@@elishevanesher8580 www.ancient-code.com/the-images-stonehenge-dont-want-see/ I dont say that the stones there now are modern. Only what we see nowadays might not be what it was originally
I am not sure if this is sarcasm or not, but I agree, they do achieve drama and suspense, but they do this mainly by creating an episodic structure within the overall film. In the meantime, by partially organizing the order of the mini episodes inside the video, they create suspense and drama naturally, as it arises from the competing theories of the scientists, who often have several probable explanations for whatever they're digging, but which wax and wane in likelihood as evidence emerges. because this is often an exercise in digging through layers of history, with older events perhaps obscured by more recent, what ends up happening is almost like a 'plot' to the story of the dig. it's actually kind of fascinating that it seems to consistently produce enough elements to make an episode really interesting. I am sure that the footage is carefully arranged to maximize this, but archeology is actually exceedingly boring MOST of the time, this approach captures the fun bits, which tend to be rare, and often separated by enough time that the last guy to dig there and never come back despite possibly promising results may be dead and buried. One major advantage this crowd has is obviously enough resources to make a more thorough assessment over the course of multiple uninterrupted days. I suspect thats in part because of these videos, which I presume would have helped fund the archeology in a way most scientists in the field (literally not a field but a lake this time, lol)would probably cheerfully stab their dept heads at the college to get secured for projects. The danger of course is that in pursuit of good TV, or drama or whatever, sloppy work or careless practice could become harmful. I know a couple of people with advanced archeology degrees, there are more of the than you might think, it's just that there are almost NO JOBS in the field. Need an archeologist, put a posting up in the break room at you local drone filled office building and you are likely to find dozens. They all work so that on vacation they can go dig things without pay, and incur great personal expense. I can't imagine how confused the show principals must have been to learn they are going to be paid, actual money, to do archeology. I am almost not joking, it's criminal really, that such an important field of human endeavour usually brings co recompense. Anyway, the two archeologists I know both said they love this show, and that the science is usually pretty accurate, and the team are real archeologists etc. They also said that it must be very much more difficult to do this work in Britain, where a lot of sites have been more or less inhabited for thousands and thousands of years. People tend to seek the same places to live, after all, and they tend to be relatively scarce. Only so many locations are good for building a hill out, which in turn becomes a Norman keep and so forth. So plenty off drama here, but it seems not the dkind that destroys sites, or annoys us watchers. Quite the accomplishment.
Jan I couldn't agree more on your statement about getting away from 2020 politics. This and many others like it is good for my head! Archeology has always fascinated me and brought me to a good place.
Absolutely! 2021 & it's still looney tunes. Biden got the Oath, Firearms, Gun Parts, Ammunition, Gas Prices, covid Closures, blames Games, Cuomo.. list goes on.
I’ve watched TimeTeam from the start. Never realised that Stewart had such lovely long eyelashes. Anyway. Back to archaeology. This one was close to my heart being in Scotland. *sigh* when born in Scotland you grow up surrounded by all the Old Stuff. You never think much about it, just accept it as your predecessors footprints. It’s reassuring and comforting. I’m also very impressed that Tony, as a sassanach, can pronounce Loch properly.💐😊💐
it must be so reassuring to have, metaphorically, your ancestors' arms around you all the time. we new-worlders know our history and wear our lineage with pride, but there's something a bit defiant about it, even at Grandfather Mountain. cheers to you.
Any negligible "global warming" will be counteracted by the impending ice age. A slight rise of the sea level will quickly go back down. And they'll continue going down, exposing the bering strait and many other submerged pieces of land. Your house will be cool but much further from the coast than it is now.
@@alexanderlittle9786 , February 2021: I read in Space Daily that the entire universe is warming up, so perhaps we should stop worrying about earth warming?
@@corneliawissing7950 ~a wise 1 you are. you are looking at a bigger picture than they are. and they think they are so smart. would be funny if they weren't so dangerous in their ignorance.
