What we can learn from ancient genomics

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  • Опубліковано 15 кві 2020
  • Eske Willerslev, University of Copenhagen, Denmark. From: The Crafoord Academy Lecture 2016, 2016-12-13.
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 20

  • @jenspeterjensen-rb3gp
    @jenspeterjensen-rb3gp 8 місяців тому +2

    kære Eske Willerslev. Jeg har fulgt dig i mange år på UA-cam og gør det stadigvæk. Du har gjort mit liv rigere. Vi er rigtig mange som synes du er rigtigt godt og spændende menneske....må din gud være med dig. Vi elsker i min familie at besøge moesgård museum og den øvelse bliver vi ved med indtil lyset slukkes. Bedste hilsner jens og familien. Jeg er dyrlæge med egen praksis i mere end 40 år i Århus. Desværre har ahlsheimer sygdommen taget en del af mig, men ikke det hele....endnu. GOD REJSE ;

  • @wooyyeah
    @wooyyeah 2 роки тому +11

    It's like the Terminator explaining science we haven't discovered yet from 50 years ahead. The T1000 will hasten Robotic Evolution emulating the evolution model from Human Evolution, quickly achieving advancements at unimaginable speeds. Skynet mapped that model with what it learned from the events of the Younger Dryas.

    • @user-zv3uz2nk6v
      @user-zv3uz2nk6v Рік тому +1

      Hahaha read this in his voice.

    • @SimonSozzi7258
      @SimonSozzi7258 Рік тому +1

      🤣 OMG! 25:49 I've been making fun in my head this whole time but I just saw your comment.

  • @Vib.H
    @Vib.H 2 роки тому +10

    Love him. He's so good - and exciting, listen to.
    He has a natural ability to his profession and to pass on this knowledge in an interesting way.
    Also to people outside, for his research community.
    The epitome of what a skilled professor should consist of.
    and - a cool accent! :)

    • @Hallands.
      @Hallands. 2 роки тому +1

      Don’t know if the accent is cool, but it’s certainly heavy! 😂
      I was especially impressed to learn that the Clovis people used big »spare« points…
      I’m guessing »spear«…

    • @Vib.H
      @Vib.H 5 місяців тому

      @@Hallands. Yes, he has a very typical "Copenhagen/ English accent" 😁Many Danes make the same little mistakes when pronouncing English (and other languages). Too soft consonants, too flat vowels, too monotonous intonation, an 'R' sound that often doesn't quite fit. An example of the latter is the word "very", which many Danes pronounce as "væ-i" (ie with a silent R). Some sound like they have a potato in their mouth, some say?

  • @gianfrancobenetti-longhini8192

    Have found this very interesting, as from my DNA, it confirms what has been passed down by our elders that we are the survivors of the Danish tribes (Kimbern or Cimbri, Teutonen and Ambronen) that left Jutland 120 BC, due to too much rain for several years, that ruined the crops. The Cimbri were defeated at Vercelli by the Romans and sought shelter in the Alps north of Venice. My Italianized surname Longhini came from the families living in the valley honoring the deity Longino (?).

  • @rooo9802
    @rooo9802 2 роки тому +3

    Excellent lecture. Wonderful.

  • @yesid17
    @yesid17 2 роки тому +4

    great video thank you!

  • @AdamArmstrong
    @AdamArmstrong Рік тому +1

    "come with me across the bearing straight if you want to live"

  • @marckristensen946
    @marckristensen946 5 місяців тому

    Haha, man kunne lige høre blandt det engelske: "som, øhhhh". Du er for fed, Eske 😀

  • @SusanLS08
    @SusanLS08 2 роки тому +3

    Very interesting.

  • @davidwilkie9551
    @davidwilkie9551 2 роки тому +1

    Very interesting
    Studying the basic time-timing sync-duration sequence codes of real-time re-evolution, aka Genetics, complicated and messy, also extremely important to our Being.

  • @silentone11111111
    @silentone11111111 Рік тому +2

    Great vid 😀

  • @APsupportsTerrorism
    @APsupportsTerrorism 2 роки тому +2

    The Younger Dryas likely being triggered by an impact is probably what made that glacial and final warming period different.
    Before it was just cold-warm-cold-warm and the vegetation survived those cycles. However, the vegetation didn't survive the impact and the resulting mini ice age.

  • @garyliu6589
    @garyliu6589 Рік тому

    The fosils across the 200ky time range, where the genomes comparison were obtained, are they of the same species? Is the out of Africa theory concluded by comparing genome of different human species, or by comparing modern human to ancient ape? Given the same result, will you still draw the same conclusion if the comparison is made to, say, a fish, instead of an ape? The out of africa conclusion is it not based on senseless comparison?

  • @marylamb1407
    @marylamb1407 Рік тому

    So in one of Eske's videos he tell of the DNA of a thirty-seven thousand year old man and that it is almost exactly the same as modern Europeans, that sounds like a race to me. I think Eske is being politically correct and not actually scientific in the last minutes of this video.

    • @ishrendon6435
      @ishrendon6435 Рік тому

      Race isnt an actual biological reality. Theyre humans

    • @jenspeterjensen-rb3gp
      @jenspeterjensen-rb3gp 7 місяців тому +1

      Eske Willerslevs største lidenskab er efter min mening at finde sandheden i historien, så den virkelig hænger sammen. Det er i min optik det bærende element.