the Amazon was deforested.

    • @dl-o-lb7618
      @dl-o-lb7618 4 роки тому +36

      Or before the Sahara was deforested

    • @greenergrass4060
      @greenergrass4060 4 роки тому +12

      When the Sahara Jungle was a barren wasteland

  • @lokky95
    @lokky95 4 роки тому +2983

    Mega-Lake Chad: The mega-chad lake.

  • @davianoinglesias5030
    @davianoinglesias5030 2 роки тому +27

    As an African and a big fan of Geology, palaeontology and archaeology, this video has encouraged me to subscribe

  • @JefffRushton
    @JefffRushton 4 роки тому +1354

    Brb doodling very detailed bigfoot illustrations in local caves in hopes of confusing future archeologists

    • @sion8
      @sion8 4 роки тому +35

      🤦‍♂️

    • @AnalyticalReckoner
      @AnalyticalReckoner 4 роки тому +115

      Put some fatheads vinyls on the walls like batman and bugs bunny. So detailed they MUST HAVE LIVED IN THE CAVE

    • @ZombieBarioth
      @ZombieBarioth 4 роки тому +21

      @Librarian-at-Large
      Yep, that's the basis of a theory that myths about sasquatch come from deeply rooted memories from our ancestors of our homo sapian cousins.

    • @RMSLusitania
      @RMSLusitania 4 роки тому +13

      @Hoàng Nguyên That is a rhinoceros with a plant in the background. Notice theres no thagomizer or spiky tail, which is the reason why stegosaurus was famous, Along with their plates

    • @inSpihr
      @inSpihr 4 роки тому +27

      "This is what we call a "troll" painting."

  • @Jujegocrazy
    @Jujegocrazy 4 роки тому +130

    0:35 Look at that grasp of human anatomy, musculature, and perspective! Ancient artist, I'm in awe :)

    • @samarkand1585
      @samarkand1585 4 роки тому +8

      Host himself is an artwork too

    • @johnarbuckle2619
      @johnarbuckle2619 4 роки тому +4

      @@samarkand1585 He looks a bit like a young Rutger Hauer

    • @goofygoober5270
      @goofygoober5270 4 роки тому

      Julie Zeitoun HES A BETTER HUMAN ARTIST THAN ME

    • @goofygoober5270
      @goofygoober5270 4 роки тому +2

      Alright that’s it
      I’m not drawing humans anymore

    • @jl.7739
      @jl.7739 4 роки тому +4

      Julie Zeitoun at 0:33 there are elephants ;) you men 0:35 I guess.
      But the same is true for ancient cave paintings in Europe (Lascaux etc) ancient artists had a VERY good understanding of anatomy, proportions etc. And that’s no wonder since they observed these animals closely every day. Or maybe only the most talented were allowed to paint ;)

  • @olivercage4398
    @olivercage4398 3 роки тому +32

    Thanks to the collaboration between ancient rock artists and modern scientists. How else could we have gotten this information.

    • @louf7178
      @louf7178 2 роки тому +1

      Not really a "collaboration", but if you must.

  • @madmo9698
    @madmo9698 3 роки тому +54

    TENERE , TENAREWEEN in plural, means desert in tamazight (berber) language.
    Thanks,
    Greetings from Morocco 🇲🇦 🌹🌹🌹

  • @codyoverton447
    @codyoverton447 3 роки тому +42

    I hope teachers show these videos in class nowadays. These are gold

    • @cyborgar15
      @cyborgar15 3 роки тому +8

      No, they only say humans create global warming..but once your climate tax is implimented ..it will somehow lessen...

    • @chriszelez7970
      @chriszelez7970 3 роки тому +1

      @@cyborgar15 Correct. The sun, that glorious orb that rules the day is the cause of all of the warming. Fools every where, to think this warming is due to man.

  • @mizoobizoo164
    @mizoobizoo164 4 роки тому +2940

    'Sahara' means 'desert' in Arabic, so "sahara desert" means "desert desert"

    • @joannaedssay5988
      @joannaedssay5988 4 роки тому +249

      So it should correctly be called either the African Sahara or the African desert?

    • @felixhaggblom7562
      @felixhaggblom7562 4 роки тому +132

      I believe many deserts are just called desert in the local language. I think its the same with the Gobi and the Teklamakan deserts?

    • @tedmed225
      @tedmed225 4 роки тому +37

      @@joannaedssay5988 yep the desert is the Sahara

    • @chasegwop47
      @chasegwop47 4 роки тому +69

      Yea but most people call it “ The Sahara “ which is still kinda funny because we refer to it as the desert

    • @ciarandevaney385
      @ciarandevaney385 4 роки тому +8

      @@tedmed225 how did they come up with the lake district

  • @tarekassassi6099
    @tarekassassi6099 4 роки тому +26

    In deserted areas in Algeria we have found different types of shells as well.

  • @Axel_Kidd
    @Axel_Kidd Рік тому +4

    Summary of what I've learned -
    The best rock artists lived in Sahara 5000 years ago.
    Unfortunately, their music did not survive, but the album covers are lit af.

  • @SeraphimKnight
    @SeraphimKnight 4 роки тому +273

    Eons: "Just pause for a moment."
    Me: *puts the video on pause

    • @ulti-mantis
      @ulti-mantis 4 роки тому +34

      *waits for video to tell to resume

    • @quazar912
      @quazar912 4 роки тому +16

      are you still on pause?

    • @aarspar
      @aarspar 4 роки тому +1

      I continued the video again because PBS Eons already told us to unpause.

