- published: 28 Jul 2007
- views: 7239
1:27
Lower Palaeolithic Stone Tools
Several Lower Palaeolithic stone tools. These come from the Boyn Hill, Thames River Terrac...
published: 28 Jul 2007
Lower Palaeolithic Stone Tools
Several Lower Palaeolithic stone tools. These come from the Boyn Hill, Thames River Terrace and were found on Clapham Common, London, England. All came to the surface during construction work in the 1950's. Work such as converting the allotments back into common land and deeper digging for drains, sewers etc.
- published: 28 Jul 2007
- views: 7239
3:22
Lower Palaeolithic tool kit
This is a Lower Palaeolithic tool kit comprising of a black flint handaxe with cutting edg...
published: 21 Feb 2012
Lower Palaeolithic tool kit
This is a Lower Palaeolithic tool kit comprising of a black flint handaxe with cutting edge,a chopper,a pointed knife and two scrapers.
All 5 of these were found yesterday on the same site where thousands of other lower palaeolithic artefacts have been found and appear to be from before the anglian ice age probably between 600-800,000 K years ago.
- published: 21 Feb 2012
- views: 157
3:02
the stone age, prehistory
The Stone Age is the period roughly between 2,500,000 and 3,000 years before Christ., And ...
published: 11 Jul 2012
the stone age, prehistory
The Stone Age is the period roughly between 2,500,000 and 3,000 years before Christ., And its main feature is the human learning techniques for the development of hunting tools and stone tools. The Stone Age is divided into the following stages: Paleolithic or Old Age, or Mesolithic and Neolithic Ages or New Age.
The Paleolithic is divided, in turn, in Lower, Middle and Upper. The Lower ranges between 2,500,000 and 100,000 years BC., And is characterized by nomadism itinerant man in search of food and water to ensure their survival. The first settlements were established in caves, shelters and river terraces. Human activity was based on the gathering, fishing and hunting in a predatory economy. The hominids evolved from homo habilis' to 'homo erectus', which achieves the final erguimiento human being.
The Middle Paleolithic chronology has between 100,000 and 35,000 BC. At this stage, hominids evolved to homo neanderthalensis', with greater height and cranial capacity. The Neanderthal Mousterian culture developed, which allowed the development of stone tools, including development of bifaces, axes, scrapers, and spears.
The Upper Paleolithic covers between 35,000 and 10,000 BC. Evolves humanization 'homo sapiens sapiens, higher cranial capacity and ease of learning new knowledge (wisdom). Man 'sapiens' stone tools to improve the development of javelins, spears and knives, and develops the rock art with hunting scenes and symbolic.
The Mesolithic or Middle Stone Age spans between 10,000 and 5,000 BC. The end of glaciation favored the Earth's global warming, migration or disappearance of some large mammals and the adaptation of stone tools to the new nature (medium or small animal), with the production of microliths. In addition, the rock art was extended in the Iberian Peninsula from the Cantabrian coast to the east, where a proliferation of open-air performances.
The Neolithic or New Stone Age is the period of prehistory from about the 5,000 and 3,000 BC. The Neolithic Revolution led to a sedentary lifestyle based on the human being with the emergence of the first villages and learning of agriculture, livestock, pottery and trade development. Therefore, the Neolithic man evolved from a predatory economy to a productive economy and trade. This stage of prehistory is the culmination of the Stone Age.
Stone Age Prehistory Metal Age Mesolithic Neolithic Palaeolithic Man Australopithecus Groups primitive nomadic Neolithic revolution history
- published: 11 Jul 2012
- views: 4760
3:39
Stone Age and humans brain
Stone Age and humans brain
http://www.physorg.com/news/2010-11-stone-age-humans-brain-pow...
published: 04 Nov 2010
Stone Age and humans brain
Stone Age and humans brain
http://www.physorg.com/news/2010-11-stone-age-humans-brain-power.html
The Manipulative Complexity of Lower Paleolithic Stone Toolmaking
http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0013718
- published: 04 Nov 2010
- views: 271
1:27
Looking for hafting evidence in Palaeolithic handaxes - Snodland Handaxe, Maidstone Museum
This handaxe is probably one the 23 listed for Snodland in Roe's Gazetteer of British Lowe...
published: 08 Mar 2011
Looking for hafting evidence in Palaeolithic handaxes - Snodland Handaxe, Maidstone Museum
This handaxe is probably one the 23 listed for Snodland in Roe's Gazetteer of British Lower and Middle Palaeolithic Sites. The material shown is very hard ,possibly a fossilised material which appears to have been soft at one time.
