I'm an artist and art teacher and I am so stunned and impressed with Victor Ambrus's work. He adds a personal quality to each episode that really brings the archaeology to life.
Can I just give a special shoutout for Victor Ambrus. I mean I love each and every member of the team but I feel like Victor is an unsung hero worthy of more accolades. Finding, and explaining what is found, is one thing. But putting those things into a perspective (drawings and sketches) that are easily understandable to the lay person is quite a skill in its own right.
It's impossible not to like these people and to want to spend time with them. I was fortunate enough to work with folks like them, and Tony sometimes remind me of my last boss. Always makes me smile. Lucky me. Lucky Time Team. Lucky us Time Team fans.
I say it hat cost her few pounds ☺no more professor Mick Aston he decided this head to after life with plenty grave goods☺ hello from royal hill Tara county Meath Ireland☺
Phil is a magnificent throwback to how I pictured archeologists growing up. Looking impeturbable while working in all kinds of weather for hours and then suddenly getting 20 shades of excited over something that could turn out to be....nothing. Broke the mold with him.
Thanks so much, Reijer, for taking the time to upload these videos. I am an anthropologist in the US, with a background in archaeology, but I had never heard of Time Team until I discovered your channel. I tell people about it all the time. You have done a great deal in educating people about history by sharing these!
***** I myself appreciate Euro-centric archeology as much as anyone but thought I'd point out that a few of these "injun" sites as you refer to them are over 13,000 years old. For example here in Texas: "Thousands of artifacts dating to between 13,200 and 15,500 years ago were uncovered by researchers led by Michael R. Waters of Texas A&M University. They report the discovery in Friday's edition of the journal Science. The find was located 5 feet below materials left by the well-known Clovis culture, which was once thought to have been the first American settlers around 13,000 years ago. It was "like finding the Holy Grail," Waters said in a telephone interview. To find what appears to be a large open-air campsite "is really gratifying. Lucky and gratifying." The trove of 15,528 artifacts, including chipping debris from working stones and 56 tools such as blades, scrapers and choppers, was found in the Buttermilk Creek complex near Austin." Tool making 13,000 to 15,000 years ago...seems like Archeology to me.
Reijer Zaaijer; I am slowly working my way through your TT channel. I thought it was time to say Thank You for your efforts. I became aware of TT well after it went off the air. I enjoy your work and theirs.
I apparently am the only viewer that likes everyone on the team. Thanks for posting these videos, I used to watch them all the time but since moving to the US have mixed my Time Team fix.
watching these on youtube, in any particular order, gives a different bond to the team as opposed to people who got used to a variation of the team over several years. I personally have no idea of the time-line of the team. To me, they just appear as guest stars, rather than someone having been replaced by someone else. It's my belief that the complainers are mostly trashing the newer members for taking the place of their favorites.
Just imagine what one season's digging would do to your knees - but these pros do it for decades!! They dig in all sorts of weather and field conditions. I am awestruck!
Not just the knees. It does not do your back any favors. Takes some pretty tough people to do that kind of work for years. They work through the pain because they love archaeology.
Each time Tony's yells "Phil!" I think of "Phil? Phil Connors?" from Groundhog Day and each time he yells "Francis!" I think of Henry IV. "Anon, anon, sir!" :)
@@Wppk765 I read somewhere that little old lady fans made him things. I love the little Mick voodoo dolls with sweater and specs, I think. Saw it twice.
I thank you also and believe that it took you 6-7 or more weeks. The first thing I do is look your post up and open a tab with each location, just for fun.
I just went to google maps comparing at 32.50, and found it. Its pretty cool to see it actually exist, and as it is when ever the pic was taken. The google terrain map is amazing, there are features everwhere it must make the archaeologists crazy over there with things to dig.
I am from Eastern Europe and mud houses are build even today on countryside. They look like regular houses after they are painted. Mud bricks are used. They have menure and straw and they are poored into rectangular shapes and let to dry . So it is obvious that in that area that was the material of choiche
From yours and other comments I gather that Sir Tony was in this 'Baldrick/Blackadder' film/films/TV series. I am not British, so will somebody please tell me whether I can still see Baldrick?
@@corneliawissing7950 Wikipedia will tell you how many series and episodes were made. If you search here on TH-cam for Black Adder series there are lists of what is available to view.
@@richardphillips6281 Thank you, Sir. I've come to the conclusion that I must have been born stupid. I did all you've just said, found ep. 1, struggled to make out a single word and gave up.
