I genuinely believe that this should be a class in highschool. I think it’s more important for people to experience the progress of history than it is for them to just know about it.
Such a video is an example of the mind-blowing wonders that are readily available on the net, for free, at the distance of a click. Damn incredible. So much knowledge, so much experiment results. Thank you.
wow, this marathon edit really shows off how much work you've put into the project over the years. Also nice to see all of the collaborators who have helped again!
Watching her chase turkeys was probably my favourite part of this video, but the entire show is great. Not just talking about things, but actually TRYING and DOING things. ❤
I’m here because I’ve been watching doctor stone and it’s really got me interested in the bronze/Iron Age. It’s amazing what humans have figured out how to do
As a person who have studied ancient technology (excatly the stuff that is done in this video), good job. I have jokingly went into this video of wanting to find mistakes to point out but found non. But you did forget one tool in weaving, not completely sure of its english name but rough translation would be sword. It was thin-ish wood piece that was used to make weave more tight. Still everything in this video was super impressive!
There is some the only one that really grinds in my gears was the fact that he didn't question the Egyptian narrative. It's physically impossible for the Great pyramid of Giza to have been built in the timeline that they suggest with the technologies that they had. The math doesn't math
@@Scrublord96 are you sure that we just havent found the technology used back then? We are missing LOT of tools and methods from ancient times because wood doesnt preserve and it was one main material used as tool.
THANKS! I haven't seen your older episodes. this is a great put together. which really gives a lot of food for thought! for myself, when I'm starting a self-sufficient project, this is a great basis for making plans.
Green sand, used in sand casting: six parts sifted sand from the beach, one part dry clay dust. Just enough water to form a fist ball. Water and molten metal are explosive. Keep your tools dry.
I can't believe I'm watching this this long 🤔I just realised I don't think I've watched any TH-camrs as long as you 👏👏I started watching when you tried making beer from soybeans I just started panicking while writing this what happens when when you get to today or tomorrow the future you know what I mean😂😂
you doing this entire series out of a rental makes me feel like a chump for not doing more wood working because of not having a dedicated woodshop at my apartment
In regards to the bronze axe casting with the sword guy I'm pretty sure that's almost like a quench because that metal on the thin end is cooling quite a bit faster then the thick body
Thank you very much for such a colossal work, I hope this is not the end and in the future we will see even more development, what you are filming is very interesting and deserves attention. Yes, of course, many years of people I mean, in prison, being tied to something until you can take the next steps, but it seems to me that this is important, at least because in these moments a person improved what he had, and this is important for progress, it would be impossible to make a straight sword blade or a saw on a stone anvil, It is important to note that with the appearance of something, it is necessary to go through its development, from simple to complex and from primitive to better quality. It was nice to watch this three-hour film, I am waiting for the next ones series of your project. Success and blessings, health and of course all the best I think many would be interested to see the entire diagram of technological progress that you presented... Thank you
*Dear bronze casting guy:* The rainbow coloring on cast metals (specifically bronze in this case, but aluminum and silver are known to do this too) is due to *a layer of oxides* that form on the surface of the metal when pouring/cooling. The thickness of the oxide layer causes different wavelengthes to be reflected and there ya go, rainbow coatings. The oxidation is natural, and sometimes can be affected by the casting media too. On bronze, it would almost always be a layer of copper oxide, which would then degrade to copper carbonate, thus forming the characteristic greenish-brownish patina on old cast bronze over time. But yeah, initially, a very thin film of oxide would form and variations in thickness cause light to reflect differently. Imagine what people thought before microbiology was a thing "Hey! We need to make bread, dont forget to put some dough by the tomato plants to get their blessing! If the Tomato fairy doesn't bless our dough sample, the bread won't rise!" "Well, Thag and Umgah down at the next cave told me a sugar beet can bless the dough as well!" "NAY!!! HERESY!!!" Makes me wonder if that isn't why we call whiskey and vodka "distilled spirits" ??? 😉😉 I also have a feeling (after watching you cobble together your um.."wheel") that perhaps the first wheels were just slices of a very large straight tree trunk or carved stones.
I'm not sure the initial stage would be using fire, because we have a mind, hands and eyes (80% of the information we receive). Without a doubt, this is very cool and awesome, I hope that you will succeed and that you will continue to delight us with your releases. I would mention the so-called - chopper... Also, we should not forget about the bones that were used for a variety of purposes, including even for making a needle...
1:12:54 patching canoe holes with pitch. You want to use pine tart that's been heated till it turns black then you want to add a charcoal then bunny poop works for fibers bees wax is a new one
(3:36:25) Create some holes around the outside diameter of the flywheel and jam some rocks or lead ingots into them. Will increase the mass and the centrifugal inertia, helping it to spin longer.