    • @dipperorange4305
      @dipperorange4305 4 роки тому

      Cute

    • @walther7147
      @walther7147 4 роки тому

      Seraph aspie?

  • @flyingskyward2153
    @flyingskyward2153 4 роки тому +588

    5,500 years ago,. So 3,500BC? The earliest Egyptians may have seen it.

    • @KakiAcha
      @KakiAcha 4 роки тому +130

      It may have affect them hard, I guess fast desertification should have caused a mass migration in the region.

    • @PainterVierax
      @PainterVierax 4 роки тому +72

      yes they did !

    • @sacrecharlemagne2262
      @sacrecharlemagne2262 4 роки тому +234

      It is speculated that the humans who would go on to become the Egyptian people were essentially refugees from the Sahara who made their new homes around the still green Nile Valley.

    • @iainmawhinney8867
      @iainmawhinney8867 4 роки тому +60

      of course they did, some of the rock art and even figurines of elephants came from them!

    • @109Rage
      @109Rage 4 роки тому +160

      The earliest Egyptians and Sumerians were no-doubt climate refugees to the quick drying of the Sahara, and this concentration of people around great rivers is possibly what led to our idea of civilization to begin with.

  • @joeywall4657
    @joeywall4657 4 роки тому +16

    This is my favorite Channel on UA-cam. Even in recent years humans saw a planet that would be unrecognizable to us today. The history of our world is so long and diverse the more I learn about it the more alien this world feels.
    I love it.

  • @zZrEtRiBuTiOnZz
    @zZrEtRiBuTiOnZz 2 роки тому +47

    Even the Sphinx has clear water erosion all around it, which indicates there was a lot more precipitation back when it was built. This is one of the reasons why some people think the Sphinx is older than originally thought.

    • @CRange-bh3tb
      @CRange-bh3tb Рік тому +6

      Facts. Different groups of people lived there when it was a lush green land.

    • @kalestanforde
      @kalestanforde Рік тому +6

      @@CRange-bh3tb now you realise there was no "sub saharan africa"

    • @teathesilkwing7616
      @teathesilkwing7616 Рік тому +7

      @@kalestanforde what? There is. It’s the parts below the sahara

    • @Intranetusa
      @Intranetusa Рік тому +13

      The Sphinx is built near the Nile River which floods regularly. So the Sphinx doesn't need to be considered older than it's current estimate (4500 years old at 2500 BC) to have water erosion marks. And even 4500 years ago means it could have lingering elements of the African green period where there was more rain and more waters in the rivers (eg. More floods).

    • @user-bs5qr5ie4s
      @user-bs5qr5ie4s 11 місяців тому

      @@Intranetusa the sphinx at least 12000 to 24000 or even 36000 years old

  • @romz5330
    @romz5330 4 роки тому +101

    Interesting video to say the least. I am west african and in our ancient lores many ethnic groups in this region always seem to point to their origins being further north on the continent, I guess it would make sense that populations would remain on the northern coast or drift further south along with the rains.
    This further goes to show the significance of climate change on human history; A Sahara that stayed green would have meant stronger links for trade, dissemination of ideas and civilization building. The Sahara is also half a continent of land not arable and going to waste, imagine the scale of arable land available in a green Sahara with large lakes!
    At the current level of global warming another green Sahara might be in the works

    • @cherylm2C6671
      @cherylm2C6671 Рік тому +3

      Fresh water, meaning another giant branch of the Nile river.

  • @aliensinnoh1
    @aliensinnoh1 4 роки тому +62

    It's crazy to think about how The Old Kingdom of Ancient Egypt began only a few hundred years after the end of the African humid period. The area around the Nile probably was still a lot more green. I'd love to see what it looked like.
    Also, it was because of this that there were still lions in North Africa for the Romans to capture during their time.

    • @Nghilifa
      @Nghilifa Рік тому +14

      Small groups of the North African lion(s) survived into the early 1960s (they're called "Barbary Lions") I believe, so people alive in North Africa today have seen/witnessed lions in their lifetime(s).

    • @theonebman7581
      @theonebman7581 Рік тому +6

      Since I'm not the only one necroposting on the replies (I'm sorry, it's been 3 years xD), might as well add
      The Hejaz and Yemen in the Arabian peninsula today are the epitome of arid desert life, but during the Roman times, it was so green it was referred to by the name "Arabia Felix"

    • @meganofsherwood3665
      @meganofsherwood3665 11 місяців тому

      Dang. I didn't realize how much had changed _this recently_

  • @lauriwiren6398
    @lauriwiren6398 3 роки тому +16

    "The world around us is always changing".

  • @DarkKnightBatman420
    @DarkKnightBatman420 4 роки тому +387

    So how’s the forestation plans for Africa’s deserts going? I heard they were planting trees out there.

    • @vwv343
      @vwv343 4 роки тому +137

      Senegal, Burkina Faso and Ethiopia have done so. Don't expect the other nations to do so for a long time. Corruption and wars are rampant in many nations in the area

    • @wrenlewis7659
      @wrenlewis7659 4 роки тому +162

      they're less going far out in to the desert and more are working to reclaim areas that have been lost to desertification

    • @matheussanthiago9685
      @matheussanthiago9685 4 роки тому +133

      @@wrenlewis7659 yeah, it's more about stopping the current desertification of new areas

    • @FlintSparkedStudios
      @FlintSparkedStudios 4 роки тому +46

      They're currently working on blessing the rains down there, so we'll see how that works out.