@@corneliawissing7950 I'm sorry to hear that. I only looked briefly myself until I realised I don't find Black Adder funny anymore so I will concentrate on Time Team now.
Holderness was featured in the Sherlock Holmes mystery of 'The Priory School'. The Duke of Holderness' son was abducted. I wonder if Sir Arthur Conan Doyle knew the region when he wrote the story?
Just a quick shout out for some help from across the pond. I've been bingeing on Time Team and this is the first I've heard of a published guide. Are such guides still available? Haven't had luck over here. Help?
The handle could be for a lid. Bear with me. Making bread let’s says and wanna flip it or something u have a pan u can put on top flip them over now another pan perfect under again
What, no chatter on the Skipsea Ghost? She's been around for quite some time. Everybody's getting jazzy about Phil's fingernails, but no one's mentioned the poor wife of the famous Drogo, who fled back to Flanders because he was the cause of her death.
That wind reminds me of the Isle of Lewis. Lewis is the gaelic word for wind. The name is program over there. I almost got blown off a cliff but found a bouquet of giant seagull feather in all hues.
Victor gave time team film that extra...without it the program would have not been as popular. Each member eaked with cooperative personalities..rare in a group...but then again they all kinda knew one another by previous associations
Does anybody remember the 'Risen Hill or Ridge' Episode about Railway Navvy's? Is that still on here, I have looked but can't find it. Thanks in hesitation of a find..miss this show.
I have a good time counting comments about the competency of the men on the team vs. the looks or "tone" of the women on the team (who have a far higher class of man than you tube incels to choose from, btw.) I have a dream that one day women will be judged by what they can do.
Interesting to see this area. An ancestor of mine came to Virginia in 1620 as an indentured servant. He was born in Brandesburton, not far from this area.
In the Middle Ages they would have buried items that were used for religious purposes when they became unsuitable for use. My theory is the salt they made was used for blessed salt, and so they couldn’t reuse the lead for profane purposes. I don’t buy that someone hid it for finding later and never came back.
In Southern CA, the Indians were Hunters and Gatherers. They ground acorns with rocks and boulders; went to the seashore for fish, the inland and mountains for game. The Spanish came in 18th and 19th century. We're not talking Roman times. In Northern California, the Indians had more to sustain them and settlements more advanced. The Spanish went to the South and Japanese and Russians came to the North for Whales mostly. The Russians even have a fort remaining in Northern CA. But we are not speaking of the depth of time found in Great Britain.
I was born and raised in California and she is right. It was a bit of a trek for the southern CA indians from the beach to the games fields of the hills but in the north the hills and forests came right down to the beach. The Russian fort, Fort Bragg, is a big part of the central north coast. There is a couple of ladies in Ft Bragg that sell the best mustard you will ever taste, and yes they ship. :-)
I wondered that too. I even got my modern skillet, which actually has a thumb dent, and I can't see that it makes any difference. Shame. I would have loved us to be proved right!
I wonder if it's not a case of some one making a thing fit our understanding. Maybe it only seems to be upside down. Maybe it's a jug handle right side up. Or maybe it's something else entirely.
www.google.com/maps/@53.9695243,-0.2104629,218m/data=!3m1!1e3 This is the google map of the area. What in the heck is that thing in the field above. It looks like the front of a building or wall with towers at either end. OMG i need therapy.
Depending on size of trench. Some were to drain the rain away from the roof & away from living quarters and others were to keep animals away or inclosed
Surprise, surprise. All the experts are out in the heavy wind working hard while Tony sits snugly in the car having a tea party for one and portraying the professionals as squabbling children. Typical Tony.
@@barbmcconnaughey3070 thanks Barb. Should we tell everyone to look at his 33 yr old Mr. Torso shot? Look up Phil Harding Axe Man....stay safe from the zombie apocalypse virus...
I have worked on firing pottery kilns. The colour of the pottery depends largely on how much oxygen reached the pottery during firing. Lots of air=red; lack of air = grey/brown, and sometimes firing in bonfires instead of kilns (like the famous Dorset Black Burnished ware from Roman times) extra smoke and soot makes the pottery black. Basically, chemically reduced iron in the pottery makes it grey, oxidised iron makes it red. If firing in a kiln, you can control the amount of air getting in by how high you build the fire in the kiln mouth(s).This also affects the colour of glaze: lots of air, red / yellow glaze, little air, green glaze. Post medieval pottery (17th century on) often has added elements in the slip to make colours: cobalt for bright blue, manganese for brown or purple and so on.Hope this helps.
careful what you wish for ... flipping off a person who cut you off and you smartassly answer back blow me ... then you get to work outside in almost gale force winds ... lol kind of self serving karma ;)
Dear oh dear oh dear. Is there no depths to your shallows? Do you even bother to learn before posting idiotic comments? I will leave it to Joseph to explain.