- published: 08 Mar 2011
- views: 499
7:13
Lower Palaeolithic Pointed Handaxe selection of 12
this is a small selection of the 100s of handaxes I have in my collection.
Here are shown ...
published: 21 Feb 2012
Lower Palaeolithic Pointed Handaxe selection of 12
this is a small selection of the 100s of handaxes I have in my collection.
Here are shown a dozen pointed handaxes dating back at least 600-800,000 years ago and made by the earliest inhabitants of Britain...a sub species of Homo Erectus that came out of Africa over a million years ago.
The european Erectus were probably Homo Heidelbergensis although an earlier species has been named Homo Antecessor in england and may date to a million years at this site.
- published: 21 Feb 2012
- views: 166
1:11
Lower Palaeolithic Scraper 600-800,000 years old Archaeology Colnian Man
Lower palaeolithic scraper,superbly worked with fine retouches on classic S shaped blade a...
published: 24 Jan 2012
Lower Palaeolithic Scraper 600-800,000 years old Archaeology Colnian Man
Lower palaeolithic scraper,superbly worked with fine retouches on classic S shaped blade and end scraper..
Unifacial with a flat platform for the finger and corresponding flat platform to rest the heel of the hand when in use.
This tool does not show signs of wear and is a work of art in its own right!
- published: 24 Jan 2012
- views: 137
6:59
Puente Pino Paleolithic Site_01
Excavation of the Puente Pino Lower Paleolithic site (Toledo, Spain). This site has a lot ...
published: 14 Jan 2010
Puente Pino Paleolithic Site_01
Excavation of the Puente Pino Lower Paleolithic site (Toledo, Spain). This site has a lot of acheulean lithic industry (bifaces, for instance) from the Middle Pleistocene (350.000 years before present old).
- published: 14 Jan 2010
- views: 830
1:31
best in stone crushing plant
best in stone crushing plant
Home page:http://www.crushermillsupplier.com
Hot products:htt...
published: 11 Oct 2012
best in stone crushing plant
best in stone crushing plant
Home page:http://www.crushermillsupplier.com
Hot products:http://www.crushermillsupplier.com/products
Crusher mill Knowledge:http://www.crushermillsupplier.com/knowledge
Auxiliary Equipment:http://www.crushermillsupplier.com/auxiliary
Grinding Mill:http://www.crushermillsupplier.com/grinding
Successful Case:http://www.crushermillsupplier.com/case
Crushing Plant:http://www.crushermillsupplier.com/crushing
Service:http://www.crushermillsupplier.com/service
Google+:https://plus.google.com/u/0/108685741954110478936/posts
Shanghai Zenith Company has a world-class stone crushing production line and modern testing base, all in accordance with ISO: international quality certification system standards for the design, production, assembly and testing. At present, thepany developed and produced the crushing of mining equipment and industrial milling machine series has been widely used in power, mining, metallurgy, construction, chemical, steel, petroleum and other industries., The occupation of the global market with reliable quality and excellent after-sales service, the products are exported to Europe, North America, Central Asia, South Asia, the Middle East, Africa, Australia and other regions. Whenever you need gold panning supplies or gold mining tools, turn to Shanghai Zenith machinery.
CGM processing plant Together with the professional crushing ...
CGM processing plant. CGM processing plant Together with the professional crushing, grinding and screening technology of world class, CGM supply professional ore ...
In the Garden
Rainbeau Ridge in Bedford Hills, which became known for supplying restaurants and farmers markets with farmstead goat cheese that had some famous fans—Martha ...
crushing, screening, washing, grinding equipment in stationary ...
