For anyone looking for the important parts of the video: <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="184">3:04</a> - Alcoholic Cat <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="275">4:35</a> - Taking notes on the laptop <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="317">5:17</a> - Scanning the terrain <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="398">6:38</a> - Unjustly held against their will <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="470">7:50</a> - Escaped from arm jail <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="1362">22:42</a> - Curious about the cabinet of curios <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="1485">24:45</a> - Extremely graceful descent from the cabinet <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="2564">42:44</a> - Returned to captivity There's also some stuff about some underwater stuff in there, kindof annoying how youtubers pad their run time with irrelevant stuff.
I was really hoping for a Doggerland video. I fell down a really deep rabbit hole at one point after listening to Santiano and I gotta tell you this shit is interesting af
We'll give them back at some point. I swear...maybe...probably. I mean all this stuff is really old, you don't really need it back do you? I'm sure you've got cooler newer stuff so....
when people ask "where you would go if you had a timemachine", i always answer "i would love to walk in the lost forest of doggerland". thank you so much for making a video about it! that place always fascinated me and i'm so glad you're doing it justice.
@lunaverse4977 Those of us who need to earn wages to live, sadly. You must be a lucky one not needing to worry over such things! Edited to add ~ Or you can still function on little sleep? I'm guessing that one, right? I'm too old to be able to do that nowadays. Learning will have to wait until after work tomorrow. 😴
You're missing an important difference between tundra and steppe. The former does not thaw, and so plants cannot punch their roots through the permafrost so only algae, lichen, and fungi thrive. The latter allows for grasses and trees as they can set down roots.
Also from the netherlands , and the energy company TenneT presented a plan for creating a island on the doggerbank in 2016. The project name is the North Sea Wind Power Hub the artificial island would have power storage units to store surplus wind energy from the surrounding windparks, and be connected to the Scottish English Dutch Danish and german electrical grids.
Such a big project would be a great opportunity for archaeologists to investigate too. If they're already sending people out and digging around, may as well kill two birds with one stone!
I am a new subscriber and listen to you all day everyday at work. Your long form content is the perfect thing for me to zone out to while doing my monotonous daily tasks. I thank you sir.
In case anyone was driven crazy (like me) at not being able to read the quote on his fireplace, it says: Old wood to burn, old books to read, old friends to trust. Based on a quote by British philosopher and statesman Francis Bacon. The more you know!
I cannot stress enough how important the Miniminuteman team has been, is, and shall be for the quality of content on this platform. This episode is wonderfully written, hilariously edited, Excellently cited and importantly it had a cat in it & Milo called em a little baby-man, man. 110%, A+. Also the topic is fascinating and you can tell from the passion & diligence that the creators don't just think so, they Know so too. and really man when the cat did that little prrw I was all like, "aAWWw🥹😂🥹, little baby man!", man. Thousand outta ten Channel.
What does "dogging" mean elsewhere? I've only ever heard it used in the US to describe the action of a person or animal following you very closely or right at your heels.
Man i love lost contenints/landmasses, like the thought of an area almost entirely lost to time is so cool, and its amazing to hear about the ones that actually once existed
While I do get a chuckle out of the running gag of your freezing cold filming studio it is really nice to see this background come together and that natural light is to die for!
Milo doing a video on Doggerland, one of the Pleistocene cradles of Homo sapiens? A place that, now even submerged for millenia, likely holds a wealth of artifacts, sites, and knowledge? Though the rest has been worn away by the water? Perfection.
I've been running through your videos since seeing you on the bridges podcast and I was just super impressed. Your videos are fantastic and super accessible. My 11 year old daughter came into the room while I was watching this and she was super interested and asking questions. I'll be watching everything I see from you from this point out
Hey man I just wanna say thank you i never got to finish school (also didn't learn proper grammar in sorry) and I never understood anything or found it easy to learn anything but since I stumbled across you I've been really interested since I love your humour and jokes and seriousness but mostly I love your passion about the things you talk about I've learned so much from you it hasn't always stuck I don't know why but I enjoy it though I think if I had you as a teacher you wouldve helped me and if maybe be able to learn easier because the way you explain things is awesome and it's really interesting I also have to add I'm British (love your jokes on us btw) and I actually have never ever heard about any of this ever this is the first time I've heard about doggerland until I saw your short on it so thanks for that too it's really interesting but I'm happy you love what you do because people like me can come learn be entertained at the same time and also look forward to the next video so again thank you love you and your content keep up the amazing work you and your team do! stay curious
if you didn't understand or find it easy to learn, my dear that's on your teachers not you! You are quite obviously smart and capable of learning .. with even a desire to do so ... Please do not think that is on you. You did not fail. You were failed. And yes Milo is a great teacher!