@@hogwashmcturnip8930 You sound that trade unionist with Paul Eddington in Yes, Minister or PM. Can't remember which. God, anyone who has ever worked for any government/beauracracy would appreciate that Solihull Hospital CS gravy train bit, as least for the Chief Siphoners.
@@eboracum2012 It was in reply to the Oh So Tiresome comment about Phil's nails I wonder if these people apply themselves to the Real issues of the day with such diligence as they do to a bloke's fingernails?.
23:00 Tony- 'He wants to talk to the farmer who used to plough Francis's field' Stuart-"How deep did you plough it" Farmer "about nine inches".I bet you did mate. All in a supposedly educational program. sickening.
雷電 calling a legitimate, contextual query a joke is one thing, calling that joke “sickening” is quite another. What does calling it sickening say about Dorian? He’s the one who saw the joke as sickening after all. 🤷🏻♂️
Dorian Leakey: If you are a linguist or a cryptographer then you might use these dialogue specimens in your next discourse analysis lecture! Otherwise, it's probably not anything, about which you need to get hot under the collar in any way, so why the fuss?...
Yet another one making himself look an idiot. 8-9 inches is recommended for heavy soil. So if this gonk thinks it is some sort of double entendre he is saying more about himself than the people in the show.
Other folks have answered to this remark. Here is one more. If you watch TT alot you'll learn about each of them. Phil plays alot of guitar and uses his nails instead of a pick. You'll see him playing in some episodes. He has a very nice touch. Ciao
@@maeve4686 It's the Shallow Brigade. Don't see past someone's appearance and can't be bothered to read comments or learn about anyone or anything, so they make themselves look like dorks! I wish I had a euro for every time some gonk mentions Phil's nails ot his hat or his shorts. The fact that the guy is not only a master of his trade a Dr with numerous qualifications , but can drive a digger, play guitar, flint knap, founded an organisation to retrain military veterans as archeaologists doesn't matter. He has long nails! (facepalm) I am so glad that I don't know them! They must be the dullest creatures on earth!
@@hogwashmcturnip8930 Thanks for your message. Drives me crazy as well. In the USA we call them snowflakes . Little substance and their ideals melt instantly. Dirty nails? I figured they have deep internal problems from childhood they're not dealing with. Cheers from the Redwoods in California...
@@maeve4686 De Nada! Hi from a Brit in Spain! And I agree, they do seem to have issues. They missed the fact that the person with short nails actually had loads of dirt under there? lol. But that isn't the point, the issue is that they make it one! Neither of these people are cooking my meal or operating on me; they are digging a Trench! Ergo they are going to have dirt around? So if Phil needs long nails for other things like playing guitar who the hell cares. Except 'Snowflakes??
@@hogwashmcturnip8930 Snowflakes. Here, everyone is entitled to be offended. Those who find fault at the most minute of ,well, anything and are so troubled and terrified by anything from a dog barking at noon to someone thinking that keeping a bird in a cage are tantamount to WW3 are snowflakes. I personally am not a snowflake tho someone called me a " bitter old cat lady" after I expressed my opinion that not all women need to be married to find success with their life. LOL...Tho I am a bit of a nutter....
Carenza. If you're going to insult her intelligence, ability and hard work in getting thru British professional sexism, spell her name right. Hope you don't have female children.
If you’re speaking of Phil, he’s a classical guitarist, and that’s his picking hand. His other hand has short nails, because that’s his fret hand. If you’re speaking about anyone else, I can’t say, but speaking from personal experience, short nails are harder to clean dirt from than longer nails.
@@agresticumbra Well said. Not only about Phil, but about nails. Short nails seem to harbour filth, whereas longer ones do not. Also if they do you can clean them very easily with a toothpick! Do these parrots never read other comments or learn about the people that they are commentng on?
@@ianrutherford878 Are you English? If so you ought to know him. he's famous for playing Baldrick in Blackadder. He is now Sir Anthony Robinson. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tony_Robinson#Early_career
I'm an artist and art teacher and I am so stunned and impressed with Victor Ambrus's work. He adds a personal quality to each episode that really brings the archaeology to life.
If you are a natural...You should know the answer why...clue I gave the answer
It always seems to me like he’s channeling the energies of the past.