CGM Machinery manufactures a full line of crushing equipment for use in processing quarried stone, rocks, aggregate, raw mining minerals, recycled broken concrete
Mining solution for crushing, grinding, ores processing industry
Home; Stone Crusher; Grinding Mill; Mobile Crusher; Optional Equipment; Beneficiation Equipment; Mining Solution; Zenith; Home>>Solutions
Plants - How To Information | eHow.com
Plants: Don't know the difference between and perennial plant and annual plant? eHow has essential tips on seeds, plant types, and deciduous trees. Find how to info ...
Aquaponics Universe
Share your thoughts. Hydroponics Lancaster Pa. Visit our website to learn more 4 THE GROWING EDGE September October 2008 Hamilton Gualala Robotics.
Stone Age - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
before Homo (Pliocene) Paleolithic Lower Paleolithic Early Stone Age Homo Control of fire Stone tools Middle Paleolithic Middle Stone Age Homo neanderthalensis Homo ...
Car Auctions, Property Auctions, Police & Government Auctions ...
Get an Amazing 25%, 50% or Even a Massive 80% off Retail Prices by Buying at Auctions
Lawn & Garden - How To Information | eHow.com
Lawn & Garden: Do you need home landscaping ideas? eHow has essential tips on garden care, fertilizers, and grass types. Find how to info on everything from decks ...
:: İMAJ TEKNIK Elektrik Elektronik San. ve Tic. Ltd. Şti._stone ...
dinel magnets mİkroschalter posİtİonsschalter 1-encoder terimler szlĞ 6 digit counter, non reset 6 or 7 digit counter, non reset a harfindekİfİrmalar ab active ...
- published: 11 Oct 2012
- views: 69
9:48
History of Iran & WW3.
The earliest archaeological artifacts in Iran were found in the Kashafrud and Ganj Par sit...
published: 12 Oct 2011
History of Iran & WW3.
The earliest archaeological artifacts in Iran were found in the Kashafrud and Ganj Par sites that date back to the Lower Paleolithic era. Mousterian Stone tools made by Neanderthal man have also been found. There are more cultural remains of Neanderthal man dating back to the Middle Paleolithic period, which have been found mainly in the Zagros region and less frequently in central Iran at sites such as Shanidar, Kobeh, Kunji, Bisetun, Tamtama, Warwasi, Palegawra, and Yafteh Cave. Discovery of human skeletons in the Huto cave and the adjacent Kamarband cave near the town of Behshahr in the Mazandaran Province, south of the Caspian Sea in Iran, suggest human habitation of the area as early as 75,000 years ago. However, recent studies in the valleys of Shuresh, around the earlier mentioned caves, led to the discovery of 400,000 year old stone tools.[53] Evidence for Upper Paleolithic and Epipaleolithic periods are known mainly from the Zagros region in the caves of Kermanshah and Khorramabad.
Early agricultural communities such as Chogha Bonut in 8000 BC, Susa (now a city still existing since 7000 BC) and Chogha Mish dating back to 6800 BC. started to form in the western Iran. Dozens of pre-historic sites across the Iranian plateau point to the existence of ancient cultures and urban settlements in the 4th millennium BC,[59][60][61] centuries before the earliest civilizations arose in nearby Mesopotamia
- published: 12 Oct 2011
- views: 19258
15:01
Violence against women is on the rise in Italy and most often the cul [NPR AUDIO 11-24-2012]
Click http://MeTee.com/coupon/SubscribeForNews
and buy a Tee-Shirt using the link above ...
published: 02 Dec 2012
Violence against women is on the rise in Italy and most often the cul [NPR AUDIO 11-24-2012]
Click http://MeTee.com/coupon/SubscribeForNews
and buy a Tee-Shirt using the link above for a 2% discount.
MeTee: Tee-Shirt Design in Seconds.
-
↑ before Homo (Pliocene)Lower Paleolithic (c. 2. 6 Ma--300 ka)
-
Subscribe for Breaking News. Like/Dislike, Comment, Favorite and share on Twitter, Facebook, and Google+ to get the word out on this video.
Like on Facebook for videos in your newsfeed:
http://www.facebook.com/videoupdates
Become a channel sponsor for 30 days for $1/day
and send me a private message. Have any ad you want to play at the end of each video (any one video can go viral with tens-of-thousands of hits)
Put this video on your own channel with a more interesting title (never know if this channel will get taken down):
http://www.keepvid.com Download video with keepvid and upload file to your own Youtube account.
