Channel 4 - Secrets of the Stone Age (1999) Part 2 Frozen in Time Life in the Upper Paleolithic Age


Channel 4 - Secrets of the Stone Age (1999) Part 2 Frozen in Time Life in the Upper Paleolithic Age

According to the history books, civilization began with the ancient Egyptians. But in this intriguing three-part series, iconoclastic anthropologist Richard Rudgley, author of the provocative “Lost Civilizations of the Stone Age”, argues that it began earlier — much earlier. We view our distant ancestors as nothing more than cave-dwelling savages but 100,000 years ago there were people who walked the earth every bit as gifted as us, who looked and thought just as we do today… In SECRETS OF THE STONE AGE, anthropologist Richard Rudgley offers a lively account of his journey across the continents in search of the lost legacy of prehistoric man. He takes us to Ancient Egypt, where excavations at Abydos have unearthed hieroglyphs belonging to an age before the pharaohs, and to the stone circles and burial chambers in Ireland, which precede Stonehenge by two millennia. In central Turkey, he discovers a Neolithic city over 9,000 years old. In the Alps, we are introduced to the Ice Man, a 5,300-year-old mummy, whose body reveals that acupuncture was practiced in Stone Age Europe, and to the awe-inspiring cave paintings of Ice Age France. In the Czech Republic he reveals a thriving textile industry dating from 24,000 BC. Delving further back still, Rudgley discovers many so-called 'modern attributes' amongst the Neanderthals of the Old Stone Age the beginnings of art, symbolic communication and even seafaring in the days of Homo Erectus, at the very dawn of humanity's existence. In Indonesia, we examine stone tools that prove pre-Neanderthal man undertook raft voyages across the open sea –700,000 years before the Kon Tiki!

forums.mvgroup.org_release.images_docfreak08_vlcsnap-2021-01-23-16h49m34s018.jpg Part 2 Frozen in Time Life in the Upper Paleolithic Age

This edition asks whether our primitive ancestors possessed unsuspected talents in art, medicine and mathematics. Anthropologically speaking, social complexity and technological skill are generally considered recent human developments. Could these qualities have appeared much longer ago than previously suspected? In this program, anthropologist Richard Rudgley shatters the stereotype of life in what is commonly referred to as the Ice Age. Rudgley shows that mammoths and primitive cave paintings are not the only relics of the Ice Age. He visits a 35,000 year old bead factory, finds a collection of sculpted female figurines and explores the beautifully painted cave cathedrals buried deep in the earth. Such findings sketch a plausible portrait of a society in which women and children were equal to men and daily tasks required being just as intelligent as humans are today. The programme dismisses the traditional view of cave men and replaces it with a portrait of an intelligent society where women and children were very important.

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