RU-vid has a lot of explainer-channels. There is a lot of cool stuff to learn here. I hope you can find your own way to acquiring knowledge, even if you were not sucessful in school. Good luck! :)
I didn't finish school either, dropped out in high school, lots of family and ppl ik dropped out in elementary, plenty of people don't finish school, nothing to be ashamed of. And trust me they never rlly teach this in school anyway until you get up to a post secondary I would imagine, I finished history at a grade 12 level a few years early before I dropped out and we never learned anything this cool.
Hey dude! I was told throughout my entire high-school experience that I would never excel at science and math. It kept me away from anything remotely related to those fields for years. As a dog trainer, I discovered behavior science and that opened the door for me to expand my knowledge of other sciences. It's never too late. The fault lies with bad teachers and schools, not with you!
I love the hurdy gurdy transition music, very atmospheric. Excellent video altogether, very informative and your presentation is very compelling. Thank you History With Kayleigh for a great collab!
You can still find the vestiges of Doggerland in East Anglia! In some Norfolk villages (such as Bunwell or Winfarthing), there are quite a few native Doggers around. If you drive around late at night, you might just come across some of their unique cultural behaviours being practised in the flesh. I am sure the same can be said for parts of Suffolk, too.
Thank you for covering this topic. I live in Northern Germany(Schleswig-Holstein), so Doggerland would be an hour drive away ;-) I think fishing nets were kinda cashin´ up some arrowheads and burnt coal from campfires, so it was discovered... I really enjoy your content! Keep on, Milo!
Guten Abend! I'm in North East Britland, on the other side of the sea. Right on the 'border' of Doggerland, as it were. Can see the sea from my window.
@@stickiedmin6508 I was on vacation in Chester-Le-Street in 2018 for two weeks and we paid a visit to Bamburgh Castle(at the sea). I loved the landscape/scenery. Rollercoaster Roads the more north we went ;-) Also visited Alnwick Castle, so cool. I saw the Angel of the North(soo fugly...sorry, but...LOL...innit?!?!!! And I wanna come back to hike the whole of Hadrian's Wall, starting at Wallsend. It's fascinating and interesting to me, that if there weren't some (more😉) drops of water between us, there could be just inhabited land, but hey, otherwise you wouldn't have your Brexit, right? Sorry again, I'm just joking. Nice evening to you ✌🏻
@@gorfrob9514 Pretty close to me. I live in Seaham, on the Durham coast. Apparently, we're quite famous now, for our sea-glass. A hundred or so years ago, there was a bottleworks (making glass bottles) right next to the town harbour. While it still existed, any stuff that got broken, or was defective in some way, would just get dumped in the sea. Tons, and tons of glass over the years, all different colours. As a result, little, rough glass pebbles have been washing up on to the local beaches ever since. I grew up here, but didn't realise that our beach was at all special because of it - I thought _all_ beaches were like that. Oh, Lord Byron lived here for a brief while too. He got married here to Lady Milbanke, whose family were heavily involved in digging the first local coal mines, building the harbour and the town that grew around them. He absolutely despised the place, which is quite ironic given that the local council have been naming streets, buildings and shopping centres after him ever since. The Byrons' daughter, Ada Lovelace was also a famous mathematician who worked closely with Charles Babbage - inventor of one of the very first mechanical computers. The Angel grows on you. I hated it at first, but got to be really fond of it eventually. I went to university in Newcastle, living there for about ten years. It felt like The Angel was standing guard over the city, arms out, holding back all the southerners and keeping them away. If I'd been away for any reason, The Angel was one of the first landmarks I'd see on my way back that let me know I was home. I'd imagine it was saying, "It's okay Stickie! Get behind me, quick! They won't get past me."
This is my absolute favorite archeological topic and it's sad that it's not more widely discussed. It's so fascinating, I'm so glad you're talking about it
For people wondering why it was called doggerland, the areas of sea around Britain are all named (to allow people to reference them more specifically than just 'the sea', mostly used for things like weather forecasts nowadays) and the one next to Norfolk which Doggerland is under is called Dogger.
Great video, just a correction on the Ouse river from someone from Bedfordshire where the Ouse passes through, it’s actually called the Great Ouse and is pronounced as ooze as in something oozing.
Fabulous video and felt relevant to me as I live in East Yorkshire in a town next to the river Ouse about 50 miles from the coast and the mouth of the Ouse, which of course wouldn’t have been a river mouth at all in Doggerland times. fascinating! It’s funny the town I’m from has a Marsh and makes me think that the marshland you described, must have extended from Doggerland, in land to our Marsh in a little town in England!