It’s an interesting story how Tony found him.
I miss him, he isnt in any of the later episodes
@@Justforfun-wq7mr
Please tell us the story of that 'founding', if you have time?
Can I just give a special shoutout for Victor Ambrus. I mean I love each and every member of the team but I feel like Victor is an unsung hero worthy of more accolades. Finding, and explaining what is found, is one thing. But putting those things into a perspective (drawings and sketches) that are easily understandable to the lay person is quite a skill in its own right.
I couldn't agree more. His illustrations are brilliant.
@@marthareis5873 Fully agree!
Mick just tickles my heart. So sad we lost him, but so glad he initiated this for TV
Did you notice? Since it's too cold for his striped sweater, he's wearing a striped hat!
It's impossible not to like these people and to want to spend time with them. I was fortunate enough to work with folks like them, and Tony sometimes remind me of my last boss. Always makes me smile. Lucky me. Lucky Time Team. Lucky us Time Team fans.
Excellent, Francis Davis's commitment and personal investment in the investigation of her fields paid off handsomely for us all.
I appreciate this channel more and more during my times of greater anxiety and insomnia. Its a real crutch.
I hear you. Going on 2 days this time.
@@eboracum2012 , A great help during lockdown, too.
What a great episode! I swear, Time Team is keeping me alive during the pandemic.
She paid for the first geophyz! I'm applauding, a few people really have a passion for archeology!
I say it hat cost her few pounds ☺no more professor Mick Aston he decided this head to after life with plenty grave goods☺ hello from royal hill Tara county Meath Ireland☺
First time I have heard that.
Phil is a magnificent throwback to how I pictured archeologists growing up.
Looking impeturbable while
working in all kinds of weather for hours and then suddenly getting 20 shades of excited over something that could turn out to be....nothing.
Broke the mold with him.
Funny I thought they'd look like Indy😊
Thanks so much, Reijer, for taking the time to upload these videos. I am an anthropologist in the US, with a background in archaeology, but I had never heard of Time Team until I discovered your channel. I tell people about it all the time. You have done a great deal in educating people about history by sharing these!
Time team has been an important part of my life for 20 years. The stuff should be on here officially. For the good of humanity.
There are some time team America episodes too if you're interested.
***** I myself appreciate Euro-centric archeology as much as anyone but thought I'd point out that a few of these "injun" sites as you refer to them are over 13,000 years old. For example here in Texas:
"Thousands of artifacts dating to between 13,200 and 15,500 years ago were uncovered by researchers led by Michael R. Waters of Texas A&M University. They report the discovery in Friday's edition of the journal Science. The find was located 5 feet below materials left by the well-known Clovis culture, which was once thought to have been the first American settlers around 13,000 years ago. It was "like finding the Holy Grail," Waters said in a telephone interview. To find what appears to be a large open-air campsite "is really gratifying. Lucky and gratifying." The trove of 15,528 artifacts, including chipping debris from working stones and 56 tools such as blades, scrapers and choppers, was found in the Buttermilk Creek complex near Austin." Tool making 13,000 to 15,000 years ago...seems like Archeology to me.
CZ Gator Isn't it amazing how much better TV in the UK is than US television. They get Time Team, we get the stupidity of Jersey Shore.
+TheNormOne sigh...
Reijer Zaaijer; I am slowly working my way through your TT channel. I thought it was time to say Thank You for your efforts. I became aware of TT well after it went off the air. I enjoy your work and theirs.
Im viewing this bulk of TT now. Back in time for 20 years.. Reijer did a great job indeed!
@@berthiltanke8377 Hear, hear!
Thanks for posting.
It's amazing how Phil manages to keep his guitar nils despite all the digging, knapping, and experimental archeology he's involved with on the reg
Chips an cracks smooth out the sound yah know 😊
I apparently am the only viewer that likes everyone on the team. Thanks for posting these videos, I used to watch them all the time but since moving to the US have mixed my Time Team fix.
I like them all as well
No, You are not alone. But I do use the bad comments to single out people I may not have noticed before.
I love them all, too! Each adds a different perspective.
watching these on youtube, in any particular order, gives a different bond to the team as opposed to people who got used to a variation of the team over several years.
I personally have no idea of the time-line of the team. To me, they just appear as guest stars, rather than someone having been replaced by someone else.
It's my belief that the complainers are mostly trashing the newer members for taking the place of their favorites.
@@janinealderete2633 As do I!
What a lovely homeowner. God bless.
if i lived there i would take up some sport kite flying.. take advantage of all the windy days. :) fun episode..