Signup to get video headlines emailed daily:
http://tinyurl.com/OneEmailDaily
- published: 02 Dec 2012
- views: 5
Vimeo results:
35:09
Lynda Frassetto, M.D. —Paleolithic Diets and Diabetes Control: How Do We Think It Works?
Dr. Lynda Frassetto presenting at the 2nd Annual Ancestral Health Symposium 2012 (AHS12).
...
published: 01 Nov 2012
author: Ancestral Health Society
Lynda Frassetto, M.D. —Paleolithic Diets and Diabetes Control: How Do We Think It Works?
Dr. Lynda Frassetto presenting at the 2nd Annual Ancestral Health Symposium 2012 (AHS12).
Bio:
Lynda Frassetto, MD, is a Professor of Medicine and Nephrology at the University of California San Francisco. She is the director of a clinical research center at UCSF, supervises patient care at three of the University’s hospitals, and helps teach courses on improved communications and behavioral stress modification techniques.
Abstract:
Obesity is one of the major health problems in the world today, in both developed and third world countries. Being overweight or obese increases the risk of developing insulin resistance and diabetes; about 85-90% of people with type 2 diabetes are overweight or obese.
Nutritional guidelines for diabetes rely on moderating carbohydrate intake and promoting weight loss. Recent meta- analysis suggest that weight loss, and not any particular diet, is the most important intervention for improving glucose levels (1,2). A recent Cochrane review of dietary advice for diabetes control concluded, “There are no high quality data on the efficacy of the dietary treatment of type 2 diabetes”(3).
There is, however, evidence in short term studies, that dietary composition can affect glucose control independent of weight loss. Thus studies of isocaloric Paleolithic-type diets demonstrate improvement of glucose levels and insulin sensitivity. Which component(s) of the “paleo-diet” is responsible for these improvements are not known. The diet is high in fiber and very large increases in fiber in the diet can lower glucose levels. Another possibility is that the quantity or quality of foods can alter neuro-hormonal control of appetite and satiety. In our presentation, we will review evidence available from clinical trials comparing dietary treatments for diabetes.
1. Aucott LS. Influences of weight loss on long-term diabetes outcomes. Proc Nutr Soc. 2008;67(1):54-9
2. Gillies CL, Abrams KR, Lambert PC et al. Pharmacological and lifestyle interventions to prevent or delay type 2 diabetes in people with impaired glucose tolerance: systematic review and meta-analysis. BMJ. 2007;334(7588):299
3. Nield L, Moore HJ, Hooper L et al. Dietary advice for treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus in adults. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2007 Jul 18;(3):CD004097
2:33
Ross School: Paleolithic Art M-Term shares with Lower School
Paleolithic Art M-Term Shares with Lower School at Ross...
published: 28 Apr 2011
author: Ross Institute
Ross School: Paleolithic Art M-Term shares with Lower School
Paleolithic Art M-Term Shares with Lower School at Ross
36:41
"Clues from the colon: How this organ illuminates our digestive evolution and microniche" by Melissa McEwen
ABSTRACT: The colon’s microbiome and anatomy hold much promise in illuminating our evoluti...
published: 22 Aug 2011
author: Ancestral Health Society
"Clues from the colon: How this organ illuminates our digestive evolution and microniche" by Melissa McEwen
ABSTRACT: The colon’s microbiome and anatomy hold much promise in illuminating our evolutionary past and teaching us about the importance of a healthy colon for overall health. By comparing the modern human colon with those of our nearest ape relatives, we can infer much about the uniqueness of the human dietary niche, which may be characterized by reliance on high-quality (lower fiber) cooked foods and starch. Further variation between human populations provides clues on more modern adaptations to diet.
