How Doggerland Sank Beneath The Waves (500,000-4000 BC) // Prehistoric Europe Documentary

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Published 2020-01-26
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A selected reading list:-
- Neolithic Britain, Keith Ray
- Britain BC, Francis Pryor
- Britain Begins, Barry Cunliffe
- Europe Between The Oceans, Barry Cunliffe
- A History of Ancient Britain, Neil Oliver
- Mapping Doggerland, Vincent Gaffen
- The Remembered Land, Jim Leary
- After The Ice, Steven Mithen
- Chris Scarre, The Human Past

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- Weston Park Museum, Sheffield
- The Natural History Museum, London
- The British Museum, London
- Derby Museum & Art Gallery, Derby
- Hull & East Riding Museum, Hull

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All Comments (21)
  • @HistoryTime
    So here we go, the first video of 2020. Ancient Europe is a fascinating subject to delve into. Many more to come on a huge variety of eras. What ancient/ prehistory topics would you like to see me tackle in the future? Please like, subscribe and share with a like minded friend if you enjoyed the video, and i'll see you on the next one! Right, back to work. Watch my latest full length history documentary:- https://youtu.be/c3Hq6UaFQqk
  • Leads you to wonder how much history is under the waves that we have no idea about
  • @billsmith3042
    Cave kid: mommy look at the deer antler mask I made! Cave mom: that's cute sweetie! Archaeologist: the anthropological significance of this artifact may be indicative of emerging pre-religious ritualistic tendencies with zoomorphic features.
  • Who else would feel Uneasy about going to sea in a boat called "The colander"?
  • @vangelderresike
    In the Netherlands we find relics from the iceage daily. De zandmotor and the Tweede Maasvlakte are made with sand from the North sea floor. As the tide comes and goes it reveals bones from mammoth, rhino, horses, megaloceros, and even Neanderthal and human tools . Also the fishermen find amazing relics in their nets. I cannot describe how much it fascinates me.
  • @weefeatures
    Interestingly, descendants of the Dogger people still exist in the UK. They inhabit carparks late at night.
  • @mjd3381
    As an American, yes, I mourn that we never learned of this rich and complicated history. It is so valuable to know the prehistoric history of Europe. It is our history as well.
  • Brilliant documentary thank you. I come from the village where the Creswell horse head was found, Creswell Crags is an amazing place with a lovely little museum with plenty of other amazing finds. You can go on guided tours into the caves to see the rock art first hand. We're not exactly in the Peak District we're about 20 odd miles away but definitely worth a visit.
  • @TheDejael
    I have long identified Doggerland with the legendary Hyperborea, naturally inclusive of Scandinavia. I first became aware of Doggerland as a boy in the 1950s, from an interesting Popular Science magazine article by, or about, archaeologist Dr. Jurgen Spanuth, who went diving in an old-style diving suit off the coast of Heligoland. In the North Sea. In the late 1940s, where he followed an ancient stone wall out to sea underwater to a bridge, gate and roadway, to ruins of ancient stone buildings. He had discovered an ancient stone village or town. He said the locals called the submerged remains Doggerland.
  • @brianlanning836
    You named your boat "Colander"? Yes. Her sister ships "Strainer" and "Sieve" both sank on their maiden voyages. We're hoping for better luck this time.
  • @rebellion2054
    I would worry if I were aboard a boat named ‘The Colander’
  • @caezar55
    One of the best documentaries on YouTube. A topic like this could easily be very dry, scientific and full of facts and dates - you have managed brilliantly to make it mystical and fascinating. Well done!
  • @bigjavo36
    Doggerland is such a fascinating thing to me. Just knowing that it was inhabited by humans. It fills my head with ideas of what ancient people lived there and what culture myth and history is buried there.
  • @nickymcneil8544
    A museum in hull has a small carving of a boat with peg like people in it, they say it's from doggerland, it's fascinating!
  • Plato: So Atlantis was the great landmass lost to the sea. Doggerland: Hold my beer.
  • @hedgehog3180
    There's something poetic about the three major country defining rivers of the Rhine, the Seine and the Thames running into the same river. These rivers have been vital in shaping some of the biggest European countries and they used to unite.
  • @LucyKosaki
    Wow, I didn't even realize this wasn't a professional tv documentary until the end. You are amazing!