I really thought you were going to try and speed run it from the beginning. I know it would be impractical but with all the knowledge youve accured it would be fun to see how fast it'd be from Neolithic to as up to date as you are I miss demolition wars.... Edit: typo
1:16:14 min You could try to stabilize it by adding a floater to one side. Look for á bigger piece of wood that swims, and connect it to the canoe via two Arms. So it kinda looks a bit like a catamaran?
Bronze has some interesting oxidation states... Copper is red ad oxidize green... Tin oxidizes white... Somehow bronze goes purple sometimes... Its how the metal mixes...
Enjoyed your attempt at a Stone Age canoe. You might have had more success with the Currach, a construct of wooden branches and animal skin dating back to the Neolithic period. As an added thought, the processing and use of animal skin would have been as invaluable a technology as the processing of metals. Its use use as bellows come to mind. Edit : I see you introduce leather at @03:357:50
I think a copper axe tapped more into more of a bearded axe shape, and wrapped around a stick in a slightly carved-in notch would be more effective, even if it would take a lot longer to make.
I don't know if it is the intellectual basis but I love your voice. Listening to you puts me in a surreal state. Like weeks of labor intensive, high reward work that I get to experience in a few minutes.
I genuinely believe that this should be a class in highschool.
I think it’s more important for people to experience the progress of history than it is for them to just know about it.
YES
That paper money that you found was not accurate to the timeline they did not have paper money at that time
You're commenting under a comment @@kimberlymichel2951
@@kimberlymichel2951 Correct, they had switched to chip & pin by this point.
No it shouldnt there is 0 reason to do so
Man, I've been watching this since the beginning. Here's to 5 more years of this series.
I thought public schools were bad lol
Saving this in case of total collapse and I need a quick reference.
me 2.. on an old smartphone in a Faraday cage.. with extra battery's
@@AA_WarlokPRECISLEY! Lol🤣🤣
@@AA_Warlok Not with THAT attitude!
@@laurahaaima1436 might be good to know that batteries age and also discharge with disuse.
@@relo999 Also a bicycle generator so you can direct-power the phone when the batteries don't work anymore lol
This is actually a genius idea, like running a marathon before a series finale so people can join in. Never seen an episode before this.
Some historian in the future is gonna be so confused when they stumble upon a stash of tools from all of history at once
🤣🤣🤣
Such a video is an example of the mind-blowing wonders that are readily available on the net, for free, at the distance of a click. Damn incredible. So much knowledge, so much experiment results. Thank you.
Wikipedia:
@@nathon1942 read again
@@davidguardado8282 Giving another example of exactly what you said, not every reply is an argument.
@@nathon1942 two replies, still not sounding smart. Wanna give another try? Come on, do your best.
@@davidguardado8282 Thank you, David.
I love all the work you guys are doing, but I also love that you guys just have cats with you everywhere
wow, this marathon edit really shows off how much work you've put into the project over the years. Also nice to see all of the collaborators who have helped again!
I can't help but feel like I somehow got here too early, but... I'm still super stoked to get to marathon this journey!
This is the Dr. Stone anime all over again.
"It took humanity 2million years to crawl out of the stone age we need to do that in a sprint"
Like earned with lead cup fever dream.
Watching her chase turkeys was probably my favourite part of this video, but the entire show is great. Not just talking about things, but actually TRYING and DOING things. ❤
The people involved in this are an absolute treasure to humanity. Preserving knowledge is better than whatever the future has coming.
This is effing cool.. I always wondered if we lost everything, what paths would we need to take to get back to speed.
I’m here because I’ve been watching doctor stone and it’s really got me interested in the bronze/Iron Age. It’s amazing what humans have figured out how to do
Congradulations in persevering through some major challenges. I have been rooting for you all along. Thank you for this amazing channel!
It's been a great 5 years of watching you walk and build through history, I hope only great things for your future
Big thanks.. awesome edit.
Practical knowledge and working with your hands 😎🤘🏽
As a person who have studied ancient technology (excatly the stuff that is done in this video), good job. I have jokingly went into this video of wanting to find mistakes to point out but found non. But you did forget one tool in weaving, not completely sure of its english name but rough translation would be sword. It was thin-ish wood piece that was used to make weave more tight. Still everything in this video was super impressive!
There is some the only one that really grinds in my gears was the fact that he didn't question the Egyptian narrative. It's physically impossible for the Great pyramid of Giza to have been built in the timeline that they suggest with the technologies that they had. The math doesn't math
@@Scrublord96 are you sure that we just havent found the technology used back then? We are missing LOT of tools and methods from ancient times because wood doesnt preserve and it was one main material used as tool.