    • @onlyrick
      @onlyrick 4 роки тому +21

      @@FlintSparkedStudios - Since the 80's or so. Glad that's still going on.

  • @youngjoseph1248
    @youngjoseph1248 3 роки тому +473

    0:19 when ancient artists can paint better than you

    • @evertonfrancisco9149
      @evertonfrancisco9149 3 роки тому +12

      LOL...You can't do it on a paper, wonder how ease it is on rock!!! True talent!

    • @ericsarpongankomah1402
      @ericsarpongankomah1402 3 роки тому +23

      These are not paintings . these are engravings even difficult than paintings

    • @sebo641
      @sebo641 3 роки тому +15

      They were the real great masters, even Picasso admitted

    • @brahim119
      @brahim119 3 роки тому +15

      @@sebo641 Thank you for reminding me what Picasso said when he visited Altamira:
      *_“we have invented nothing, none of us can paint like this."_*

    • @TheMorste
      @TheMorste 3 роки тому +8

      They had plenty of time on their hands and were true specialists, don't compare yourself to them. But whenever I meet those ancient anonymous paintings, engravings or statues, I'm always delighted by their avant-guarde streak.

  • @thedoruk6324
    @thedoruk6324 4 роки тому +289

    The ironic side is that most of the most inhospitable desert regions of the world; even arabia; were literal paradise regions

    • @fionafiona1146
      @fionafiona1146 4 роки тому +2

      At different times.

    • @darkbozo11
      @darkbozo11 4 роки тому +34

      Then religion moved in.....

    • @noger1234
      @noger1234 4 роки тому +111

      @@darkbozo11 are you stupid

    • @shaider1982
      @shaider1982 4 роки тому +4

      Were also under the sea.

    • @ls200076
      @ls200076 4 роки тому +7

      @@darkbozo11 Communism in the Arabian Union.

  • @rh1507
    @rh1507 3 роки тому +4

    It's a nice thing that we humans have tendancies to paint and record our surroundings. We may not always do the best things to our fellow animals and plants but our desires to record things with painting and literature help paint a picture of the past.

  • @crunch2427
    @crunch2427 4 роки тому +105

    Damn do I love coming home from school and seeing PBS Eons uploaded.

    • @HONNEKI
      @HONNEKI 4 роки тому +2

      Lmao it's 23.27pm 😂😭

    • @crunch2427
      @crunch2427 4 роки тому +8

      It’s 11:27 for you, 5:30 for me

    • @napatora
      @napatora 4 роки тому +6

      @@HONNEKI you realize there are people that live in different time zones than you, right?

    • @moonlitm3285
      @moonlitm3285 4 роки тому +5

      Wow it's nice seeing another youngster watch these videos, usually it's viewed by an older demographic.

    • @bluon259
      @bluon259 4 роки тому +1

      Same, but right now I’m off of school for 2 weeks

  • @ChobThomas
    @ChobThomas 4 роки тому +263

    "picture the sahara desert... you probably imagined a DESERT, didn't you? LOL"

    • @jansalava1046
      @jansalava1046 4 роки тому +15

      picture the (Desert) desert...

    • @JabbarTV1
      @JabbarTV1 4 роки тому +10

      sahara means desert in arabic too lmao

    • @injest1928
      @injest1928 4 роки тому +9

      You're all idiots picturing the Sahara Desert as a Desert. I imagined it as a Tiramisu which is Dessert.

    • @MadNotAngry
      @MadNotAngry 4 роки тому

      Well, Sahara does mean desert, so ... yeah.

    • @lukasmihara
      @lukasmihara 4 роки тому

      Well, there are deserts that don't look that sandy.

  • @DViper15PR
    @DViper15PR 4 роки тому +6

    I'm at 0:02, should I resume the video yet?

  • @wadanatar
    @wadanatar 9 місяців тому +2

    I am a geologist and I worked for 1 year in the middle of Sahara desert on the Mauritania-Mali border. In many places, small, lime remnants of paleo lakes are visible. Ostrich eggs (semi-fossilized), grinding stones, obsidian axe, and arrowheads are easily found around these paleolakes. Sahara was green for sure not long time ago..

  • @Skyler.142
    @Skyler.142 4 роки тому +45

    Love these videos, I'm going to school to become a paleontologist and these videos remind me every day why I want to be one

    • @brooksrobertson250
      @brooksrobertson250 4 роки тому +5

      Keep going! I believe in you!

    • @Iucebowel
      @Iucebowel 4 роки тому +3

      When I die imma bury a nokia in the Antarctic to screw with ppl like you 😂

    • @chubibi06
      @chubibi06 4 роки тому +6

      Then please never give up on your dream, kiddo !
      I gave up ; ill-adviced by those i trusted the most and spent more than a decade, to this day, regretting it...
      Don't end up like me : fight for your dream, you'll pull through

    • @chubibi06
      @chubibi06 4 роки тому +2

      @@Iucebowel good luck with that

    • @Iucebowel
      @Iucebowel 4 роки тому

      @VobisPacem imagine finding an egyptian symbol in the middle of France right below the eiffel tower and trying to explain that to the public

  • @fasaughavas4892
    @fasaughavas4892 3 роки тому +22

    It's interesting to note that on the 'later cave art', just as the climate changed, the camel had already been domesticated, as the picture shows a rider on it's back, with a harness!

  • @accipiter160
    @accipiter160 4 роки тому +28

    0:29 I saw that exact photo when I was in Tassili N'Ajjer National Park, Algeria

  • @colonelradec5956
    @colonelradec5956 3 роки тому +16

    thats so cool. imagine them rock artist just drawing for fun. 12,000 years later the drawings still there for us to study. that is absolutely amazing. they did a basic daily thing. like ahhh im bored gonna draw a giraffe.
    and they have an impact reaching that far in the future lol so cool.