@@robertmitchell8728 , Thank you, Sir. I don't think I'm exceptionally wise, but I read widely and years and years of teaching have indelibly taught me the danger of ignorance. Are you perhaps a teacher?
I LOVE Timeline!!! The most interesting, best, shows with wonderful information and the hosts (Tony Robinson and all) are great! (I rather say "adorable but I don't want you all to think I'm weird, yes I'm weird but you all keep me interested and thrilled with each exist! Thank you
*Time Team:* So what's your name, new friend? *Local Man:* 's Andy. *Time Team:* It's nice to meet you Sandy. *Andy:* My name's Andy are y'deaf? *Time Team:* Would you like to be on TV, Sandy Aryadev? *Sandy:* "You're darned right I would, new friends"
It's kind of freaking me out that the SCOTS I can understand flawlessly, but half the English are confused frown inducing efforts to decipher for this MANY generations American girl. 😶😒💁
Ok, It def. took me a minute to realize the guy had a shirt on underneath his jacket because its so flesh colored. I thought the buttons were a necklace. I kept thinking why tf does this guy not have a shirt on and his jacket unzipped so far??? lol🤣🤣
Another fantastic episode. Not to mention a unique thing to learn about: a crannog-- not something I have seen alot of in landlocked Ontario, lol, certainly a very interesting concept for housing that's for sure!!👍 Most people look terrible in a scuba suit, but just like his daisy dukes 😉, Phil ROCKED that scuba suit!!🤭 Team Phil!!👍💖🐾🌈🇨🇦
Irish American, of Counties Kerry and Cork lineage. *I must say the Scotish Accent is the most delightful of the accents in that area of the world, course I also love the Irish, but the Scotts seems to have a tone of mischief and it just puts a smile in my face!* God bless those Scotts, too. 🍀🇺🇸🍀
well i never... lol.. i have never ever been so excited as to watch this past 46 mins of a crannog an in the far off tree at the 'point'field signs for the tree with cut in it to see something ..? more of this series please... i wish.. i really did enjoy this.. years ago along the shoreline of loch lomond.. there was a few weeks series on loch lomond.. underwater pics as well.. i was so fascinated.. an now this .. thank you thank you.. cheers an blessings.. helena..x
It's a good thing Marion Fraser had a good memory: she was able to give Stewart excellent directions to the location where the Migdale Hoard was found. Well done Marion.
The henge would be a place for ritual transformation, like transition to adulthood or to holy orders. Exiting the henge would be like being reborn out into the world as a changed being.
Is there a possibility, that you will upload more of Time Team? If i remember correctly, they said something about over 200 digs... the little one really loves this show and we watched this playlist at least 3 times already
These archaeological digs and ocean dives always seem to be under some 3-7 day deadline. The whole project gets aborted. My sense in this project is that the loch water level was much lower. Was it some recreational area where the group would Barbecue fish or an occasional aurochs on a Saturday night? Certainly not some defensible space. Was there any connection to Dirt Henge?
The Loch it is said Never gives up her dead. There were no bronze swords or silver coin hoards. Just some rocks, timbers, and some tent pegs. So the TimeTeam crew Went home empty too. But the site at last it was dated. And they ended show with more plans don't you know for further achlogical expiration.
Buncha English, poking around Scotland, trying to figure out, who did what, to whom, behind what barn, for how many cookies. Gonna be some whiskey over the dam afore they figure it out right.
I have to wonder if the lake hut might have been the community headman's domicile; & perhaps a defensible position for them when experiencing marauders. Just a thought anyway.
@@AudioJeep 95% eh? And that all from a crannogh. Australopithecus, ergaster, rhodesiensis, babylonians, summeriers, Egyptian civilization, the greeks, the romans, the mongols, huns, mayans, aztecs, incasso, the chinese empire, australian aboriginals, north american indians, the crusades.....all in that one crannogh. I am impressed
@@AudioJeep perhaps, but it would certainly help if you would have made a clear point to begin with rather than trying to hide that with an ad hominem.