Why would you go into a video wanting to find mistakes? What an odd past time.
Awesomely done, learned a lot from your videos. Interesting and informative, keep it up!
I've been waiting for this video 😂
About time
I was hoping you would do something like this ❣️
This is so awesome ❤
you would've been building a nuclear fusion reactor right now if annaliese was still around
Who?
@@andrew6464newb
@@andrew6464Did you watch the video lol
What happened im still watching the video did she die?
THANKS! I haven't seen your older episodes. this is a great put together. which really gives a lot of food for thought! for myself, when I'm starting a self-sufficient project, this is a great basis for making plans.
The first day man created fire was a Wednesday. It took two more days to learn to cook. That would have been Fryday 😅😅😅
Green sand, used in sand casting: six parts sifted sand from the beach, one part dry clay dust. Just enough water to form a fist ball. Water and molten metal are explosive. Keep your tools dry.
That was very informative. Maybe you could post a video and show us. I know I want to see it
can u post that full tech tree?
I love your content, please keep it up; your indefatigable persistence is such an inspiration!!!
Weed, fishing poles, cash...dude, where is this wonderland you hang out in?
Minnesota, not far from the twin cities
@@SlyFireVR noted....
oh hell yeah! lets do this thing.
Even though I seen all these episodes individually. This is still entertaining to watch 😊❤
I can't believe I'm watching this this long 🤔I just realised I don't think I've watched any TH-camrs as long as you 👏👏I started watching when you tried making beer from soybeans
I just started panicking while writing this what happens when when you get to today or tomorrow the future you know what I mean😂😂
one of the coolest video ideas i've heard!
You maybe might want to consider doing a crossover with Fraser builds, if he’s up for it. His channel is nothing but pure gold
Ive been watching so much of him, i actually wanna start making these fr
So love this
Oh! This was definitely my favorite arc of the series. I really like the primitive stuff
I thought this was going to be a history of speedrunning since the Stone Age. I had no clue what that would look like, but I was open to the idea
This is all insane, but I think making your own crucibles from scratch is still the craziest thing to me!
Dude watched Dr. Stone and got super inspired
I’m sorry, but you guys went about all this probably the hardest way possible.
Dang, did he just shoot and catch a cured ham in the woods?!
A wild one at that!
you doing this entire series out of a rental makes me feel like a chump for not doing more wood working because of not having a dedicated woodshop at my apartment
downloading this, juust in case
such a great channel!
1:15:00 one of the most heart warming moments ive seen all week :)
[ paused at 5 mins ]
You are hurting my head...
[ finds the 2x SPACE-BAR shortcut on 'real' computers ]
nice anime about the subject : Dr. Stone
Love this series! Love that cat too
In regards to the bronze axe casting with the sword guy I'm pretty sure that's almost like a quench because that metal on the thin end is cooling quite a bit faster then the thick body
Thank you very much for such a colossal work, I hope this is not the end and in the future we will see even more development, what you are filming is very interesting and deserves attention. Yes, of course, many years of people I mean, in prison, being tied to something until you can take the next steps, but it seems to me that this is important, at least because in these moments a person improved what he had, and this is important for progress, it would be impossible to make a straight sword blade or a saw on a stone anvil, It is important to note that with the appearance of something, it is necessary to go through its development, from simple to complex and from primitive to better quality. It was nice to watch this three-hour film, I am waiting for the next ones series of your project. Success and blessings, health and of course all the best I think many would be interested to see the entire diagram of technological progress that you presented... Thank you
*Dear bronze casting guy:* The rainbow coloring on cast metals (specifically bronze in this case, but aluminum and silver are known to do this too) is due to *a layer of oxides* that form on the surface of the metal when pouring/cooling. The thickness of the oxide layer causes different wavelengthes to be reflected and there ya go, rainbow coatings. The oxidation is natural, and sometimes can be affected by the casting media too. On bronze, it would almost always be a layer of copper oxide, which would then degrade to copper carbonate, thus forming the characteristic greenish-brownish patina on old cast bronze over time. But yeah, initially, a very thin film of oxide would form and variations in thickness cause light to reflect differently.
Imagine what people thought before microbiology was a thing "Hey! We need to make bread, dont forget to put some dough by the tomato plants to get their blessing! If the Tomato fairy doesn't bless our dough sample, the bread won't rise!" "Well, Thag and Umgah down at the next cave told me a sugar beet can bless the dough as well!" "NAY!!! HERESY!!!"
Makes me wonder if that isn't why we call whiskey and vodka "distilled spirits" ??? 😉😉
I also have a feeling (after watching you cobble together your um.."wheel") that perhaps the first wheels were just slices of a very large straight tree trunk or carved stones.