COMMEMORATIVE ESSAY: In 1995, anthropologists Leslie C. Aiello and Peter Wheeler published a paper on a theory they termed The Expensive Tissue Hypothesis (ETH). Expensive refers to our brain tissue, which is uniquely metabolically demanding compared to other primate brains. According to the ETH humans compensated for the increased metabolic costs of the brain by evolving less metabolically expensive splanchnic organs, which include the gut and liver. Humans were able to fuel their large brains using only a relatively small gut because increased dietary quality reduced the need for gut mass. The hypothesis was that the main driver of this increased dietary quality was the increased use of animal products.
Exactly how unusual is the modern human gut? Based on a reduced major axis equation computed for higher primates, the human gut should be about .8 grams larger.It is hard to know when this change started, as guts do not fossilize. However, it is possible to infer some information from post-cranial anatomy. Living apes with big guts have a rounded abdomen continuous with the lower portion of the rib cage, giving it a funnel shape, as well as a wide pelvis with flared upper margins. In contrast, the human pelvis size is reduced and the abdomen has a defined waist region. Hominids start exhibiting this in the fossil record starting with Homo erectus, about 1.5 million years ago.
In humans compared to primates, the gut is reorganized. The size of the colon is much reduced and the size of the small intestine is increased.
In the colon, bacteria digest otherwise useless dietary constituents into important nutrients and other chemical byproducts. These include short-chain fatty acids (SCFA). The major difference in this matter between humans and the other great apes is that apes such as the gorilla are able to use their larger colons to obtain as much as 60% of their caloric intake from SCFA alone. Upper estimates for human caloric use of SCFA range from seven to nine percent.
Suggestions that humans may have obtained more calories from SCFA in the past are rooted in estimates of fiber consumption from the Paleolithic. Evidence is rather sparse and limited to coprolites, showing evidence for fiber intakes as high as 150 grams as day, well over what any known human culture currently consumes. Even if the method for estimating fiber consumption from coprolites is accurate, they may not support the conclusion that they represent some species level optimal.
Some of the issue is also overemphasis on fiber, when other food constituents that play a similar role may have been more important in human evolution. Early optimism that high fiber could prevent many diseases of civilization spurred many studies on the matter, which had mixed results. Focus on fiber in the past was on its abilities as indigestible bulking matter to increase digestive transit time and bind up certain food constituents.
The fact that humans cannot digest certain fibers and starches in the diet does not mean they are nothing but bulking matter. In the scientific world, more and more research focus has been on the fact that these seemingly indigestible ingredients actually are often digested in the human body, just not by human enzymes. Instead, they are digested by human gut bacteria.
The colonic microbiome remains of vital importance to human health. Scientists are just discovering how the bacterial population and its byproducts play important roles in human nutrition, the immune system, and other vital bodily processes. The gut flora is currently under investigation for its role on hundreds of diseases.
Borne out of this are several new paradigms for studying fiber, not as bulk, but as an interaction agent with gut bacteria. The importance of the species mix, population level, and products has been emphasized. One new term for some fibers is “prebiotic.” A prebiotic fiber is indigestible by human enzymes, but stimulates the growth of certain beneficial gut bacteria such as Bifidobacterium and Lactobactillus.
Another hypothesis is that lack of SCFAs is behind such diseases of civilization. A SCFA called butyrate provides some insight into this. Butyrate is the preferred fuel of the colonic epithelial cells and also plays a major role in the regulation of cell proliferation and differentiation. Lower than normal levels have been found in patients with several diseases, notably types of colitis and inflammatory bowel diso
22:10
Jamie Scott—High Performance Evolutionary Fitness - Using EvoBio to Optimize Training for Endurance (AHS12)
Jamie Scott, PGDipNutMed, PGDipSportExMed presenting at the second annual Ancestral Health...
published: 05 Nov 2012
author: Ancestral Health Society
Jamie Scott—High Performance Evolutionary Fitness - Using EvoBio to Optimize Training for Endurance (AHS12)
Jamie Scott, PGDipNutMed, PGDipSportExMed presenting at the second annual Ancestral Health Symposium (AHS12).