  • @YavinPrime
    @YavinPrime 4 роки тому +32

    If the Saraha dried up around 5000 years ago would that mean that it could have indirectly lead to the evolution of ancient civilizations such as the Sumarians and the Egyptians? The idea of the Saraha being green is a tantalizing one and the thought of how much viable land there would have been suggests that people may have spread out a lot in those times. Losing all of that and huddling around water sources like a fire in the night may have been what sparked civilization on a large scale. Thanks for the great video, so much fun food for thought.

    • @oliverweidemann1553
      @oliverweidemann1553 4 роки тому +9

      It is not only a thought. You can find bones in the desert of hippos and especially fish which you can dated with carbon-14 dating method quite acuratly. If you might noticed I am no english-native. My german prof. in university in berlin worked on that field in Libya and Egypt. His life-work is in a book which is only available in german, sadly: Pachur (2006) Die Ostsahara im Spätquartär (Springer-Press).

    • @robheusd
      @robheusd 9 місяців тому

      Human society as we know it today (with people living in cities and agricultural technology and domesticating animals and the use of science and technology) would perhaps not even exist without this climatic change. Sp maybe the current climate change can be a driving force for new innovations and technology to deal with a more rapid change in climate, like finding ways to produce food with less water, regreen deserts, and to change from fossile fuels to renewables and nuclear.

    • @Mari-gn8su
      @Mari-gn8su 8 місяців тому

      I think your right lol. The Sahara desert formed in approximately 300 years, a time span equivalent to the duration between the present day and the signing of the Declaration of Independence. I assume that people likely flocked in areas abundant with resources and engaged in rapid trade. This likely also triggered the agricultural revolution, as the scarcity of fresh fruits and vegetables in the desert would have made them increasingly difficult to get. This may have also provoked the beginning of conflicts among mankind to assert dominance over land.

    • @alanbudde8560
      @alanbudde8560 7 місяців тому

      Totally agree. It makes so much sense. Although to be clear at that time agriculture had been practiced for ~5000 years already in the levant

  • @WickedWildlife
    @WickedWildlife 4 роки тому +143

    Could you do a video on when australia central deserts where an inland ocean with their very own crocodile species the Baru 🐊 🌊

    • @parmaxolotl
      @parmaxolotl 4 роки тому +7

      Ahh yes, the Eromanga Sea (actual name).

    • @olgapopova5768
      @olgapopova5768 4 роки тому +3

      @@parmaxolotl sounds like hentai shop or web site (im very sorry)

    • @Archgeek0
      @Archgeek0 4 роки тому

      @@olgapopova5768 It ummm... it rather do, though.

    • @cdemr
      @cdemr 4 роки тому

      @@olgapopova5768 Absolutely, Eromanga 😂

  • @capivara6094
    @capivara6094 3 роки тому +177

    Living in North Africa is truly living in a post-apocalyptic world

    • @mohamedmedhat2436
      @mohamedmedhat2436 3 роки тому +8

      ?
      Not really lmao

    • @Aeturnalis
      @Aeturnalis 3 роки тому +39

      How do you figure? Most people of North Africa live near the Mediterranean where there is ample water and arable land, and much of it is thriving and hospitable with growing economies built on service, tourism, and mineral export. Honestly, only Libya has serious issues, and those issues all come from western imperialists in Europe and the US overthrowing their government to steal their resources. Prior to 2014, Libya was one of the most stable and thriving countries in Africa.

    • @yazidproduction
      @yazidproduction 3 роки тому +2

      @Hammam Hraisha I’m sorry man, south European coastline is waaaaay better

    • @yazidproduction
      @yazidproduction 3 роки тому +4

      @Hammam Hraisha I’m not talking about the government, I’m talking about the pure beauty, there’s no such islands like in Greece and turkey and no such beaches like in Italy and south France, North Africa is beautiful but not as beautiful as southern europe

    • @yazidproduction
      @yazidproduction 3 роки тому +1

      @Hammam Hraisha check online “les calanques de cassis” and tell me if you can find beaches like that in Libya

  • @downbntout
    @downbntout 3 роки тому +9

    Herodotus was a writer in ancient Greece who traveled in North Africa as far as Libya. He wrote that it was all grasslands.

    • @perseusarkouda
      @perseusarkouda 3 роки тому +2

      I strongly believe what made Egypt so prosperous wasn't the thin green line on Nile we see today. And on the other hand what stopped northern europe's people to prosper was the cold.

    • @downbntout
      @downbntout 3 роки тому +3

      @@perseusarkouda did you know there are whale bones far inland in Egypt?

    • @perseusarkouda
      @perseusarkouda 3 роки тому

      @Antoine Shelby I don't think he said there was no desert. I believe he says there was a lot more green that what is today on these countries.

    • @perseusarkouda
      @perseusarkouda 3 роки тому +1

      @Antoine Shelby I don't disagree. In my first post I was saying for these countries to be so advanced back in ancient times, must have been a reason. For example the Romans considered North Africa very precious for it's ability to provide the empire with grain.

    • @downbntout
      @downbntout 3 роки тому

      @Antoine Shelby not what he wrote

  • @gufu21
    @gufu21 4 роки тому +149

    Dang, I wish I could draw giraffes and elephants that good. :/

    • @alliuumduo
      @alliuumduo 3 роки тому +1

      @@m.dewylde5287 not everyone can speak english fluently

    • @robertkat
      @robertkat 3 роки тому +1

      I can draw water.