I'm not sure the initial stage would be using fire, because we have a mind, hands and eyes (80% of the information we receive). Without a doubt, this is very cool and awesome, I hope that you will succeed and that you will continue to delight us with your releases. I would mention the so-called - chopper... Also, we should not forget about the bones that were used for a variety of purposes, including even for making a needle...
Nice Review 💪👌🫶
8:50 Cat's tought's (probably): "Sht my Pets are evolving backwards!! Neighbour warned me about that i didn't believe!!!!! Uuuh Chikem!😍"
I’ve watched a lot of these but always worried that I missed parts so it’s so nice to have them all here in one place
7:25 i like how she got the clay pot out of the way of the fire that it was born from lol. I wanna learn how to make fire with a bow drill now!
Finished!
1:12:54 patching canoe holes with pitch.
You want to use pine tart that's been heated till it turns black then you want to add a charcoal then bunny poop works for fibers bees wax is a new one
(3:36:25) Create some holes around the outside diameter of the flywheel and jam some rocks or lead ingots into them. Will increase the mass and the centrifugal inertia, helping it to spin longer.
Excellent! Thank you for putting it all together. Love watching your videos.
5 years 😳 man time is going fast
Nice
i feel like there's a book on this... anyways this is incredible
That Minnesota accent really comes through on the word "dagger" lmao 2:21:21
Ruger, Steyr, S&W
Very well made, inexpensive, Durable.
good content!
Broooo you found a whole field of the Lord's loud gotta head back over in fall and harvest that beautiful crop 😭
cant believe its been 5 years, and what a whirlwind those years have been. excited to see how it all ends!
I really wish this could have been my career/job. This kind of archiological work is fascinating to me. Thank you for the movie!
Haha this is mint 👌
I really thought you were going to try and speed run it from the beginning. I know it would be impractical but with all the knowledge youve accured it would be fun to see how fast it'd be from Neolithic to as up to date as you are
I miss demolition wars....
Edit: typo
Seeing the quality of work he does on his hand axe and Adze, I have to admit I am a little nervous about him building his own fission reactor.
The distribution of agricultural civilizations and their consequences 2:10:41
@231:00 the colouring is from heat treatment, the same as steel changes colour with heat treatment
Well speed edits are great, but how do i find episode 1? I like the whole thing!
My friend who works on the railroad has sent me numerous snaps of cannabis growing along the tracks. He was mainly in Kansas.
a little tip make the clay less wet it wil make it easier to handle
1:16:14 min
You could try to stabilize it by adding a floater to one side. Look for á bigger piece of wood that swims, and connect it to the canoe via two Arms. So it kinda looks a bit like a catamaran?
0:08 please don't reset Montreal, I live there.
all you needed to make a absolutely perfect right angle is a piece of string and just a bit of trigonometry easy to do
After this you should go from copper to metal
you mean iron? copper is metal
@@ethandoessomestuff...8949 yeah
The oldest structure in Egypt is the Sphinx. It was built approximately 14,000 years ago because there is water erosion on the Sphinx not wind.
Caught you cheating. At 1:06:16 the little kid had a modern hammer.
I've been watching for almost 3 years or maybe 4 I don't know but love the videos.
Bronze has some interesting oxidation states... Copper is red ad oxidize green... Tin oxidizes white... Somehow bronze goes purple sometimes... Its how the metal mixes...
In the 4th Marathon - Ok lets build our own fusion reactor xD
Bro just created Dr. Stone Live action
1:04:30 - Kitty doesn't like sailing... Can't blame her!
as far as the form for the bronze goes, you can put sand in anything. you don't need a wooden box. you can it in a hole in the ground if you had to.
Enjoyed your attempt at a Stone Age canoe. You might have had more success with the Currach, a construct of wooden branches and animal skin dating back to the Neolithic period. As an added thought, the processing and use of animal skin would have been as invaluable a technology as the processing of metals. Its use use as bellows come to mind. Edit : I see you introduce leather at @03:357:50
I think a copper axe tapped more into more of a bearded axe shape, and wrapped around a stick in a slightly carved-in notch would be more effective, even if it would take a lot longer to make.
Real life Dr. Stone
that $75 was definitely a dead-drop XD
I would really like to see the whole tech tree you did
Can't wait for the nuclear age!
I have literally thought about this whole scenario before like, how long would it take us to get back to how we are now after an apocalyptic event.
If how we are now leads to an apocalyptic event, probably best to not try to get back to it.
I don't know if it is the intellectual basis but I love your voice. Listening to you puts me in a surreal state. Like weeks of labor intensive, high reward work that I get to experience in a few minutes.