Unfortunately wrong river Ouse. From checking a few of the maps of doggerland the river Ouse mentioned is the river Great Ouse down in East Anglia (Funnily enough which runs by where I'm from). Although the proposed route of the river Great Ouse through doggerland does have it running north up to the Norwegian trench and one of the proposed tributaries is the modern Humber. So through this and considering the humber wouldn't have been the modern estuary (plus river naming convension of longest river keeps its name. The Humber would have just been the River Ouse (Yorkshire) with the Trent as an tributary, and it would have then flowed into the River Great Ouse.
Can't wait for this, i find sunken landmasses that humans used for generations fascinating. Like how parts of Alexandria are underwater, or in the case of Port Royal completely underwater intact
@@Geheimnis-c2e looked it up I believe it is port Royal! The earthquake caused the city to go underwater & apparently of you dive there a majority of the city is literally just sitting there chilling. Updated my og comment to reflect it's oort royal
Hey Milo! I just want to say I recently found your channel and I really connected with it! It was so cool hearing mentions of blue hill cus that’s my home town lol. I’ve already watched everything twice and just want to say keep up the good work and it cool how excited about the topics you are
Hey, I just caught the final couple seconds of the premier! Great success! And it's about Doggerland, which I love and live very close to, and often see specimens of! Even Greater Success YAY :D!
I have to praise you and your team Milo. Your videos have been getting better and better. Not only the content, but the visuals and pacing as well. I'm glad to have been here to see your channel grow for as long as I have. I have learned more about archeology from you and 90s national geographic, than I did in school. Please keep up the great work, and pass along my love to your team as well.
I never got a chance to study history and archaeology formally in school, only in my own research. I absolutely love that I am still able to learn about it from someone so passionate about it. I appreciate you Milo for allowing me and others to continue to engage with this core part of our humanity. Cheers 🍻
Your set is looking really good. Things are coming together very well. You are doing a great job and I love how you seem to really love what you do and the passion you have for knowledge
I live in Norfolk and have visited the dune woodlands many times but had no idea of their connection to Doggerland or tbh about the Doggerlands at all, thank you for teaching me about the history of my local area, its truly wonderful to learn more :)
Bro this is top tier. The subject matter with visuals, the delivery, the backdrop, the cat, the jokes, and superb editing (the tiny music bits had me rolling lol)
As someone who used to go to Norfolk at least once a year and would wander along the coast, finding out about Doggerland absolutely fascinated me and I was really happy to learn more about it. Thanks Milo, keep up the good work.
I would love it if you were able to do a video about Iron Age Wales, I’ve grown up surrounded by the hillforts in the Black Mountains and constant references to Roman and pre-Roman archaeological sites but never been able to find much information on them
Particularly, the part that always fascinated me was something I heard mentioned at one point which was how people actually left the valleys and returned to and reoccupied the hillforts after the romans left
Uuuh, just Imagine how many tribes of our ancestors might have lived there and Imagine how much ancient stuff you could find! Maybe some plants or animals that only lived in that region? How possible is that? Im rarely this exited about a history lesson.
Keep doing what you’re doing. I have learned so much from you and I am old and worldly. Whenever you release a video, I get ready to have my world view changed.
Maybe the story of Doggerland had a generational warping into the story into Atlantis? Also love your vids, they’re great and I look forward to watching a repost your lecture because I can’t pause my schoolwork to go out there, no matter how much I want to.
I live on the north east coast of England. My town has a petrified forest right underneath the beach, if we have a particularly bad storm it gets uncovered and it looks amazing
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="1332">22:12</a> AI pictures for sabertooth. Cmon Milo, you're better than that. Great vid regardless, but let's be careful of AI content, especially in scientific communication.
I mean… to give him the benefit of the doubt, he might not have realised they were AI? Since he sites were he got the images from in the bottom left hand corner and they aren’t from AI image generation software.
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="1332">22:12</a> I know they're separate entries, but following sabertooth tigers with horses made me think of them as sabertooth horses which is mildly terrifying.
I've been fascinated by Doggerland ever since National Geographic covered it years ago. This video was both informative and evocative. Plus, the Shminky interludes and outro. Top tier.
I genuinely enjoy your content Milo. You make archaeology actually interesting and fun. And are helping to teach critically important and yet disastrously not well taught history on our planet That is to say geological history is a subject not well taught below a certain education level. Your funny. Cool and keep it interesting even when you have to go on an extended rant or in depth talk on any given subject. You genuinely have a gift for teaching and I like to show your videos to friends and family. Even my father finds your videos interesting. Keep up the fantastic work man
When i was in film college we had to make a documentary about something, and I chose doggerland as I live on the east side of England and found it fascinating. I'm so glad that most of my reaserch I found back then was brought up here cause it confirms I did it right, especially the storrega slide! Brilliant video as allways