    • @hijodelaisla275
      @hijodelaisla275 3 роки тому +1

      Those giraffes and elephants could be a little naughty at times.

    • @hijodelaisla275
      @hijodelaisla275 3 роки тому

      @@alliuumduo Name two.

    • @tsunamis82
      @tsunamis82 2 роки тому +1

      Artist must have left a trail of art work. Most of it lost forever

  • @fatahmalom2393
    @fatahmalom2393 4 роки тому +126

    0:20 These drawings date back thousands of years, located in the Tassili region of the Algerian desert الجزائر

    • @tedmed225
      @tedmed225 4 роки тому +5

      Yes, in the state of Tamanrasette, the 1st Nation at the world, this is the real story hidden and forbidden 🐫🌴🌞☝️🌙

    • @user-vu2yb1gy4l
      @user-vu2yb1gy4l 4 роки тому +2

      @@tedmed225 what's hidden?

    • @benabdelkaderabdallah4107
      @benabdelkaderabdallah4107 4 роки тому +1

      Tassili nadjer

    • @donyamalak
      @donyamalak 3 роки тому

      @@user-vu2yb1gy4l the city of sefar is an ancient natural (or maybe not) open rock city classified as the largest opened museum in the world,,,it is a sort of a mystery,, anyone who tries to get deeper into it,,,never comes back,,,the government always warns people to not go a lot inside ,,,local legends tell that it is inhabited by djinn (invisible creatures)

    • @illikan2152
      @illikan2152 3 роки тому +2

      @@donyamalak cuz its rich with gold and uranium that's all .
      Story of Djinn is for chkopistanies 🤣 to not level up and stay cubic creatures 😂 kdbo bchwya chkopistan

  • @illuminated8134
    @illuminated8134 4 роки тому +279

    My brain: wanna know if the Sahara was always a desert
    Me:why though?
    My brain: you just gotta

    • @discoskull
      @discoskull 4 роки тому +8

      I'm very glad you exist.

    • @ARICKROSSPRODUCTION
      @ARICKROSSPRODUCTION 4 роки тому

      WORLD SHIFT. ABOUT TO HAPPEN AGAIN. LOOK AT THE PAST ...LEARN SOMTHIN

    • @zzulm
      @zzulm 3 роки тому

      Because the balance in our planet is awesome.

    • @benjohn2263
      @benjohn2263 3 роки тому

      Actually your brain is talking to itself , you are your brain

    • @mo_1645
      @mo_1645 3 роки тому

      It will be green again at some point

  • @jamesstrong593
    @jamesstrong593 3 роки тому +12

    Im currently on Google Earth and you can see where these lakes used to be! Love it...I believe The persian Gulf used to extend all the way down into Iraq and Baghdad was once under water

  • @peetsnort
    @peetsnort 4 роки тому +26

    I have a lovely fossilised log from desert in Sudan and it has all the features of a fallen tree with knot holes and bark. It proves that the Sahara had trees of a decent size

    • @iloveamerica1966
      @iloveamerica1966 4 роки тому +1

      I have a bunch of lovely coconuts.
      There they are, all standing in a row. It proves there were...
      big ones, small ones, some as big as your head.

    • @peetsnort
      @peetsnort 4 роки тому +1

      @@iloveamerica1966 bored?

    • @iloveamerica1966
      @iloveamerica1966 4 роки тому +1

      @@peetsnort a bit.

    • @peetsnort
      @peetsnort 4 роки тому

      @Robert Williamson I think the continent plate drifting has more to do with crocs and turtles being there.
      The whole of Australia is moving slowly for example.
      The surface of the earth is like plastic over hundreds of millions of years. Slowly moving

  • @veggieboyultimate
    @veggieboyultimate 4 роки тому +66

    I got the next video idea: describe the many different extinct corals of the Paleozoic and Mesozoic.

  • @jonathansantos6009
    @jonathansantos6009 4 роки тому +8

    Yes. I believe the Sahara desert use to have water over its land and I could believe how it took awhile to stay green before it became sand more over.
    Seeing the greener kind does look more pleasant.
    Thanks for taking us back in time again better than what I found before you.🧡

  • @slimaneismailli8732
    @slimaneismailli8732 Рік тому +2

    In some places in North Africa, there are objects on the ground like necklaces, some pieces of which are ostrich egg shells which are engraved. There are also triangles, arrows, large stones for polishing. It's like it's been people been there lately

  • @TechLevelUpOfficial
    @TechLevelUpOfficial 4 роки тому +5

    yeah i worked in the Algeria Desert and it's beautiful,tho it's dry but groundwater is everywhere ,just dig anywhere and there is water.

  • @Bimtavdesign
    @Bimtavdesign 4 роки тому +7

    I had never seen that rock art! Its beautiful!!

  • @miniimaelstrom
    @miniimaelstrom 4 роки тому +16

    I am getting SUCH Legend of Zelda vibes from the background music. ((I did really enjoy the information about the Sahara's Green Period, though. Keep up the great work, y'all! This channel is part of the bread and butter of my midnight UA-cam wanderings as I crochet, haha. I learn so much! It's awesome!))

  • @RecapRico
    @RecapRico 3 роки тому +6

    Guy: There are cave drawings that show giraffes and other animals found in Central and Southern Africa in the Sahara
    Me: Ummmm so you're just going to ignore the fact that that guy is half as tall as the giraffe???