So many variations Thomas, which one do you mean. Anyhow it's fascinating how many words in the Scottish dialects come originally from the continent, Swedish, German and French in particular.
I am an empath…. I am getting that the hoard from the older rock blast was from a market… either a trader’s wares or a meeting site/crossroad for long distance traders.
Stewart not liking the word henge is just semantics. A henge isn't only stone. So him not wanting to use the word is just contributing to public ignorance. If you don't use "henge" people will keep thinking they are only stone.
A henge isn't stone at all. Some henges had stone or wooden structures associated with them but a henge is a circular monument with an external bank and internal ditch. Stonehenge is not actually a henge because the bank is inside the ditch.
Interesting excavations, imagenative narrative. BTW. I also have wandered freely around Stone Henge, many moons ago, before "English Heritage" (so called), surrounded it with a ring of steel and contrarily to the gift to the nation of the Victorian landowner hijacked it made it conditionally available to only those with a pocket full of money and disenfranchised everyone else.
It is sad that the public have to pay to access the monuments that belong to us all. Unfortunately, now that the government have withdrawn 100% of their funding from English Heritage, things are unlikely to get better any time soon.
That's very sad and unjust, indeed. Though it might also protect the site from the disrespectful tourists that draw graffitis or carve onto the stones of the sites....
What in the world would be the reason to put that much work into having a hut on the loch, why would someone build like that, it's not far enough to avoid enemies.
60 meters from shore is quite some way out.... And makes all but the waterborne or determined swimmers (not too many did) and perhaps archers with fire not an immediate threat- and thus escape with all portable goods across the loch or even just to the MIDDLE and wait them out was a viable survival protocol.
@@Joey-rs7uq I'm sorry I didn't mean to derail the video. It kills me, no matter the site, say Gobekli Tepe, They're "ritualistic" no, maybe they had threesomes there? lol...
Right... when they pretty much have proof that the "ritualistic henge" was probably used as some sort of sundial. Or just anything related to astronomy.
Just saw the title and the screenshot and I'm thinking "Okay...it's a crannog. What's mysterious about that?" Is there more to this 44 min video, or did I just figure it all out in about 5 seconds? Please comment if you've watched the entire video to let me know if it's worth the time.
@Daniel Strickland A crannog is a free-standing wooden structure, they were built using dozens of support beams, effectively creating an artificial island that extended from shore out into relatively still bodies of water, such as lakes and estuaries, in Bronze and Iron Age Britain.
The more that I look back in history the more that I question things and their veracity. I will say that when I was a child I was told that Venus proceeded the Sun on the same plane East-West. Therefore it would have been a means for navigation and site-building.
It is a circular monument with an external bank and internal ditch. That is the archaeological definition of a henge (although because of its small size this would technically be called a hengiform monument or mini henge). Somewhat ironically, by this definition, the most famous 'henge' of all is not actually a henge.
"It's like Netflix, but for history documentaries" -----> Sign up to History Hit with code 'timeline' for a huge discount! bit.ly/3rs2w3k
Stone henge is fake-
@@lettersandnumbersuc Uh huh
@@lettersandnumbersuc and what is your source for this information?
Sky view Cafe for constellations
@@elishevanesher8580 www.ancient-code.com/the-images-stonehenge-dont-want-see/
I dont say that the stones there now are modern.
Only what we see nowadays might not be what it was originally
I really like that this show gets straight to the point and doesn't add unnecessary drama to the narration.
Are you from the states?