John seemed genuinely pleased that he "won" :)
Steward don't need to dig no stinkin' holes does he? And Francis is so sweet and genuine.
Just imagine what one season's digging would do to your knees - but these pros do it for decades!! They dig in all sorts of weather and field conditions. I am awestruck!
Not just the knees. It does not do your back any favors. Takes some pretty tough people to do that kind of work for years. They work through the pain because they love archaeology.
Aha, I know this area pretty well, especially the mere, as my Gran and a lot of my cousins lived in Hornsea.
"I'd be happy to eat out of that."
"I wouldn't if I were you."
This was great ty so much for sharing
Check out Prof. Aston's cap and mittens!!!! A man one can love.
One of the best TT episodes, in my opinion, and I've seen most of them.
I enjoy every time team
I love the fan ones. They make more of an effort in some cases.
Very interesting. We used to have a house here. Lots of fond memories
Each time Tony's yells "Phil!" I think of "Phil? Phil Connors?" from Groundhog Day and each time he yells "Francis!" I think of Henry IV. "Anon, anon, sir!" :)
They're so cute with their walkie-talkies. These days, those are like crank phones from the 1920s.
mick's hat is a joy to behold.
kachina flonk somebody in his family enjoyed knitting!
@@Wppk765 I read somewhere that little old lady fans made him things. I love the little Mick voodoo dolls with sweater and specs, I think. Saw it twice.
If he can't wear his striped sweater, he'll wear a striped hat.
Phill brings things to life
The building trench is here:
53°58'04.9"N 0°12'42.0"W
But there are intriguing crop marks in the fields to the north here:
53°58'14.2"N 0°12'38.5"W
thank you for the coordinates.
My pleasure. It took about 6-7 weeks but was worth it. I was working in Mexico at the time.
great job!
I thank you also and believe that it took you 6-7 or more weeks. The first thing I do is look your post up and open a tab with each location, just for fun.
Stannous Flouride is
I just went to google maps comparing at 32.50, and found it. Its pretty cool to see it actually exist, and as it is when ever the pic was taken. The google terrain map is amazing, there are features everwhere it must make the archaeologists crazy over there with things to dig.
Mom.l9
Tony: “Go on, tea break over”
Stewart: “But I didn’t get my tea!”
Tony: “It’s still over. “
A lot like life, huh?
❤
The minute they said "castle", I was all for dropping everything to go dig it up!
I am from Eastern Europe and mud houses are build even today on countryside. They look like regular houses after they are painted. Mud bricks are used. They have menure and straw and they are poored into rectangular shapes and let to dry . So it is obvious that in that area that was the material of choiche
Or just the available material.
great episode
Baldrick loves being the "boss" after Blackadder ran him around for 12 centuries.
From yours and other comments I gather that Sir Tony was in this 'Baldrick/Blackadder' film/films/TV series. I am not British, so will somebody please tell me whether I can still see Baldrick?
@@corneliawissing7950 Wikipedia will tell you how many series and episodes were made. If you search here on TH-cam for Black Adder series there are lists of what is available to view.
@@richardphillips6281 Thank you, Sir. I've come to the conclusion that I must have been born stupid. I did all you've just said, found ep. 1, struggled to make out a single word and gave up.
@@corneliawissing7950 I'm sorry to hear that. I only looked briefly myself until I realised I don't find Black Adder funny anymore so I will concentrate on Time Team now.
@@richardphillips6281 , You mean I've not gone deaf and imbecilic, but have grown up? Thank you!!!!!!!!
Lovely, this1 i have never seen before :)
thx for posting
Great episode
Francis has that tell-tale sign of the local accent.Elsewhere in Britain they say Thir-teen----she says Thirt-teen.
I believe Tony was flirting just a bit.
I just love the Hobbit references just jumped in my esteem Phil knew there was a reason I loved you
And Sir Tony quotes Chaucer and 'The wind in the willows'!!!!
@@corneliawissing7950And Sir Terry Pratchett's discworld.
@@deborahparham3783 YES! Books for a lifetime!
Holderness was featured in the Sherlock Holmes mystery of 'The Priory School'. The Duke of Holderness' son was abducted. I wonder if Sir Arthur Conan Doyle knew the region when he wrote the story?
As an (old) American, the ads at the end for "The Simpsons" on Channel 4 kill me..it was on at the exact same time in the States...
Yes, thank you Reijer.
Just a quick shout out for some help from across the pond. I've been bingeing on Time Team and this is the first I've heard of a published guide. Are such guides still available? Haven't had luck over here. Help?