  • @islandsunset
    @islandsunset 3 роки тому +5

    I never realised stone art painting could be used this way. Very observant.

  • @Rairyuujin
    @Rairyuujin 4 роки тому +141

    Interesting thought: imagine an Africa that still had such vast land & resources to explore. An ancient power equal or greater than Egypt’s might have formed.

    • @akrybion
      @akrybion 4 роки тому +10

      I wonder, if maybe it did? Egypt was already doing pretty good 5000 years ago, so why not a civilization west of it, maybe close to the ancient lake?

    • @UnluckyHistorian
      @UnluckyHistorian 4 роки тому +22

      KRS: Imagine.
      Me: Atlantis?

    • @ainzooalgown1364
      @ainzooalgown1364 4 роки тому +48

      A green Sahara would change the entire history of the Mediterranean.
      It’s hard to say whether a great land power would form in the hospitable land, or if it would’ve turned into a open plain for nomadic peoples like the Eurasian steppe.
      It’s also hard to say how impactful Egypt and Mesopotamia would’ve been with large plains to settle instead of being constricted to river valleys/flood plains.

    • @szzk7937
      @szzk7937 4 роки тому +10

      They are the Ancient Egyptians they just went to Nile. If it were still green today, cultures would just spring up on the Southern Mediterranean first as opposed to the north eastern shores. I don't think it would change, Rome like place would start in Egypt as opposed to Italy first.

    • @grumpyaustralian6631
      @grumpyaustralian6631 4 роки тому +37

      I'm sure its possible given enough time and luck, but generally speaking Olmecs and Aztecs aside, civalisations appear to be more probable when groups of people are exposed to harsher conditions, for example the event that gave rise to Egypt itself was a great drought that the first known pharaoh conquered with canals off the Nile, single handedly unifying upper and lower egypt and becoming the first pharaoh of greater egypt.
      The tons of water, fruit and prey that forrests offer just don't seem to drive innovation as much or in the same way that harsher environments do.

  • @MargoMB19
    @MargoMB19 4 роки тому +22

    Me seeing a new Eons video posted: Yeaaaahhh!!
    Me seeing how short the video is: Awwwwww.

  • @HECKproductions
    @HECKproductions 3 роки тому +4

    that is really counterintuitive that MORE warmth would would make an area LESS like a desert

    • @skippy9214
      @skippy9214 3 роки тому

      It depends on the relative climate of the time.

  • @proximacentaur1654
    @proximacentaur1654 4 роки тому +5

    I would listen to this if it were a podcast - the narration is excellent.

  • @dannykraeger1602
    @dannykraeger1602 4 роки тому +7

    That was incredible, I love this stuff thank you.

  • @57thorns
    @57thorns 4 роки тому +99

    I have heard that Saharan dust is an important factor in fertilizing the Amazonas Raindforest. Has there been any research into how the Green Sahara impacted (if at all) Amazonas?
    Also, if the Northern hemisphere got warmer, did the southern hemisphere cool at the same time, or was this an overall increase in solar radiation, and what impact did that have on a global scale?

    • @jacobkobald1753
      @jacobkobald1753 4 роки тому

      I was just gonna ask that

    • @iamspencerx
      @iamspencerx 4 роки тому +3

      My guess is that earth's tilt would make the southern hemisphere a bit cooler, however, since it doesn't have much landmass in it, it would've cooled down just a little. You should also take into account the global temperatures at that time

    • @zddxddyddw
      @zddxddyddw 4 роки тому +9

      I believe at that time the Amazon didn't exist as it does today. There wasn't a single, gigantic rainforest. What there was, was a collection of small patches of jungle separated by vast expanses of savannah, a landscape similar to today's Cerrado in Brazil.

    • @jacobkobald1753
      @jacobkobald1753 4 роки тому +13

      I'm just curious if we were to artificially green the Sahara could we mitigate the loss of the dust? Therefore getting the best of both worlds and trapping massive amounts of carbon and creating a massive new bread basket at the same time?

    • @matheussanthiago9685
      @matheussanthiago9685 4 роки тому +6

      @@jacobkobald1753 geoengineering at it's finest

  • @largesizejellyfish3014
    @largesizejellyfish3014 3 роки тому +2

    I love PBS!! For my final essay in English I wrote my essay on why we need to keep funding PBS.I grew up poor and the only tv we had was by antenna. PBS inspired me and grew my curiosity. It allowed me to grow into the person I am today. Thank you PBS!!

  • @andreasgernhardt6876
    @andreasgernhardt6876 3 роки тому +8

    Thanks for the good job you have done. Amazing what you can learn from history.

  • @GoronTico
    @GoronTico 4 роки тому +378

    Meanwhile in 7520: "When europe and north america were green"

    • @mintchip5763
      @mintchip5763 4 роки тому +20

      Meanwhile in the year 3020: “When there were polar icecaps”

    • @nathanaelraynard2641
      @nathanaelraynard2641 4 роки тому +9

      @@mintchip5763 recomendation tab on 3020: when the sea level wasn't soo high

    • @rescuerex7031
      @rescuerex7031 4 роки тому +4

      Like humans'l be alive even by 3000

    • @4bidn1
      @4bidn1 4 роки тому +3

      trending tab in 10940 A.D: "when humans resided on a small, (previously) blue planet called "earth""

    • @randomgirl3396
      @randomgirl3396 4 роки тому +1

      RescueRex70 by 2100

  • @fuzzlenutberry
    @fuzzlenutberry 4 роки тому +75

    This reminded me of the Sphinx water erosion hypothesis

    • @laserbeard328
      @laserbeard328 4 роки тому +10

      absolutely, this is the most important comment here ^^^

    • @matthewcreaks2147
      @matthewcreaks2147 4 роки тому +8

      The best explanation out there i think is that the sphinx was carved from a preexisting natural rock formation, so the weathering would have been there already

    • @one2threeee
      @one2threeee 4 роки тому +14

      @@matthewcreaks2147 If it was carved out of weathered rock, the old weathered surface would have to be carved away, revealing the new rock underneath. But how come this new, freshly carved rock shows signs of water erosion?