I am not sure if this is sarcasm or not, but I agree, they do achieve drama and suspense, but they do this mainly by creating an episodic structure within the overall film. In the meantime, by partially organizing the order of the mini episodes inside the video, they create suspense and drama naturally, as it arises from the competing theories of the scientists, who often have several probable explanations for whatever they're digging, but which wax and wane in likelihood as evidence emerges. because this is often an exercise in digging through layers of history, with older events perhaps obscured by more recent, what ends up happening is almost like a 'plot' to the story of the dig. it's actually kind of fascinating that it seems to consistently produce enough elements to make an episode really interesting.
I am sure that the footage is carefully arranged to maximize this, but archeology is actually exceedingly boring MOST of the time, this approach captures the fun bits, which tend to be rare, and often separated by enough time that the last guy to dig there and never come back despite possibly promising results may be dead and buried. One major advantage this crowd has is obviously enough resources to make a more thorough assessment over the course of multiple uninterrupted days. I suspect thats in part because of these videos, which I presume would have helped fund the archeology in a way most scientists in the field (literally not a field but a lake this time, lol)would probably cheerfully stab their dept heads at the college to get secured for projects.
The danger of course is that in pursuit of good TV, or drama or whatever, sloppy work or careless practice could become harmful. I know a couple of people with advanced archeology degrees, there are more of the than you might think, it's just that there are almost NO JOBS in the field. Need an archeologist, put a posting up in the break room at you local drone filled office building and you are likely to find dozens. They all work so that on vacation they can go dig things without pay, and incur great personal expense. I can't imagine how confused the show principals must have been to learn they are going to be paid, actual money, to do archeology. I am almost not joking, it's criminal really, that such an important field of human endeavour usually brings co recompense. Anyway, the two archeologists I know both said they love this show, and that the science is usually pretty accurate, and the team are real archeologists etc. They also said that it must be very much more difficult to do this work in Britain, where a lot of sites have been more or less inhabited for thousands and thousands of years. People tend to seek the same places to live, after all, and they tend to be relatively scarce. Only so many locations are good for building a hill out, which in turn becomes a Norman keep and so forth.
So plenty off drama here, but it seems not the dkind that destroys sites, or annoys us watchers. Quite the accomplishment.
I have to have relief from US 2020 politics and this is a great way to getaway and see something positive! Thanks!
Thats how I got here.😍
Samesies
You could always go pound sand.
Jan I couldn't agree more on your statement about getting away from 2020 politics. This and many others like it is good for my head! Archeology has always fascinated me and brought me to a good place.
Absolutely!
2021 & it's still looney tunes. Biden got the Oath, Firearms, Gun Parts, Ammunition, Gas Prices, covid Closures, blames Games, Cuomo.. list goes on.
LOL -- if looks could kill.... when Carenza was accused of only wanting to find "pretty things"! Glad Tony called out the other guy.
I’ve watched TimeTeam from the start. Never realised that Stewart had such lovely long eyelashes. Anyway. Back to archaeology. This one was close to my heart being in Scotland. *sigh* when born in Scotland you grow up surrounded by all the Old Stuff. You never think much about it, just accept it as your predecessors footprints. It’s reassuring and comforting. I’m also very impressed that Tony, as a sassanach, can pronounce Loch properly.💐😊💐
Aye, but they didna put Loch in the title!
it must be so reassuring to have, metaphorically, your ancestors' arms around you all the time. we new-worlders know our history and wear our lineage with pride, but there's something a bit defiant about it, even at Grandfather Mountain.
cheers to you.
@Daniel Strickland It means 'not scottish' XD
@@betenoireindustries speak for yourself. Some of us have lines here that go back well more than 20,000 years.
@@KayKay114 you say that as if you know anything about me, you puling child.
They found more in a single day then in 10 years of Oak island.
woohoo!!
Tru, WTF?
Oak island is a joke
lol..
LOL 😂
I love history where in the smallest fossil a grand story begins to unfold full of allegory and mystery. Thanks time-team.
Joanelizabeth This decomposing base of an ancient stick that was burned down must have been magnificent. Just amazing .
