ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
History of Technology 2: Boat Accomplishments 23 Views
Share It!
Description:
Here's a brief rundown of boat accomplishments: they don't succumb to pier pressure, they've seen The Codfather twelve times, they have an uncanny ability to seas the day...okay, fine, maybe these aren't exactly true, but boats have helped to accomplish a lot of cool things. Hit play to find out more.
Transcript
- 00:02
Even without sails rudders maps or compasses early peoples were able to
- 00:08
accomplish astounding things with water transportation they populated the entire [Man in a boat paddling away from a shark]
- 00:13
earth built cities established trade and dreamt up religious rituals and because
- 00:19
we apparently have nothing better to do well let's just check out these things [Man browsing past events on a laptop using google]
- 00:22
one by one well first and foremost there are some places we can't get to by foot
Full Transcript
- 00:27
no matter how nice our fancy leather sandals are we're not going to make it [Man tries walking on water and drowns and Jesus appears]
- 00:31
to Hawaii unless we get like you know rockets installed on them and that'd be
- 00:35
really cool but since we wouldn't get rockets installed drowning would
- 00:40
definitely ensue and our sandals would be ruined bummer and yet humans [Man attempting to fly and falls to the ground]
- 00:44
eventually traveled to almost every habitable scrap of land on the planet
- 00:47
well one of the earliest migrations that definitely required boats was the
- 00:51
journey to Australia for the geographically challenged among us [Caveman standing in a forest]
- 00:56
Australia is a giant island filled with kangaroos koala bears and lots of
- 01:00
poisonous things that want to kill us anyway archaeologist thinks that first
- 01:05
humans landed there about 50,000 years ago which those of you keeping score at [First human landing in Australia]
- 01:09
home is a really long time humans were just barely figuring out stone knives
- 01:14
and slings when suddenly they were floating out in the open ocean on rafts out of
- 01:19
the frying pan into the fire I think that's crazy well then consider [Frying pan sizzles and boy jumps on a bed]
- 01:23
the Pacific Islands which are the twenty thousand islands scattered like marbles
- 01:27
across the Pacific Ocean but for most of human history these islands were
- 01:31
untouched because they were tiny really far away then around 1500 BCE a new and [Map showing the small islands around the world]
- 01:37
ambitious culture developed around New Guinea the Lupita culture had fantastic
- 01:42
pottery a good grasp of farming and some pretty sweet canoes and apparently they [Lupita member painting their canoe]
- 01:47
had the desire to play leapfrog across vast wretches of open ocean but within five
- 01:53
or ten generations they'd settled most of the Pacific Island and brought along
- 01:57
pigs dogs and chickens and edible plant now the normal things you tend to travel in [People in grass skirts singing as pigs dogs and plants appear]
- 02:02
humans were officially everywhere well at some point in human history we jumped
- 02:07
from small groups of families living in cutesy little villages a huge population [A mother and her children running behind her]
- 02:11
living in sprawling cities at the hearts of empires
- 02:15
well that jump is actually super complicated and it happened over a long
- 02:19
period of time in many different parts of the world for different reasons
- 02:23
oversimplification well you betcha with that said water transportation was [ships transporting cargo around the world]
- 02:27
a huge factor in establishing many of the world's first cities and
- 02:29
civilizations boats are a big part of the reason that most of the old cities
- 02:34
in the world popped up near coasts and major rivers [A city near a coastline appears]
- 02:38
well that and you know having water to drink. Ancient people couldn't go to the
- 02:42
store and pick up some Perrier well boats also allowed large-scale trade to happen
- 02:48
before there were roads wheels or pack animals floating goods down the river [Two men negotiating trade deals]
- 02:53
was the only way to get stuff from point A to point B well kind of glad that's
- 02:57
not how our Amazon shipments show up well consider the ancient Sudanese city
- 03:02
of Meroe around 800 BCE nice big city a few pyramids great place to raise the [Pyramids in Meroe]
- 03:08
kids all-in-all a nice place and the wealth
- 03:11
of Meroe was based on a huge iron industry they made iron that was traded
- 03:15
all the way to China but how do they get something as heavy as iron out of the [Chinese man receives a delivery of iron]
- 03:20
middle of the Sudan well on the Nile River on boats or if we want to take a
- 03:25
more famous example let's look at Stonehenge in England well one theory is [Ancient people moving stones to create stone henge]
- 03:29
that ancient peoples moved those ginormous stones by flopping them onto
- 03:33
rafts and float them down rivers another theory is aliens and we're just saying
- 03:39
Stonehenge could be the result of alien dumping their unwanted stuff on earth [Alien dumping trash out of a spacecraft onto earth]
- 03:43
now maybe goodwill was too far away
Up Next
GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government
Related Videos
When you're about to marry the love of your life, not many things could stop you. However, finding out that your future hubby is keeping his crazy...
Here at Shmoop, we work for kids, not just the bottom line. Founded by David Siminoff and his wife Ellen Siminoff, Shmoop was originally conceived...
ACT Math: Elementary Algebra Drill 4, Problem 5. What is the solution to the problem shown?