This is one thing I like about TH-cam. There is no country boundaries well as far as i know?
channel4.com/shop or more likely, ebay uk.
The handle could be for a lid. Bear with me. Making bread let’s says and wanna flip it or something u have a pan u can put on top flip them over now another pan perfect under again
What, no chatter on the Skipsea Ghost? She's been around for quite some time. Everybody's getting jazzy about Phil's fingernails, but no one's mentioned the poor wife of the famous Drogo, who fled back to Flanders because he was the cause of her death.
The geophys layouts make for great 2 d or abstract black & white drawings
That wind reminds me of the Isle of Lewis. Lewis is the gaelic word for wind. The name is program over there. I almost got blown off a cliff but found a bouquet of giant seagull feather in all hues.
on my own doorstep ,the loveable mick
William the Conqueror is my relative. I'm Yank for the USA but I'm coming to claim my Throne.
TIN MAN , me too. I don’t want the throne, I just want to roam around. 😉
Victor gave time team film that extra...without it the program would have not been as popular.
Each member eaked with cooperative personalities..rare in a group...but then again they all kinda knew one another by previous associations
It's crazy that the coast can erode at 1m/yr!
Try I believe it's the dover episode where in 2 storms the lost a whole town 😮
Does anybody remember the 'Risen Hill or Ridge' Episode about Railway Navvy's? Is that still on here, I have looked but can't find it.
Thanks in hesitation of a find..miss this show.
www.unofficialtonyrobinsonwebsite.co.uk/pages/tt_2k9/risehill.html
That? season sixteen episode five. If i'm not mistaken.
THANKQ
Search, Blood Swaet and Beers. i think thats the correct title but may be wrong.
I have a good time counting comments about the competency of the men on the team vs. the looks or "tone" of the women on the team (who have a far higher class of man than you tube incels to choose from, btw.) I have a dream that one day women will be judged by what they can do.
Dream on girl but don't hold your breath. We have always had to work twice as hard but never get the credit for it.
I have a geek crush on racksha dave
me too...she seems fun and spirited digger !
but alas, she's married now.
And me
Interesting to see this area. An ancestor of mine came to Virginia in 1620 as an indentured servant. He was born in Brandesburton, not far from this area.
In the Middle Ages they would have buried items that were used for religious purposes when they became unsuitable for use. My theory is the salt they made was used for blessed salt, and so they couldn’t reuse the lead for profane purposes. I don’t buy that someone hid it for finding later and never came back.
that fry pan looking thing is a pot lid. look where the thumb print is
I live in boring California where there's almost nothing cool to dig up.
You should have neolithic american indian and Spanish colonial finds.
In Southern CA, the Indians were Hunters and Gatherers. They ground acorns with rocks and boulders; went to the seashore for fish, the inland and mountains for game. The Spanish came in 18th and 19th century. We're not talking Roman times. In Northern California, the Indians had more to sustain them and settlements more advanced. The Spanish went to the South and Japanese and Russians came to the North for Whales mostly. The Russians even have a fort remaining in Northern CA. But we are not speaking of the depth of time found in Great Britain.
+Peggy Jenkinson what the hell was that? And sorry but most of that information is incorrect.
I was born and raised in California and she is right. It was a bit of a trek for the southern CA indians from the beach to the games fields of the hills but in the north the hills and forests came right down to the beach. The Russian fort, Fort Bragg, is a big part of the central north coast. There is a couple of ladies in Ft Bragg that sell the best mustard you will ever taste, and yes they ship. :-)
Read the book the First Angelenos to get some idea of how ignorant you are.
Would that piece that he held in his hand be upside down if he was left-handed
Can't see why but if the leaded salt had cause genetic damage maybe someone had a thumb for a pinky.
I wondered that too. I even got my modern skillet, which actually has a thumb dent, and I can't see that it makes any difference. Shame. I would have loved us to be proved right!
I wonder if it's not a case of some one making a thing fit our understanding. Maybe it only seems to be upside down. Maybe it's a jug handle right side up. Or maybe it's something else entirely.
so they built houses with what in America would be called Adobe.
Much more sand Adobe, but close the earth type walls.
In America we call it you build it out of what?????
USA Washington!!!!!!😊
never heard so many lisping exsperts ever....love me some time team.
who has a lisp?
www.google.com/maps/@53.9695243,-0.2104629,218m/data=!3m1!1e3
This is the google map of the area. What in the heck is that thing in the field above. It looks like the front of a building or wall with towers at either end. OMG i need therapy.