@Pete ? [There you go]
@@brentdawgs8905 really significant 😂
@Pete Pete, asks question in form of statement, thus annoying me.
I'm imaginin' future lads diggin up my flooded house n being absolutely amazed
First they will say it some sort of religious site because of the sacrifices of all the little plastic three-legged tables.
Any negligible "global warming" will be counteracted by the impending ice age. A slight rise of the sea level will quickly go back down. And they'll continue going down, exposing the bering strait and many other submerged pieces of land. Your house will be cool but much further from the coast than it is now.
@@alexanderlittle9786 , February 2021: I read in Space Daily that the entire universe is warming up, so perhaps we should stop worrying about earth warming?
@@corneliawissing7950 ~a wise 1 you are. you are looking at a bigger picture than they are. and they think they are so smart. would be funny if they weren't so dangerous in their ignorance.
@@robertmitchell8728 , Thank you, Sir. I don't think I'm exceptionally wise, but I read widely and years and years of teaching have indelibly taught me the danger of ignorance. Are you perhaps a teacher?
Phil and Henry's wetsuit in the lake scene gets me everytime I watch. Love you guys from America.
I can't wait for Time Team to go back there and do more in depth excavations. Please Time Team go do further excavations at this site.
Omg this one is the best episode. Phil & Henry in the lake makes me laugh so much! Love ❤️ from Ontario Canada 🇨🇦
I LOVE Timeline!!! The most interesting, best, shows with wonderful information and the hosts (Tony Robinson and all) are great! (I rather say "adorable but I don't want you all to think I'm weird, yes I'm weird but you all keep me interested and thrilled with each exist! Thank you
The crannog investigation was in desperate need of a cofferdam.
Before Stonehenge was built, there has been the discovery of a wooden henge as well, which was underwater for very long time.
TT has an episode on it. Seahenge
Now we must find the elusive straw henge.
@@tonyplaysthemambo don't rule out the multitude of airhenges waiting to be discovered
Make Henges Great Again!
@@tonyplaysthemambo grass henge, it’s out their somewhere...😂
I wish History Hit would leave us all alone to watch Time Team in peace.
Am I missing something????
So that’s what Sting wrote the song about. “At at the bottom of a dark Scottish Loch.” Professor Gordon Sumner, amazing again:)
*Time Team:* So what's your name, new friend?
*Local Man:* 's Andy.
*Time Team:* It's nice to meet you Sandy.
*Andy:* My name's Andy are y'deaf?
*Time Team:* Would you like to be on TV, Sandy Aryadev?
*Sandy:* "You're darned right I would, new friends"
Aren’t local dialects grand?!?😂
It's kind of freaking me out that the SCOTS I can understand flawlessly, but half the English are confused frown inducing efforts to decipher for this MANY generations American girl. 😶😒💁
👏🤣
Great free, quality documentaries on YT, nice
Ok, It def. took me a minute to realize the guy had a shirt on underneath his jacket because its so flesh colored. I thought the buttons were a necklace.
I kept thinking why tf does this guy not have a shirt on and his jacket unzipped so far??? lol🤣🤣
Great Episode. The last couple to go up have all been great ones.
00l
1
Something left out of this discussion.... 4000 years ago, the water level of this lake was likely to be different than today
I thought they said two feet
Another fantastic episode. Not to mention a unique thing to learn about: a crannog-- not something I have seen alot of in landlocked Ontario, lol, certainly a very interesting concept for housing that's for sure!!👍
Most people look terrible in a scuba suit, but just like his daisy dukes 😉, Phil ROCKED that scuba suit!!🤭 Team Phil!!👍💖🐾🌈🇨🇦
Phil: I am a digger not a surveyer.
Tony: Then pretend this is a long thin shovel, you will be okay.
British humour!
I love Phil's starfleet uniform at 3:44
😆
"Is that deep enough for you Henry?"
"Let's see what happens. You'd be fine"
Sudden plunge!
