20 Greatest Archaeological Discoveries of 2023 | World of Antiquity | History Teacher Reacts



Our knowledge of history is always changing. That’s a good thing too. We should always be willing to change our historical conclusions based off new evidence. In this video, World of Antiquity shares the 20 greatest archeological discoveries of 2023. It’s time to rewrite the history books again! Mr. Terry talks about the history behind the discoveries.

Original Video: https://youtu.be/CrkudmEHyyc?si=IOfPmVmZnOQKRgAj

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30 thoughts on “20 Greatest Archaeological Discoveries of 2023 | World of Antiquity | History Teacher Reacts”

  1. Professor Miano is the man. Since you're interested in Bronze Age Mediterranean history, his channel should be a treasure trove for you. He also has some pretty funny TikTok history and pseudo-archaeology takedowns on his channel.

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  2. The amazon civilization was lost to plagues from the first spanish contacts. It was just 50years later when the second contact called the first group frauds as the land was reclaimed by plants. We now know the Amazon jungle was largely man made as the soil was made by slow wet burning of organic waste. This sweetened the soil and fixed carbon. Some now think this was the most advanced civilization of the time totaly wiped out by disease. Over 80% of Bazil has evidence of a massive City grid like Canal Network. Imagine Venice the size of Texas. Also some mountains have now been shown to be man made pyramids 3x larger than the great pyramid in Egypt. While you can disagree with his conclusions you should check out the works of Grahm Hancock. Big money schools don't want to rewrite textbooks and hinder real learning, only once they can't deny something do they get on board. The smithsonian's own 100-year policy of no pre Columbian contact cover ups and conspiracies is among the worse destroyers of real archeology and history.

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  3. Just because it's ancient, doesn't make people uneducated. Just because we don't know how things were built /made back in time, doesn't mean they didn't have the equivalent of an Einstein or Hawking in their society. Stands to reason

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  4. 19:00 I wonder how much history is lost because people didn’t write on inorganic materials, even if it was as simple as scratching into leaves. Were people in general more literate than what we give them credit for, but they just didn’t have access or need to use age resistant materials? Have there been thousands of Ancient Greek poems that simply have degraded into nothingness because they weren’t famous enough to be immortalized in their pop-culture as songs?

    For example in China, there’ve been numerous examples of symbols that look suspiciously like future ideographs etched on pottery dating to like the 6,000’s, but oracle bones have only been found since the mid 2-1,000’s.

    It’s fascinating to think that it’s likely that writing is much much older in every known early civilization than has been found so far

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  5. Have you watched Cave of Bones on Netflix. Watched that over the break and it was fascinating. I have one question for you. I jaut started teaching world history and ancient civ this year. I’m learning so much but do you have any book recommendations for Mesopotamia and Ancient China?

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  6. For me I'd say that the most important is a tie between the sea port because so little is widely known about the sea peoples for as much as they're talked about and his #1 pick just because it was so much and it's something they've been searching for

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  7. Ostia Antica outside of Rome is absolutely fascinating. You can freely roam the ancient port city and see not only homes but businesses frozen in time.
    Ostia Antica, and also the Protestant Cemetery, were my most magical visits there. Guess I'm a Rome nerd 😊

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