Abstract:
High Performance Evolutionary Fitness - Using EvoBio to Optimize Training for Endurance Sports
Following a paleolithic lifestyle incorporating a diet relatively low in carbohydrates and promoting high-intensity intermittent exercise is often seen as incompatible with conventionally-held nutrition and training recommendations for endurance sports such as cycling. With these sports becoming more popular amongst individuals who may also be drawn toward the health-promoting benefits of a paleolithic lifestyle, people can often be left struggling to make the two fit. Undertaking large volumes of endurance training whilst trying to follow a higher-fat, lower-carbohydrate diet can lead to rapid failure at either endeavour.
Recent challenges to conventional wisdom within the fields of exercise physiology and sports nutrition have shed light on strategies which are very much in line with many of the commonly promoted paleolithic lifestyle recommendations. These include a renewed focus on adaptation to high-fat diets, "train-low, race-high" nutrition strategies, and a focus on training at both very low and very high exercise intensities, with a decrease in time spent at high-draining "Goldilocks" intensities. This presentation looks at how these recent advances in sport science and our current understanding of biologicaly appropriate nutrition and fitness strategies can be combined to produce high-performance evolutionary fitness.
Bio:
Jamie is a nutritionist, researcher, and writer based in Christchurch, New Zealand. He is one of only two specialist paleo nutritionists in New Zealand, and is the lead researcher and writer for the only corporate health company applying evolutionary biology to all of its corporate programmes. Jamie presented at AHS11 alongside Emily Deans, M.D.
Youtube results:
2:27
Snow Storm In Spain
I filmed this video in Cantabra Spain in 1992. The north of Spain got hit with big snow st...
published: 30 Jan 2012
Snow Storm In Spain
I filmed this video in Cantabra Spain in 1992. The north of Spain got hit with big snow storm that year. (Filmed By Herman Ashley)
Cantabria belongs to Green Spain, the name given to the strip of land between the Cantabrian Sea and the Cantabrian Mountains, so called because of its particularly lush vegetation, due to the wet and moderate oceanic climate. The climate is strongly influenced by Atlantic Ocean winds trapped by the mountains; the average precipitation is about 1,200 mm (47 inches).
Cantabria is the richest region in the world for archaeological sites from the Upper Paleolithic period, although the first signs of human occupation date from Lower Paleolithic. The most significant site for cave paintings is that in the cave of Altamira, dating from about 16,000 to 9000 BC and declared, along with nine other Cantabrian caves, as World Heritage Sites by UNESCO.
The modern Province of Cantabria was constituted on 28 July 1778. The Organic Law of the Autonomy Statute of Cantabria was approved on 30 December 1981, giving the region its own institutions of self government.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cantabria
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
- published: 30 Jan 2012
- views: 452
1:58
Beautiful Lower Palaeolithic handaxe 600-800,000 years old
This is a beautifully worked lower palaeolithic handaxe possibly as old as 800,000 years a...
published: 24 Jan 2012
Beautiful Lower Palaeolithic handaxe 600-800,000 years old
This is a beautifully worked lower palaeolithic handaxe possibly as old as 800,000 years aprox 4 1/2 inches long,very symetric and the ergonomic qualities have to be felt to be fully appreciated.
Found in the UK in the Pleistocene Thames.
For more artefacts see my blog on www.thefoundationofkingdavid.org/exec/
Subscibe to this channel and I will post regularly,I have 1000s of artefacts from this one site.
We are on facebook too username ColnianMan
- published: 24 Jan 2012
- views: 163
2:41
Palaeolithic Bone Tools archaeology Very rare c600-800,000 years old.
These are a series of lower palaeolithic bone tools probably used for digging flint out of...
published: 27 Jan 2012
Palaeolithic Bone Tools archaeology Very rare c600-800,000 years old.
These are a series of lower palaeolithic bone tools probably used for digging flint out of the local chalk here on this unique,so far unrecognised site in what was the pleistocene Thames until about 475,000 years ago.
- published: 27 Jan 2012
- views: 218
1:27
Hunter Gatherer: The Premier Primitive Cooking Show
Host Tribal Darrin goes where no chef has gone before...to the Lower Paleolithic Age. "Tri...
published: 12 Jan 2013
Hunter Gatherer: The Premier Primitive Cooking Show
Host Tribal Darrin goes where no chef has gone before...to the Lower Paleolithic Age. "Tribal 'til you Die!"
- published: 12 Jan 2013
- views: 12