"Whoah! I'm not going in there!"
😂😂😂😂😂
Could the directional markings be for planting, seasonal, star alignments.
Irish American, of Counties Kerry and Cork lineage.
*I must say the Scotish Accent is the most delightful of the accents in that area of the world, course I also love the Irish, but the Scotts seems to have a tone of mischief and it just puts a smile in my face!*
God bless those Scotts, too.
🍀🇺🇸🍀
well i never... lol.. i have never ever been so excited as to watch this past 46 mins of a crannog an in the far off tree at the 'point'field signs for the tree with cut in it to see something ..? more of this series please... i wish.. i really did enjoy this.. years ago along the shoreline of loch lomond.. there was a few weeks series on loch lomond.. underwater pics as well.. i was so fascinated.. an now this .. thank you thank you.. cheers an blessings.. helena..x
This is exciting ! Cheering you in spirit from Santa Monica California.
many miles away there's a shadow on the door, of a cottage on the shore, of a dark Scottish lake
My nine year old lives Tony in the Worst Jobs in History. This show? “Mommy, all they do is mumble stuff and dig things.” 😂
It's a good thing Marion Fraser had a good memory: she was able to give Stewart excellent directions to the location where the Migdale Hoard was found.
Well done Marion.
The henge would be a place for ritual transformation, like transition to adulthood or to holy orders. Exiting the henge would be like being reborn out into the world as a changed being.
22:15 - I often see these yellow-flowered bushes on Time team. What are they called?
It’s like the History Channel, but with actual History
Lol, and no aliens!
@@unowen9668 Yeah, it's great to not hear that either feature (or both) was built by aliens!
"You found something in the dirt? Let's get drunk!" Tony probably @44:40
Thank you for your tyme, team..
Is there a possibility, that you will upload more of Time Team? If i remember correctly, they said something about over 200 digs... the little one really loves this show and we watched this playlist at least 3 times already
Well they sure picked a gorgeous spot.
Super cool I love this kind of show
14:51 This guy sounds like Sam Gamgee. I thought he was so excited because he found evidence of ancient taters.
These archaeological digs and ocean dives always seem to be under some 3-7 day deadline.
The whole project gets aborted.
My sense in this project is that the loch water level was much lower.
Was it some recreational area where the group would Barbecue fish or an occasional aurochs on a Saturday night? Certainly not some defensible space. Was there any connection to Dirt Henge?
The Loch it is said
Never gives up her dead.
There were no bronze swords or silver coin hoards.
Just some rocks, timbers, and some tent pegs.
So the TimeTeam crew
Went home empty too. But the site at last it was dated. And they ended show with more plans don't you know for further achlogical expiration.
Saturday night barbecue, Sunday morning church
Them standing on the ring in the water with all the bright plastic colors looks like an archeologists party 🥳
What are the gold flowered bushes? Gorse? Quite lovely.
Buncha English, poking around Scotland, trying to figure out, who did what, to whom, behind what barn, for how many cookies. Gonna be some whiskey over the dam afore they figure it out right.
thats why archaeologists drink so much
@Kirk Jones I don't know if that was a dis or you're giving them props, lol
@@Error_4x5 Confusion to the enemy!
@@kirkjones9639 Lol, ok
@@michaellarson938 Archaeology is just an excuse to get dead drunk.
This whole episode reminds me of Broken Swords "Eye of the needle" puzzle.
I have to wonder if the lake hut might have been the community headman's domicile; & perhaps a defensible position for them when experiencing marauders. Just a thought anyway.
We don't call them Lakes.....its Loch. Your welcome 👍🏴
love this one !!
The entire “your henge/my enclosure” exchange was...lmfao yikes dudes definitely looking down intellectually on tony
What an talent gone Mr Víctor Ambros.
Fascinating and amazing! K.B.