May I suggest a dose of time team? Best therapy for me...
Has time team ever explained why people loved to dig ditches and trenches?
My guess it's using the land rather than buildings.
Depending on size of trench. Some were to drain the rain away from the roof & away from living quarters and others were to keep animals away or inclosed
Kind of weird in that TT has an audience of one.
thanks
Corona2020
Surprise, surprise. All the experts are out in the heavy wind working hard while Tony sits snugly in the car having a tea party for one and portraying the professionals as squabbling children. Typical Tony.
You would be where if your job was to be seen an heard.
AAARRRRGGGGHHHHH...Phil has long nails as he plays guitar and uses his NAILS instead of a PICK.
Leave the nail length alone
I just had an image of Phil clawing through a trench because he 'uses his nails as a pick' pop into my head. I am terrible, but it would be funny.
You tell ‘em, Maeve!
@@barbmcconnaughey3070 thanks Barb. Should we tell everyone to look at his 33 yr old Mr. Torso shot? Look up Phil Harding Axe Man....stay safe from the zombie apocalypse virus...
Maeve Scott naaah, let’s keep it under our hats. 😏
Maeve Scott have you watched this? th-cam.com/video/0WqTbfPCq-s/w-d-xo.html
so the glasses are mesolithic? they dont look that old!
Paradoxian GD 😆
Why are some pottery shards black and some red?
I have worked on firing pottery kilns. The colour of the pottery depends largely on how much oxygen reached the pottery during firing. Lots of air=red; lack of air = grey/brown, and sometimes firing in bonfires instead of kilns (like the famous Dorset Black Burnished ware from Roman times) extra smoke and soot makes the pottery black. Basically, chemically reduced iron in the pottery makes it grey, oxidised iron makes it red. If firing in a kiln, you can control the amount of air getting in by how high you build the fire in the kiln mouth(s).This also affects the colour of glaze: lots of air, red / yellow glaze, little air, green glaze. Post medieval pottery (17th century on) often has added elements in the slip to make colours: cobalt for bright blue, manganese for brown or purple and so on.Hope this helps.
@@vincerussett7922 Also where they came from? Different clays?
Roulette wheel?
32:35 What did he say?
I think it was "beauty, beauty, beauty."
I think it's "magic magic magic"
and we are still under the heel of the normans and there descendants now... :(
Just found out that my name is Norman, and I’m under everybody’s heel!
@alanrtment porter Silly comment. unless you happen to be an Old Etonian/ Robber Baron descendant?
I miss seeing Brigid in her tiny shirts! ;-P
I never realized how much she was a big part of the show
trousers hugging her hips and shirts revealing just a strip of her belly? She's always a sight to behold :)
38.35 What?
Answers the last question first... Yes, absolutely dying to open it, no, I haven't seen inside.... It's a Yorkshire thing..
careful what you wish for ... flipping off a person who cut you off and you smartassly answer back blow me ... then you get to work outside in almost gale force winds ... lol kind of self serving karma ;)
USA here, it probably will get you shot. Sorry just stick with the finger.
Or my preferred the wave😊
C
Phil's fingernails are revolting.
He plays the classical guitar - hence the long nails!
Dear oh dear oh dear. Is there no depths to your shallows? Do you even bother to learn before posting idiotic comments? I will leave it to Joseph to explain.
@@hogwashmcturnip8930 You sound that trade unionist with Paul Eddington in Yes, Minister or PM. Can't remember which. God, anyone who has ever worked for any government/beauracracy would appreciate that Solihull Hospital CS gravy train bit, as least for the Chief Siphoners.
@@eboracum2012 It was in reply to the Oh So Tiresome comment about Phil's nails I wonder if these people apply themselves to the Real issues of the day with such diligence as they do to a bloke's fingernails?.
@@hogwashmcturnip8930Again, BRAVO! Well said.
23:00 Tony- 'He wants to talk to the farmer who used to plough Francis's field' Stuart-"How deep did you plough it" Farmer "about nine inches".I bet you did mate.
All in a supposedly educational program. sickening.
You don't know much about plowing, do you? It's a legit question.
雷電 calling a legitimate, contextual query a joke is one thing, calling that joke “sickening” is quite another. What does calling it sickening say about Dorian? He’s the one who saw the joke as sickening after all. 🤷🏻♂️
Dorian Leakey: If you are a linguist or a cryptographer then you might use these dialogue specimens in your next discourse analysis lecture! Otherwise, it's probably not anything, about which you need to get hot under the collar in any way, so why the fuss?...