    • @matthewcreaks2147
      @matthewcreaks2147 4 роки тому +2

      @@one2threeee well from what i see, the carved sphinx itself isnt actually eroded, its the rocks underneath and around it
      also yeah, accodding to the known age of sphinx its around 4.5k years old, so that matches perfectly being about 500 years after the dying of sahara

    • @CrustyMcButternuts
      @CrustyMcButternuts 4 роки тому +2

      I was just watching the Robert Schoch interview on Joe Rogan's podcast last night talking about this.

  • @neilcreamer8207
    @neilcreamer8207 3 роки тому +33

    This is fascinating and deserves much more than a rushed 10-minute piece. Is there a full documentary on the subject?

    • @greglogan7706
      @greglogan7706 3 роки тому +2

      This sort of data tells me that a narrative like Noah's flood or a Hebrew exodus simply are not historical.

  • @joshujere2988
    @joshujere2988 4 роки тому +43

    UA-cam getting too comfortable with these 2 ads 😩

  • @oiartsun
    @oiartsun 4 роки тому +109

    I kept hoping he'd call it Classic Rock art. I'll let myself out now.

  • @chuckkottke
    @chuckkottke 4 роки тому +8

    What I'm wondering is that today, the Amazon's rain forest relies on mineral fertilization from dusts blowing off ancient lake Chad. What happened during this period to the Amazonian rainforest?

  • @dmbeckmann
    @dmbeckmann 3 роки тому +1

    Ethiopia has reversed desertification and Allen Savoy has explained a practical solution.

    • @OutRAjious
      @OutRAjious 2 роки тому

      he can save the World …. XR rebellion hate him

  • @ZoomNotice
    @ZoomNotice 4 роки тому +5

    This makes me happy seeing this come to light. Big part of our history that has never gets covered.

  • @clankb2o5
    @clankb2o5 4 роки тому +80

    As a linguist I was just starting to wonder if the ecological change could have coincided with the split of Proto-Afro-Asiatic or some other large family.... I cannot believe they actually referred to linguistics, amazing...

    • @ohlangeni
      @ohlangeni 2 роки тому

      Afroasiatic language phylum DOES NOT EXIST.
      Only Semitic and Somali/Afari (so-called Cushitic) are genealogically related.

    • @clankb2o5
      @clankb2o5 2 роки тому +9

      @@ohlangeni Really? That sounds interesting, where did you read this?

    • @messianic_scam
      @messianic_scam 2 роки тому +1

      there is no afro asiatic language you like to make up things repeat it until you believe

    • @clankb2o5
      @clankb2o5 2 роки тому +17

      @@messianic_scam I'd love to read about any critique on the Afro-Asiatic language family. Would you know of any publication on this topic, youtube user "royal scam"? Thanks in advance.

    • @moanjelo9453
      @moanjelo9453 2 роки тому +5

      @@ohlangeni Your name is Mthoko but you want belittle a family language while you have no knowledge about the language family you are referring to as "so-called=non existent".
      You west Africans should seek help before you go crazy with no reason.

  • @DaveTexas
    @DaveTexas 4 роки тому +5

    Blake videos always put a smile on my face! (They also put cool knowledge in my brain.). It’s a happy day when we get a new Blake video.

  • @thomasf.5768
    @thomasf.5768 3 роки тому +3

    Fantastic !!
    Great presentation. Wow, 230 time green in past 8 million years.
    🌳🌵🌿🌱 🌍🌧

  • @KomodoMagic
    @KomodoMagic 4 роки тому +11

    4:15 I just love the name of that lake :3

  • @anterebic8214
    @anterebic8214 4 роки тому +5

    This is truly amazing!!! And ty for wearing that shirt!

  • @WhoTheHellIsHarvy
    @WhoTheHellIsHarvy 4 роки тому +6

    Awesome video, as always! Damn I forgot how much I love this channel. And Steve.

  • @surfrat8884
    @surfrat8884 3 роки тому +1

    Fascinating

  • @tehbonehead
    @tehbonehead 4 роки тому +12

    "Geological bathtub rings."
    🤣🤣🤣

  • @robertmelvin5203
    @robertmelvin5203 4 роки тому +79

    I recommend PBS's Secrets of the Dead, "Egypt's Darkest Hour" which shows the collapse of the empire’s Old Kingdom and presents evidence of a change in the environment from savanna grasslands to desert.

    • @eddiebrevet4000
      @eddiebrevet4000 4 роки тому +11

      The drying of the Sahara caused a migration to the Nile, Then probably fighting resulted, things settled down, a hierarchy developed, Egypt began. I really don’t know

    • @VidarrKerr
      @VidarrKerr 3 роки тому +1

      If only they had stopped eating meat, stopped driving cars, ended all fossil fuels...