*IMMACULATE CONTENT THANKS*
Dude is literally corrected by a professional and continues to just call it a henge
It's called a "Crannog".
It was never a mystery.....
Shout-out to Mark McGrath from Sugar Ray in the thumbnail photo🙌
🤣🤣🤣
I had to double take, but accurate 😁
Also resembles David Freeman who built the wicker man in the Time Team episode digging for a druid settlement.
I love this era of Time Team. Once Phil and Francis left the show went down hill fast.
Both Phil and Francis were present until the end. Mick Aston was not in the final series, however.
The good news: it's a crannogh. The bad news: we destroyed it
@Celto Loco on many levels archeologists are basically grave robbers
@@Ed19601 and without them you wouldnt know 95% of history.
@@AudioJeep 95% eh? And that all from a crannogh. Australopithecus, ergaster, rhodesiensis, babylonians, summeriers, Egyptian civilization, the greeks, the romans, the mongols, huns, mayans, aztecs, incasso, the chinese empire, australian aboriginals, north american indians, the crusades.....all in that one crannogh. I am impressed
@@Ed19601 reading comprehension isnt your strong suit apparently.
@@AudioJeep perhaps, but it would certainly help if you would have made a clear point to begin with rather than trying to hide that with an ad hominem.
Thank you Tony, its a loch, not a lake!
Great, Ramona, and I am from Northern Ireland and agree with you!!!
google "Loch" ... in German
So many variations Thomas, which one do you mean. Anyhow it's fascinating how many words in the Scottish dialects come originally from the continent, Swedish, German and French in particular.
@@ramonamcmahon3248 Thanks Ramona
@Irish Jester a loch is a Scottish term for a body of inland water, a lake is the English version.
Completely unrelated: I want Tony's oversized sweater and I don't want to knit it myself.
We have Lochs in Scotland, not Lakes.
Great history
Basically, they found a clock~ 2000 years old, generations in the making.
Thank you timeline
When was this episode filmed?
It was filmed in March 2003 and first broadcast on 18th January 2004.
Reminds me to send off my flood insurance payment. Thanks.
And your comment reminded me that I have to fill in my income tax form.
Thank you
I sympathize with those men who have to dig with naked hands ,the chill factor would make mine ache.
I am an empath…. I am getting that the hoard from the older rock blast was from a market… either a trader’s wares or a meeting site/crossroad for long distance traders.
i love this stuff.
Putting Phil in the water is great. He can't talk. It must have been tortuous for him.
(Hendge) It makes sence to build the center up. Build your house then have a trench around it so the ground inside yiur house doesn't get wet.
Another idea is your roof over time makes a trench around the house as the water falls.
Why oh why oh WHYYYY did they cut off the intro and the little leader bit where Tony explains where they are and what they're doing?! BAD EDITING!
40:04 a stake to go with our chips...DING!
Stewart not liking the word henge is just semantics. A henge isn't only stone. So him not wanting to use the word is just contributing to public ignorance. If you don't use "henge" people will keep thinking they are only stone.
A henge isn't stone at all. Some henges had stone or wooden structures associated with them but a henge is a circular monument with an external bank and internal ditch. Stonehenge is not actually a henge because the bank is inside the ditch.
Interesting excavations, imagenative narrative. BTW. I also have wandered freely around Stone Henge, many moons ago, before "English Heritage" (so called), surrounded it with a ring of steel and contrarily to the gift to the nation of the Victorian landowner hijacked it made it conditionally available to only those with a pocket full of money and disenfranchised everyone else.
It is sad that the public have to pay to access the monuments that belong to us all. Unfortunately, now that the government have withdrawn 100% of their funding from English Heritage, things are unlikely to get better any time soon.
That's very sad and unjust, indeed. Though it might also protect the site from the disrespectful tourists that draw graffitis or carve onto the stones of the sites....
@@cameleonfleuri Hopefully. I'm afraid that the tourists would plan and save specifically to go to Stonehenge...
