Ice Age Europe - The Epic Transformation of Europe's Landscape | Full Documentary

Published 2024-01-31
#fullepisode #animals #documentary #iceage
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The ice sheet that shifted from Scandinavia to Central Europe was massive. Measuring several thousand metres in diameter, it pushed rubble and debris across the continent to form Denmark and Northern Germany. Meltwater created a huge lake that broke through a chalk ridge connecting Calais to Dover, and separated France from Great Britain. France’s Channel coast emerged; Germany’s federal state rose from the ground. Europe truly is the gift of the glaciers.

All Comments (21)
  • Amazing documentary! So much detail and i really found the part explaining the bison crosses intriguing. So thankful to have everything broken down.
  • @SuperBigwinston
    10 miles out of Norwich north Norfolk 20 years or so ago. An Elephant was found buried on an old open chalk mine .
  • @JH-pv6rd
    A great documentary. Thank you for uploading ❤
  • @BenTrem42
    So often touched upon, but so rarely expanded on as you have here. And so very well! thanks
  • @frigginsane
    Feathers pretty. Feathers warm. I theorize, ancient peoples killed owls for feathers. Feathers for arrows. Feathers for protection against cold. Feathers for decoration.
  • What a fascinating documentary film. I love docos like this, crave them actually as I'm a bit of a prehistory nut. Especially the Paleolithic and Mesolithic. So, I enjoyed this very much. Both thumbs up!
  • @Rocio1988
    Thanks for sharing this amazing documentary to learn about the ice age in Europe and the ancient animals that once lived in the continent. Great job🦣🦣
  • @bodamyan_bg
    Thanx a thousand and salutations from Sofia/ BG for the wonderful documentaries. Your work is much appreciated.
  • @aaronsanborn4291
    Ok you're wrong about snowy owls only being found in the Artic...we see them in Maine fairly regularly.
  • @svennielsen633
    Let us be clear: we are not even talking about the latest ice age (Weichsel) but the second latest ice age (Elster).
  • @johnshields6852
    Geological time is so vast, it's hard to put in perspective in our brief lives.