    • @squirlmy
      @squirlmy 3 роки тому

      I wonder too, if the Green Sahara was so fertile and lush that people didn't need agriculture. When the normal foods of homo sapiens became scarce, they grew to depend on crops from the flooding Nile Valley. (Also needing food supplies to supply an army, and specialized farmers and peasants to grow and cultivate these crops.) Basically, I think what Eddie brevet said could be expanded and explored a lot further.

    • @VidarrKerr
      @VidarrKerr 3 роки тому +5

      @@squirlmy Agriculture is necessary to make a civilization like that. Without agriculture (and animal husbandry) civilizations cannot become very advanced, because they are all required to "hunt and gather" --almost every person is involved in food acquisition.
      You have to have food stores (storage of food, production of food greater than the people producing the foods can eat) to free people up to devote time to other tech, like architecture and art and music and everything else people do that does not directly feed themselves.

  • @umbragon2814
    @umbragon2814 4 роки тому +15

    I'm surprised you didn't mention that the desertification of the Sahara at the end of this period was what caused people to migrate into Egypt and empires to form in Africa, and possibly other ancient middle eastern and north african cibilizations.

  • @suecox2308
    @suecox2308 Рік тому +1

    Another fascinating video in this fantastic series.

  • @terrybuggage724
    @terrybuggage724 4 роки тому +9

    A metal foundry was found in the Sahara that dated back to 12,000 BC . Every 20 ,000 years the Sahara transitions from desert to greenland . that human period U speak of was @ the end of this wet period . It will return . Great report .

    • @Hakkeholt
      @Hakkeholt 3 роки тому +1

      It will not return if we keep plowing and overgrazing the lands, we should change our farming methods, regenerative agriculture is becoming more popular and succesfull, also in North-Africa there are succesfull attempts of greening the desert.

  • @acanpc333
    @acanpc333 4 роки тому +15

    Very interesting! I’d like to know more about the history of those people that lived during that time and where they went. There are some ideas that something north into the Iberian Peninsula. It’s cool to see those linguistic connections! Maybe there’s something to it

    • @Nghilifa
      @Nghilifa Рік тому +1

      Some went east and founded the nile river civilizations, others went north towards the coast, some went westwards and others went south/south-west towards current day Ghana/Ivory Coast/Nigeria etc. It's quite fascinating.

  • @Akmundra1
    @Akmundra1 3 роки тому +8

    Ever since I read Dune, deserts got even more unnerving.

  • @72vince27
    @72vince27 Рік тому +1

    This is really dope to think about. A green Sahara once more.

  • @salil7174
    @salil7174 3 роки тому +4

    idk why i find ancient Egypt so fascinating. but i spent most of my life wanting to know more about that place and time. the Gods....the love for cats....the structures...even stories from the bible. I love Egypt! Love Thoth.

  • @AndromedaCripps
    @AndromedaCripps 4 роки тому +5

    It's really interesting to me that just adding humidity can grassify a desert over enough time. It makes sense that removing humidity can easily and quickly desertify grasslands or even forests, but it feels like it would be much harder to reverse that. 🤷🏻‍♀️

  • @TheAxeForgetsTheTreeRemembers
    @TheAxeForgetsTheTreeRemembers 4 роки тому +6

    Help! I paused at 0:02 but now nothing happens. I don't know what to do!

  • @joshuaray4120
    @joshuaray4120 3 роки тому +1

    Nicely explained the past tensions of the region.

  • @andrewgrandahl
    @andrewgrandahl 4 роки тому +8

    Mega-Lake Chad is wild. Also, you guys are the best.

  • @livinproof718
    @livinproof718 Рік тому +3

    The person feeding the 🦒 was tall af

  • @Toastmaster_5000
    @Toastmaster_5000 4 роки тому +8

    I've always wondered what would happen if humans were to deliberately create a canal running through much of the Sahara to any part of it that is lower than sea level, to encourage a more permanent water source. The canal would basically never stop flowing toward the lake, because the intense heat would cause the water to perpetually evaporate. This evaporation would create more clouds, and then hopefully cause more rain throughout the desert.

    • @angrygopnik2317
      @angrygopnik2317 Рік тому

      Not worth it financially. You underestimate how massive the Sahara desert is and how unstable and dangerous the governments that own these places are.

    • @Toastmaster_5000
      @Toastmaster_5000 Рік тому +3

      ​@@angrygopnik2317 If you look it up, there is a place I think in Egypt's desert that is below sea level, and the distance is short enough that a canal could be built; there have been bigger and more complex projects.
      And yes, the lake constantly filling up, evaporating, and causing rain is kinda the point of my idea.

  • @Googledeservestodie
    @Googledeservestodie 4 роки тому +330

    "imagine the Sahara Desert"
    My brain: *Gobi's Desert theme from Banjo Kazooie*

    • @RT710.
      @RT710. 4 роки тому +2

      SBBwasaight Vuong damn this takes me wayyyyy back

    • @CloudsGirl7
      @CloudsGirl7 4 роки тому +7

      You had to say it; now I hear it, too.
      Now I wanna play Banjo-Kazooie again...

    • @AnalyticalReckoner
      @AnalyticalReckoner 4 роки тому +1

      I think of Lawrence of Arabia's theme.

    • @GeraltofRivia-12
      @GeraltofRivia-12 4 роки тому +1

      Huh? All i could think of was frank Herbert's dune and the prophecy theme.

    • @ZombieBarioth
      @ZombieBarioth 4 роки тому +1

      Mine would, but I read Banjo Kazooie and got Mumbo's Mountain stuck in my head unstead.:P

  • @ThePrinceofPlots
    @ThePrinceofPlots Рік тому +2

    Imagine the civilizations hidden beneath those sands