TY 😃
"We can't say it's definitely not." Say what?
Very interesting
Was anyone else curious what a "styke" was at first 🤣
A stake?
Min 3:40 "How are we gonna dig it?"... Ive got a CUNNING plan XDDDDDDD
SIR TONY ! DRAMS UP BEAUTIES !
Nice one !
I love crannogs!
That is one good looking Scot!
What in the world would be the reason to put that much work into having a hut on the loch, why would someone build like that, it's not far enough to avoid enemies.
60 meters from shore is quite some way out....
And makes all but the waterborne or determined swimmers (not too many did) and perhaps archers with fire not an immediate threat- and thus escape with all portable goods across the loch or even just to the MIDDLE and wait them out was a viable survival protocol.
A little island to canoe out to, picnic, have the village fete. Children playhouse. Barbecue.
Maybe for fishing🤔
Maybe the water level was much lower?
Everything is "ritualistic" in other words they don't know...
My daily habits in a few millenia could be seen as rituatlistic. But nonetheless, very cool video!
@@Joey-rs7uq I'm sorry I didn't mean to derail the video. It kills me, no matter the site, say Gobekli Tepe, They're "ritualistic" no, maybe they had threesomes there? lol...
yeah, nail on the head. "ceremonial purposes" is Archaeologist for "we have no idea wtf this thing is" 😄
Right... when they pretty much have proof that the "ritualistic henge" was probably used as some sort of sundial. Or just anything related to astronomy.
@@89ludeawakening1 i keep thinking a planting calendar. these were agrarian people.
I have watched a few videos from this channel over the past couple years and don't know why I didn't subscribe sooner. 👍😉
......👣👣👣
Francis's focus made me think of a man delivering a baby--that ginger hold, the careful motions, the narrow view... it was cute.
Let me guess. You’ve 3 days. Still, could be worse.
I never would have thought an omelette could survive that long
Why are his pants so tight?
maybe he, is a she. or something else. come on, get with the times. we don't need labels anymore.
Just saw the title and the screenshot and I'm thinking "Okay...it's a crannog. What's mysterious about that?"
Is there more to this 44 min video, or did I just figure it all out in about 5 seconds?
Please comment if you've watched the entire video to let me know if it's worth the time.
@Daniel Strickland
A crannog is a free-standing wooden structure, they were built using dozens of support beams, effectively creating an artificial island that extended from shore out into relatively still bodies of water, such as lakes and estuaries, in Bronze and Iron Age Britain.
@@josh420masterB Recent evidence from the Outer Hebrides shows that some crannogs date from the Neolithic!
Your soils are so luscious, l am so jealous.
Lol there all getting attitudes with each other 🤣 “UUUHUH WELL WHAT DID YOU FIND ?? CAN YOU DATE IT OR WHAT !??”
“A doddle”??
What the heck is “a doddle”??
a quick drawing. lol
Doodle
More than likely the orientation was towards the morning star. This find reminds me of Tenochitlan, and symbols from Spain and West Africa.
I'd like to see more charts on the crannog layout.
@Gary Allen I'd like to understand the total importance of Venus, or even where the early and later lithic periods are delineated.
The more that I look back in history the more that I question things and their veracity. I will say that when I was a child I was told that Venus proceeded the Sun on the same plane East-West. Therefore it would have been a means for navigation and site-building.
Otherwise Cosmologically I can only provide the Christian perspective.
Wouldn't Venus have been a degree or two to the west back then when this was built?
He keeps calling it a henge bc he wants to over sell for tv
Love how the one gentleman even told him to stop calling it a henge.
It is a circular monument with an external bank and internal ditch. That is the archaeological definition of a henge (although because of its small size this would technically be called a hengiform monument or mini henge). Somewhat ironically, by this definition, the most famous 'henge' of all is not actually a henge.
First rate crew.☆☆☆☆
Scottish steak and chips, please !