Yet another one making himself look an idiot. 8-9 inches is recommended for heavy soil. So if this gonk thinks it is some sort of double entendre he is saying more about himself than the people in the show.
@@hogwashmcturnip8930 Agreed.
How can someone who does much digging have such long fingernails? Clip them, Phil!
He plays guitar and is a finger picker like myself. My nails are the same and its only on one hand depending which hand you play with.
@@paulwood7798 Well, now I know there's a purpose. It would be hard for me, myself to still dig though.
His finger nails are a running gag in all of these comments troughout the years.. ;-)
@@aimeepotts2137Phil is used to it and he knows what he is doing.
Phil could with a nail clippers
Other folks have answered to this remark. Here is one more. If you watch TT alot you'll learn about each of them. Phil plays alot of guitar and uses his nails instead of a pick. You'll see him playing in some episodes. He has a very nice touch. Ciao
@@maeve4686 It's the Shallow Brigade. Don't see past someone's appearance and can't be bothered to read comments or learn about anyone or anything, so they make themselves look like dorks! I wish I had a euro for every time some gonk mentions Phil's nails ot his hat or his shorts. The fact that the guy is not only a master of his trade a Dr with numerous qualifications , but can drive a digger, play guitar, flint knap, founded an organisation to retrain military veterans as archeaologists doesn't matter. He has long nails! (facepalm) I am so glad that I don't know them! They must be the dullest creatures on earth!
@@hogwashmcturnip8930 Thanks for your message. Drives me crazy as well. In the USA we call them snowflakes . Little substance and their ideals melt instantly. Dirty nails? I figured they have deep internal problems from childhood they're not dealing with. Cheers from the Redwoods in California...
@@maeve4686 De Nada! Hi from a Brit in Spain! And I agree, they do seem to have issues. They missed the fact that the person with short nails actually had loads of dirt under there? lol. But that isn't the point, the issue is that they make it one! Neither of these people are cooking my meal or operating on me; they are digging a Trench! Ergo they are going to have dirt around? So if Phil needs long nails for other things like playing guitar who the hell cares. Except 'Snowflakes??
@@hogwashmcturnip8930 Snowflakes. Here, everyone is entitled to be offended. Those who find fault at the most minute of ,well, anything and are so troubled and terrified by anything from a dog barking at noon to someone thinking that keeping a bird in a cage are tantamount to WW3 are snowflakes. I personally am not a snowflake tho someone called me a " bitter old cat lady" after I expressed my opinion that not all women need to be married to find success with their life. LOL...Tho I am a bit of a nutter....
... Thankfully, in this episode, Crescenda is kept to a minimum.
Carenza. If you're going to insult her intelligence, ability and hard work in getting thru British professional sexism, spell her name right. Hope you don't have female children.
Did you love the bit where she agreed with 'Susan'?
If I'm not mistaken... yes, yes, Susan agreed with Coe-ren-za.
All these incels and fingernail elitists tho.....
I think Carenza and Phil should swap accents and clothes for comedy value. Mud,stones and broken pots don't make for interesting tv.
maybe skip watching tv programs about mud, stones and broken pots then?
Time team got ridiculous basically people started to crack jokes it moored away from the archaeology
Ugh, those nails. Clip 'em or paint them...gross.
If you’re speaking of Phil, he’s a classical guitarist, and that’s his picking hand. His other hand has short nails, because that’s his fret hand. If you’re speaking about anyone else, I can’t say, but speaking from personal experience, short nails are harder to clean dirt from than longer nails.
@@agresticumbra Well said. Not only about Phil, but about nails. Short nails seem to harbour filth, whereas longer ones do not. Also if they do you can clean them very easily with a toothpick! Do these parrots never read other comments or learn about the people that they are commentng on?
Get over yourself Phil, sickening, condescending Tony yuk. Oh for a Time team with just Stewart, Carenza, Mills and John
Phil and Tony are founding members of TT and for the record, Phil know his stuff and Tony is said to be one of the UK's best actors ( see Blackadder).
I've seen some of your half-witted troll remarks before. You're a fucking idiot. Piss off
@@Ana_crusis mind you he's provoked quite a reaction there..I wonder who said T.R . is one of U.K.s best actors and based on what?
@@ianrutherford878 Are you English? If so you ought to know him. he's famous for playing Baldrick in Blackadder. He is now Sir Anthony Robinson.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tony_Robinson#Early_career
Freomood not picture and no name but lots of abusive comments. Pig!